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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67135 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67135)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Lives of Celebrated Travellers,
-Vol. III (of 3), by James Augustus St. John
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Lives of Celebrated Travellers, Vol. III (of 3)
-
-Author: James Augustus St. John
-
-Release Date: January 10, 2022 [eBook #67135]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Turgut Dincer, sf2001, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIVES OF CELEBRATED
-TRAVELLERS, VOL. III (OF 3) ***
-
-
-
-
-
- _Harper’s Stereotype Edition._
-
- THE
- LIVES
- OF
- CELEBRATED TRAVELLERS.
-
- BY
- JAMES AUGUSTUS ST. JOHN.
-
- Wand’ring from clime to clime, observant stray’d,
- Their manners noted and their states survey’d.
- Pope’s Homer.
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
- VOL. III.
-
- NEW-YORK:
-
- PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY J. & J. HARPER,
- NO. 82 CLIFF-STREET,
-
- AND SOLD BY THE PRINCIPAL BOOKSELLERS THROUGHOUT
- THE UNITED STATES.
-
- 1832.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-MUNGO PARK.
-
-Born 1771.--Died 1806.
-
- Born at Fowlshiels, near Selkirk--Receives a respectable
- education--Bound apprentice to a surgeon--Finishes his education
- at Edinburgh--Removes to London--Becomes known to Sir Joseph
- Banks--Appointed surgeon to the Worcester, East Indiaman--Engaged
- by the African Association to ascertain the course of the
- Niger--Sails from England--Arrives at Jillifica--Unknown species
- of fish--Alligators--Hippopotami--Pisania--Dr. Laidley--Studies
- the Mandingo language--Attacked by fever and delirium--Horrors
- of the rainy season in Africa--Wild beasts--Departs from
- Pisania--Surrounded by a body of the natives--Visits the King of
- Woolli--Obtains a guide--Elephant-hunters--Presents his coat to
- the chief of Fatteconda--Major Houghton--Limited territories of
- the African kings--Suggestion by which Africa may be effectually
- explored--Folly of despatching a solitary traveller--A night
- journey--Solitary forest--Dangers from wild beasts--Hospitable
- Mohammedan--Festival in honour of his arrival--Negro
- dances--Joag--Robbed of half his merchandise--Humanity of
- a female slave--Kasson--Robbed a second time--Affectionate
- meeting between the blacksmith and his relations--Maternal
- affection--Curiosity excited by the presence of a white
- man--Kooniakary--Audience with the king--Advised to retrace his
- footsteps--Romantic scenery--Cheapness of provisions--Superstition
- of his Mohammedan guide--Terrifies two negro horsemen--Is
- mistaken for a demon--Kaarta--Buglehorns formed of elephants’
- teeth--Receives permission to depart--Jarra--Visits Ali the
- King of Ludamar--Despatches his journal to the Gambia--Is
- robbed--Barbarous treatment of Park by Ali and his Moorish
- countrymen--Placed in a hut with a wild boar--Is chosen royal
- barber--Pillaged of the remainder of his property--Superstitious
- curiosity--Is threatened with death or mutilation--Tortured
- for Moorish amusement--Robbed of his slave-boy--Affecting
- scene--Attempts to escape--Departs in the night--Stopped
- and robbed of his cloak--Nearly perishes from hunger and
- thirst--Storm in the desert--Multitude of frogs--Compelled to
- wander through the woods--Subsists on wild berries--Enters
- the kingdom of Bambarra--Mistaken for a Moor--Destitute
- condition--Comes within sight of the Niger--Joy at effecting
- the object of his mission--Sego--Refused entrance into the
- city--Humanity of a woman--Receives a present from the king of
- Bambarra--Sansanding--Hospitable reception--Is requested to write
- a saphie, or charm--Camelopard--Encounters a lion--Moodiboo--Loses
- his horse--Reaches Silla--Exhausted with fatigue and
- sickness--Unable to proceed--Resolves to return--Song--Denied
- entrance into the village--In danger of being devoured by
- lions--Stripped and robbed by a band of peasants--Overwhelmed
- with grief and terror--Derives consolation from religious
- reflections--Sibidooloo--Regains his horse and other
- property--Unites himself to a slave caravan--Obtains a common
- prayer-book--Arrives at Pisania--Returns to England--Singular
- interview with his brother-in-law--Received with distinguished
- honour by the African Association--Publishes his travels--Returns
- to Scotland--Marries--Practises as a surgeon at Peebles--Becomes
- disgusted with an obscure life--Appointed chief conductor of a
- second expedition into the interior of Africa, under the sanction
- of the British government--Sails from Portsmouth--Arrives at
- Pisanio--Sets out with the party for the interior--Dreadfully
- stung by a swarm of bees--The journey nearly put an end to by this
- event--Rainy season--The whole party sick--Gold-pits--Soldiers
- become delirious--Numbers die, or are left behind--Attacked
- by wild beasts--Cut off by the natives--Guide attacked and
- wounded by a crocodile--Remarkable presence of mind--Robbed by
- two African princes--Encounters three lions--Arrives on the
- banks of the Niger--Opens a bazaar--Death of Mr. Scott--Mission
- reduced to a very small number--Death of Mr. Anderson--Embarks
- on the Niger--Conclusion of his journal--Isaaco’s account of his
- death--Captain Clapperton’s corroboration--Character--Sir Walter
- Scott 13
-
-
-PETER SIMON PALLAS.
-
-Born 1741.--Died 1811.
-
- Born at Berlin--Educated as a surgeon--Studies natural
- history--Visits Holland--England--Publishes his first
- great work--Accepts an appointment in the Academy of
- St. Petersburg--Catherine II.--Engages in the Russian
- enterprise for observing the transit of Venus--Sets
- out from St. Petersburg--Gadflies--River Jemlia--Pearl
- muscles--Arrives at Moscow--Marine sponges used for painting
- the cheeks--Rhubarb--Vlodimir--Cherry-orchards--Tartar
- princes--Goitres--Extreme filthiness of the Russians--Severe
- cold--Mules between the goat and sheep--Sulphurous
- springs--Environs of Sumara--Travels on sledges--Skeletons
- of elephants--Tizran--Excessive heat--Village unroofed
- by a hurricane--River Volga--Ancient tombs--Gigantic
- bones--Kalmuc camp--Archery--Botanical excursions--Marsh
- flies--Kirghees--Orenburg--Golden eagles--Falconry--Value
- of a trained hawk--Salt-mines--Chinese caravan--Jasper
- mountains--Jasper tombs--Ruins of Sarai--Embarks upon the Caspian
- Sea--Arranges his Journal--Floods--Hurricanes--Bottomless
- pit--Furious wild dogs--Beehives--Method of protecting the hives
- from the bears--Volcano--Burning forest--Cotton produced from the
- poplar-tree--Loses himself in a forest--Curious method of passing
- a river--Asbestos mountain--The mind abhors an uninterrupted
- calm--Insipid method of travelling--Method of preparing
- Russia leather in Siberia--Cheliabinsk--Departs for Eastern
- Siberia--Extensive conflagration--Steppe of Ischimi--Aquatic
- game--White herons--Arrives at Omsk--Refused permission to
- inspect the Siberian maps there--Banks of the Irtish--Continual
- storms--Method of preserving furs from the moth--Encounters an
- enormous wolf--Ancient mines--Attacked by dysentery--Prodigious
- tomb--Enormous lump of solid gold--Visits the Altaïc
- mountains--Sublime scenery--Black sparrows--Crosses Lake Baikal
- in a sledge--Rugged and sublime scenery--Tremendous storm--Hunting
- the sea-dog--Mongolia--Borders of China--His health declines--Blue
- crow--Locusts--Tartar hordes--Intense cold--Prepares for
- his return to Petersburg--Execrable manner of peopling
- Siberia--Perilous adventure--Wild horses--Ancient shores of the
- Caspian--Repairs to Moscow--Arrives at Petersburg--Premature
- old age--Publishes his travels, &c.--M. Cuvier--Theory of the
- earth--Traverses the southern provinces of Russia--Dies at
- Berlin--Character 65
-
-
-CARSTEN NIEBUHR.
-
-Born 1733.--Died 1815.
-
- Born in the province of Friesland--Studies music--Intends
- practising as a land-surveyor--Celebrated Reiske--Engaged
- to accompany a scientific expedition into Arabia--Goes to
- Copenhagen--Appointed lieutenant of engineers--Liberality
- of the Danish Minister--Proceeds to Marseilles--White
- rainbow--Transit of Venus--Malta--Serpents--Maltese
- knights--Efforts to convert Niebuhr to Catholicism--Great
- Church of St. John--Prodigious wealth--Hospital--Sails
- to Smyrna--Tenedos--Attacked by dysentery--Proceeds to
- Constantinople--Assumes the oriental costume--Sails for
- Egypt--Rhodes--Turkish eating-house--Wine-drinkers--Female
- slaves--Amusing story--Plague--Egypt--Pompey’s pillar--Turkish
- merchant and the telescope--Laughable anecdote--Mr. Forskaal
- stripped of his breeches--Rosetta--Arrives at Cairo--The
- river Nile--Pirates--Bruce the traveller--Curious anecdote
- of robbers--The Virgin on horseback--Churches strewed
- with crutches--Arrives at Damietta--Boats loaded with
- beehives--Europeans detested at Damietta--Encountered
- by a young sheïkh--Visits the Pyramids--Observations on
- them--Sets out for Suez--Advantages of travelling on
- dromedaries--Trade of Suez--Rose of Jericho--Mountain of
- Inscriptions--Arab women--Is refused admission into the
- monastery of St. Catherine--Deserted by his guides--Ascends
- a portion of Mount Sinai--Voyage from Suez to Jidda--Black
- eunuch--Elim--Is protected by some Janizaries--Emerald
- mountains--Forskaal taken for a physician--Laughable
- story--Ship in danger of being set on fire--Indiscreet
- curiosity--Jidda--Custom-house extortions--Forbidden to approach
- the Mecca gate--Curious method of catching wild ducks--Sails
- for Loheia--Yemen--Bedouins--Politeness of the emir--Hospitable
- treatment--Curiosity of the Arabs--Dr. Cramer requested to
- prescribe for the emir’s horse--Amusing anecdote of two young
- Arabs--Great coffee emporium of Beit el-Fakih--Description of
- the coffee plantations--Danger of travelling by day--Niebuhr
- is mistaken for an Arab--Is supposed to be searching for
- gold--Balm of Mecca--Is seized with illness--Mokha--Ludicrous
- anecdote--Death of Von Haven--Of Forskaal--Difficulty of obtaining
- a place of burial--Polite reception at Sana--Obtains an audience
- of the imam--Sails for India--Arrives at Bombay--Death of
- Baurenfeind--Forwards his manuscripts to Copenhagen--Sails for
- the Persian gulf--Phosphoric fires--Troop of dolphins--History
- of Nadir Shah--Sir W. Jones--Visits Shiraz--Superstition
- respecting manner of killing a fowl--Visits a Turkoman
- camp--Anecdote--Arrives at Shiraz--Hospitable reception by
- an Englishman--Palace--Persepolis--Arab sheïkh--Dialogue
- with the moollah of a mosque respecting marriage--Ruins of
- Babylon--Proceeds with a Jewish caravan--Turkish firman--Devil
- worshippers--Cowardice of his companions--Adventure with an
- Arab sheïkh--Dr. Patrick Russel--Oriental Christians--Visits
- Palestine--Mount Taurus--Baber Khan--Returns to Europe--Arrives
- at Copenhagen--Publishes his various works--Marries--Quits the
- capital--Appointed secretary of the district at Meldorf--Anecdotes
- and character of Niebuhr by his son--Illiberality towards
- Bruce--Account of Niebuhr’s latter days--Illness--Death 99
-
-
-CHOISEUL-GOUFFIER.
-
-Born 1752.--Died 1817.
-
- Incompleteness of the biography of celebrated men--Born at Paris
- of an illustrious family--His passion for the fine arts--Taste
- for literature--Falls in love--Marries--Adopts the profession
- of arms--Obtains the rank of colonel--Sails for Greece--His
- enthusiasm for antiquity--Visits the Grecian Isles--Occupies
- himself in drawing--Grotto of Antiparos--Opinions respecting
- its construction--Proceeds to Lemnos, Rhodes, &c.--Ruins of
- Telmissus--River Mæander, Ephesus, Smyrna, and Troy--Homer--Trojan
- territories--Rivers Simois and Scamander--Remarkable spots in
- the neighbourhood of Troy--Tombs of Ilus and Patroclus--Camp of
- the Greeks--Returns to France--Arranges the materials of his
- travels--Flattering reception--Patriotism--Modern Greeks--Elected
- member of the French Academy--Celebrated discourse on the death
- of D’Alembert--Delille’s poem entitled “Imagination”--Extract
- applied to Choiseul-Gouffier--Appointed ambassador to the
- Ottoman Porte--Acquires the confidence of Halil Pasha, and of
- Prince Mauro Cordato--Attempts to introduce civilization among
- the Turks--Turkish ship-of-war--Obtains the release of the
- Russian ambassador--Prevents the imprisonment of the Austrian
- internuncio--Protects the Russian and Austrian prisoners--Revisits
- the Troad--Despatches artists to Syria and Egypt--Appointed
- ambassador to the court of London--Anecdote of the Count de
- Cobentzel--Emperor Paul of Russia--Returns to France--Rose harvest
- of Adrianople--Personal existence of Homer--Is seized with an
- apoplectic fit--Dies 154
-
-
-JOHN LEWIS BURCKHARDT.
-
-Born 1784.--Died 1817.
-
- Descended from an eminent family at Basle--Born at
- Lausanne--Aversion to republican principles--Detestation
- of the French--Enters as a student at Leipzig--Removes to
- Göttingen--Arrives in London--African Association--His offers
- are accepted--Studies Arabic--Allows his beard to grow--Assumes
- the oriental dress--Accustoms himself to endure hardships--Sails
- from Cowes--Arrives at Malta--Dr. Sectzen--Assumes the
- character of an Indian Mohammedan merchant--Reaches the coast
- of Syria--Departs for Aleppo--Laughable anecdote--Aga’s
- dislike to beer and potatoes--Suspected of being a Frank in
- disguise--Is pulled by the beard and otherwise insulted--Arrives
- at Aleppo--Puts off his Mohammedan dress--Is seized with fever
- from the bites of vermin--Attempts a translation of Robinson
- Crusoe into Arabic--Sets out in company with an Arab sheïkh for
- Palmyra--Robbed on the road--Damascus--Arab hospitality--Beautiful
- scenery--Baalbec and Libanus--Cedars--The Druses--Haurān the
- patrimony of Abraham--Vestiges of ancient cities--Places
- himself under the protection of an Arab sheïkh--Enters the
- desert--Is stripped to the skin, and left exposed to the rays
- of the sun--Arab lady attempts to steal his shirt--Returns to
- Damascus--Dead Sea--Joins a caravan--Philadelphia--Treachery of
- the Sheïkh of Kerek--Valley of Ghor--Ruins of Petra--Arrives
- at Cairo--Journey into Nubia--Mameluke chiefs--Deadly
- feud--Hospitality of the Nubians--Romantic scenery--Curious mode
- of extorting presents--Admirable custom of placing water-jars
- by the road-side--Drunken savages--Palm wine--Contempt for
- Mohammed Ali--Descends the Nile--Colossal statues--Anecdote
- of an Arab--Assouan--Cheapness of provisions--March of a
- caravan through the desert--Is treated with great contempt
- by his companions--Bruce--Burckhardt’s insolent skepticism
- respecting that eminent traveller--Extraordinary sufferings--Wady
- el Nabeh--Scarcity of water--Nubian desert--Lakes of
- mirage--Is near perishing from thirst--Camels despatched to
- the Nile--Insolence and extortion--Extraordinary method of
- discovering a stolen lamb--Arrives at Damar--Adventure with
- a Faky--Numerous crocodiles--Romantic scenery--Tremendous
- effects of a desert storm--Taka--Enormous lions--Effects of the
- sultan’s firman on his persecutors--Returns to Jidda--Attacked
- by fever--Delicious fruit--Sells his slave--Sets out for the
- interior of the Hejah--Arrives at Mecca--Picturesque scenery--Ras
- el Kora--Tayef--Observations on Burckhardt’s beard--Suspected
- of being an English spy--Affects to be hurt by the pasha’s
- suspicions--Animated description of the Hadj, or pilgrimage
- to Mecca--Sets out for Medina--Is attacked by an intermittent
- fever--Melancholy condition--Consoles himself by reading
- Milton--Tomb of Mohammed--Sets out for Yembo--Plague--Pursues
- his journey to Cairo--Composes his journal--Excursion to Mount
- Sinai--Furnishes Belzoni with money for removing the head of
- Memnon--Is attacked with dysentery--Dies at Cairo--Character 168
-
-
-VOLNEY.
-
-Born 1757.--Died 1820.
-
- Born at Craon in Anjou--His name first changed by his
- father, and afterward by himself--Studies the sciences with
- ardour--Is bequeathed a small sum of money--Determines to
- spend it in travelling--Proceeds to Marseilles--Embarks
- for Egypt--Alexandria--Cairo--Studies the Arabic--Defends
- Herodotus--Proceeds to Syria--Describes Mount Lebanon--Resides
- in an Arabian convent--Studies the Arabic--Visits the tribe
- of Bedouins--Is invited to reside among them--Describes the
- Druzes--Returns to France--Publishes his travels--Acquires a
- great reputation--Is compared with Herodotus--Is presented with a
- gold medal by the Empress Catherine--Publishes his considerations
- on the war between the Turks and Russians--Meditates the
- improvement of agriculture--Is elected a member of the Constituent
- Assembly--Connexion with Cabanis and Mirabeau--Anecdote--Returns
- Catherine her medal, and is abused by Grimm--Visits
- Corsica--Publishes the “Law of Nature”--Character of that
- work--Is imprisoned as a royalist--Travels in America--Well
- received by Washington--Dr. Priestley--Returns to France--Refuses
- to share the honours of Napoleon--Marries--Dies 219
-
-
-EDWARD DANIEL CLARKE.
-
-Born 1769.--Died 1822.
-
- Born in Sussex--Is an idle student--Saves the life of his
- brother--Studies at Cambridge--Loses his father--Proceeds
- slowly with his studies--Fond of miscellaneous reading--Quits
- the university--Becomes a private tutor--Makes the tour
- of England--Publishes an account of it--Travels with Lord
- Berwick--Passes the Alps--Italy--Naples--Eruption of Mount
- Vesuvius--Is in danger of perishing among the lava--Engages to
- travel in Egypt--Returns to England--Is disappointed--Publishes a
- periodical work--Is again a private tutor--Engages to travel with
- Mr. Cripps--Departs from England--Sweden--Norway--Lapland--Gulf
- of Finland--St. Petersburg--Picture of the Russians and their
- emperor--Moscow--The Crimea--Professor Pallas--Constantinople--The
- Plain of Troy--Aboukir--Palestine--Egypt--The
- Pyramids--Antiquities taken from the French--Isles of
- Greece--Athens--Mount Parnassus--Returns to England--Created
- LL.D.--Takes orders--Marries--Sells his MSS. and coins--Enjoys
- pluralities--Sells the copyright of his travels--Lectures on
- mineralogy--Appointed professor--Studies with enthusiasm--Falls
- ill--Is carried to London--Dies 238
-
-
-FRANCOIS LE VAILLANT.
-
-Born 1753.--Died 1824.
-
- Peculiar excellence of Le Vaillant’s style--Born in Dutch
- Guyana--Early pursuits--Is brought to Europe--Studies--Conceives
- the idea of travelling--Repairs to Holland--Embarks for
- the Cape of Good Hope--Arrive--Dutch hospitality--Cape
- Town--Hurricane--Character of the colonists--Admiration of the
- English, and detestation of the French--Saldanha Bay--Mutton
- Island--Gazelle and panther-hunting--Harpooning a whale--The
- Dane’s grave--Prodigious clouds of birds--Blowing-up of a
- ship-of-war--Loss of Le Vaillant’s papers, collections, and
- travelling-chest--Melancholy--Meets with a friend--Recommences
- his collections--Prepares for a journey into the
- interior--His wagons, merchandise, and arms--Choice of
- travelling companions--Hottentot followers--Departs from
- Cape Town--Sweets of liberty--Magnificent scenery--Vast
- herds of antelopes--Curious species of tortoise--Augments
- his followers--Arrives on the Dove’s River--Pleasant mode
- of spending his time--African story-teller--Abundance of
- game--Seashore--Beautiful district--Fairy-land--Spenser--Gardens
- of Adonis--Shoots a touraco--Pursues it through the woods--Falls
- into an elephant-snare--Danger and alarm--Escapes--Torrents
- of Africa--Verdant palace--Proceeds to the Black
- River--Accident--Is attacked by illness--Oppressed by
- melancholy--Recovers--Discovers the footmarks of elephants--Sets
- out in chase of them--Shoots an elephant--Pursues the herd--Is
- in imminent danger--Escapes--Exquisite flavour of an elephant’s
- foot--Falls in with a tribe of wild Hottentots--Manners and
- opinions--Approaches the country of the Kaffers--Terrors of
- his followers--Despatches messengers into Kaffer-land--Fury
- of an African storm--Wild beasts--Meets with a new tribe of
- Hottentots--Exchange of presents--Enamoured of a Hottentot
- girl--Return of his messengers, accompanied by Kaffers--Dutch
- spies in the camp--Alarm of the Kaffers--Their departure--Prepares
- to enter Kaffraria--His people refuse to proceed--Selects
- a small number of the bravest of his Hottentots for the
- expedition--Quits his camp--Enters Kaffraria--Solitude and
- desertion of the country--Returns--Contemplates his return to
- the Cape--Enormous herds of antelopes--Sublime scenery of the
- Sneuw Bergen--The Bushmen--Great scarcity of water--Reaches
- the Cape--Reposes--Unhappy opinion--Projects a second
- journey--Preparations--Departure--Nests of the white ant--Dreadful
- scarcity of water--Discovers a well in the desert--Elephant’s
- River--African harpies--Is near perishing in the Elephant’s
- River--Abandons his chariots in the desert--Forerunners of
- a tempest--Cloud-worshippers--A storm--Quenches his burning
- thirst--Visits a Hottentot horde--Hospitality--Is overtaken
- by a Dutchman, who intoxicates his followers--Terrible
- accident--Horrors of the savage life--Proceeds on his
- journey--Beholds a giraffe, and kills one--Presence of women in
- the camp--Arrives on the frontiers of the Hoozwana country--New
- terrors of his followers--Solitude of the desert--Discovers
- a horde of Hoozwanas--Obtains their friendship--Character
- of these wild people--They reconduct him to his camp on the
- Gariep--Accident--Oxen stolen by the Bushmen--Follows them
- to their kraal--Battle--Recovers his cattle, and returns
- to the camp--Befriends a miserable white family--Is on the
- point of death--Recovers--Returns to the Cape--And then to
- Europe--Publishes his travels--Dies 262
-
-
-BELZONI.
-
- Born at Padua--Is designed for the monastic life--Studies at
- Rome--Hydraulics--Invasion of Italy by the French--Alters his plan
- of life--Departs from Rome--Arrives in England--Marries--Remains
- nine years in Great Britain--Travels through the south of
- Europe--Malta--Arrives in Egypt--Enters into the service of
- the pasha--Constructs an hydraulic machine--View from the
- Pyramids--Is near being murdered by a soldier--Rebellion of
- the janizaries--Quits the service of the pasha--Undertakes
- the removal of the Memnon’s head--Ascends the Nile--Arrives
- at Thebes--Magnificence of the ruins--Establishes himself
- in the Memnonium--Removes the head to the Nile--Visits the
- Necropolis at Gournon--Loses himself in the sepulchres--Horrors
- of the tombs--Proceeds to Assouan--His boat attacked on the
- Nile--Reaches Deir--Temple of Ipsambul--Ignorance of the
- Nubians--Use of money--Returns to Thebes--Embarks the head of
- Memnon--Antiquarians--Is shot at in the ruins of Thebes--Descends
- the Nile to Rosetta--Mr. Briggs--Returns to Cairo, and thence
- again to Thebes--Mummy-pits--Decay of the mummies--Proceeds to
- Ipsambul--Opens the temple--Sepulchres of the kings--Alabaster
- sarcophagus--Visits the emerald mines on the Red Sea--Returns
- to Cairo--Visits the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon--Returns to
- England--Publishes his travels--Proceeds again to Africa--Dies 327
-
-
-DOMINIQUE VIVANT DENON.
-
-Born 1754.--Died 1825.
-
- Born at Burgundy--Becomes a king’s page--Secretary to the
- Neapolitan Embassy--His character and physiognomy--Studies the
- art of design--Adopts the principles of the revolution--Embarks
- with Napoleon for Egypt--Arrives at Alexandria--Impressions on
- entering a new city--Rosetta--Pursued by the Arabs--Desaix--Visits
- the Pyramids--Population of Cairo--Revolt against the
- French--Danger of Denon--Massacre of four _savans_--Dissects the
- mummy of Ibis--Serpent-charmers--Departs for Upper Egypt--Murad
- Bey--Battle with the Mamelukes--Horrible anecdote--Anecdote of a
- youthful robber--A shower of rain--Ruins of Oxyrinchus--Gloomy
- opinions--Ruins of Hermopolis--Dangerous mode of travelling--Ruins
- of Denderah--Anger of General Desaix--Anecdote of a French
- officer--Comes in sight of the ruins of Thebes--The whole army
- halt and clap their hands--Statues of Ossymandyas--Island
- of Phile--Khamsyn wind--Journey to Cosseir--Returns to the
- Nile--Sails for France--Is made superintendent of museums by
- Napoleon--Directs the casting of the triumphal column in the Place
- Vendôme--Dies 345
-
-
-REGINALD HEBER.
-
-Born 1783.--Died 1826.
-
- Born at Malpas, in the county of Chester--Early piety--Studies
- at Oxford--Poem of “Palestine”--Recites his work in
- public--Becomes a volunteer--Loses his father--Travels in Northern
- Europe--Sweden--Norway--Russia--Ladies of Moscow--Traverses the
- Ukraine--Romantic view at Nakitchivan--Tcherkask--Inhabitants
- of the banks of the Kuban--Traverses the Crimea--Returns to
- England--Obtains the living of Hodnet--Purity and romance of his
- opinions--Marries--Excellence as a parish priest--Contributes
- to the Quarterly Review--Publishes his poems--Observance
- of Sunday--Delivers the Bampton Lectures--Loses his only
- child--Illness--Appointed Bishop of Calcutta--Friendship
- of the honourable Watkins Williams Wynn--Is exceedingly
- esteemed and regretted--Sails with his family for India--Pious
- conduct on board--Arrives in the Ganges--Colour of the
- Hindoos--Reaches Calcutta--Laborious situation--Departs from
- Calcutta on his visitation to the Upper Provinces--Scenery
- of Bengal--Arrives at Dacca--Visits the Nawâb--Loses his
- chaplain--Continues his voyage up the Ganges--Sultan Sujah’s
- palace--Rosefields of Ghazeepoor--Attar of roses--Reaches
- Benares--Lucknow--First view of the Himalaya--Contrasted with
- view of Mont Blanc--Approaches the Himalaya--Almorah--Returns
- towards the south--Delhi--Is presented to the emperor--Agra--The
- Taj-mahal--Sir David Ochterlony--Traverses Rajpootana--Bombay--Mr.
- Elphinstone--Ceylon--Calcutta--Madras--Death 356
-
-
-
-
-THE LIVES OF CELEBRATED TRAVELLERS.
-
-
-
-
-MUNGO PARK.
-
-Born 1771.--Died 1806.
-
-
-This enterprising and distinguished traveller was born on the 10th
-of September, 1771, at Fowlshiels, a farm occupied by his father on
-the banks of the Yarrow, near Selkirk. In common with the greater
-number of the sons of Scottish yeomen, Mungo Park, notwithstanding
-that the number of his brothers and sisters amounted to no less
-than thirteen, received a respectable education, and at the age of
-fifteen was bound apprentice to a surgeon at Selkirk. At the close
-of this apprenticeship, in 1789, Park continued his medical studies
-at the university of Edinburgh, where, though nothing remarkable is
-recorded of him, he seems to have applied with great assiduity to his
-professional studies. His summer vacations, during one of which he made
-a tour to the Highlands, were devoted to botany.
-
-Having completed his education, Park removed to London in search of
-professional employment. Here, through the kindness of Mr. Dickson,
-his brother-in-law, he had the good fortune to become known to Sir
-Joseph Banks, to whom so many other distinguished travellers have been
-indebted; and through whose recommendation he was appointed surgeon
-to the Worcester East Indiaman. In this capacity he made a voyage to
-Bencoolen, in Sumatra, the only fruits of which was a paper containing
-descriptions of eight new fishes from Sumatra, published in the third
-volume of the _Linnæan Transactions_.
-
-Shortly after his return from this voyage, Park, learning that the
-African Association, of which his friend Sir Joseph Banks was a very
-active and zealous member, were desirous of engaging a person to
-replace Major Houghton, who, it was feared, had fallen a sacrifice to
-the climate, or perished in some contest with the natives, eagerly
-offered his services, which after due deliberation were accepted.
-The association, he observes, conducted itself with great liberality
-towards him. He forthwith prepared himself for the voyage, and on the
-22d of May, 1795, sailed from Portsmouth in the brig Endeavour. His
-instructions, he says, were very plain and concise. He was directed,
-on his arrival in Africa, “to pass on to the river Niger, either by
-the way of Bambouk or by such other route as should be found most
-convenient; that I should ascertain the course, and, if possible,
-the rise and termination of the river. That I should use my utmost
-exertions to visit the principal towns or cities in its neighbourhood,
-particularly Timbuctoo and Houssa; and that I should afterward be at
-liberty to return to Europe, either by the way of the Gambia, or by
-such other route as under all the then existing circumstances of my
-situation and prospects should appear to me to be most advisable.”
-
-On the 21st of June, after an agreeable voyage of thirty days, he
-arrived at Jillifica, a town on the northern bank of the Gambia, in the
-kingdom of Barra. From this place after a stay of two days he proceeded
-up the Gambia, in the waters of which were found prodigious numbers
-of fish of unknown species, together with alligators and hippopotami,
-whose teeth furnish excellent ivory. Park, having quitted the Endeavour
-at Jonkakonda, proceeded thence by land; and reaching Pisania, a small
-British factory in the King of Yam’s dominions, on the 5th of July took
-up his residence at the house of Dr. Laidley, until he should be able
-to prosecute his journey into the interior.
-
-Our traveller’s first care now was to render himself master of the
-Mandingo language, which in this part of Africa is in general use; and
-to collect from every source within his power information respecting
-the countries he was about to visit. In the language his progress
-depended on his own application; but he soon found that little or no
-reliance could be placed on the accounts of the interior furnished him
-by the natives, who on the most material points were frequently in
-direct contradiction with each other. His anxiety to examine and judge
-for himself was therefore increased. However, besides that the rainy
-season, which had now commenced, rendered travelling impracticable,
-another equally insuperable bar to the speedy prosecution of his
-journey quickly presented itself. In observing on the 31st of July
-an eclipse of the moon, he imprudently exposed himself to the night
-dew, and next day he found himself attacked by fever and delirium,
-which were the commencement of an illness that with a very trifling
-intermission confined him during two months within doors. “The care and
-attention of Dr. Laidley contributed greatly,” says Park, “to alleviate
-my sufferings; his company and conversation beguiled the tedious
-hours during that gloomy season when the rain falls in torrents; when
-suffocating heats oppress by day, and when the night is spent by the
-terrified traveller in listening to the croaking of frogs (of which the
-numbers are beyond imagination), the shrill cry of the jackal, and the
-deep howling of the hyena; a dismal concert, interrupted only by the
-roar of such tremendous thunder as no person can form a conception of
-but those who have heard it.”
-
-Having been disappointed in his expectations of proceeding with a
-slave caravan towards Bambarra, Park departed from Pisania on the 2d
-of December, 1795. He had been provided with a negro servant, named
-Johnson, who had been many years in Great Britain, and understood
-both the English and Mandingo languages; and with a negro boy, named
-Demba, the property of Dr. Laidley, who, as the highest inducement of
-good behaviour, promised him his freedom on his return. Besides these
-Park was accompanied by four other persons, who, though independent
-of his control, were made to understand that their safe return to the
-countries on the Gambia would depend on our traveller’s preservation.
-His equipment was by no means magnificent: a horse for himself, two
-asses for his servants, provisions for two days, a small assortment of
-beads, amber, and tobacco, a few changes of linen and other apparel,
-an umbrella, a pocket sextant, a magnetic compass, a thermometer, two
-fowling-pieces, two pair of pistols, and some other small articles. His
-friends at Pisania accompanied him during the first two days, and then,
-dismissing him on his way, took their leave, secretly persuaded they
-should never see him more.
-
-He had scarcely lost sight of his European friends, and ridden off
-musing and somewhat melancholy into the wood, when a body of black
-people presented themselves in a clamorous manner before him, demanding
-custom-dues, in default of which they threatened to carry him before
-their king. To escape from this honour, which might have proved a
-costly one, Park presented them with a little tobacco, upon which they
-were of course contented, and he was allowed to proceed. On reaching
-Medina, the capital of Woolli, he judged it prudent, or perhaps
-absolutely necessary, to present himself at the king’s levee, when
-the venerable benevolent old chief not only granted him permission to
-traverse his dominions, but assured him he would offer up prayers for
-his safety, partly to secure which he furnished him with a trusty guide.
-
-Having safely reached the frontiers of the Woolli dominions, Park
-dismissed his guide; and being about to enter a country interspersed
-with deserts, in which water is frequently not to be procured, he hired
-three negroes, experienced elephant-hunters, who were at once to serve
-as guides and water-bearers. While he was preparing to depart, however,
-one of these negroes, who had all received a part of their pay in
-advance, made his escape; and lest the remaining two should be disposed
-to follow his example, he immediately gave orders to fill their
-calabashes, or gourds, with water, and struck off into the wilderness,
-just as the sun was appearing above the horizon. Through this desert
-they proceeded until they reached Tallika, the frontier town of Bondou
-towards Woolli, where Park engaged a kind of custom-house officer to
-accompany him for a trifling present to Fatteconda, the residence
-of the king. In his company our traveller accordingly performed the
-journey to that city. On his arrival at Fatteconda he was received by
-the black chief with much apparent kindness, though Major Houghton, he
-had heard, in his passage through the country, had been both insulted
-and plundered by this same man. However, he soon discovered that the
-manifestations of a hospitable disposition observable in the king’s
-manner was not deceptive. It is true he was so completely captivated
-by our traveller’s best blue coat and gilt buttons, that he could not
-resist the temptation to beg it; but he endeavoured in some measure to
-remunerate him for the loss by a present of five drachms of gold, and
-by altogether abstaining from examining his baggage, or exacting any
-other present than what was voluntarily bestowed.
-
-The territories of these petty African chiefs, whom we complaisantly
-denominate kings, are exceedingly limited in extent. Your road conducts
-you to-day through one kingdom, to-morrow through another, and the next
-day through a third; which, of all those circumstances that obstruct
-the movements of the traveller in Africa, is, perhaps, the most
-vexatious and the most difficult to overcome; as the rapacity of the
-first chiefs who lie in his way deprives him of the power of satisfying
-the equal rapacity of the remainder. This consideration alone would
-suffice to convince me that if ever Africa is to be properly explored,
-it must be by an armed force sufficiently powerful to carry terror
-through the country, and not by a solitary traveller, who, whatever may
-be his perseverance or courage, must either fall in the attempt, or
-return with notions hastily formed, picked up at random, or borrowed
-from the ignorant credulous natives. The perpetual state of captivity
-in which Park moved is a strong proof of this. He was never, unless
-when far removed from human society by woods or deserts, completely
-master of his own actions, or sufficiently respected to render it
-possible for him to contemplate the superior classes, even of these
-savages, from a proper level. To judge with impartiality, a man must
-neither be under the influence of fear nor of contempt, of anger nor of
-gratitude. He must feel himself perfectly on a level with those about
-him.
-
-To proceed, however, with Park:--“In the afternoon,” says he, “my
-fellow-travellers informed me, that as this was the boundary between
-Bondou and Kajaaga, and dangerous for travellers, it would be necessary
-to continue our journey by night, until we should reach a more
-hospitable part of the country. I agreed to the proposal, and hired
-two people for guides through the woods, and as soon as the people of
-the village were gone to sleep (the moon shining bright) we set out.
-The stillness of the air, the howling of the wild beasts, and the deep
-solitude of the forest made the scene solemn and impressive. Not a word
-was uttered by any of us but in a whisper; all were attentive, and
-every one anxious to show his sagacity by pointing out to me the wolves
-and hyenas as they glided like shadows from one thicket to another.
-Towards morning we arrived at a village called Kimmoo, when our guides
-awakened one of their acquaintance, and we stopped to give our asses
-some corn, and roast a few ground-nuts for ourselves. At daylight
-we resumed our journey, and in the afternoon arrived at Joag in the
-kingdom of Kajaaga.”
-
-On arriving at Joag, the frontier town of the kingdom of Kajaaga, our
-traveller (who had taken up his residence at the house of the dooty, or
-chief man of the town, a rigid but hospitable Mohammedan) was favoured
-with an opportunity of observing the genuine character of the negro.
-“The same evening,” says he, “Madiboo, the bushreen who had accompanied
-me from Pisania, went to pay a visit to his father and mother, who
-dwelt at a neighbouring town called Dramanet. He was joined by my other
-attendant the blacksmith; and as soon as it was dark, I was invited
-to see the sports of the inhabitants, it being their custom on the
-arrival of strangers to welcome them by diversions of different kinds.
-I found a great crowd surrounding a party who were dancing by the light
-of some large fires to the music of four drums, which were beat with
-great exactness and uniformity. The dances, however, consisted more in
-wanton gestures than in muscular exertion or graceful attitudes. The
-ladies vied with each other in displaying the most voluptuous movements
-imaginable.”
-
-At Joag, while preparing to advance on his journey, he was suddenly
-honoured with a visit from the king’s son, accompanied by a troop
-of horse, who, pretending that by entering his father’s dominions
-he had forfeited the whole of his property, insisted upon examining
-his merchandise, of which he seized upon the moiety. Of the remnant
-that remained, particularly a little amber and a few beads, which
-he had succeeded in concealing, he was now so fearful of producing
-any portion, even for the purchase of food, lest he should once more
-awaken the cupidity of the authorities, that both he and his attendants
-determined on combating hunger for the day, “and wait some opportunity
-of purchasing or begging provisions.” In this extremity, while he
-was sitting down chewing straws, a female slave, who observed him
-in passing by, was moved with compassion, and presented him with a
-quantity of ground-nuts, which was a very seasonable supply. Scarcely
-had the old woman left him, before he received information that the
-nephew of the King of Kasson, who had been sent by his uncle on an
-embassy to the King of Kajaaga, and was now returning to his own
-country, was about to pay him a visit. He came accordingly, and upon
-Park’s representing to him his situation and distresses, kindly offered
-to be his guide and protector as far as Kasson. With him, therefore,
-our traveller now continued his route to the banks of the Senegal,
-upon crossing which, his royal guide, who, like other guides, required
-a present for his services, informed him they were in his uncle’s
-dominions, and in complete safety.
-
-Safe or not safe, however, Park soon found that the stranger and the
-traveller were nowhere beyond the reach of extortion. Half of the
-little property which had escaped the fangs of the Kajaaga people, was
-here taken from him. He was then permitted to depart. Among the honest
-negroes with whom he had set out from Pisania, on the Gambia, there was
-a blacksmith from the interior, who, having amassed some little money
-upon the coast, was now returning to spend the remainder of his days
-in his native land. Shortly after quitting Teesee, the last place where
-our traveller had submitted to legal robbery, he and his companions
-came within sight of the blacksmith’s village. The news of his return
-had, it seems, preceded him. His brother, accompanied by a singing-man,
-came forth to welcome the wanderer home, and brought along with him a
-horse, that the blacksmith “might enter his native town in a dignified
-manner.” Park and his companions were desired to put a good charge of
-powder into their guns. The singing-man led the way; the two brothers
-followed; and the cavalcade was quickly joined by a considerable number
-of the inhabitants, who, by extravagant gestures and songs of triumph,
-testified their joy at the return of their townsman. “When we arrived
-at the blacksmith’s place of residence, we dismounted, and fired our
-muskets. The meeting between him and his relations was very tender;
-for these rude children of nature, freed from restraint, display their
-emotions in the strongest and most expressive manner.--Amid these
-transports, the blacksmith’s aged mother was led forth, leaning upon a
-staff. Every one made way for her; and she stretched out her hand to
-bid her son welcome. Being totally blind, she stroked his hands, and
-arms, and face with great care, and seemed highly delighted that her
-latter days were blessed by his return, and that her ears once more
-heard the music of his voice. From this interview, I was convinced,
-that whatever difference there is between the Negro and European in the
-conformation of the nose, and the colour of their skin, there is none
-in the genuine sympathies and characteristic feelings of our common
-nature.
-
-“During the tumult of these congratulations, I had seated myself
-apart, by the side of one of the huts, being unwilling to interrupt
-the flow of filial and parental tenderness; and the attention of the
-company was so entirely taken up with the blacksmith, that I believe
-none of his friends had observed me. When all the people present had
-seated themselves, the blacksmith was desired by his father to give
-some account of his adventures; and silence being commanded he began;
-and after repeatedly thanking God for the success that had attended
-him, related every material occurrence that had happened to him from
-his leaving Kasson to his arrival at the Gambia; his employment and
-success in those parts; and the dangers he had escaped in returning
-to his native country. In the latter part of his narration, he had
-frequent occasion to mention me; and after many strong expressions
-concerning my kindness to him, he pointed to the place where I sat, and
-exclaimed, _Affille ibi siring_ (see him sitting there). In a moment
-all eyes were turned upon me. I appeared like a being dropped from the
-clouds, every one was surprised that they had not observed me before;
-and a few women and children expressed great uneasiness at being so
-near a man of such an uncommon appearance. By degrees, however, their
-apprehensions subsided, and when the blacksmith assured them I was
-perfectly inoffensive, some of them ventured so far as to examine the
-texture of my clothes; but many of them were still very suspicious,
-and when by accident I happened to move myself, or look at the young
-children, their mothers would scamper off with them with the greatest
-precipitation. In a few hours, however, they all became reconciled to
-me.”
-
-With these honest people Park remained during the whole of that day and
-the next, and then, accompanied by the worthy blacksmith, who declared
-he would not quit him during his stay in that part of the country, set
-forward towards Kooniakary. On his arrival at this city he obtained
-an audience of the king, a fine old man, who, for his conduct both in
-peace and war, was greatly beloved by his subjects. His behaviour
-towards the stranger was not inconsistent with this character. He
-informed him with apparent regret, that the direct route to Bambarra
-was about to be closed by war, but, after vainly advising his guest to
-retrace his footsteps, added, that there yet remained some hopes of
-peace, respecting the validity of which he should be able to pronounce
-an opinion in the course of four or five days. In the mean while he
-invited Park to remain in the neighbourhood.
-
-On the 1st of February, 1796, the king’s messenger returned from the
-contiguous kingdom of Kaarta, bringing intelligence that the Bambarra
-army had not yet entered the country, and that it was possible the
-traveller might be enabled to traverse it before the invasion should
-take place. Accordingly, being provided with two guides by the king,
-Park took leave of his friend the blacksmith, and set forward on his
-dangerous journey. The country, at all times thickly peopled, now
-swarmed with fugitives, whom the fear of the Bambarrans had terrified
-from their homes. The scenery in many places was romantically wild. “On
-coming within sight of the mountains of Foolado, we travelled,” says
-Park, “with great difficulty down a stony and abrupt precipice, and
-continued our way in the bed of a dried river-course, where the trees
-meeting over our heads, made the place dark and cool. In a little time
-we reached the bottom of this romantic glen; and about ten o’clock
-emerged from between two rocky hills, and found ourselves on the
-level and sandy plains of Kaarta. At noon we arrived at a korree, or
-watering-place, where, for a few strings of beads, I purchased as much
-milk and corn-meal as we could eat; and indeed provisions are here so
-cheap, and the shepherds live in such affluence, that they seldom ask
-any return for what refreshment a traveller receives from them.”
-
-From this place, having prevailed upon his landlord, a Mohammedan
-negro, to accompany him as a guide to Kemmoo, our traveller set forward
-on the 11th of February. He observes, “We had no sooner got into a
-dark and lonely part of the first wood, than he made a sign for us
-to stop; and taking hold of a hollow piece of bamboo that hung as an
-amulet round his neck, whistled very loud three times. I confess I was
-somewhat startled, thinking it was a signal for some of his companions
-to come and attack us; but he assured me it was done merely with a view
-to ascertain what success we were likely to meet with on our present
-journey. He then dismounted, laid his spear across the road, and having
-said a number of short prayers, concluded with three loud whistles;
-after which he listened for some time, as if in expectation of an
-answer, and receiving none, told us we might proceed without fear, for
-there was no danger.”
-
-Adventures now appeared to crowd upon our traveller. The country
-through which their road lay being thickly sprinkled with wild
-fruit-trees, they amused themselves as they rode slowly along with
-picking and eating the fruit. “In this pursuit,” says Park, “I had
-wandered a little from my people, and being uncertain whether they were
-before or behind me, I hastened to a rising ground to look about me.
-As I was proceeding towards this eminence, two negro horsemen, armed
-with muskets, came galloping from among the bushes. On seeing them I
-made a full stop; the horsemen did the same; and all three of us seemed
-equally surprised and confounded at this interview. As I approached
-them their fears increased, and one of them, after casting on me a
-look of horror, rode off at full speed; the other, in a panic of fear,
-put his hand over his eyes, and continued muttering prayers until his
-horse, seemingly without his rider’s knowledge, conveyed him slowly
-after his companion. About a mile to the westward they fell in with my
-attendants, to whom they related a frightful story; it seems their
-fears had dressed me in the flowing robes of a tremendous spirit; and
-one of them affirmed, that when I made my appearance, a cold blast of
-wind came pouring down upon him from the sky, like so much cold water.”
-
-Shortly after this they arrived at the capital of Kaarta, where he
-was an object of such extraordinary curiosity to the populace, the
-majority of whom had never before seen a white man, that they burst
-forcibly into his hut, crowd after crowd. Those who had beheld the
-monster giving way to those who had not, until, as he observes, the hut
-was filled and emptied thirteen different times. Here he found that
-the war with Bambarra had actually commenced; that all communication
-between the countries had consequently ceased; and that, if it was his
-determination to persevere, it would be necessary to take a circuitous
-route through the Moorish kingdom of Ludamar. The people of Kaarta
-were Mohammedans; but there is a variety in church discipline even
-among these inflexible fanatics; for, instead of the fine sonorous
-voice of the muezzin, by which the faithful are elsewhere summoned to
-their devotions, the hour of prayer was here announced by the beating
-of drums, and blowing through large elephant’s teeth, hollowed out in
-such a manner as to resemble buglehorns. The sound of these horns our
-traveller thought melodious, and approaching nearer to the human voice
-than any other artificial sound. Being very desirous to depart from the
-seat of war, Park presented his horse-pistols and holsters to the king;
-and on pressing to be dismissed, received in return an escort of eight
-horsemen to conduct him to Jarra. Three of the king’s sons, with two
-hundred horsemen, kindly undertook to accompany him a little way on his
-journey.
-
-On his arrival at Jarra, in the kingdom of Ludamar, he despatched a
-messenger to Ali, who was then encamped near Benowm,
-soliciting permission to pass unmolested through his territories; and
-having waited fourteen days for his reply, a slave at length arrived
-from the chief, affirming that he had been instructed to conduct the
-traveller in safety as far as Goomba. His negro, Johnson, here refused
-to follow him any further, and signified his intention of pushing back
-without delay to Gambia; upon which Park, fearful of the success of his
-enterprise, intrusted him with a copy of his journal, reserving another
-for himself, directing him to deliver the papers to the English on the
-coast. A portion of his baggage and apparel he committed to the care
-of a slave-merchant at Jarra, who was known to Dr. Laidley. He then
-departed with his slave-boy, accompanied by the chief’s messenger. On
-the road our traveller was robbed once more by the Moors, who added
-insult to violence; and when he was nearly perishing for thirst, beat
-away his faithful slave from the wells, without permitting him to draw
-water.
-
-However, after much fatigue and extraordinary privations, they arrived
-in Ali’s camp at Benowm, where Park was immediately
-surrounded by crowds of fanatical Moors, attracted partly by curiosity,
-partly from a desire to vent their fierce zeal against a Christian.
-“My arrival,” says he, “was no sooner observed than the people, who
-drew water at the wells, threw down their buckets; those in the tents
-mounted their horses, and men, women, and children came running or
-galloping towards me. I soon found myself surrounded by such a crowd,
-that I could scarcely move; one pulled my clothes, another took off
-my hat; a third stopped me to examine my waistcoat buttons, and a
-fourth called out ‘La illah el allah Mahamet rasowl allahi,’ and
-signified, in a threatening manner, that I must repeat those words.
-We reached at length the king’s tent, where we found a great number
-of people, men, women, and children, assembled. Ali was sitting on
-a black leathern cushion, clipping a few hairs from his upper lip--a
-female attendant holding up a looking-glass before him. He appeared
-to be an old man of the Arab cast, with a long white beard, and he
-had a sullen and indignant aspect. He surveyed me with attention,
-and inquired of the Moors if I could speak Arabic; being answered in
-the negative, he appeared much surprised, and continued silent. The
-surrounding attendants, and particularly the ladies, were abundantly
-more inquisitive; they asked a thousand questions, inspected every
-part of my apparel, searched my pockets, and obliged me to unbutton my
-waistcoat and display the whiteness of my skin; they even counted my
-toes and fingers, as if they doubted whether I was in truth a human
-being.”
-
-Ali now, with the base idea of insulting an unprotected stranger,
-ordered a wild boar to be brought in, which he signified his desire
-that Park should kill and eat. This, well knowing their religious
-prejudices, he of course refused to do; upon which the boys who led in
-the boar were commanded to let it loose upon him, the Moors supposing
-that there exists an inveterate feud between pigs and Christians, and
-that it would immediately run upon and gore him. The boar, however,
-was more magnanimous. Scorning to attack a defenceless foreigner, he
-no sooner found himself at liberty than, brandishing his tusks at the
-natives, he rushed at them indiscriminately, and then, to complete
-the consternation, took shelter under the very couch upon which
-the tyrant was sitting. This bold proceeding of the unclean beast
-dissolved the assembly, and the traveller was led away to the tent of
-a slave, in front of which, not being permitted to enter, he received
-a little food. Here he likewise passed the night lying upon the sand,
-surrounded by the curious multitude. Next day, a hut, constructed
-with corn-stalks, was given him; but the abovementioned boar, which
-had been recaptured, was tied to a stake in the corner of it, as his
-fittest companion.
-
-By degrees, however, the Moors began to conceive that the Christian
-might in one way or another be rendered useful, but could think of
-no better employment for him than that of a barber. In this capacity
-he made his first attempt, in the royal presence, on the head of the
-young prince of Ludamar. This dignified office he had no great desire
-to monopolize, and his unskilfulness in performing the operation, for
-he almost at the outset made an incision in the young prince’s head,
-quickly reduced him once more to the rank of a common mortal. Ali
-seemed by no means desirous, however, of dispensing altogether with his
-services, wishing perhaps to preserve him from the same motives which
-induce us to preserve a wild beast; and therefore, to render his escape
-the more impracticable, took possession of the whole of his baggage,
-including his gold, amber, watch, and one of his pocket compasses; the
-other he had fortunately buried in the sand composing the floor of his
-hut. The gold and amber were highly gratifying to Moorish avarice, but
-the pocket compass soon became an object of superstitious curiosity.
-“Ali was very desirous to be informed, why that small piece of iron,
-the needle, always pointed to the Great Desert, and I found myself
-somewhat puzzled to answer the question. To have pleaded my ignorance,
-would have created a suspicion that I wished to conceal the real truth
-from him; I therefore told him that my mother resided far beyond the
-sands of Sahara, and that while she was alive, the piece of iron would
-always point that way, and serve as a guide to conduct me to her; and
-that if she was dead, it would point to her grave. Ali now looked
-at the compass with redoubled amazement; turned it round and round
-repeatedly, but observing that it always pointed the same way, he took
-it up with great caution, and returned it to me, manifesting that he
-thought there was something of magic in it, and that he was afraid of
-keeping so dangerous an instrument in his possession.”
-
-It now began to be debated between Ali and his advisers what should
-be done with their prisoner. Their decisions were very dissimilar.
-Some were of opinion that he should be put to death; others that he
-should merely lose his right hand; while a third party thought that
-his eyes ought to be put out. Ali himself, however, determined that
-matters should remain as they were until his queen Fatima, then in
-the north, had seen him. Meanwhile all these reports were related to
-our traveller, and tended not a little to distress and agitate his
-mind. His demand to be permitted to depart was formally refused. The
-accumulated horrors of his situation, united with the want of food and
-sleep, at length brought on a fever, by which his life was endangered.
-But his persecution from the Moors did not therefore cease. They
-plucked his cloak from him; they overwhelmed him with insults; they
-tortured him like some ferocious animal, for their amusement; and when,
-to escape from this detestable thraldom, he crawled away to a short
-distance from the camp, he was forced back by menaces and violence.
-
-At length, after more than a month’s detention at Benowm, he was
-commanded to follow Ali to the northern encampment of Bubaker, on the
-skirts of the Great Desert, and on the way endured the extremity of
-hunger, thirst, and fatigue. Upon arriving at Bubaker, he was shown
-as a strange animal to Fatima; who, though far from being exempt from
-the Moorish prejudices against a Christian, or in any remarkable
-degree disposed to humanity, still treated him with somewhat greater
-lenity than the rest of the Moors; and, upon the departure of her
-husband for Jarra, not only obtained him permission to join the party,
-but prevailed upon the tyrant to restore him his horse, saddle, and
-bridle, together with a part of his apparel. His faithful black boy
-Demba, however, was taken from him, notwithstanding his animated
-remonstrances to Ali, who, upon his pressing the point rather warmly,
-only replied, that if he did not instantly mount his horse and depart,
-he should share the fate of his slave. “There is something in the frown
-of a tyrant,” says Park, “which rouses the most secret emotions of
-the heart; I could not suppress my feelings; and for once entertained
-an indignant wish to rid the world of such a monster. Poor Demba was
-not less affected than myself; he had formed a strong attachment
-towards me, and had a cheerfulness of disposition which often beguiled
-the tedious hours of captivity; he was likewise a proficient in the
-Bambarra tongue, and promised, on that account, to be of great use to
-me in future. But it was in vain to expect any thing favourable to
-humanity from a people who are strangers to its dictates. So having
-shaken hands with this unfortunate boy, and blended my tears with his,
-assuring him, however, I would do the best to redeem him, I saw him led
-off by three of Ali’s slaves towards the camp at Bubaker.”
-
-Upon his arrival at Jarra, where he was shortly afterward transferred
-by Ali to tyrants of a lower grade, his condition, far from being
-improved, was only rendered the more intolerable. The city itself,
-moreover, was in a state of the utmost confusion. Malcontents from
-Kaarta having taken refuge here, had recently made an incursion into
-their native country, carried off a large quantity of plunder, and thus
-drawn the vengeance of their king against the city. All those who had
-reason to dread his resentment were now, therefore, preparing to fly
-into Bambarra; and Park, whose route lay in the same direction, became
-exceedingly desirous of effecting his escape from the Moors, that he
-might seize upon this fortunate occasion of fulfilling the object
-of his mission. “Their departure,” says he, speaking of the black
-fugitives, “was very affecting: the women and children crying, the men
-sullen and dejected, and all of them looking back with regret on their
-native town; and on the wells and rocks beyond which their ambition had
-never tempted them to stray, and where they had laid all their plans of
-future happiness; all of which they were now forced to abandon, and to
-seek shelter among strangers.”
-
-Hoping to escape in this confused throng, he mounted his horse; and
-taking a bag of corn before him, rode slowly off along with the
-townspeople. On their arrival at Queira, a village at no great distance
-from the city, Park began to flatter himself that he had really eluded
-the vigilance of his persecutors; but before the agreeable idea had got
-a firm footing in his mind, he saw Ali’s chief slave, accompanied by
-four Moors, arrive, and take up their lodgings with the dooty. Johnson,
-our traveller’s interpreter, suspecting the design of this visit, sent
-two boys to overhear their conversation, by which means he learned that
-it was their intention to carry Park back to Bubaker. Upon this he at
-once came to the desperate resolution to effect his deliverance that
-very night from his pursuers, or to perish in the attempt. Johnson, who
-applauded this determination, but wanted the courage to imitate it, was
-nevertheless exceedingly well disposed to aid in effecting his master’s
-escape. He therefore undertook to keep watch upon the movements of the
-enemy, while Park was preparing for flight. About midnight he got all
-his apparel in readiness, which consisted of two shirts, two pair of
-trousers, two pocket-handkerchiefs, an upper and under waistcoat, a
-hat, a pair of half-boots, and a cloak. Besides these things he had
-not in his possession a single bead, or any other article, with which
-to purchase food for himself, or provender for his horse:--“About
-daybreak, Johnson, who had been listening to the Moors all night,
-came,” says he, “and whispered to me that they were all asleep. The
-awful crisis was now arrived when I was again either to taste the
-blessings of freedom, or languish out my days in captivity. A cold
-sweat moistened my forehead as I thought of the dreadful alternative,
-and reflected that one way or the other, my fate must be decided in
-the course of the ensuing day. But to deliberate was to lose the only
-chance of escaping. So taking up my bundle, I stepped gently over the
-negroes who were sleeping in the open air; and, having mounted my
-horse, I bade Johnson farewell, desiring him to take particular care of
-the papers I had intrusted him with, and inform my friends in Gambia
-that he had left me in good health on my way to Bambarra. I proceeded
-with great caution, surveying each bush, and frequently listening and
-looking behind me for the Moorish horsemen, until I was about a mile
-from the town, when I was surprised to find myself in the neighbourhood
-of a korree, belonging to the Moors. The shepherds followed me for
-about a mile, hooting and throwing stones after me; and when I was out
-of their reach, and had begun to indulge the pleasing hope of escaping,
-I was again greatly alarmed to hear somebody halloo behind me; and
-looking back I saw three Moors on horseback, coming after me at full
-speed, whooping and brandishing their double-barrel guns: I knew it was
-in vain to think of escaping, and therefore turned back and met them;
-when two of them caught hold of my bridle, one on each side, and the
-third, presenting his musket, told me I must go back to Ali.”
-
-It soon appeared, however, that these gentlemen were merely private
-robbers, who were fearful that their master had not sufficiently
-pillaged the stranger; for, after examining his bundle, and plundering
-him of his cloak, they bade him begone, and follow them no further. Too
-happy to be rid of the villains at any rate, he immediately struck
-into the woods, and continued his journey. His joy at thus escaping
-from the Moors was quickly damped by the consideration that he must
-very soon be in want of both food and water, neither of which could he
-procure without approaching villages or wells, where he would almost
-inevitably encounter his old enemies. He therefore pushed on with all
-the vigour of which he was possessed, in the hope of reaching some
-town or village of the kingdom of Bambarra. But he already began to
-experience the tortures of thirst. His mouth was parched and inflamed;
-a sudden dimness, accompanied by symptoms of fainting, would frequently
-come over his eyes; and as his horse also was exceedingly fatigued,
-he began to apprehend that he should perish of thirst. Some shrubs,
-the leaves of which he chewed to relieve the burning pain in his mouth
-and throat, were all found to be bitter and of no service. “A little
-before sunset, having reached the top of a gentle rising,” says Park,
-“I climbed a high tree, from the topmost branches of which I cast a
-melancholy look over the barren wilderness, but without discovering the
-most distant trace of a human dwelling. The same dismal uniformity of
-shrubs and sand everywhere presented itself, and the horizon was level
-and uninterrupted as that of the sea.
-
-“Descending from the tree, I found my horse devouring the stubble and
-brushwood with great avidity; and as I was now too faint to attempt
-walking, and my horse too much fatigued to carry me, I thought it
-but an act of humanity, and perhaps the last I should ever have it
-in my power to perform, to take off his bridle and let him shift for
-himself; in doing which, I was affected with sickness and giddiness;
-and, falling upon the sand, felt as if the hour of death was fast
-approaching. Here then (thought I), after a short but ineffectual
-struggle, terminate all my hopes of being useful in my day and
-generation--here must the short span of my life come to an end. I
-cast, as I believed, a last look on the surrounding scene, and while
-I reflected on the awful change that was about to take place, this
-world and its enjoyments seemed to vanish from my recollection. Nature,
-however, at length resumed its functions; and on recovering my senses
-I found myself stretched upon the sand, with the bridle still in my
-hand, and the sun just sinking behind the trees. I now summoned all
-my resolution, and determined to make another effort to prolong my
-existence: and, as the evening was somewhat cool, I resolved to travel
-as far as my limbs would carry me, in hopes of reaching (my only
-resource) a watering-place. With this view I put the bridle upon my
-horse, and driving him before me, went slowly along for about an hour,
-when I perceived some lightning from the north-east--a most delightful
-sight, for it promised rain. The darkness and lightning increased very
-rapidly; and in less than an hour I heard the wind roaring behind the
-bushes. I had already opened my mouth to receive the refreshing drops
-which I expected: but I was instantly covered with a cloud of sand,
-driven with such force by the wind as to give a very disagreeable
-sensation to my face and arms; and I was obliged to mount my horse and
-stop under a bush to prevent being suffocated. The sand continued to
-fly for near an hour in amazing quantities, after which I again set
-forward, and travelled with difficulty until ten o’clock. About this
-time I was agreeably surprised by some very vivid flashes of lightning,
-followed by a few heavy drops of rain. In a little time the sand ceased
-to fly, and I alighted and spread out all my clean clothes to collect
-the rain, which at length I saw would certainly fall. For more than an
-hour it rained plentifully, and I quenched my thirst by wringing and
-sucking my clothes.
-
-“There being no moon, it was remarkably dark; so that I was obliged to
-lead my horse, and direct my way by the compass, which the lightning
-enabled me to observe. In this manner I travelled with tolerable
-expedition until past midnight; when the lightning became more distant,
-and I was under the necessity of groping along, to the no small danger
-of my hands and eyes. About two o’clock my horse started at something;
-and, looking round, I was not a little surprised to see a light at
-a short distance among the trees, and supposing it to be a town, I
-groped along the sand in hopes of finding corn-stalks, cotton, or
-other appearances of cultivation, but found none. As I approached, I
-perceived a number of other lights in different places, and began to
-suspect that I had fallen upon a party of Moors. However, in my present
-situation, I was resolved to see who they were, if I could do it with
-safety. I accordingly led my horse cautiously towards the light, and
-heard by the lowing of the cattle, and the clamorous tongues of the
-herdsmen, that it was a watering-place, and most likely belonged to
-the Moors. Delightful as the sound of the human voice was to me, I
-resolved once more to strike into the woods, and rather run the risk
-of perishing with hunger, than trust myself again in their hands; but
-being still thirsty, and dreading the approach of the burning day, I
-thought it prudent to search for the wells, which I expected to find
-at no great distance. In this pursuit I inadvertently approached so
-near one of the tents as to to be perceived by a woman, who immediately
-screamed out. The people came running to her assistance from some of
-the neighbouring tents, and passed so very near me that I thought I was
-discovered, and hastened again into the woods.
-
-“About a mile from this place I heard a loud and confused noise,
-somewhere to the right of my course, and in a short time was happy
-to find it was the croaking of frogs, which was heavenly music to my
-ears. I followed the sound, and at daybreak arrived at some shallow
-muddy pools, so full of frogs that it was difficult to discern the
-water. The noise they made frightened my horse, and I was obliged to
-keep them quiet by beating the water with a branch until he had drunk.
-Having here quenched my thirst, I ascended a tree, and the morning
-being clear, I soon perceived the smoke of the watering-place which
-I had passed in the night, and observed another pillar of smoke,
-east-southeast, distant 12 or 14 miles.”
-
-Towards this column of smoke, which, as he was informed, arose from
-a Foulah village, he now directed his course; but on arriving at the
-place, was inhospitably driven from every door, except that of an old
-woman, who kindly received him into her dwelling, and furnished him
-with food for himself and with provender for his horse. Even here,
-however, the influence of Ali pursued him like his evil genius. The
-people who had collected round him while he was eating, began, as
-he clearly discovered from their expressions, to form the design of
-carrying him back once more to Benowm or Bubaker. He therefore hastened
-his departure, and having wandered among the woods all day, passed the
-night under a tree. In this way he continued his journey, sometimes
-meeting with hospitality, but more frequently avoiding the dwellings of
-man, and subsisting upon the wild produce of the woods, and the water
-of a few pools, to which the croaking of the frogs directed him.
-
-At length he entered the kingdom of Bambarra, where he found the people
-more hospitable in proportion as they were more opulent than their
-neighbours. Cultivation was here carried on in a spirited manner and
-on an extensive scale, and “hunger,” as the natives expressed it,
-“was never known.” The country itself was beautiful, intersected on
-all sides by rivulets, which, after a rain-storm, were swelled into
-rapid streams. Park’s horse was now so attenuated by fatigue that it
-appeared like a mere skeleton, which the traveller, fearing to mount,
-drove before him, as if to scare away the crows. The Bambarrans, whose
-hospitable disposition was accompanied by but little delicacy, were
-infinitely amused at this droll spectacle. Taking him for a Moor, they
-supposed from his appearance that he must be one of those religious
-mendicants who, having performed the pilgrimage to the holy cities,
-thenceforward consider themselves fully entitled to subsist upon the
-labours of their industrious coreligionists. “‘He has been at Mecca,’
-said one; ‘you may see that by his clothes.’ Another asked if my horse
-was sick; a third wished to purchase it, &c. So that I believe the very
-slaves were ashamed to be seen in my company.”
-
-However, in spite of all this laughter and ridicule, he proceeded on
-his way, and at length had the satisfaction to be informed that on the
-morrow he should see the Niger, denominated _Joliba_, or the “Great
-Water,” by the natives. Next morning, the 21st of July, after passing
-through several large villages, he saw the smoke ascend over Sego,
-the capital of Bambarra, and felt elate with joy at the thought of
-drawing near so important an object of his mission. “As we approached
-the town,” says Park, “I was fortunate enough to overtake the fugitive
-Kaartans, to whose kindness I had been so much indebted in my journey
-through Bambarra. They readily agreed to introduce me to the king, and
-we rode together through some marshy ground, where, as I anxiously
-looked around for the river, one of them called out _Geo affilli_
-(see the water); and, looking forward, I saw with infinite pleasure
-the great object of my mission,--the long sought for, majestic Niger,
-glittering to the morning sun, as broad as the Thames at Westminster,
-and flowing slowly _to the eastward_. I hastened to the brink, and,
-having drunk of the water, lifted up my fervent thanks in prayer
-to the Great Ruler of all things for having thus far crowned my
-endeavours with success.”
-
-Sego, the capital of Bambarra, consisted of four distinct towns, two
-on the northern, and two on the southern bank of the Niger. The king
-at this period resided on the southern bank, while Park had arrived on
-the opposite side. The communication between the different quarters of
-the city was kept up by means of large canoes, which were constantly
-passing and repassing; notwithstanding which, so great was the pressure
-of passengers, that Park was compelled to wait upwards of two hours
-before he could obtain even a chance of being ferried over. Meanwhile,
-the prospect before him was novel and striking in the highest degree.
-“The view of this extensive city,” he observes, “the numerous canoes
-on the river, the crowded population, and the cultivated state of the
-surrounding country formed altogether a prospect of civilization and
-magnificence which I little expected to find in the bosom of Africa.”
-
-While he was thus waiting for a passage, the news was conveyed to
-Mansong that a white man was on the banks of the river coming to see
-him. The king, who seems to have been alarmed at this intelligence,
-immediately despatched a messenger, who was directed to inform the
-stranger that he would not be admitted into the royal presence until
-the purport of his mission were made known; and that, in the mean
-while, he was prohibited from passing the river. He was likewise told
-that the king desired him to seek lodgings in one of the villages in
-the vicinity of the capital. As there was no alternative, he at once
-set out for the village, where, to his great mortification, he found
-that no person would admit him into his house. “I was regarded with
-astonishment and fear,” he observes, “and was obliged to sit all day
-without victuals in the shade of a tree; and the night threatened to be
-very uncomfortable, for the wind rose, and there was great appearance
-of a heavy rain; and the wild beasts were so very numerous in the
-neighbourhood, that I should have been under the necessity of climbing
-up a tree, and resting among the branches. About sunset, however, as
-I was preparing to pass the night in this manner, and had turned my
-horse loose that he might graze at liberty, a woman returning from
-the labours of the field stopped to observe me, and, perceiving that
-I was weary and dejected, inquired into my situation, which I briefly
-explained to her; whereupon, with looks of great compassion, she took
-up my saddle and bridle, and told me to follow her. Having conducted
-me into her hut, she lighted up a lamp, spread a mat upon the floor,
-and told me I might remain there for the night. Finding that I was very
-hungry, she said she would procure me something to eat; she accordingly
-went out, and returned in a short time with a very fine fish, which,
-having caused to be half-broiled upon some embers, she gave me for
-supper. The rites of hospitality being thus performed towards a
-stranger in distress, my worthy benefactress, pointing to the mat, and
-telling me I might sleep there without apprehension, called to the
-female part of her family, who had stood gazing on me all the while in
-fixed astonishment, to resume their task of spinning cotton, in which
-they continued to employ themselves great part of the night. They
-lightened their labour by songs, one of which was composed extempore,
-for I was myself the subject of it; it was sung by one of the young
-women, the rest joining in a sort of chorus. The air was sweet and
-plaintive, and the words literally translated were these:--‘The winds
-roared, and the rains fell; the poor white man, faint and weary, came
-and sat under our tree; he has no mother to bring him milk, no wife to
-grind his corn.’ Chorus:--‘Let us pity the white man, no mother has
-he,’ &c. Trifling as this recital may appear to the reader, to a person
-in my situation the circumstance was affecting in the highest degree.
-I was oppressed by such unexpected kindness that sleep fled my eyes. In
-the morning I presented my compassionate landlady with two of the four
-brass buttons which remained on my waistcoat, the only recompense I
-could make her.”
-
-Although Mansong refused to admit our traveller into his presence, and
-seemed at first to neglect him, it soon appeared that this conduct did
-not arise from any churlish or inhospitable feelings; for while he
-persisted in his refusal to see him, and signified his pleasure that he
-should forthwith depart from the city, he sent him a present of five
-thousand cowries and a guide to Sansanding. Park immediately obeyed
-the royal command, and learned from the conversation of his guide on
-the way, that the king’s motives for thus dismissing him without an
-audience were at once prudent and liberal, since he feared that by the
-least show of favour he should excite the jealousy and envy of the
-Moorish inhabitants, from whose inveterate malice he might be unable to
-protect him.
-
-With this guide he proceeded to Sansanding, where he was hospitably
-received by the dooty, and would, as the king’s stranger, have enjoyed
-much quiet and consideration, had he not had the misfortune to meet
-with some of his old enemies the Moors, who insisted on conducting him
-to the mosque, and converting him into a Mohammedan at once. However,
-the dooty, by exerting his authority, freed him from these fanatics,
-and ordered a sheep to be killed, and part of it dressed for his
-supper. “About midnight, when the Moors had left me,” says Park, “he
-paid me a visit, and with much earnestness desired me to write him a
-saphie. ‘If a Moor’s saphie is good,’ said this hospitable old man, ‘a
-white man’s must needs be better.’ I readily furnished him with one
-possessed of all the virtues I could concentrate, for it contained the
-Lord’s Prayer. The pen with which it was written was made of a reed, a
-little charcoal and gum-water made very tolerable ink, and a thin board
-answered the purpose of paper.”
-
-From Sansanding he departed early in the morning, before the Moors
-were stirring. The road now lay through the woods, and the guide, who
-understood the dangers of the way, moved forward with the greatest
-circumspection, frequently stopping and looking under the bushes. Upon
-observing this, Park inquired the reason, and was told that lions were
-very plentiful in that part of the country, and very often attacked
-travellers in the woods. While they were conversing on this subject
-Park discovered a camelopard at a little distance, the fore-legs of
-which, from a hasty glance, appeared much longer than the hinder.
-“Shortly after this,” says he, “as we were crossing a large open
-plain where there were a few scattered bushes, my guide, who was a
-little way before me, wheeled his horse round in a moment, calling out
-something in the Foulah language which I did not understand. I inquired
-in Mandingo what he meant. ‘_Wara billi billi_’ (a very large lion)!
-said he, and made signs for me to ride away. But my horse was too much
-fatigued; so we rode slowly past the bush from which the animal had
-given us the alarm. Not seeing any thing myself, however, I thought my
-guide had been mistaken, when the Foulah suddenly put his hand to his
-mouth, exclaiming, ‘_Soubah an alluhi_’ (God preserve us)! and to my
-great surprise I then perceived a large red lion at a short distance
-from the bush, with his head couched between his fore-paws. I expected
-he would instantly spring upon me, and instinctively pulled my feet
-from my stirrups to throw myself on the ground, that my horse might
-become the victim rather than myself. But it is probable the lion was
-not hungry; for he quietly suffered us to pass, though we were fairly
-within his reach.”
-
-About sunset they arrived at Moodiboo, “a delightful village on the
-banks of the Niger, commanding a view of the river for many miles, both
-to the east and west. The small green islands, the peaceful retreat
-of some industrious Foulahs, whose cattle were here secure from the
-attacks of wild beasts, and the majestic breadth of the river, which
-is here much larger than at Sego, render the situation one of the
-most enchanting in the world.” Park was now so worn out with fatigue
-and suffering, that his landlord, fearing he might die in his house,
-hurried him away, though he was scarcely able to walk, and his horse
-still less able to carry him. In fact, they had not proceeded far
-before the poor beast fell down, and could no more be made to rise;
-so that, taking off his saddle and bridle, our traveller with extreme
-reluctance abandoned him to his fate, and began to toil along on foot
-after his guide. In this way they reached Kea, a small fishing-village
-on the Niger, where Park embarked in a fisherman’s canoe which was
-going down the stream, while the guide returned to Sego.
-
-In this canoe our traveller reached Moorzan, whence he was conveyed
-across the river to Silla, a large town on the opposite shore. It
-was with great difficulty that he here obtained admission into the
-strangers’ room of the dooty’s house, a damp, uncomfortable place,
-where he had a severe paroxysm of fever during the night. Here his
-resolution and energy, of which no traveller ever possessed a larger
-share, began at length to fail. No hope of success remained. He
-therefore, with extreme sorrow and anguish of mind, determined on
-returning whence he had come; but let me lay before the reader his
-own simple and manly account of the matter, which cannot fail to
-impress even the most insensible with veneration for a degree of
-courage and intrepidity amounting to heroism. “Worn down by sickness,
-exhausted by hunger and fatigue, half-naked, and without any article
-of value by which I might procure provisions, clothes, or lodging,
-I began,” says Park, “to reflect seriously on my situation. I was
-now convinced by painful experience that the obstacles to my further
-progress were insurmountable. The tropical rains had already set in
-with all their violence; the rice-grounds and swamps were already
-overflowed; and in a few days more travelling of every kind except by
-water would be completely obstructed. The cowries which remained of
-the King of Bambarra’s present were not sufficient to hire a canoe
-for any great distance; and I had but little hopes of subsisting by
-charity in a country where the Moors have such influence. But, above
-all, I perceived I was advancing more and more within the power of
-those merciless fanatics; and from my reception both at Sego and
-Sansanding, I was apprehensive that, in attempting to reach even
-Jeuné (unless under the protection of some man of consequence among
-them, which I had no means of obtaining), I should sacrifice my life
-to no purpose; for my discoveries would perish with me. The prospect
-either way was gloomy. In returning to the Gambia, a journey on foot
-of many hundred miles presented itself to my contemplation, through
-regions and countries unknown. Nevertheless, this seemed to be the only
-alternative; for I saw inevitable destruction in attempting to proceed
-to the eastward. With this conviction on my mind, I hope my readers
-will acknowledge I did right in going no farther. I had made every
-exertion to execute my mission in its fullest extent which prudence
-could justify. Had there been the most distant prospect of a successful
-termination, neither the unavoidable hardships of the journey nor the
-dangers of a second captivity should have forced me to desist. This,
-however, necessity compelled me to do.”
-
-When he had come to this resolution, he thought it incumbent upon
-him before he left Silla to collect whatever information might be
-within his reach respecting the further course of the Niger, and
-the situation and extent of the various kingdoms in its vicinity.
-Subsequent travellers have solved the problem, the honour of explaining
-which was denied to Park. We now know that this great river, after
-having flowed to a considerable distance eastward of Timbuctoo,
-makes a bend or elbow like the Burrampooter, and, after pursuing a
-south-westerly course, falls into the Atlantic Ocean on the coast of
-Benin.
-
-On the 30th of July our traveller commenced his return westward, by
-the same route through which he had reached Silla. In a few days he
-recovered his horse, which had in some measure regained its strength,
-though it was still too weak to be ridden. The rainy season having now
-set in, the whole of the plain country was quickly inundated; so that
-our traveller was often in danger of losing his way while traversing
-savannahs many miles in extent, knee-deep in water. In several places
-he waded breast-deep across the swamps. The huts of the villages in
-which he passed the night, being undermined or softened by the rain,
-often fell in; and the noise of their fall sometimes kept him awake,
-expecting that his own might be the next. His situation was now even
-worse than during his progress eastward. A report had been widely
-circulated that he was a spy, in consequence of which he was in some
-places civilly refused admittance into the towns, in others repulsed
-from the gates with violence; so that he now appeared inevitably
-doomed to perish of hunger. However, when the fatal hour seemed at
-hand, some charitable being always appeared with a poor but seasonable
-supply, such, perhaps, as a little raw corn, which prolonged his life,
-and supplied him with strength to achieve his memorable journey. “On
-the evening of the 15th of August I arrived,” says Park, “at a small
-village called Song, the surly inhabitants of which would not receive
-me, nor so much as permit me to enter the gate; but as lions were very
-numerous in this neighbourhood, and I had frequently in the course of
-the day seen the impression of their feet upon the road, I resolved to
-stay in the vicinity of the village. Having collected some grass for
-my horse, I accordingly laid down under a tree by the gate. About ten
-o’clock I heard the hollow roar of a lion at no great distance, and
-attempted to open the gate; but the people from within told me that no
-person must attempt to enter the gate without the dooty’s permission.
-I begged them to inform the dooty that a lion was approaching the
-village, and I hoped he would allow me to come within the gate. I
-waited for an answer to this message with great anxiety; for the lion
-kept prowling round the village, and once advanced so very near me that
-I heard him rustling among the grass, and climbed the tree for safety.
-About midnight the dooty with some of his people opened the gate, and
-desired me to come in. They were convinced, they said, I was not a
-Moor; for no Moor ever waited any time at the gate of a village without
-cursing the inhabitants.”
-
-The history of this journey now becomes nothing more than a repetition
-of similar sufferings. Hunger, fatigue, and depression of spirits
-attack the traveller by turns. Nothing, however, subdues his courage.
-Obstacle after obstacle yields to his persevering intrepidity, and
-he pushes forward with invincible ardour towards the coast. In one
-place, at the request of a native who had grown opulent by industrious
-application to commerce, he wrote charms for a good supper; and,
-finding the contrivance productive, continued the practice next day for
-small presents of various kinds. On other occasions, where superstition
-did not come to his aid, humanity interposed, and snatched him from
-starvation. At Bammakoo he was hospitably treated, even by a Moor,
-who, having travelled to Rio Grande, had conversed with Christians,
-and conceived a favourable idea of their character. The rains had now
-increased the Niger to a vast size, and rendered impassable almost
-every road; but, as our traveller’s finances had long been exhausted,
-he found himself compelled to proceed, the charity of the natives
-not extending so far as to the maintaining of a stranger for several
-months. The ordinary roads being obstructed by the rains, the only
-practicable route, wild, dreary, and desolate, lay over steril rocky
-mountains, over which, it was feared, a horse could not pass.
-
-Finding that a singing-man was about to proceed by this road to
-Sibidooloo, Park placed himself under his guidance, and quitted
-Bammakoo. He had not proceeded far, however, before his companion,
-finding that he had taken the wrong path, escaped among the rocks,
-and left him to find his way how he might. He soon arrived at a
-village, where he was entertained with hospitality, and where he
-passed the night. Next day, as he was quietly pursuing his course,
-a troop of peasants presented themselves, whom he at first took
-for elephant-hunters, but who very shortly proved themselves to be
-banditti. Pretending to arrest him in the name of the King of the
-Foulahs, they commanded him to follow them, until, having reached a
-dark lonely part of a wood, one of them exclaimed in the Mandingo
-language, “This place will do!” and immediately snatched his hat from
-his head. “Though I was by no means free from apprehension,” says Park,
-“yet I was resolved to show as few signs of fear as possible; and
-therefore told them, that unless my hat was returned to me I should
-proceed no farther. But before I had time to receive an answer another
-drew a knife, and, seizing upon a metal button which remained upon my
-waistcoat, cut it off, and put it into his pocket. Their intentions
-were now obvious; and I thought that the easier they were permitted
-to rob me of every thing the less I had to fear. I therefore allowed
-them to search my pockets without resistance, and examine every part
-of my apparel, which they did with the most scrupulous exactness.
-But, observing that I had one waistcoat under another, they insisted
-that I should cast them both off; and at last, to make sure work,
-stripped me quite naked. Even my half-boots, though the sole of one of
-them was tied on to my foot with a broken bridle-rein, were minutely
-inspected. While they were examining the plunder, I begged them with
-great earnestness to return my pocket-compass; but when I pointed
-it out to them, as it was lying on the ground, one of the banditti,
-thinking I was about to take it up, cocked his musket, and swore he
-would lay me dead upon the spot if I presumed to put my hand upon it.
-After this, some of them went away with my horse, and the remainder
-stood considering whether they should leave me quite naked, or allow me
-something to shelter me from the sun. Humanity at last prevailed; they
-returned me the worst of the two shirts and a pair of trousers; and, as
-they went away, one of them threw back my hat, in the crown of which I
-kept my memorandums; and this was probably the reason why they did not
-wish to keep it.”
-
-This was the most terrible misfortune that had hitherto befallen him,
-and at first, his mind appeared to sink under the united influence
-of grief and terror. For a while he sat in sullen dejection,
-half-persuaded that he had no alternative but to lie down and perish.
-Presently, however, thoughts of religion, and a reliance upon
-Providence, succeeding this extreme dejection, his mind gradually
-regained its fervent tone:--
-
-“I was, indeed, a stranger,” he thought, “in a strange land; yet I was
-still under the protecting eye of that Providence, who has condescended
-to call himself the stranger’s friend. At this moment, painful as
-my reflections were, the extraordinary beauty of a small moss in
-fructification irresistibly caught my eye. I mention this to show from
-what trifling circumstances the mind will sometimes derive consolation;
-for though the whole plant was not larger than the top of one of my
-fingers, I could not contemplate the delicate conformation of its
-roots, leaves, and capsula without admiration. Can that Being (thought
-I) who planted, watered, and brought to perfection, in this obscure
-part of the world, a thing which appears of so small importance, look
-with unconcern upon the situation and sufferings of creatures formed
-after his own image? Surely not! Reflections like these would not allow
-me to despair; I started up, and, disregarding both danger and fatigue,
-travelled forwards, assured that relief was at hand; and I was not
-disappointed.”
-
-On arriving at Sibidooloo, Park related to the mansa, or chief of the
-town, the misfortune which had befallen him. This humane and excellent
-man, having heard him patiently to an end, took the pipe from his
-mouth, and tossing up the sleeve of his coat with an indignant air,
-“Sit down,” said he, “you shall have every thing restored to you; I
-have sworn it.” He then took the necessary measures for the recovery of
-the traveller’s property, and invited him to partake of his hospitable
-fare until this should have been effected. After spending a few days at
-this place, without hearing any news of his horse or other property,
-our traveller removed to a distant village, where he remained until the
-whole was discovered and restored to him, with the exception of his
-pocket compass, which had been broken to pieces. Having nothing else to
-bestow upon his hospitable landlords, he gave his horse to one, and his
-saddle and bridle to the other: and then taking his leave, proceeded
-on foot to Kamalia. At this town, romantically situated at the foot of
-a lofty mountain, he found a slave-merchant, who, intending to descend
-to the coast with a small caravan in the beginning of the dry season,
-offered our traveller an asylum until he should set out. Conceiving
-that it would be impossible to proceed during the rains, Park accepted
-his kind proposal, and promised in return to give him the price of a
-slave upon their arrival on the coast. Here a fever, which had for some
-time menaced him, manifested itself with great violence, and continued
-to torment him during the whole season of the rains. His landlord,
-meanwhile, exerted himself to keep up his hopes, and having by some
-means or another obtained possession of an English Common Prayer Book,
-he communicated the use of it to Park, who was thus enabled to beguile
-the gloomy hours of his solitude and sickness. At length the rains
-became less frequent, and the fever abated, so that he could move out
-to enjoy the fresh air in the fields.
-
-On the 19th of April, Karfa, the slave-merchant, having collected his
-slaves, and completed all necessary preparations, set out towards the
-coast, taking our traveller, to whom his behaviour had always been
-marked by the greatest kindness, along with him. Their road led them
-across a vast wilderness, where the sufferings of every member of the
-caravan, and more particularly of the slaves, were most exquisite; but
-affliction was far from having taught them commiseration, for a fine
-young female slave, fainting from fatigue, had no sooner signified
-her inability to go on, than the universal cry of the caravan was,
-“cut her throat, cut her throat.” By the interposition of Karfa her
-life was spared, but she was abandoned on the road, where she was no
-doubt soon devoured by wild beasts. At length, after a long, toilsome
-journey, Karfa succeeded in fulfilling his promise, and conducted our
-traveller safe to Pisania, where the good old man was overwhelmed with
-the gratitude of his guest. Park now took his passage in an American
-vessel, and on arriving in the West Indies, quitted this ship for a
-packet bound for Falmouth, where he arrived on the 22d of December,
-1797, after an absence of two years and seven months.
-
-Immediately on his landing he hastened to London, where he arrived
-before daylight on the morning of Christmas-day. It being too early an
-hour to call on his brother-in-law, Mr. Dickson, he strolled about for
-some time in the neighbouring streets. At length, finding one of the
-entrances into the gardens of the British Museum accidentally open,
-he went in and walked about there for some time. It happened that Mr.
-Dickson, who had the care of those gardens, went there early that
-morning on some trifling business. What must have been his emotions on
-beholding, at that extraordinary time and place, the vision, as it must
-at first have appeared, of his long lost friend, the object of so many
-anxious reflections, and whom he had long numbered with the dead.
-
-He was now received with distinguished honour by the African
-Association, and the various literary men whom he met with in London.
-In the mean time his travels, which the Association permitted him to
-publish on his own account, were announced; and both during his stay
-in London, and the visit which he paid to his friends in Scotland,
-all his leisure hours were devoted to the compiling and arranging
-of the materials for the work. It appeared in the spring of 1799,
-and immediately acquired that degree of popularity which it has ever
-since maintained. In the composition of his travels, however, he was
-assisted by Bryan Edwards, author of a “History of the West Indies,”
-an advocate of the slave-trade, in deference to whom Park is said
-to have suppressed his own opinions, which had a contrary tendency.
-The apology offered for this mean compliance is, that Bryan Edwards,
-being secretary to the African Association, had it in his power
-greatly to influence the future fortunes of our traveller. I should
-prefer supposing that his arguments produced a temporary conviction
-upon Park’s mind, unless some more convincing proof than has yet been
-brought forward could be adduced to substantiate the accusation of so
-remarkable a deficiency of moral courage in a man in whom, on all other
-occasions, courage seemed to be the prevailing virtue.
-
-However this may be, Park again returned to Scotland soon after the
-publication of his travels, where, on the 2d of August, 1799, he
-married one of the daughters of Mr. Anderson, of Selkirk, with whom
-he had served his apprenticeship. He now seemed to have forgotten
-his ambitious feelings, and for more than two years resided on the
-farm at Fowlshiels, with his mother and one of his brothers. He then
-removed to the town of Peebles, where he resumed the practice of his
-profession, and seems, in a short time, to have acquired a good share
-of the business of the place. But it will easily be imagined that the
-quiet obscure life of a country surgeon could possess no charms for
-an ardent ambitious mind like Park’s. He longed to be performing upon
-some more stirring scene. In this dreary solitude, therefore, where
-the indulgence of day-dreams would appear to have been his principal
-amusement, scheme after scheme seems to have presented itself to his
-mind, each giving way in its turn to another equally impracticable.
-At length he received, through the medium of Sir Joseph Banks,
-intelligence that the African Association were once more about to send
-a mission into the interior of Africa, for the purpose of penetrating
-to and navigating the Niger; and that, in case government should enter
-into the plan, he himself would certainly be recommended as the person
-proper to be employed for carrying it into execution.
-
-Dilatoriness is too frequently the characteristic of the proceedings
-of great public bodies. The first idea of this new mission was
-conceived in 1801, but it was not until the beginning of 1805 that
-the expedition was ultimately determined on, when Park received from
-Lord Camden his appointment as its chief conductor. “For the better
-enabling you to execute this service,” says his lordship, “his majesty
-has granted you the brevet commission of captain in Africa, and has
-also granted a similar commission of lieutenant to Mr. Alexander
-Anderson, whom you have recommended as a proper person to accompany
-you. Mr. Scott has also been selected to attend you as draughtsman. You
-are hereby empowered to enlist with you for this expedition any number
-you think proper of the garrison at Goree, not exceeding forty-five,
-which the commandant of that island will be ordered to place under your
-command, giving them such bounties or encouragement as may be necessary
-to induce them cheerfully to join with you in the expedition.”
-
-Five thousand pounds were at the same time placed at Park’s disposal,
-and further directions given him respecting the course and line of
-conduct he was expected to pursue. With these instructions Park and
-his companions proceeded to Portsmouth, where they were joined by four
-or five artificers, appointed for the service from the dock-yards.
-They sailed on the 30th of January, and on the 28th of April arrived
-at Pisania. Here they made preparations for entering the interior. The
-party consisted of forty men, two lieutenants, a draughtsman, a guide,
-and Park himself. Their provisions and merchandise were carried by
-asses, and they had horses for themselves. Thus appointed, they left
-Pisania on the 4th of May. It was very quickly discovered, however,
-that their asses were unequal to the task imposed upon them; some lay
-down, others kicked off their burdens, and it became necessary to
-increase the number of these vicious animals.
-
-At Bady, a town in the interior frontier of Woolli, they were led into
-a quarrel with the farauba, or chief of the town, respecting the
-amount of duties to be paid by their caravan, in which, though the
-conduct of the African was rude and peremptory, the travellers were
-clearly in the wrong. A few days after this affair the caravan had an
-adventure with a new species of enemy. On the 24th of May they reached
-a place which they denominated Bee’s Creek, where they halted with the
-intention of encamping there. “We had no sooner unloaded the asses at
-the creek,” says Park, “than some of Isaaco’s people, being in search
-of honey, unfortunately disturbed a large swarm of bees near where the
-coffle had halted. The bees came out in immense numbers, and attacked
-men and beasts at the same time. Luckily, most of the asses were loose,
-and galloped up the valley; but the horses and people were very much
-stung, and obliged to scamper in all directions. The fire which had
-been kindled for cooking, having been deserted, spread and set fire to
-the bamboos; and our baggage had like to have been burnt. In fact, for
-half an hour the bees seemed to have put an end to our journey.
-
-“In the evening, when the bees became less troublesome, and we could
-venture to collect our cattle, we found that many of them were very
-much stung and swelled about the head. Three asses were missing; one
-died in the evening and one next morning, and we were compelled to
-leave one at Sibikillin; in all six: besides which, our guide lost his
-horse, and many of the people were very much stung about the face and
-hands.”
-
-About the middle of June the rains began to set in, accompanied
-by violent tornadoes. The earth was quickly covered with water.
-The soldiers were affected with vomiting, or with an irresistible
-inclination to sleep. Our traveller himself was affected in a similar
-manner during the storm, and, notwithstanding that he used every
-exertion to keep away heaviness, at length fell asleep on the damp
-ground. The soldiers did the same thing. In the morning twelve of
-them were sick. In this vicinity he saw many pits, from which gold was
-obtained in large quantities by washing. As the caravan proceeded, many
-of the soldiers growing delirious, or too weak to continue the march,
-were left behind to the care of the natives; while others died on the
-road, or were drowned in the rivers. Some, still more unfortunate if
-possible, were lost in the woods, where they were no doubt devoured
-by wild beasts. Meanwhile the natives, who imagined that the caravan
-contained prodigious wealth, hung upon their march, plundered them
-at every turn, and as often as they appeared too weak to resist,
-endeavoured to extort presents from them.
-
-The condition of the men now became desperate. Day after day some poor
-wretch was abandoned to his fate, some in one way, some in another.
-I give one example which may serve for the whole. “Three miles east
-of the village of Koombandi,” says Park, “William Alston, one of the
-seamen whom I received from his majesty’s ship Squirrel, became so
-faint that he fell from his ass, and allowed the ass to run away.
-Set him on my horse, but found he could not sit without holding him.
-Replaced him on the ass, but he still tumbled off. Put him again on the
-horse, and made one man hold him upright while I led the horse; but, as
-he made no exertion to hold himself erect, it was impossible to keep
-him on the horse, and after repeated tumbles he begged to be left in
-the woods till morning. I left a loaded pistol with him, and put some
-cartridges into the crown of his hat.”
-
-In crossing the Wondu the caravan was nearly deprived of its guide in
-the following manner: “Our guide, Isaaco, was very active in pushing
-the asses into the water, and shoving along the canoe; but as he was
-afraid that we could not have them all carried over in the course of
-the day, he attempted to drive six of the asses across the river
-farther down, where the water was shallower. When he had reached the
-middle of the river, a crocodile rose close to him, and instantly
-seizing him by the left thigh, pulled him under water. With wonderful
-presence of mind he felt the head of the animal, and thrust his finger
-into its eye, on which it quitted its hold, and Isaaco attempted to
-reach the farther shore, calling loudly for a knife. But the crocodile
-returned and seized him by the other thigh, and again pulled him under
-water; he had recourse to the same expedient, and thrust his fingers
-into its eyes with such violence that it again quitted him; when it
-arose, flounced about on the surface of the water as if stupid, and
-then swam down the middle of the river. Isaaco proceeded to the other
-side, bleeding very much.”
-
-This event retarded for several days the march of the caravan. Besides,
-Park himself was attacked with fever, and their provisions, moreover,
-were now reduced to so low an ebb, that upon examination it was found
-that no more than rice for two days remained in their possession. This
-deficiency was, therefore, to be immediately supplied. Two persons
-were sent away with an ass to a distant village for rice, and in the
-mean time our traveller devoted his attentions to the wounds of the
-guide. The sailor who had been abandoned in the woods here rejoined
-the caravan quite naked, having been robbed of his clothes by the
-natives. The audacity of these thieves was extraordinary. In ascending
-an eminence two miles from Maniakono, Park himself was robbed in a very
-characteristic manner:--“As I was holding my musket carelessly in my
-hand, and looking round,” says he, “two of Numma’s sons came up to me;
-one of them requested me to give him some snuff; at this instant the
-other (called Woosaba), coming up behind me, snatched the musket from
-my hand, and ran off with it. I instantly sprung from the saddle and
-followed him with my sword, calling to Mr. Anderson to ride back, and
-tell some of the people to look after my horse. Mr. Anderson got within
-musket-shot of him; but, seeing it was Numma’s son, had some doubts
-about shooting him, and called to me if he should fire. Luckily I did
-not hear him, or I might possibly have recovered my musket at the risk
-of a long palaver, and perhaps the loss of half our baggage. The thief
-accordingly made his escape among the rocks; and when I returned to my
-horse, I found the other of the royal descendants had stolen my coat.”
-
-Their condition was now exceedingly distressing. Not only the soldiers
-and sailors, but Scott and Anderson began to lag behind, being attacked
-by fever, the first effect of which in those countries is to deprive
-the sufferer of his energies. Having remained for some time by the
-wayside with his dying friend, he placed him, when his strength
-appeared for a moment to return, upon his horse, and pushed forward
-towards their proposed halting-place, leading the horse by the bridle.
-“We had not proceeded above a mile,” says Park, “before we heard on our
-left a noise very much like the barking of a large mastiff, but ending
-in a hiss like the fuff[1] of a cat. I thought it must be some large
-monkey; and was observing to Mr. Anderson, ‘What a bouncing fellow that
-must be,’ when we heard another bark nearer to us, and presently a
-third still nearer, accompanied with a growl. I now suspected some wild
-beast meant to attack us, but could not conjecture of what species it
-was likely to be. We had not proceeded a hundred yards farther, when,
-coming to an opening in the bushes, I was not a little surprised to
-see three lions coming towards us. They were not so red as the lion I
-had formerly seen in Bambarra, but of a dusky colour, like that of an
-ass. They were very large, and came bounding over the long grass, not
-one after another, but all abreast of each other. I was afraid, if I
-allowed them to come too near us, and my piece should miss fire, that
-we should all be devoured by them. I therefore let go the bridle, and
-walked forwards to meet them. As soon as they were within a long shot
-of me, I fired at the centre one. I do not think I hit him; but they
-all stopped, looked at each other, and then bounded away a few paces,
-when one of them stopped and looked back at me. I was too busy in
-loading my piece to observe their motions as they went away, and was
-very happy to see the last of them march slowly off among the bushes.
-We had not proceeded above half a mile farther when we heard another
-bark and growl close to us among the bushes. This was, doubtless, one
-of the lions before seen; and I was afraid they would follow us till
-dark, when they would have too many opportunities of springing on us
-unawares. We however heard no more of them.”
-
-[1] _Fuff_ is an expressive Scotch word, applicable in its original
-sense to the explosive noise which a cat makes in flying at a dog.
-
-At length, from the brow of a hill, Park had once more the satisfaction
-of beholding the Niger, rolling its immense stream along the plain.
-But he was in no mood of mind to triumph at the sight. The majority
-of his companions had fallen on the way; of thirty-four soldiers
-and four carpenters who left the Gambia, only six soldiers and one
-carpenter reached the Niger. With this miserable remnant of his
-original force he descended the hill, and pitched his tents near
-the town of Bambakoo. Here some of the party
-embarked in canoes on the Niger, while others proceeded by land to the
-neighbourhood of Sego, which they reached on the 19th of September.
-Mansong was still king of Bambarra; and being highly gratified with
-their presents, not only gave them permission to build a boat on the
-Niger at whatever town they pleased, but engaged to protect, as far
-as his power extended, the trade of the whites in the interior. Park
-selected Sansanding as the place most eligible for building the boat,
-and removed thither as quickly as possible. Here immediately on his
-arrival he opened a shop, exhibiting a choice assortment of European
-goods, which sold so well among the natives that his success excited
-the envy of the Jinnic people, the Moors, and the other merchants of
-the place, who offered Mansong merchandise to a much greater value than
-the presents made him by Park, if he would either kill the strangers or
-drive them out of the country. Mansong, however, rejected the offer.
-“From the 8th to the 16th nothing of consequence occurred; I found my
-shop every day more and more crowded with customers; and such was my
-run of business, that I was sometimes forced to employ three tellers
-at once to count my cash. I turned one market-day twenty-five thousand
-seven hundred and fifty-six pieces of money (cowries).”
-
-Park now received intelligence of the death of Mr. Scott, who had been
-left behind near Bambakoo. Mansong very soon convinced the traveller
-that he understood the art of receiving presents much better than that
-of returning them; for upon being requested to furnish a canoe in
-which the mission, now reduced to a very small number, might embark
-on the Niger, he sent one after another several half-rotten barks;
-two of which Park, seeing no hope of getting better, was at length
-compelled to accept, and with these he constructed what he termed a
-schooner. Shortly after this he lost his friend Anderson, upon whose
-death “I felt myself,” says he, “as if left a second time lonely and
-friendless amid the wilds of Africa.” Dreary and perilous as was his
-position, however, he still determined to persevere. His companions
-were now reduced to four, Lieutenant Martyn and three soldiers, one
-of whom was deranged in his mind; yet with this wretched remnant of
-a detachment which, it must be confessed, had been thus thinned, or
-rather annihilated, by his own ill management and want of foresight, he
-purposed following the course of the Niger to its termination, whether
-that should prove to be in some great lake or inland sea, or, as he
-rather believed, in the Atlantic Ocean. And this voyage, says one of
-his biographers, one of the most formidable ever attempted, was to be
-undertaken in a crazy and ill-appointed vessel, manned by a few negroes
-and a few Europeans!
-
-On the 16th of November, having completed all the necessary
-preparations for his voyage, our traveller put the finishing hand to
-his journal; and in the interval between that and his embarkation,
-which seems to have taken place on the 19th, wrote several letters to
-England. These letters, together with the journal, were then delivered
-to his guide Isaaco, by whom they were conveyed to the Gambia, from
-whence they were transmitted to England; after which nothing certain
-or authentic can be said to have been heard either of Park or the
-expedition. In 1806, however, vague accounts of the death of Park and
-his companions were brought to the British settlements on the coast by
-the native traders from the interior; but several years elapsed without
-any further intelligence being obtained. At length, in 1810, Colonel
-Maxwell, governor of Senegal, despatched Park’s guide, Isaaco, into the
-interior, for the purpose of ascertaining the truth or falsehood of the
-reports which prevailed, and, should they prove correct, of collecting
-information respecting the place and manner of the catastrophe.
-
-After an absence of one year and eight months Isaaco returned to
-Senegal, and delivered to the governor a journal of his proceedings,
-including a narrative which he had received from Amadi Fatouma,
-the guide who accompanied Park from Sansanding down the Niger. The
-particulars of Isaaco’s adventures it is altogether unnecessary to
-describe. He found Amadi Fatouma at Madina, a village distant a few
-hours from Sansanding. On seeing Isaaco, and hearing the name of Park,
-he began to weep; and his first words were, “They are all dead.” The
-recollection of the melancholy transaction appeared to affect him in
-an extraordinary manner, and it was with the utmost reluctance that
-he at length consented to recall to memory an event which he seemed
-peculiarly desirous of delivering over to oblivion. However, upon the
-pressing entreaties of Isaaco, he narrated circumstantially what had
-taken place. Upon leaving Sansanding, there were, he said, nine persons
-in the canoe; Park, Martyn, three other white men, three slaves, and
-himself as their guide and interpreter. They had proceeded but a very
-little way down the river before they were pursued and attacked by the
-Africans in canoes, particularly in passing Timbuctoo, where a great
-number of the natives were killed. Shortly after passing Goronmo, they
-lost one white man by sickness. They were now, therefore, reduced to
-eight; but as each person had always fifteen muskets loaded and ready
-for action, they were still formidable to their enemies.
-
-As Park had laid in a considerable quantity of provisions previous to
-his leaving Sansanding, he was enabled to proceed for several days
-without stopping at any place, which is the only circumstance that
-can account for his passing in safety through the country of so many
-hostile nations. At length, however, their wants compelled them to have
-some communication with the shore. “We came,” says Amadi Fatouma, “near
-a small island, and saw some of the natives; I was sent on shore to buy
-some milk. When I got among them, I saw two canoes go on board to sell
-fresh provisions, such as fowls, rice, &c. One of the natives wanted to
-kill me, and at last he took hold of me, and said I was his prisoner.
-Mr. Park, seeing what was passing on shore, suspected the truth. He
-stopped the two canoes and people; telling the latter, that if they
-should kill me, or keep me prisoner on shore, he would kill them all,
-and carry their canoes away with him. Those on shore, suspecting Mr.
-Park’s intentions, sent me off in another canoe on board; they were
-then released: after which we bought some provisions from them, and
-made them some presents. A short time after our departure twenty canoes
-came after us from the same place; on coming near, they hailed, and
-said, ‘Amadi Fatouma, how can you pass through our country without
-giving us any thing?’ I mentioned what they had said to Mr. Park, and
-he gave them a few grains of amber and some trinkets, and they went
-back peaceably. On coming to a narrow part of the river, we saw on the
-shore a great many men sitting down; coming nearer to them they stood
-up; we presented our muskets to them, which made them run off into the
-interior. A little farther on we came to a very difficult passage. The
-rocks had barred the river, but three passages were still open between
-them. On coming near one of them, we discovered the same people again,
-standing on the top of a large rock; which caused great uneasiness to
-us, especially to me, and I seriously promised never to pass there
-again without making considerable charitable donations to the poor. We
-returned, and went to a pass of less danger, where we passed unmolested.
-
-“We came-to before Carmassee, and gave the chief one piece of baft.
-We went on, and anchored before Gourman. Mr. Park sent me on shore
-with forty thousand cowries to buy provisions. I went and bought rice,
-onions, fowls, milk, &c., and departed late in the evening. The chief
-of the village sent a canoe after us, to let us know of a large army
-encamped on the top of a very high mountain, waiting for us; and that
-we had better return, or be on our guard. We immediately came to an
-anchor, and spent there the rest of the day and all the night. We
-started in the morning; on passing the abovementioned mountain we saw
-the army, composed of Moors with horses and camels, but without any
-firearms. As they said nothing to us we passed on quietly, and entered
-the country of Haoussa, and came to an anchor. Mr. Park said to me,
-‘Now, Amadi, you are at the end of your journey: I engaged you to
-conduct me here; you are going to leave me; but before you go you must
-give me the names of the necessaries of life, &c., in the language of
-the countries through which I am going to pass;’ to which I agreed, and
-we spent two days together about it without landing. During our voyage
-I was the only one who had landed. We departed, and arrived at Yaour. I
-was sent on shore the next morning with a musket and a sabre to carry
-to the chief of the village; also with three pieces of white baft for
-distribution. I went and gave the chief his present: I also gave one
-to Alhagi, one to Alhagibiron, and the other to a person whose name
-I forget; all Marabons. The chief gave us a bullock, a sheep, three
-jars of honey, and four men’s loads of rice. Mr. Park gave me seven
-thousand cowries, and ordered me to buy provisions, which I did; he
-told me to go to the chief, and give him five silver rings, some powder
-and flints, and tell him that these presents were given to the king
-by the white men, who were taking leave of him before they went away.
-After the chief had received these things, he inquired if the white
-men intended to come back. Mr. Park, being informed of this inquiry,
-replied that he could not return any more.[2] Mr. Park had paid me
-for my voyage before we left Sansanding: I said to him, ‘I agreed to
-carry you into the kingdom of Haoussa; we are now in Haoussa. I have
-fulfilled my engagement with you; I am therefore going to leave you
-here and return.’”
-
-[2] These words occasioned his death; for the certainty of Mr. Park not
-returning induced the chief to withhold the presents from the king.
-
-On the next day Park departed, leaving the guide at the village
-of Yaour, where he was put in irons by order of the king, from a
-supposition that he had aided the white men in defrauding him of the
-customary presents, which the chief of Yaour had in fact received, but
-retained for himself. “The next morning, early,” continues the guide,
-“the king sent an army to a village called Boussa, near the river-side.
-There is before this village a rock across the whole breadth of the
-river. One part of the rock is very high; there is a large opening in
-that rock in the form of a door, which is the only passage for the
-water to pass through; the tide current is here very strong. This army
-went and took possession of the top of this opening. Mr. Park came
-there after the army had posted itself; he nevertheless attempted to
-pass. The people began to attack him, throwing lances, pikes, arrows,
-and stones. Mr. Park defended himself for a long time; two of his
-slaves at the stern of the canoe were killed; they threw every thing
-they had in the canoe into the river, and kept firing; but being
-overpowered by numbers, and fatigued, and unable to keep up the canoe
-against the current, and no probability of escaping, Mr. Park took hold
-of one of the white men and jumped into the water; Martyn did the same,
-and they were drowned in the stream in attempting to escape. The only
-slave remaining in the boat, seeing the natives persist in throwing
-weapons at the canoe without ceasing, stood up and said to them, ‘Stop
-throwing now, you see nothing in the canoe, and nobody but myself;
-therefore cease. Take me and the canoe, but don’t kill me.’ They took
-possession of the canoe and the man, and carried them to the king.
-
-“I was kept in irons three months; the king released me, and gave me a
-slave (woman). I immediately went to the slave taken in the canoe, who
-told me in what manner Mr. Park and all of them had died, and what I
-have related above. I asked him if he was sure nothing had been found
-in the canoe after its capture; he said nothing remained in the canoe
-but himself and a sword-belt. I asked him where the sword-belt was; he
-said the king took it, and had made a girth for his horse with it.”
-
-Such is the narrative of Amadi Fatouma; and the information since
-obtained in the country by Captain Clapperton corroborates almost every
-important circumstance which it describes. It appears, however, that
-certain books (whether printed or manuscript does not appear) were
-found in Park’s canoe, some of which were still in the possession of
-the chief of Yaour when Clapperton made his inquiries; but the wily
-African, who no doubt expected a valuable present for these relics,
-refused to deliver them to our traveller’s messenger, and Clapperton
-himself, for some reason or another not stated, neglected to visit
-this chief in person. It should be remarked, that the Africans who
-were questioned by Clapperton seemed all exceedingly desirous of
-exculpating their countrymen, perhaps their own friends and relations,
-from the charge of having murdered Park and his companions: according
-to one narrator, the canoe was caught between two rocks, where the
-river, being obstructed in its course, rushed through its narrow
-channel with prodigious rapidity. Here the travellers, in attempting
-to disembark, were drowned in the sight of an immense multitude who
-had assembled to see them pass, and were too timid to attack or assist
-them. On another occasion, however, the same person confessed that his
-countrymen did indeed discharge their arrows at the travellers, but
-not until they had been fired upon from the canoe. But the sheriff of
-Bokhary, whose letter was found among the MSS. of Clapperton, asserts
-that the inhabitants of Boussa went out against the white men in
-great numbers, and attacked them during three successive days; after
-which Park and Martyn, who from this account would appear to have
-been the only European survivors, threw their papers and baggage into
-the water, and leaping in after them were drowned in the stream. It
-would answer no useful purpose to push these inquiries any further at
-present, as we in reality possess no sufficient materials for coming
-to any definite conclusion. There can be no doubt that Mungo Park
-perished on the Niger, near Boussa, or that the Africans were the
-cause, mediate or immediate, of his death. His character will be best
-understood by a careful examination of his life; but it may be useful
-to remark, in conclusion, that, although his natural prudence seems
-partly to have forsaken him during his second journey, few men have
-possessed in a higher degree the virtues of a traveller--intrepidity,
-enthusiasm, perseverance, veracity, prudence; his manners, likewise,
-though somewhat too stiff and reserved, must upon the whole have been
-agreeable, since he was able both in civilized and savage countries
-to gain and preserve many friends; among whom by far the most
-distinguished was Sir Walter Scott, with whom, during the interval
-between his two journeys, he lived on terms of the greatest intimacy.
-
-
-
-
-PETER SIMON PALLAS.
-
-Born 1741.--Died 1811.
-
-
-This traveller, whose works are comparatively little known in England,
-was born at Berlin, September 22, 1741. His father, who was an
-able surgeon, entertained the design of educating him for his own
-profession; and at the same time caused him to learn several languages.
-At a very early age he was able, therefore, to write the Latin, the
-English, the French, and the German. His retentive memory rendered
-these acquirements so easy, that his great success in this department
-of knowledge scarcely at all interfered with his progress in others;
-so that he is said to have likewise maintained among his schoolfellows
-the pre-eminence in all their various studies. He was, in fact, by no
-means satisfied with what was taught him by his different masters, but
-employed his leisure hours in the study of natural history; and at the
-age of fifteen he had already imagined ingenious divisions of several
-classes of animals.
-
-Having attended at Berlin the courses of Gleditsch, Mekhel, and
-Roloff, and those of Vogel and Rœderer at Göttingen, he proceeded
-to Leyden, to finish his studies under Albinus, Gaubins, and
-Musschenbroeck. The rarest productions of nature had been for two
-centuries accumulating in Holland by the commerce of the whole world;
-and it was therefore impossible that the ardent passion of Pallas
-for natural history should not be still further excited by living
-in the midst of them. But perhaps we attribute too much influence
-to the force of circumstances. The soul, with all its tastes and
-passions, is far more independent of external things than is generally
-supposed. Concomitance is not causation. The energy of the mind derives
-sustenance, as it were, from circumstances; but the effect of this
-nourishment is determined by its own original character, just as it is
-determined by the innate qualities of the scorpion, or the bee, whether
-the vegetable juices which they extract from the plants of the field
-shall be converted into poison or into nectar. However this may be,
-Pallas afterward visited England, where a commerce more extensive than
-had ever been carried on by any other nation, ancient or modern, must
-likewise have collected immense treasures in natural history, which
-afforded him a fortunate occasion for improving his knowledge. The
-sight of these scientific riches seems, in reality, to have determined
-him to waive all claim to professional emolument or honours, for
-the purpose of devoting himself entirely to natural history; and he
-obtained his father’s permission to settle at the Hague, with a view of
-continuing his studies.
-
-Here, in 1776, he published his “Elenchus Zoophytorum,” the first of
-his “great works,” to adopt the expression of M. Eyriès, which, for an
-author of twenty-five, was a remarkable performance. The “Miscellanea
-Zoologica,” which was published the same year, still further augmented
-his reputation. This work (I still borrow the language of the French
-geographer) threw a new light upon the least known classes of the
-animal kingdom, those which had hitherto been confounded together under
-the name of worms. These two publications carried far and wide the
-name of their author, and several governments sought to monopolize his
-talents. He would probably have given the preference to that of his
-own country, had he received from it the least encouragement; but, as
-too often happens, says M. Cuvier, it was at home that he was least
-respected. He therefore resolved to desert his country, and accepted
-a place in the Academy of St. Petersburg, which was offered him by
-Catherine II. Pallas’s private circumstances are nowhere, so far as I
-have been able to discover, properly explained. I know not, therefore,
-whether extreme poverty or vulgar cupidity determined him to take this
-step; but I cannot, without pain, contemplate men of abilities running
-about the world in search of wealth, ready to snatch at it from any
-hand, and no less ready, however base may be the donor, to repay the
-dishonourable obligation by despicable flattery and adulation. For this
-reason, in spite of the profound veneration with which I regard every
-thing like genius, which appears to be a spark of the Divine nature
-fallen from heaven, I cannot help considering Pallas as a learned and
-ingenious slave, cringing at the foot of power, and willing to perform
-all things at its bidding.
-
-Catherine, it is well known, was desirous that some of her own
-barbarians should observe in Siberia the transit of Venus over
-the sun’s disk in 1769, and not, as in 1763, leave the honour to
-foreigners. She therefore selected a number of astronomers from the
-Academy of St. Petersburg, and joined with them several naturalists,
-whose business it was to examine the nature of the productions and soil
-in this remote province of the empire. They were, in fact, instructed
-to make the most exact researches on the nature of the soil; on that
-of the waters; on the means of cultivating the deserts; on the actual
-state of agriculture; the diseases which chiefly prevailed among men
-and beasts; the means of curing or preventing them; the manner of
-rearing bees, silkworms, and cattle; minerals, and mineral waters; the
-arts, trades, and other industrious processes of each province; the
-plants, animals, the interior and the form of mountains; and, in short,
-on all the objects of natural history. The geography of the country,
-the manners of its inhabitants, and the traditions and monuments of
-antiquity were likewise included.
-
-Such was the enterprise to engage in which Pallas was invited into
-Russia. In the midst of the numerous preparations required for so long
-and arduous a journey, he found leisure to compose several new works
-(for he possessed, and was vain of, a great facility in writing),
-which, in the opinion of naturalists, were full of interesting views;
-among others he presented to the academy his famous memoir on the bones
-of large quadrupeds discovered in Siberia, in which he proves that the
-remains of elephants, rhinoceroses, buffaloes, and many other kinds of
-animals now peculiar to the south, were found in those northern regions.
-
-The expedition was composed of seven astronomers and geometricians,
-five naturalists, and several pupils, who were to direct their course
-in various directions over the immense country which they were about to
-explore. Pallas left Petersburg on the 21st of June, 1768. The great
-road to Moscow, which traverses a part of Ingria, affords nothing
-interesting either to the traveller or the naturalist. Having passed
-Tosna, they entered a forest of pines and birch-trees, where, owing
-to the marshy nature of the soil, every spot which had been cleared
-of wood swarmed with gadflies. He passed through, but made no stay at
-Novogorod, and then pushed on to Bronitzkoi. The river which passes
-through this town abounds in salmon-trout, which descend from the lake
-of Ilman, visible from the neighbouring hill. The road here affords a
-view of several ancient tombs, which our traveller did not pause to
-examine.
-
-At a short distance beyond Saisovo, he crossed the Jemlin, in which
-pearl-muscles are found; and, hurrying along impatiently, arrived at
-Moscow on the 4th of July. This city, which had so often been visited
-and described by others, possessed so few attractions for him that
-he would willingly have quitted it immediately; but his vehicles,
-shattered by the badness of the roads, paved in some instances with
-trees, and cracked by the heat of the sun, required reparation; other
-causes of delay occurred, and he was therefore detained here many days.
-To amuse himself a little, and blunt the point of his impatience, he
-made several short excursions in the environs, where he was greatly
-struck at finding on all sides numerous petrifactions of marine
-substances. The river Moskwa produces an abundance of marine sponges,
-with which the Russian women rub their cheeks, instead of paint.
-Attempts were even then making to raise the genuine rhubarb in the
-environs of Moscow.
-
-From this city he set out for Vlodimir. But little care was then taken
-in Russia to provide travellers with good horses, since even the
-members of this expedition were sometimes scarcely able to proceed on
-account of the badness of their beasts. Vlodimir, formerly an extensive
-city, according to the traditions of the country, is picturesquely
-situated upon several small hills, and surrounded by cherry-orchards,
-the produce of which is the chief means of subsistence possessed by
-the inhabitants. At Kassinof Pallas found the descendants of several
-Tartar princes, who were now engaged in the fur trade, and possessed of
-considerable riches. They were of the Mohammedan religion, and were at
-that time rebuilding a fallen mosque, by permission of the government.
-
-At a small village on the banks of the Oka he saw a great number of
-goitres, whose deformity he supposed to arise from the quality of
-the water. On the banks of the Piana he found, in a small scattered
-village, several descendants of the Mordwans, who, having been
-converted to Christianity, had lost almost all traces of their ancient
-manners. These, according to Pallas, were at that time the filthiest
-people in the Russian empire, which was a bold thing to say; but they
-were good husbandmen, and their women, though ugly, were exceedingly
-laborious, which our traveller, no doubt, regarded as a superior
-quality to beauty.
-
-About the middle of September the cold was already considerable, rain
-and snow were frequent, and the severe frosts commenced. Having passed
-the Soura, they entered into an immense forest, where he observed wild
-cabbages on the banks of the river. Here they saw the beehives of the
-Mordwans, which were left all the winter in the forests with a very
-slender covering; and, among their flocks, several mules produced
-between the goat and the sheep. The peasants of these woody districts
-were principally employed in making tar. On the 22d of September
-they reached Simbirsk, on the Volga, where they were detained within
-doors for some days by a tremendous storm. They then issued forth
-upon their various pursuits; and, among other places, Pallas visited
-the sulphurous springs which are found near the Sargout. One of those
-springs was formerly of considerable extent, and furnished large
-quantities of sulphur, but it had then disappeared. The other formed
-a little marsh on the left bank of the stream. Even in the depth of
-winter, the water of the spring never froze, and at all times a thin
-sulphury vapour hung like a light cloud over its surface.
-
-The season being now too far advanced to allow them to proceed on their
-journey, they determined to pass the winter at Simbirsk, from whence
-they departed on the following March towards Siberia. In fact, they
-were weary of their residence at Simbirsk long before the winter was
-over; and Pallas, having been given a charming picture of the environs
-of Samara, removed thither with his companions on sledges. Near this
-town, in the bed of a small stream which falls into the Sviaga, were
-found numerous remains of the skeletons of elephants, among which were
-several tusks very slightly injured by time, from the ivory of which
-various beautiful articles were wrought. Here our traveller continued
-during the whole month of April, in which time he examined whatever
-was remarkable in the environs; and then, on the 2d of May, proceeded
-towards the south, to Sizran on the Volga.
-
-The heat at this place during almost the whole of May was nearly
-insupportable; the clouds gathered together, and, extending themselves
-in a thick canopy over the sky, appeared to promise rain, while the
-thermometer continued rising from 105 to 110 degrees in the shade; so
-that, in a place situated in the same latitude as Caernarvon in North
-Wales, a heat equal to that of Calcutta in July was experienced in the
-spring. So high a temperature of the atmosphere was probably unusual,
-as it alarmed the peasantry for their crops; and processions, offering
-up solemn prayers for rain, were beheld throughout the country.
-
-Proceeding thence towards Perevoloka, our traveller beheld on the way
-a village which on the evening before his arrival had been nearly
-unroofed by a hurricane. The vast chalky plains on the banks of the
-Volga had now been almost entirely stripped of vegetation by the sun,
-and the heat in those places which were bare of trees was tremendous.
-At the foot of a small range of hills which traverse these stepps
-Pallas conjectured that the vine would succeed admirably. On drawing
-near the Volga they found numerous lofty hills, some of which were
-exceedingly well wooded, while barrenness dwelt upon the others; and
-the narrow defiles which divided them were filled with tarantula-holes,
-and the burrows of the marmot, which was seen sitting at the mouth of
-its retreat uttering piercing cries.
-
-On a solitary spot at a short distance from the Volga Pallas visited
-a large tomb, which he found had formerly been opened by avaricious
-treasure-seekers; but their excavations, like the tomb itself, were now
-covered with a thick underwood, and were therefore of ancient date. The
-excursions of our traveller in various directions from Samara, which
-was his head-quarters, were numerous, and his discoveries in natural
-history would seem to have been no less so; but he passed from place
-to place with the utmost safety and despatch, as we travel from London
-to Bath; and therefore, however valuable may have been his scientific
-labours, the events of one day too nearly resembled those of the
-preceding not to cause the utmost monotony in his history.
-
-Near Bouzoulouk, on the river Samara, were found numerous ancient tombs
-resembling those of the Grecian heroes on the shores of the Hellespont.
-Copper or golden-headed arrows were sometimes found on opening these
-burrows; and on one occasion the treasure-seekers were rewarded by
-the discovery of a chain of gold round the neck of a skeleton. The
-bones of the dead indicated a gigantic stature. On arriving at one
-of the principal fortresses on the line of the Jaik, Pallas visited
-the Bashkir and Kalmuc camps, where he was amused with a concert in
-the old national style. The songs of the Kalmucs, like those of more
-refined nations, were chiefly of love. Their instruments, though
-rude, were not unpleasing. They likewise exhibited their strength in
-the wrestling-ring, and their dexterity in the use of the bow. The
-Bashkirs also displayed their skill in archery, and danced several
-Tartar dances. Here Pallas observed the largest marsh-flies he had
-ever seen,--six inches in length by three and a half in breadth. In
-travelling along the Jaik it was found necessary to move under the
-protection of an escort of Cossacks, as the Kirghees, a hostile nation,
-were encamped in groups along the banks of the river. On the 1st of
-July, 1769, he arrived at Orenburg.
-
-In this city our traveller enjoyed an opportunity of observing the
-manners of the Kirghees. These people purchased annually from the
-Russians a number of golden eagles, used by their hunters in the chase
-of the wolf, the fox, and the gazelle, and would sometimes give a horse
-in exchange for one of these birds, while others were hardly valued at
-a sheep, or even a small piece of money. During his stay at Orenburg he
-visited the great salt-mines of Hetzkain, and learned the laborious and
-ingenious methods by which the fossil salt is extracted from the bowels
-of the earth. The mines are chiefly worked in summer, and the salt,
-being left to accumulate until the winter months, is then transported
-to distant places by the peasantry. In these solitary regions he saw
-a caravan of thirty camels returning from China, having crossed the
-vast deserts of Central Asia, where both men and animals had nearly
-perished for want, in consequence of the excessive heat of the summer.
-From thence he proceeded to the Jasper Mountains, where many stones
-were found beautifully variegated; some representing, when split,
-the figures of trees upon their surfaces, while others were dotted
-with spots of different colours. On the summits of these mountains he
-beheld numerous Kirgheesian tombs constructed with prodigious blocks of
-jasper, with more than imperial magnificence.
-
-From Orenburg he descended along the course of the Jaik, through a
-mountainous country, intersected by numerous ravines, and of a wild,
-desolate aspect. Near Kalmikova, on the eastern shore of the Jaik, he
-saw a Kirghees camp. When the party drew near, about the close of the
-day, the Kirghees seemed terrified at their approach; but were soon
-reassured upon observing their pacific disposition. They then crowded
-round them with joyful faces, and, bringing forth their koumiss,
-or prepared mare’s milk, enabled several of Pallas’s attendants to
-steep their senses in forgetfulness. Still, our honest travellers,
-conscious, perhaps, that the Kirghees had some injuries to revenge
-against the Russians, were fearful of passing the night in the camp,
-and therefore hastened to return before dark to the city. Thence he
-continued proceeding in a southern direction to the ruins of Sarai, of
-which the ditch and the rampart are nearly all that now remain. It sunk
-gradually with the decay of the Tartar power, until the inhabitants
-at length emigrated to Chiva, and allowed it to fall entirely. The
-road from thence to Gourief, on the Caspian, lies over a dry marsh,
-where nothing but a few red wild-flowers meet the eye. Here Pallas
-embarked in a boat with a Mons. Euler, in order to visit a small island
-in the Caspian, the waters of which were of a grayish green, though
-the sailors assured them that the colour farther out at sea was a
-greenish black. It was said, that during summer phosphoric fires were
-occasionally beheld upon its waves.
-
-Having examined the embouchure of the Jaik, and the neighbouring coast
-of the Caspian Sea, Pallas returned northward, and set up his quarters
-for the winter of 1769 at Oufa, situated on the river Belaia. Here he
-employed the time not spent in travelling in working up his journal.
-The winter unfortunately happened to be peculiarly bad; and this,
-united with the melancholy situation of the city, and the bad air
-which prevails there, prevented him from deriving all the advantages
-which might have been expected from so long a residence. To increase
-the dulness and insipidity of his stay, he was kept almost a prisoner
-in the city until the month of May by continual inundations. In all
-other respects, likewise, the winter was unfavourable. It commenced
-with September, and continued increasing in rigour until the end of
-November, when they were visited by terrible tempests, in which several
-travellers perished on the downs of Orenburg. These continued during
-the whole of December. January was less severe, and February mild. The
-winter ended in March, the thaw commenced with April, and then the
-country was overflowed.
-
-Pallas had passed so unpleasant a winter at Oufa, that he saw the time
-of departure approach with the greatest satisfaction; and, as soon as
-the overflowing of the rivers had ceased, despatched a soldier before
-him across the Ural Mountains into the province of Isetsk, with orders
-to cause the roads and bridges to be repaired. He himself followed on
-the 16th of May. The weather, notwithstanding the advanced season of
-the year, was overcast and stormy, with a north-west wind; it hailed,
-snowed, and rained at intervals; but this did not continue long. In
-the course of the day he passed by a vast chasm, formed by the sliding
-of strata from their basis, and by the inhabitants denominated “the
-bottomless pit.” Here the people had three years before cast the
-carcasses of all those animals which had died of the murrain, which
-brought thither a prodigious number of famished and furious wild dogs,
-and thus rendered the road so dangerous that it was found necessary to
-send out an armed detachment against them.
-
-The road now entered an immense forest, in which the Russians, in
-imitation of the Bashkirs, kept great numbers of beehives, which were
-hollowed out in the trunks of large trees, about five or six fathoms
-from the ground. This is intended as one of the means of protecting
-the hives against the bears; for which purpose they likewise carefully
-cut off all the lower branches of the tree, and smooth every knot.
-However, as the bear is too able a climber to be thus discouraged,
-they, in addition to these common precautions, fix a kind of circle of
-sharp knives or scythes round the tree, a little below the hive, which
-either prevents the animal from ascending, or impales him when he would
-return. But there are some old bears too experienced to be thus caught,
-who strike out the spikes with their paws. Against these other means
-are resorted to. In the first place, they fix a kind of catapult aloft
-on the tree, with a cord suspended, which, when the animal touches, an
-arrow is darted down with great vehemence, which transfixes him in the
-breast. Another method is, to suspend a plank horizontally on some of
-the long branches by cords, in such a manner that it can be drawn at
-will before the mouth of the hive, to which it is fastened by a knot
-of pliable bark. Upon this plank the bear seats himself in order to
-work at the hive. He then commences by loosening the knot, upon which
-the plank becomes what boys call a “see-saw;” and the bear is either
-precipitated in a moment to the ground, where he is impaled upon sharp
-stakes fixed there for the purpose, or, if he does not fall, he is
-compelled to leap, or wait trembling on the plank until the owner of
-the hive arrives and shoots him at his ease.
-
-Having traversed the country of the Moursalarki Bashkirs, our traveller
-visited a small volcano, around which every thing was in full flower
-and further advanced than elsewhere, on account of the internal
-heat. This volcano was not of ancient date. Many persons then living
-remembered the storm during which a thunderbolt fell upon a great
-pine-tree, which, taking fire and burning rapidly to the very roots,
-kindled the mountain, which had thenceforward continued on fire. The
-neighbouring forests were wholly consumed by the conflagration. At this
-time the fire seemed to have retired into the centre of the mountain,
-where it raged with prodigious violence, occasionally bursting forth
-through the wide fissures of the superincumbent crust, which it was
-gradually calcining to powder. The view of the volcano during a stormy
-night was sublime. Broad openings or cracks, commencing at the summit
-of the cone, spread themselves like the veins of a leaf down the
-side, branching forth in many directions, as from a trunk; and these,
-contrasted with the dark mass of the mountain, and emitting light-red
-flames through all their extent, appeared like so many perpetual
-streams of lightning in a thunder-cloud.
-
-In traversing a forest in this district after a terrible hurricane,
-Pallas found the ground strewed with small branches of poplar, the
-extremities of which furnish a finer and more silky cotton than that of
-Egypt or Bengal. Whether the Russian government has ever attended to
-the suggestion of this naturalist, in substituting this cotton for the
-ordinary species, I have not been able to learn. The route through the
-forests and mountains which border the Aural in this direction was by
-no means very pleasing. Pallas loved smooth roads, good inns, and good
-dinners. He was therefore particularly annoyed when, in making towards
-a mountain said to abound in aluminous slate, he found his guide at
-fault in the woods, where, after wandering about for some time, they
-were overtaken by a tempest. The sky suddenly grew dark, and their way
-lying among rugged rocks of enormous magnitude, the passage between
-which was frequently blocked up by trees which the hurricane had
-overthrown, their horses refused to proceed. Besides, the darkness was
-now so great that they could not see before them, and it was therefore
-necessary to pass the night where they were. To make their lodgings
-as comfortable as they could, they selected the tops of the highest
-rocks, which were somewhat drier than the rest of the forest. Had they
-possessed a tinder-box, it would have been easy to kindle a fire, by
-which they might have dried and warmed themselves; but our traveller,
-like Sir Abel Handy in “Speed the Plough,” whose inventions were
-never completed by the hour of need, had left his tinder-box behind
-him. He endeavoured to remedy this evil by rubbing together two small
-pieces of wood; but the rain had damped the seeds of fire which they
-contained, and he rubbed in vain. Relinquishing at length all attempts
-to inveigle Vulcan into their company, they erected a small tent with
-the branches of trees and their cloaks, and throwing themselves, wet
-as they were, upon the felt of their saddles, in this manner quietly
-passed the night, though the rain fell in torrents on all sides.
-Next morning, after drinking a little water, which served them for
-breakfast, they pushed on through the woods; but as the rain still
-continued, they were for a considerable time unable, with all their
-exertions, to restore warmth to their limbs. In the afternoon, however,
-they discovered an iron-foundry, where they dried their garments, and
-then set forward on their return to their quarters. This was destined
-to be a day of adventures for Pallas. The river Aï, which they had
-crossed without difficulty the day before, was now swelled to a furious
-torrent by the rains; so that a ferry-boat was indispensable. A horde
-of Chouvashes, who inhabited the banks of the stream, undertook to
-construct a boat; but when it was launched, and the traveller embarked
-in it, the mariners discovered that the cords by which it was to be
-pulled along were so awkwardly arranged that they were every moment
-in danger of being capsized and hurled into the water. Fortunately,
-the rapidity of the current was so great, that they darted along like
-an arrow, clinging to their carriage, which they had had the prudence
-to fasten with strong cords to the boat; and in a moment they were on
-the opposite shore, where the sharp angles of their raft, for it was
-little better, struck in the earth, and prevented all possibility of a
-refluence into the river. They then dragged their vehicle on shore, and
-continued their journey.
-
-Proceeding eastward from this place, they arrived on the 20th of June
-at the Asbestos Mountain, which traverses a marshy region covered with
-moss. The asbestos is found on the summit of the loftiest hill in the
-whole chain, in a kind of coarse slate. It is brittle, like decayed
-wood, while in the stone, but upon being exposed to the air becomes
-soft and pliable as flax, and is easily spun and woven into cloth.
-Pallas himself, who carefully examined its nature and qualities, as
-well as the mine, if it may be so termed, from which it is drawn,
-saw it manufactured into paper. From this place he proceeded to the
-iron-forges of Sisertskoï, in the neighbourhood of which gold is
-found in a matrix of quartz and ochre; and, indeed, all the country
-immediately north of this point abounds in an auriferous ochre, from
-which much pure metal might be extracted. He then visited various
-other forges, mines, and quarries, and arrived at Ekaterinburg on the
-23d of June.
-
-Our traveller’s life, like the peaceful periods of history complained
-of by Plutarch, was too uniform to furnish many interesting events to
-his biographer. He travelled, he examined many things, he wrote; but
-dangers, difficulties, and all the fierce play of the passions, which
-render the life of a bold adventurer who relies on his own resources
-a series of romantic achievements, have no existence in his travels’
-history, and both the reader’s patience and mine are, therefore,
-somewhat irritated. This, no doubt, may appear unphilosophical to many.
-It may be said, that when we behold the picture of a life, whether
-individual or national, which flowed along in a calm tide, unruffled
-by misfortune or vicissitude, our feelings should be lulled into the
-same tranquil motion, and be productive of a happiness similar to
-that, the representation of which we contemplate. I have faith in the
-wisdom of nature, which has ordered things otherwise. The mind, when
-in a healthy and vigorous state, abhors an uninterrupted calm; and
-storms, hurricanes, and thunders are not more conducive to the general
-good of the physical world than vicissitudes, transitions, dangers,
-escapes, which are the storms and sunshine of life, are conducive to
-happiness in the individual who undergoes them, and to sympathy and
-pleasure in those who contemplate his career. For this reason, persons
-who travel with authority never inspire us with the same respect as
-those whose movements are spontaneous and independent; nor can such
-travellers ever penetrate like the latter into the core of manners
-and national character, since most of those who approach them put
-on, in deference to their very authority, an artificial, deceptive
-appearance. In the same manner, a nation which should begin and end in
-peace would have no history; none, at least, which could interest any
-one beyond its borders. Human virtues are plants which never strike a
-deep root unless shaken by misfortune. Virtue consists in the directing
-of our intellectual and physical energies to a praiseworthy end;
-but if our energies be naturally feeble, or dwindle and wither away
-through lack of exercise, our virtue, by a necessary consequence, must
-become dwarfish and insignificant, and utterly incapable of exciting
-enthusiastic sympathy in those who behold its meek and timid bearing.
-
-These reflections have been extorted from me by the insipid mode of
-travelling adopted by Pallas. Nothing can be further from my intention
-than to recommend or require foolhardiness in a traveller; but it
-seems not irrational to expect, that when a man undertakes the task of
-examining a remote country, he should be willing to incur some risk
-and fatigue in the execution of his plan. Of fatigue Pallas, perhaps,
-endured his share; but he seems to have shrunk rather too timidly from
-coming in contact with barbarous nations; and I therefore greatly
-distrust the completeness of his moral pictures. On the other hand, his
-descriptions of plants, minerals, and the processes of Russian industry
-are exceedingly minute, and enjoy, I believe, among scientific men the
-reputation of being exact; but these, unfortunately, the very nature
-of biography compels me to reject, or introduce into the narrative but
-sparingly. Among the curious things observed in the western districts
-of Siberia was the method of preparing Russia leather, which, though
-tanned in the ordinary manner, acquired the fine scent which renders
-it so valuable from the oil extracted from the bark of the birch-tree.
-In traversing the forests which surround the marble quarries on the
-banks of the Toura, with Vogoul guides, they were overtaken by the
-night. Excepting the small spot on which they halted, all around was
-a marshy swamp encumbered with wood, and affording neither road nor
-pathway. They therefore considered themselves fortunate in having found
-a dry resting-place; and the Vogouls, to whom such accidents were
-familiar, immediately occupied themselves in kindling a fire at once,
-in order to procure warmth and keep off the bears. Next morning his
-guides undertook to conduct him, by a short path across the forest,
-to the banks of the Liala, and accordingly struck off boldly into the
-wilderness. The sombre pine-trees, intermingling their branches above,
-rendered the way exceedingly obscure; a bog or a fallen tree every
-moment intercepted their route; the branches of prickly shrubs tore
-their hands and faces; and not a step could be taken without carefully
-observing whether it might not precipitate them into some impassable
-morass. Not a plant met the eye but the _mœringia_ and the _linnea_,
-two plants which our traveller, in general a patient forbearing man,
-often saluted with Tristram Shandy’s whole chapter of curses, as they
-were in those northern regions the never-failing forerunners of a swamp
-or an impervious pine-forest. After much toil they reached an open
-space, from which the trees had been cleared away by a conflagration,
-which Pallas attributed to lightning, and his guides to the frolics
-of the devil, who, they imagined, during some long winter night had
-kindled a whole forest to light up his gambols. Shortly afterward, his
-guides, who had probably bestowed too many of their thoughts upon the
-devil, entirely lost their way, and, after floundering about in bogs
-and woods for several hours, were compelled to confess their utter
-ignorance of the way; upon which, at the command of our traveller,
-they turned back, and regained the point from which he had started.
-The Vogouls, with whom he performed this unsuccessful journey, are a
-people of primitive and peculiar manners, living in separate families
-scattered through the woods, with each its domain and enclosure of
-several miles, containing elks and other large game. Though surrounded
-by marshes, they are said to enjoy excellent health. Their lives,
-however, are not of long duration. Short in stature, and effeminate in
-form, they in some measure resemble the Kalmucs, but their complexion
-is fairer. Their women are handsome, and of exceedingly amorous
-temperament. They profess Christianity, but merely for peace’ sake; for
-in secret they continue the worship of idols, which are daily invoked
-with prayer and sacrifice.
-
-About the end of August Pallas arrived at Cheliabinsk, where he was
-for a considerable time confined to his chamber by an affection of the
-eyes. Here, therefore, he resolved to remain during the winter; but,
-in order that no time might be lost, he despatched a number of his
-attendants in various directions, with orders to collect information.
-Growing tired of this town about the middle of December, however,
-he set out for Tobolsk, where he remained but a few days, and then
-returned by Ekaterinburg to Cheliabinsk, where he continued during the
-remainder of the winter.
-
-Pallas remained at Cheliabinsk until the 16th of April, 1771, when,
-having commissioned a number of the young men who accompanied the
-expedition to examine the more northern portions of Siberia, he
-departed towards the east. The day before he set out, the long grass
-on the extensive downs to the north of the city were set on fire; the
-flames swept rapidly along the plains, and the wind blowing towards
-the town, there was some danger that this irresistible conflagration,
-which already embraced the whole extent of the horizon, might reach the
-place, and consume it to ashes. A timely shower of rain, however, put
-an end to their apprehensions.
-
-In proceeding towards the Tobol, our traveller was alarmed by a report
-that the Kirghees were making an incursion into the interjacent
-territory, and prudently turned out of his way to avoid an encounter
-with these rude barbarians. At Kaminskaia several of his companions
-fell sick, some with fever, some with scorbutic rheumatism, while
-others became a prey to melancholy. His movements, for these reasons,
-were slow. The weather, meanwhile, was exceedingly severe; the snow
-falling heavily, accompanied by cold wind. The last days of April were
-marked by a terrible hurricane, and May was commenced with hard frost;
-notwithstanding which, neither the young flowers nor the buds suffered
-any particular injury. On the 2d of May one of his attendants died of
-scurvy, which had afflicted him for five months, and was accompanied
-by symptoms no less violent than those which attend the same disorder
-at sea. This event, which would have cost some men a tear, seems to
-have given no particular uneasiness to Pallas, who, leaving some of his
-people to inter the dead, coolly continued his journey.
-
-On reaching the stepp of Ischimi, he found an immense plain watered by
-extensive lakes, and abounding in aquatic game, among which the most
-remarkable was a large species of white heron. To study the manners of
-this bird he remained here a few days. But his mode of procuring game
-was somewhat different from that of Le Vaillant, who pursued the birds
-into the woods, observed them in their native haunts, and shot them
-himself. Pallas despatched a number of subaltern naturalists, who shot
-the game for him, and furnished him with an account of their manners;
-and this was what he termed studying natural history.
-
-On arriving at Omsk, he applied to the temporary governor of the
-town for permission to examine the collection of maps of Siberia, as
-divided into provinces and districts, which had been made by the late
-Governor Springer; but the new functionary, “dressed in a little brief
-authority,” had the ambition to play the politician and statesman,
-and, notwithstanding that he knew Pallas to be travelling for the
-government upon a public mission, refused him the favour he demanded
-without an express order from court. Nay, when he desired to depart,
-this new great man, with the prudence of an owl, denied him a proper
-passport, though without this it would be difficult for him to obtain
-horses on the way. Pallas, however, with the caution of a courtier,
-rather than with the honest indignation of a man of letters, instead
-of stigmatizing this gross misconduct as it deserved, merely observes,
-that he attributed it to the military spirit naturally inimical to the
-sciences.
-
-Our traveller at length departed from Omsk, and commenced his
-examination of the productions found on the banks of the Irtish, where,
-on digging in the sandy downs, the bones of elephants and of many large
-fishes were discovered. Though it was now drawing near the end of May,
-he experienced continual storms, sometimes accompanied by black clouds,
-at others by a clear sky. From the inhabitants, however, he learned
-that tempests succeed each other almost unceasingly in those regions,
-where a week of fine weather is seldom or never known. He here learned
-from the fur-merchants a secret which deserves to be generally known:
-in order to preserve their furs from the worms, they tied up in each
-bale several calamus roots, which, they asserted, were an unfailing
-defence of their merchandise. A few shreds of Russia leather, which
-preserves books and papers from the moth even in Hindostan, would no
-doubt have answered the same purpose.
-
-On the 11th of June, while travelling through a country thickly
-intersected with salt-lakes and birch forests, and peopled by myriads
-of wild bees, he encountered an enormous wolf, which was chasing a duck
-upon the heath. This animal, he says, is generally remarkable for its
-timidity in summer; but on the present occasion seemed disposed, like
-one of La Fontaine’s wolves; to enter into a debate with the strangers;
-for, instead of flying, he coolly stood still to look at them, without
-being in the least disturbed by their shouting. At length, however,
-despairing of entering into any thing like rational conversation with
-persons who seemed resolved to monopolize all the privilege of good
-company for themselves, he turned round upon his heel, and with a
-disdainful and careless bound, continued his journey.
-
-At the foot of the small mountains which branch northward of the Altaïc
-chain, Pallas discovered a prodigious number of excavations and pits,
-made at some remote period by a people now unknown, who understood the
-art of smelting metals, but who have left no trace of their existence
-save these mines, and the ornaments of copper and gold which are found
-in their tombs. Here, at the small town of Shoulba, our traveller was
-attacked with dysentery; but it was necessary to push forward, though
-his weakness was such that he could scarcely step into his carriage.
-While in this state he passed by, but could not visit, a tomb of
-prodigious magnitude, situated on the summit of a lofty mountain,
-which, according to tradition, had formerly been opened by a band of
-one hundred and fifty armed peasantry, who had been rewarded for their
-labour by the discovery of fifty pounds weight of solid gold. A few
-days afterward his dysentery became so violent that he was compelled to
-discontinue his journey, and confine himself, during several weeks, to
-his bed.
-
-As soon as his health was a little improved, he set out with M.
-Sokoloff, in order to visit the Altaïc mountains. The whole of the
-neighbouring districts are diversified with hill and dale, and watered
-by numerous streams, which come down from the mountains, foaming and
-thundering over their rocky beds. On some of these eminences were found
-extensive copses of raspberry-bushes, around which Pallas observed
-the fresh tracks of bears, which are very fond of this fruit, and
-not unfrequently carry off women and children who resort thither to
-gather it. Apparently this is done merely as a frolic, or by way of
-terrifying interlopers from meddling with their property; for our
-traveller gravely observes that they do them no manner of injury.
-
-At length they discovered the summits of the Altaï, covered with snow,
-and towering far above everything around them. Pallas had no eye for
-the picturesque. What in the eyes of another man would have been
-sublime was to him merely fearful and horrible; but he was struck with
-these cones, and pyramids, and precipices, and prodigious pinnacles
-of rock, which, when he beheld them, appeared to support a black roof
-of clouds, which stretched over the whole hemisphere, and menaced the
-country with a second deluge. No marine petrifactions, or any sign of
-their ever having been submerged in the ocean, were here discoverable;
-but it is probable that more careful researches would have been
-productive of a different result.
-
-From the Altaïc mountains Pallas directed his course towards the north,
-crossed the Obi, traversed the governments of Kolyran, visited Tomsk,
-and on the 10th of October arrived at Krasnoiarsk, a city situated
-on the Yeniseï, in the 66th degree of north latitude. Here he set up
-his quarters for the winter. The autumn, he observes, is generally
-mild in the southern parts of Siberia; but with the winter storms and
-hurricanes come on, and sometimes blow during a whole month without
-intermission. The cold is intense. Nevertheless, about the middle of
-February the sun begins to exert considerable power, and sensibly
-diminishes the snow on the mountains.
-
-On the 7th of March, 1772, Pallas departed from Krasnoiarsk for
-the eastern part of Siberia, accompanied by a painter, and three
-naturalists. Their route, as far as the Angora, lay through a country
-partly covered with forests, where there falls, during winter, large
-quantities of snow. From time to time they observed the encampments of
-the idolatrous tribes who inhabit those regions, and roam about like
-wild animals in the woods. They reached Irkutsk on the 14th, and having
-remained a week in that capital, continued their journey along the
-shores of Lake Baikal. The weather had now grown warm, and they saw the
-last flocks of alpine larks and black sparrows, flying round the city,
-and then departing for the north; these were followed by a species
-of striped crow, which had passed the winter in the warm regions of
-Mongolia, or China, and was now pursuing the same route towards the
-arctic circle.
-
-As our traveller was desirous of crossing Lake Baikal on sledges, he
-hurried his departure from Irkutsk, lest the warm weather should melt
-the ice, and obstruct his passage. The scenery on the shores of this
-immense lake is exceedingly rugged and sublime. Rocks of vast elevation
-form the shores of the Angara, by which you descend from Irkutsk to
-the sea; and on arriving at the mouth of the river you discover,
-as through an arcade, the vast basin of the Baikal, and the lofty
-mountains which confine its waters on the east. They directed their
-course in a straight line from a small post on the bank of the frozen
-stream, towards the borders of the lake, pursuing their way in sledges
-on the ice. When they had proceeded about half-way, they were overtaken
-by a tremendous storm from the north-west, which entirely cooled the
-atmosphere. The wind swept along the ice with such prodigious violence,
-that the sledge-drivers, who ran along by the side of the vehicles,
-were sometimes blown away to the distance of many fathoms from the
-road, and were compelled to stick their knives in the ice, to prevent
-their being carried away, and hurled into some chasm. To avoid the risk
-of such accidents, the party halted until the tempest was over.
-
-At Zimovia on the Baikal, they found several persons setting out
-to hunt the sea-dog on the lake. This kind of chase takes place
-principally in April. The sea-dogs, assembling on those parts of the
-shore where rapid streams or warm springs keep up an opening in the
-ice, then ascend from the water, in order to lie down upon the ice,
-and sleep in the sun. The hunters fix up in their little sledges a
-small white flag, which the dogs take for ice, and accordingly are not
-frightened until they draw near and fire upon them.
-
-Pallas now descended in his sledge upon the Baikal, and commenced
-this singular portion of his journey. The ice had this winter been as
-smooth as a mirror, on the whole surface of the lake; but when they had
-advanced to a certain distance from the shore, they found a fissure of
-several feet in breadth, which intercepted their passage, and forced
-them to make a circuit of considerable length. However, this obstacle
-having been surmounted, they encountered no other, and quickly found
-themselves on the opposite shore. The road now assumed a different
-character, running over rugged mountains, or sandy flats, where the
-snow was entirely melted, until, cutting the Selinga, as it were, into
-two parts, it led them into a milder climate, where the spring, with
-all its gay accompaniments, was already far advanced. They arrived,
-much fatigued, at Selinginsk, on the 25th of March.
-
-From Selinginsk he proceeded through Mongolia towards the borders of
-China, moving among an idolatrous people, the partisans of the Lamaic
-hierarchy, until, arriving at Kiakter, he touched the extreme limits
-of the empire, where his journey in that direction was to terminate.
-Here Pallas made many inquiries respecting the commerce, opinions, and
-manners of the Chinese; and having satisfied his curiosity, returned
-to Selinginsk. From this point he now directed his course northward,
-towards the great tributary streams which fall into the Selinga. His
-excursions in this direction, which were carried into execution without
-enthusiasm or curiosity, merely as a task imposed on him by authority,
-are still more destitute of incidents, if possible, than the former
-portion of his travels. He examined the iron-mines, the grain and fur
-trade, and the objects of natural history furnished by the district.
-
-Pallas now turned his face towards the east, traversed the desert
-regions which lie between the Selinga and the Onon, the principal
-branch of the Amoor, and having pushed his researches to within a very
-short distance of the Chinese frontier, returned by a different route
-to Selinginsk, leaving to M. Sokolof and others the honour of exploring
-the frontiers of Mongolia, along the banks of the Argoon and Amoor. His
-health, indeed, now began to suffer from constant fatigue, and he was
-therefore fully justified in relinquishing this portion of his task;
-but I cannot easily pardon him for pretending to have been actuated
-by the desire of botanizing on the banks of the Selinga, since, if
-botanizing was his object, it was to be presumed that the wild shores
-of the Amoor would have afforded a still more ample and extraordinary
-field for his researches. During his stay at Selinginsk, he observed,
-among other curious animals and birds, the blue crow, which was easily
-taken, as its young were hitherto unfledged; and a species of small
-white hare, which was found in great numbers in the little islands in
-the Selinga. Besides these there was the leaping hare, which, mingling
-at night among the sheep, frightened them by its bounding motions. The
-Mongols, who are fond of its flesh when roasted, imagine that it sucks
-the ewes; as the vulgar in England report of the hedgehog and the cow.
-
-Previous to his finally quitting the country, he made another excursion
-to the frontiers of China, principally, it would seem, for the purpose
-of studying the botany of those districts, when the flowers were
-clothed in all the beauty of summer. The road to Kiakta traverses a
-large sandy plain, and afterward a succession of rocky mountains,
-entirely destitute of wood. In this latter district our traveller
-observed a species of locust, by whose flight the natives could foretel
-with certainty whether the weather would be fair or otherwise. They
-mounted aloft on the wing previous to rainy weather, and the noise of
-their motions resembled that of castanets. After remaining some short
-time in the vicinity of Kiakta, he once more returned to Selinginsk,
-and began to make the necessary preparations for retracing their
-footsteps to Krasnoiarsk, where they again intended to pass the winter.
-Accordingly, on the 3d of July, Pallas and a part of his companions
-departed from Selinginsk, and proceeded towards the Baikal.
-
-Upon reaching the eastern shore of the lake, they saw a thick cold
-mist, which appeared to fill the whole extent of its vast basin, and
-hung close upon the surface of the water. This fog exactly resembled
-those fogs which are sometimes collected in the hollows of the
-mountains, or on the shores of the sea. It was kept in continual
-motion, and tossed hither and thither, like the waves of the ocean, by
-the wind. This mist was accompanied by strong westerly winds, which
-prevented our traveller from proceeding on his way; and he amused
-himself during his detention in studying the fishes of the lake,
-together with the birds and animals which frequent its shores.
-
-On the 10th of July, he embarked, and set sail with boisterous and
-contrary winds. The passage of the lake was long, but, arriving at
-length at Zimovia, Pallas proceeded with all possible expedition to
-Krasnoiarsk, by way of Irkutsk. He arrived on the 1st of August at
-the point of destination, where, to his great satisfaction, he found
-that a magnificent collection of the flowers which adorn the banks of
-the Yeniseï had been made during the spring and summer, by one of his
-pupils, whom he had left behind for that purpose. From Krasnoiarsk,
-our traveller made another long excursion, visited several Tartar
-hordes, various mines, mountains, and tombs, and returned about the
-middle of September, the approach of winter being already visible in
-those high latitudes. By December, the cold had reached an intensity
-which had never been felt even in Siberia. The air was still, and at
-the same time condensed, as it were; so that, although the sky was
-exceedingly clear, the sun appeared as if beheld through a cloud.
-In the morning of the 6th of December, Pallas found the mercury of
-his thermometer frozen, “a thing,” says he, “which had never before
-happened during the whole eight years in which I had made use of this
-instrument. I then conveyed it from the gallery where it was kept
-into an apartment moderately warmed with a stove. Here the column of
-mercury, which had been condensed in the tube, immediately sunk into
-the bulb, while that in the bulb resumed its activity in the course
-of half a minute. I repeated this experiment several times with the
-same result, so that sometimes there remained but a very few particles
-in the tube, sometimes not above one. In order to follow the progress
-of the experiment, I gently warmed the bulb with my fingers, after it
-had been exposed to the air, and watching the mounting of the mercury,
-distinctly observed that the condensed and frozen columns offered
-considerable resistance before they gave way. At the same time I
-exposed about a quarter of a pound of mercury to the air, in a saucer.
-This mercury had been previously well washed in vinegar, and cleansed
-from impurities. The saucer was placed in a gallery on the north side
-of my house. In an hour the edges of the surface were frozen, and a
-few minutes afterward, the whole superficies was condensed into a
-soft mass, exactly resembling pewter. As the interior, however, still
-continued fluid, a small portion of the surface presented numerous
-wrinkles branching out from each other, but the greater part was
-sufficiently smooth. The same thing took place with a still larger
-quantity which I placed in the open air. This mass of frozen mercury
-was as pliable as lead but if bent suddenly, would break more easily
-than pewter; and when flattened into sheets, appeared somewhat knotty.
-I tried to beat it out with the hammer, but being quite cold, the
-mercury fell from it in drops. The same thing took place when you
-touched this mass with the finger, the top of which was instantly
-benumbed with cold by the simple contact. I then placed it in a
-moderately warm room, and it melted like wax placed over the fire. The
-drops separated from the surface, which melted gradually. The intensity
-of the cold diminished towards the evening.”
-
-In the month of January, 1773, Pallas began to make preparations for
-returning to Petersburg, and departing on the 22d, pushed on with
-the utmost rapidity to Tomsk. During this journey, he discovered the
-execrable principles upon which it was attempted to people Siberia.
-The refuse of the people, the lame, the sick, the infirm, and the
-old, had been collected together, and sent thither to die. Men had
-been torn, for this purpose, from their wives and families. Women,
-for some reason or another, had not been allowed to emigrate from the
-west in sufficient numbers, and vice and misery flourished in their
-absence. Man, deprived of the society of women, necessarily degenerates
-into a ferocious beast, contemning all laws, and every regulation of
-morality. “It is not good that man should be alone.” Whenever new
-colonies are established, women should be numerous. It is they who are
-the grand instruments of civilization.--The cavern, the desert hut,
-when inhabited by a woman, already contains the germs of humanity, of
-hospitality, of improvement; but without her is a den, a haunt of
-ungovernable passions,--a refuge from the storm, but not a home.
-
-In crossing a bridge over the Dooroosh, in the country of the Votiaks,
-our traveller was placed in a more perilous condition than he had
-experienced during any former period of his travels. His horses had
-already reached the shore, when the bridge, which must have been a very
-frail structure, gave way under his carriage, and he must infallibly
-have been precipitated into the stream, had not the spirited horses
-dashed on at the moment, and dragged up the carriage from amid the
-falling ruins.
-
-The country between the Jaik and the Volga was at that period a
-vast desert, which abounded with wild horses. Pallas, however, was
-of opinion that these animals had once been tame, but, during the
-emigrations and nomadic movements of the Kalmucs and Kirghees, had
-escaped into the wilderness, where they had multiplied exceedingly.
-To fly from the heat and the hornets, these horses wandered far into
-the north during the summer months, and there, besides a refuge from
-their persecutors, found better pasturage, and an abundance of water.
-The surface of this great Mesopotamia was sprinkled at intervals with
-ruins of Tartar edifices, which swarmed in an extraordinary manner with
-serpents.
-
-On the 25th of June our traveller arrived at the Moravian colony of
-Sarepta, which in eight years had increased, by immigration, from five
-persons to two thousand five hundred; and was at this period in a
-highly flourishing state. He here entered into some curious researches
-respecting the ancient shores of the Caspian, whose waters, in his
-opinion, once covered the greater portion of the Kalmuc country, just
-as those of the Black Sea did all the low lands upon its banks, before
-the deluge of Deucalion, when they first burst the huge natural mound
-which separated them from the Mediterranean.
-
-Pallas passed the autumn at Zarizyn, where he observed the Kalmucs
-moving westward in hordes towards the country lying between the Volga
-and the Don. From this place he made an excursion through the stepps
-which lie up the stream of the Volga; on his return from which he
-chiefly employed himself in botanical researches, until the spring of
-1774. He then undertook another journey along the banks of the Aktooba,
-through a country infested with bands of vagabond Kirghees, and other
-wandering nations, and returned to his head-quarters on the 25th of May.
-
-It was now six years since the expedition had set out from Petersburg,
-and all its members began to desire repose. Each person, therefore,
-hastened to return by the shortest road to the capital. Pallas was
-directed to repair to Moscow, and punctually obeyed his orders, without
-making the slightest deviation to the right-hand or to the left. He
-arrived at this ancient city on the 3d of July, 1774. “Here,” says he,
-“I found the orders of the court, by which I was commanded to hasten
-without the least delay to Petersburg; and, notwithstanding that I felt
-exceedingly desirous of making a short stay at Moscow, for the purpose
-of improving my knowledge, by conversing with the learned M. Müller,
-one of the most excellent men in Russia, as well as one of the most
-celebrated of its historians, _it was necessary to yield and obey_.”
-Such is the condition of those who travel by command. He arrived at
-Petersburg on the 30th of July, exhausted by fatigue, and with a head
-sprinkled with premature gray hairs; for he was then no more than
-thirty-three years old.
-
-The companions of Pallas had suffered still more severely; scarcely one
-of them lived long enough to draw up an account of his travels; and
-it was therefore left to him to render this piece of justice to their
-memory. For himself, the splendid objects which he had beheld had made
-too profound an impression on his mind to allow of his being satisfied
-with the accounts of them which he had hastily traced in his journal.
-He therefore determined upon the publication of several separate
-works, which should contain the natural history of the most celebrated
-quadrupeds of Siberia; and these he actually laid before the public,
-together with descriptions of a great number of birds, reptiles, and
-fishes. In addition to all these, he even projected a natural history
-of all the animals and plants in the Russian empire; in which design,
-though it was never completed, he made a very considerable progress.
-The empress herself, worthless and profligate as she was, was possessed
-by the ambition of being regarded as the patron of the sciences, and
-in order to facilitate the execution of our traveller’s project,
-communicated to him the herbariums of several other botanists, who
-had studied the flora of the empire. To secure the completion of the
-undertaking, Catherine moreover engaged to furnish the expense of the
-engraving and printing of the work; but the end was not answerable to
-this magnificent beginning; projects of more vulgar ambition, or vile
-and despicable amours, too fully occupied the imperial mind to allow so
-unimportant a thing as the science of botany to command a thought, and
-Pallas was constrained to rely upon his own resources for making known
-his botanical discoveries to the world. The same fate attended his
-works on the natural history of the animals and insects of the empire.
-
-M. Cuvier, whose capacity to appreciate the labours of a scientific man
-can scarcely be called in question, observes, that it is seldom that
-very laborious men possess sufficient tranquillity of mind to conceive
-those root-ideas which produce a revolution in the sciences; but Pallas
-formed an exception to this rule. He nearly succeeded in changing the
-whole aspect of the science of zoology; and most certainly did operate
-a complete change in that of the theory of the earth. An attentive
-consideration of the two great chains of mountains of Siberia enabled
-him to discover this general rule, which has been everywhere found
-to hold good, that there exist three primitive orders of mountains,
-the granitic in the centre, the schistous next in succession, and the
-calcareous on the outside. It may be said that this great discovery,
-distinctly announced in a memoir read before the academy in 1777, gave
-birth to the modern science of geology: from this point the Saussures,
-the Delues, and the Werners proceeded to the discovery of the real
-structure of the earth, which is so exceedingly at variance with the
-fantastic ideas of preceding writers.
-
-In addition to his scientific labours, Pallas was engaged by Catherine
-in drawing up comparative vocabularies of the languages spoken by all
-the various nations in the Russian empire; but was restrained, in
-the execution of this plan, to follow exactly in the track pointed
-out by his mistress. He was likewise chosen member of the committee
-employed, in 1777, in compiling a new topography of the empire; and
-had the honour of instructing Alexander, the late despot of Russia,
-and his brother Constantine, in natural history. But, notwithstanding
-all these marks of distinction, and many others of equal importance,
-our traveller experienced the truth, that happiness is incompatible
-with dependence of every kind. His travelling habits, too, rendered a
-sedentary life irksome to him; but what still further disgusted him
-with Petersburg, was the crowd of fashionable but absurd people who
-thronged his house, imagining, perhaps, they were doing him an honour
-by consuming his time. To escape from this species of persecution, he
-took advantage of the invasion of the Crimea, to visit new countries;
-and during the years 1793 and 1794, traversed the southern provinces
-of the empire at his own expense. He even skirted the frontiers of
-Circassia, but, with his usual prudence, avoided the dangers which
-would have attended a journey into that country. He then proceeded
-into the Crimea, through which Potemkin was leading the empress as a
-spectacle of contempt and scorn to all mankind; and was so captivated
-by a passing glance at its splendid scenery, that, on his return to
-Petersburg, he solicited and obtained permission to retire thither.
-
-Solitude, however, which appeared so desirable at a distance, Pallas
-soon found to be an intolerable curse; the climate, also, fell
-infinitely short of his expectations, was inconstant and humid, and
-liable to be altered by every passing wind. It united, in fact, the
-inconveniences of the north and of the south; yet our traveller endured
-these evils for fifteen years; but at length, feeling the approaches of
-old age, he determined at once to escape from the climate of the Crimea
-and from Russian despotism, and selling his estates at an exceedingly
-low rate, returned to his native city, after an absence of forty-two
-years. His health, however, had been so completely undermined by the
-diseases he had contracted during his travels, and, more than all,
-by his long residence in the Crimea, that he might be said merely to
-have looked upon his native place, and on the face of those friends
-or admirers which his knowledge and fame had gathered around him,
-before death removed him from the enjoyment of all these things. This
-event took place on the 8th of September, 1811. Pallas appears to have
-been an able, learned, and upright man, deeply intent on promoting
-the interests of science, but indifferent about those great political
-rights without the enjoyment of which even the sciences themselves are
-of no more dignity or value than the tricks of a juggler.
-
-
-
-
-CARSTEN NIEBUHR.
-
-Born 1733.--Died 1815.
-
-
-This traveller was born on the 17th of March, 1733, in the province of
-Friesland, in the kingdom of Hanover. It would be to mislead the reader
-to represent him, as some of his biographers have done, as the son
-of a peasant, in the sense in which that term is applied in England.
-His father and his ancestors, for several generations, had been small
-landed proprietors; he himself received an education, and inherited a
-property, which, however small, served as an incentive to ambition; and
-though, like many others, he found the entrance of the road to fame
-rugged and hard to tread, it must not be dissembled that his prudence
-and perseverance were singularly aided by good fortune.
-
-Having lost his mother before he was six weeks old, the care of his
-infancy was intrusted to a step-mother; and he was still a lad when
-his father likewise died. The guardians upon whom the superintendence
-of his youth at first devolved, entertaining, apparently, but little
-respect for intellectual pursuits, interrupted his studies; and his
-maternal uncle, who succeeded them in this important trust, would seem
-to have wanted the means, if he possessed the will, to direct the
-course of a young man. Niebuhr was therefore left very much to his
-own guidance, which, to a man of vigorous intellect, I am far from
-regarding as a misfortune. The beginnings of life, however, like the
-beginnings of day, are generally accompanied by mists which obscure the
-view, and render it absolutely impossible to determine with precision
-the character of the various paths which present themselves before us;
-and thus it was that our traveller, who, knowing not that Providence
-was about to conduct him to a brilliant destiny in the East, at one
-time studied music, with the intention of becoming an organist, and was
-afterward led, through accidental circumstances, to apply himself to
-geometry, for the purpose of practising as a land-surveyor.
-
-With this design he repaired, in his twenty-third year, to Bremen,
-where he discovered a person from whom he might have derived the
-necessary instruction; but finding that this individual’s domestic
-economy was under the superintendence of two youthful sisters, whose
-behaviour towards himself Niebuhr seems to have regarded as forward
-and indecorous, he immediately quitted this city and proceeded to
-Hamburgh. It will easily be conceived that the studies of a young man
-who voluntarily cultivated his intellect as the only means by which
-he could arrive at distinction, were pursued with ardent enthusiasm.
-Niebuhr, in fact, considered labour and toil as the only guides
-to genuine glory, and was content to tolerate on the way the rude
-fierceness of their manners.
-
-When he had studied the mathematics, during two years, under Büsch, he
-removed to Göttingen, where he continued another year. At this period
-the Danish ministry, at the suggestion of Michaelis, had projected
-a scientific expedition into Arabia, which was at first designed,
-at least by its originator, merely to throw some light upon certain
-passages of the Old Testament, but which afterward embraced a much
-wider field. Michaelis, to whom the choice of the individuals who were
-to form this mission had been intrusted, betrayed the narrowness or
-malignity of his mind, by neglecting the celebrated Reiske, who was
-then well known to be struggling with starvation, in order to thrust
-forward Von Haven, a pupil of his own, who, but for this partial
-choice, would probably have lived and died in obscurity. Niebuhr
-himself was recommended to Michaelis by Kästner, whose pupil he had
-for some time been. The proposal was abruptly made, and as suddenly
-accepted. “Have you a mind,” said Kästner, “to go into Arabia?”--“Why
-not?” replied Niebuhr, “if anybody will pay my expenses.”--“The King
-of Denmark,” said Kästner, “will pay your expenses.” He then entered
-into the history of the Danish ministry’s project, and Niebuhr, whose
-genuine ambition was most ardent, and who, though in manners modest
-and unassuming, could not but entertain a favourable opinion of his
-own capacity, at once engaged to form a member of the mission. It was
-agreed, on the part of his Danish majesty, that he should be allowed
-a year and a half for preparation, with a salary sufficient for his
-maintenance.
-
-Niebuhr had now a definite object. The East, with all its barbaric
-pomp and historical glory, which in preceding and succeeding days
-have kindled enthusiasm in so many bosoms, appeared to court his
-examination; and, like a lover who appreciates at their highest value
-the accomplishments of his mistress, and is bent on rendering himself
-worthy of her, he thenceforward studied, with vehement earnestness,
-all those branches of knowledge which he regarded as necessary to a
-traveller in the East; and Latin, Arabic, the mathematics, drawing,
-practical mechanics, together with the history of the countries he was
-about to visit, amply occupied his hours. An additional half-year being
-granted him, it was not until the Michaelmas of 1760 that he quitted
-Göttingen for Copenhagen.
-
-Here he was received in the most flattering manner by Count
-Bernstorf, the Danish minister, by whom he was appointed lieutenant
-of engineers. The rank of captain he modestly refused. Niebuhr was
-never possessed by an immoderate desire for wealth, and a trait of
-unpresuming disinterestedness which escaped him during his preparatory
-studies is at once illustrative of this fact, and of another equally
-important,--that wealth no less than fame is frequently best won by
-carefully abstaining from grasping at it too eagerly. The salary
-granted him by the King of Denmark was probably small, but our
-traveller, with that repugnance to solicit which is characteristic
-of superior minds, not only contrived to reduce his wants within the
-limits of his means, but by rigid economy enabled himself, moreover,
-to purchase at his own expense whatever instruments he needed. The
-knowledge of this fact coming to the ears of the minister, he not only
-reimbursed the young traveller the sum he had expended, but, as a mark
-of the high satisfaction he derived from so striking an evidence of
-honest independence, committed to his charge the travelling-chest of
-the mission.
-
-Niebuhr’s companions were four in number: Von Haven, the linguist, a
-person of mean capacity; Forskaal, the naturalist, distinguished for
-his numerous and profound acquirements; Cramer, a physician, devoid
-even of professional knowledge; and Baurenfeind, an artist, not
-destitute of talent, but ignorant, full of prejudices, and addicted to
-the vulgar habit of drinking. Von Haven, to whom a long sea-voyage was
-disagreeable, obtained permission to proceed to Marseilles by land;
-and the ship in which the other members of the expedition embarked was
-directed to take him on board at that port. They left the Sound on the
-7th of January, 1761, but were three times driven back by contrary
-winds; so that it was not until the 10th of March that they were
-enabled fairly to put to sea, and continue their voyage.
-
-Niebuhr describes, among the singular things observed during this
-voyage, a white rainbow, which only differed from the common rainbow in
-being destitute of colours. This, I believe, is a phenomenon not often
-witnessed; but on the 21st of May, 1830, which succeeded a day and
-night of tremendous thunder, lightning, and rain, I remember to have
-myself seen a similar rainbow in Normandy. It was much thicker, but
-greatly inferior in span, and less sharply defined at the edges than
-the ordinary bow; and, as the morning mist upon which it was painted
-grew thinner, the arch decreased in span, until it at length vanished
-entirely.
-
-Our traveller amused himself while on board in observing the manners
-of the crew, which he considered manly though unpolished. He likewise
-exercised himself daily in nautical and astronomical observations;
-and by his affability and the extent of his knowledge, acquired and
-preserved the respect of both officers and men. They discovered Cape
-St. Vincent on the 21st of April, and a few days afterward entered the
-Mediterranean, where their course was considerably retarded by calms
-and contrary winds. Meanwhile the weather was beautiful, and their
-eyes were refreshed with the most lovely prospects, now on the African
-shores, and now on those of Europe. On the 14th of May they cast anchor
-in the port of Marseilles, which was at that time crowded by Swedish,
-Danish, Dutch, Spanish, and French ships, the greater number of which
-were prevented from putting to sea by fear of the English fleets, which
-scoured the Mediterranean, diffusing consternation and terror on all
-sides.
-
-From the agreeable society of Marseilles, rendered doubly charming in
-their estimation by their previous privation, they were soon compelled
-to snatch themselves away. On the 6th of June Niebuhr observed at sea
-the transit of Venus, and on the 14th reached Malta. This little island
-enjoys, like Ireland, the privilege of being free from serpents, which
-it is supposed to owe to the interference of St. Paul; though Niebuhr
-imagines that the dry and rocky nature of the soil is sufficient,
-without a miracle, to account for the circumstance. The knights
-observing, perhaps, a peculiar absence of bigotry in our traveller,
-imagined that this indicated a leaning towards Catholicism, and
-appear to have been desirous of tempting him by magnificent promises
-to desert the creed of his forefathers. Though his stay in Malta was
-very short, Niebuhr was careful to observe whatever curiosities the
-island afforded: the great church of St. John, enriched, it is said, by
-sharing the plunder of the knights, with innumerable ornaments, and a
-prodigious candelabrum of gold; the hospital, where the sick, whatever
-might be their medical treatment, were served with vessels of silver;
-the immense corn-magazines, hewn out in the rock; the salt-mines; and
-the catacombs. For some reason, however, which is not stated, he did
-not see the Phenician inscription, which was still preserved in the
-island.
-
-In sailing from Malta to Smyrna he was attacked with dysentery, and
-began to fear that his travels were to terminate there; but the
-disorder was less serious than he imagined, and having reached Tenedos,
-he embarked in a Turkish boat, and proceeded up the Dardanelles to
-Constantinople. Here, though slowly, he recovered his health, and
-having remained quiet two months, and provided oriental dresses, not
-choosing to expose himself in the paltry costume of Europe to the
-laughter of the populace, he set sail with his companions for Egypt.
-
-On the way they landed at Rhodes, where, for the first time they
-visited a Turkish eating-house. The dinner, though dear, was good, but
-was served up in common earthen platters, in the open street. They
-next visited a Jew, who kept wine for the accommodation of Europeans;
-and had in his house two young women, whom he called his daughters,
-who were probably designed for the same purpose. Their reception here
-cost them still dearer than their Turkish dinner; and as Jews, wine,
-and the drinkers of wine are held in contempt by all sincere and
-respectable Mohammedans, this must be considered a highly injudicious
-step in Niebuhr. The ship in which they sailed had on board a number
-of female slaves, the principal of whom were lodged in a large chamber
-directly over their cabin, from which we may infer that the Turks do
-not, like the Burmese, consider it a disgrace to have women walking
-over their heads. As there were tolerably wide cracks in the ceiling,
-our travellers frequently enjoyed the pleasure of viewing these ladies,
-who, though a little terrified at first, soon became accustomed to
-their faces, and notwithstanding that neither party at all understood
-the language of the other, many little presents of fruit and other
-trifles were given and returned. The mode in which this affair was
-conducted was ingenious. As soon as the Mohammedans collected together
-for prayer, the girls gently tapped at their windows, and Niebuhr
-and Forskaal, looking out of the cabin, beheld the handkerchiefs of
-the fair held out for fruit. When filled, they were drawn up, and
-the presents they chose to make in return were then lowered down in
-the same way. During the voyage, six or eight persons having died
-suddenly, it was suspected that they had the plague on board; but
-Niebuhr imagined that other causes might have hastened the end of those
-who died; at all events, none of the members of the expedition were
-infected, though their physician had often visited the sick.
-
-The land of Egypt at length appeared on the 26th of September, and
-on the same day, late in the evening, they cast anchor in the port
-of Alexandria. Norden, a scientific, but an uninteresting traveller,
-having recently constructed a plan of the city, Niebuhr judged that
-he might spare himself the pains of repeating the process, more
-especially as the Arabs, hovering in troops in the vicinity, rendered
-him apprehensive that he might be robbed. However, as the eminence on
-which Pompey’s pillar stands overlooks a large portion of the city, he
-amused himself with taking several angles from thence, intending to
-follow this up by taking others from some other positions. While he was
-thus engaged, one of the Turkish merchants, who happened to be present,
-observing his telescope pointed towards the city, had the curiosity to
-look through it, and was not a little alarmed at perceiving a tower
-upside down. “This,” says he, “gave occasion to a rumour, that I was
-come to Alexandria to turn the whole city topsyturvy. The report
-reached the governor’s house. My janizary refused to accompany me
-when I took out my instrument; and as I then supposed that a European
-could not venture to appear in an eastern city without a janizary, I
-relinquished the idea of making any further geometrical measurements
-there.”--“On another occasion,” he continues, “when I was making an
-astronomical observation on the southern point of the Delta, a very
-civil and sensible peasant, from the village of Daraúe, happened to be
-present. As I wished to show him something he had never seen before, I
-pointed the telescope of the quadrant towards his village, on which he
-was extremely terrified at seeing all the houses upside down. He asked
-my servant what could be the cause of this. The man replied, that the
-government, being extremely dissatisfied with the inhabitants of that
-village, had sent me to overthrow it entirely. The poor peasant was
-greatly afflicted, and entreated me to wait long enough for him to take
-his wife, his children, and his cow to some place of safety. My servant
-assured him he had two hours good. He immediately ran home, and as soon
-as the sun had passed the meridian, I took my quadrant on board again.”
-
-Niebuhr found a number of Mohammedans at Alexandria who understood
-French, Swedish, and Danish as completely as if they had been born
-in the countries where those languages are spoken. As most European
-travellers proceed up the Nile from this city to Cairo, the members of
-the expedition were desirous of performing the journey by land, but
-were restrained by fear of the Arabs; and M. Forskaal, who afterward
-ventured upon this hardy enterprise, was actually stripped to the
-skin, and with great difficulty obtained back his breeches. Niebuhr
-now hired a small ship, and embarked on the 31st of October, but was
-detained in the Gulf of Aboukir by contrary winds. Impatient of delay,
-his companions proceeded thence to Rosetta by land, with a company of
-Turks; but our traveller continued his voyage, and reached the city
-very shortly after them. Though the inhabitants of Rosetta enjoyed the
-reputation of being peculiarly polite towards strangers, Niebuhr was
-too impatient to behold the capital of modern Egypt to linger long in
-any provincial city; he therefore hastened to ascend the Nile, and
-enjoyed the romantic prospect of fertility, villages peeping through
-groves of date-trees, and here and there vast wrecks of ancient cities,
-which all travellers in that extraordinary country have admired. They
-arrived at Cairo on the 10th of November.
-
-The Nile, like the Ganges, has long been renowned for the daring race
-of pirates who infest it. Bruce, and many other travellers, have
-celebrated their ingenuity; but the following anecdote, related by
-Niebuhr, exhibits their exquisite skill in a still more favourable
-point of view: A pasha, recently arrived in Egypt, happening to
-be encamped on the banks of the river, his servants, aware of the
-dexterity of their countrymen, kept so strict a watch during the
-night, that they detected one of the pirates, and brought him before
-the pasha, who threatened to put him to death on the spot. The
-prisoner, however, entreated permission to show the pasha one of the
-extraordinary tricks of his art, in the hope of thereby inducing him to
-spare his life. The permission was granted. The man then took up the
-pasha’s garments, and whatever else he found in the tent, and having
-tied them up into a packet, as the Egyptians do when they are about to
-swim across a river, made several turns before the company to amuse
-them. He then insensibly approached the Nile, and darting into the
-water like lightning, had already reached the opposite shore, with the
-pasha’s garments upon his head, before the Turks could get ready their
-muskets to fire at him.
-
-Niebuhr was exceedingly desirous, soon after his arrival at Cairo, of
-descending the eastern branch of the Nile to Damietta; but the sky
-during the whole winter and spring was so overcast with clouds, and the
-rain fell so frequently, that it was impossible to take astronomical
-observations. On the 1st of May, however, the weather having cleared
-up, he left Cairo. The wind blowing from the north, their progress
-was slow, and he had therefore considerable leisure for observation.
-The Coptic churches amused him much. In one of these he saw pictures
-representing Christ, the Virgin, and several saints, on horseback;
-intended, perhaps, to insinuate to their Mohammedan masters, that the
-founder of their religion and his followers had not been compelled,
-as Christians then were in Egypt, to ride upon asses. These churches,
-moreover, were strewed with so many crutches, that a stranger might
-conclude, upon observing them, that the whole Coptic community had lost
-the use of their limbs; however, upon inquiry, our traveller discovered
-that it was the custom among them to stand in church, which many
-persons found so wearisome that they resolved to aid their piety with
-crutches. The floors were covered with mats, which, not being changed
-very frequently, swarmed with fleas, numbers of which did our traveller
-the honour to prefer him before any of their ancient patrons. In
-approaching Damietta he saw about twenty large boats loaded with bees:
-each of these boats carried two hundred hives; the number, therefore,
-of the hives here assembled in one spot, was four thousand; and when
-the inhabitants of this floating city issued forth to visit the flowers
-of the neighbourhood, they must have appeared like a locust cloud.
-
-His stay at Damietta, which is about four miles above the mouth of the
-Nile, was short. Europeans are nowhere in the East so much detested, on
-account, chiefly, of the profligate character of the French formerly
-settled there, who, having debauched several Mohammedan women, were
-nearly all massacred by the infuriated populace. Niebuhr’s fancy
-that they still remember the crusades, and hate the Franks for the
-evils those insane expeditions inflicted on their ancestors, is just
-as rational as if the English people were to be supposed to nourish
-resentment against all the northern nations, because their barbarous
-ancestors made piratical descents upon our coasts.
-
-While at Cairo he could not, of course, resist the desire of visiting
-the Pyramids. He therefore hired two Bedouin guides, and proceeded with
-his friend Forskaal towards the desert, where they were encountered by
-a young sheïkh, who, by dint of bravado and insolence, succeeded in
-extorting from them a small sum of money; but had they, when he first
-offered his services, bestowed upon him half a crown, he would not only
-have given them no further molestation, but would have constituted
-himself their protector against all other importunates. Niebuhr
-afterward returned under more favourable auspices, and completed the
-measurement of the two great pyramids, the loftier of which he found to
-be 443 feet, and the second to be 403 feet high. I shall hereafter,
-perhaps, have occasion to remark upon the strange discrepancies which
-are found between the measurements of various travellers, which are, in
-fact, so great, that we must suspect some of them, at least, of having
-wanted the knowledge required by such an undertaking. From considering
-the petrifactions and the nature of the rocks in this neighbourhood,
-Niebuhr was led to infer the prodigious antiquity of Egypt: “Supposing
-the whole of the rocks in the northern portions of the country to be
-composed of petrifactions of a certain kind of shell, how many years,”
-says he, “must have elapsed before a sufficient number of little snails
-to raise mountains to their present height could have been born and
-died! How many other years before Egypt could have been drained and
-become solid, supposing that, in those remote ages, the waters retired
-from the shore as slowly as they have during the last ten centuries!
-How many years still, before the country was sufficiently peopled to
-think of erecting the first pyramid! How many more years, before that
-vast multitude of pyramids which are still found in the country could
-have been constructed! Considering that at the present day we are
-ignorant of when, and by whom, even the most modern of them was built.”
-
-On the 26th of August, 1762, Niebuhr and his companions set out with
-the caravan going from Cairo to Suez: the rest of the party, in spite
-of the Mohammedans, mounted on horseback, and Niebuhr himself on a
-dromedary. By this means he avoided several evils to which the others
-were liable. Seated on his mattress he could turn his face now on one
-side, now on another, to avoid the heat of the sun; and, after having
-travelled all day, was no more fatigued in the evening than if he had
-been all the while reposing in a chair; while the horsemen, compelled
-to remain perpetually in the same posture, were well-nigh exhausted. On
-the 30th they encamped near a well of good water, mentioned by Belin,
-Pietro Della Valle, and Pococke, close to which the Turks formerly
-erected a castle, which was now in ruins, and in three hours more
-arrived at the wells of Suez, which were surrounded by a strong wall,
-to keep out the Arabs, and entered by a door fastened with enormous
-clumps of iron. The water here was drawn up with buckets or sacks of
-leather.
-
-Suez, from its fortunate position on the Red Sea, carried on a
-considerable trade. Numbers of ships were built there annually, the
-materials of which were transported thither on the backs of camels from
-Cairo. The environs consist of naked rocks, or beds of loose sand, in
-which nothing but brambles and a few dry stunted plants, among others
-the rose of Jericho, are found to grow. This rose is employed by the
-women of the East in various superstitious practices, and is therefore
-to be found for sale in all cities. When pregnant, they gather one of
-the buds, and putting its stem in water, foretel whether their pains
-will be severe or slight from the greater or smaller development of the
-flower.
-
-Niebuhr’s first inquiry on arriving at Suez was concerning the
-“Mountain of Inscriptions,” about which so much had been said in
-Europe. The individuals to whom his first questions were put had never
-even heard of it; others, who were exactly in the same predicament,
-but desired to possess themselves of a little of their European gold,
-professed a most accurate knowledge of the spot, but upon inquiry
-were detected. At length, however, an Arab was discovered, from whose
-replies it was clear, that whether he had seen the real _Gebel el
-Mokatteb_ or not, some mountain or another he had beheld, upon which
-inscriptions in an unknown language were to be found. Under this man’s
-guidance, therefore, they placed themselves,--that is, Niebuhr and
-Von Haven, for the rest were, from various causes, detained at Suez;
-and leaving the Red Sea on their right-hand, they struck off into the
-desert.
-
-As I have given a description of this part of Arabia in the life of
-Dr. Shaw, it will not be necessary here to repeat what I then said.
-Niebuhr found that the Arabs, whose profession it is to serve as
-guides, were distinguished, like all other persons of that class,
-for their extravagant cupidity. So long as they could live at the
-expense of strangers their own provisions and means were assiduously
-spared; but on other occasions they exhibited various symptoms that
-the old national virtue of hospitality was not wholly banished from
-their minds. The women in this part of Arabia are not in the habit of
-concealing their faces from strangers, as is the fashion in Egypt.
-Niebuhr, in his solitary rambles through the country, discovered the
-wife and sister of a sheïkh grinding corn beside their tent; who,
-instead of flying and concealing themselves at his approach, as he
-seems to have expected, came forward, according to the good old custom
-of the East, with a present in their hands.
-
-On arriving at what his guides called the “Mountain of Inscriptions,” a
-lofty rugged eminence, which it cost them much time and toil to climb,
-he found--not what he had expected--but a vast Egyptian cemetery,
-in which were a great number of sepulchral monuments, covered with
-hieroglyphics. These inscriptions he was not permitted to copy at the
-time, because the sheïkh of the mountain apprehended he might thereby
-gain possession of the immense treasures concealed beneath; but one of
-his guides, who probably had little faith in that point of the sheïkh’s
-creed, afterward, on his return from Mount Sinai, enabled him to copy
-whatever he pleased. On his arrival at the convent of St. Catherine
-the monks politely refused to admit him, alleging, as their excuse,
-that he had not brought along with him a letter from their bishop. The
-patriarch’s letter, which he presented to them, they returned unopened.
-He was, in fact, destined to meet with nothing but disappointment in
-these celebrated regions; for his Arabs, having conducted him up to
-a certain height on Mount Sinai, refused to proceed any farther, and
-he was not possessed of sufficient resolution to ascend the remainder
-alone.
-
-Niebuhr now hastened back to Suez, and on his return forded the Red Sea
-on his dromedary, a thing which no European had done before, though the
-guides, who were on foot, did not find the water above knee deep. Being
-desirous of surveying the extremity of the Arabian Gulf, he procured
-a guide soon after his return from Mount Sinai, with whom he set out
-upon this expedition. They travelled, however, in constant fear; and
-the sight of a stranger in the distance increased the terrors of the
-guide to so extraordinary a pitch, that I suspect he had blood upon his
-hands, and dreaded the hour of retribution.
-
-The constant arrival of pilgrims from Egypt had now rendered Suez, in
-proportion to its extent, more populous than Cairo. These holy men,
-being on their way to the city of their prophet, regarded Christians
-with an evil eye, just as a bigoted Franciscan travelling to Jerusalem
-would regard a heretic or an unbeliever; and on this account Niebuhr
-greatly dreaded the voyage he was about to perform in their company
-from Suez to Jidda. To avoid, as far as possible, all causes of dispute
-with their fellow-passengers, they embarked several days before the
-rest, paid their passage, stowed away their luggage, and then amused
-themselves with observing the strange characters by which they were
-surrounded, not the least extraordinary of which was a rich black
-eunuch, who, in imitation of the great Turkish lords, travelled with
-his harem.
-
-All the passengers having at length repaired on board, they set sail
-on the 9th of October, and sailing along coral reefs, which in bad
-weather are highly dangerous, they arrived next day at Tor. Near this
-town is a small village inhabited by Christians, to which Forskaal
-went alone, for the purpose of visiting what is supposed to be the
-site of ancient Elim. While he was absent it was rumoured on board
-that the Arabs had formed the intention of pursuing and arresting the
-Frank, who had landed with the design of sketching their mountains;
-upon which a number of janizaries from Cairo, who happened to be on
-board, immediately set out for the village, and having met with M.
-Forskaal, conducted him back in safety to the vessel. “Are there many
-Christians,” inquires Niebuhr, “who, under similar circumstances, would
-do as much for a Jew?”
-
-On the evening of the 16th of October they discovered, about sunset,
-the Emerald Mountains on the coast of Egypt, called _Gebel Zumrud_ by
-the Arabs. Next day there happened an eclipse of the sun. In Mohammedan
-countries persons who are able to calculate an eclipse are regarded as
-consummate physicians. Forskaal had informed the reis, or captain, that
-an eclipse was about to take place; and to amuse him and keep him from
-interrupting his astronomical observations, Niebuhr had smoked several
-glasses, through which he, as well as the principal merchants, might
-contemplate the phenomenon. They were all greatly amused, and from that
-moment Forskaal enjoyed the reputation of being a second Avicenna. From
-a spirit of humane complaisance, which induces us to allow every one an
-opportunity of exhibiting his peculiar talents, men are exceedingly apt
-to fall ill when they come in contact with a physician. Our traveller’s
-Mohammedan companions were particularly polite in this way; for no
-sooner had they persuaded themselves that there was a physician on
-board than they all discovered that they were attacked by diseases
-which had previously lain dormant, and confidingly demanded medicines
-and advice. Forskaal prescribed for all. To the majority he recommended
-more or less sleep, and a careful attention to their diet. A pilgrim
-at length presented himself who complained that he was unable to see
-during the night. The physician advised him to light a candle. This
-was excellent. The Arabs, who are naturally lively, burst into a loud
-laugh, and all their diseases were forgotten in a moment.
-
-Between Ras Mohammed and Hassâni the ship was twice in danger of
-being set on fire by the negligence of the women; but at length they
-reached this small island in safety, and the Mohammedans, believing
-the principal danger to be now over, exhibited various tokens of joy,
-firing muskets and pistols, illuminating the ship with lamps and
-lanterns, and uttering the triumphant cry of _Be, be, be!_ so commonly
-used by the orientals. The sailors and the pilot petitioned for a
-present, the former coming round to each passenger with a little boat
-in their hands, which, when the collection was over, was thrown into
-the sea. During this passage Niebuhr, who, up to his arrival at Suez,
-had scarcely seen the face of a Mohammedan woman, had an opportunity
-of viewing three or four of them naked in a bath; and his indiscreet
-curiosity very fortunately entailed upon him no evil consequences.
-
-On the 29th of October they arrived at Jidda, where the usual attempts
-were made to defraud the custom-house. In this praiseworthy design some
-succeeded to the extent of their desires; but others, less adroit, or
-more unfortunate, were detected and compelled to pay the duties, no
-such atrocity as the confiscation of the whole property being ever
-practised. A duty of two or two and a half _per cent._ being levied
-upon all specie, people were most anxious to conceal their wealth: but
-by endeavouring to effect this, one of Niebuhr’s companions suffered
-severely; for in stepping from the ship into the boat, his purse,
-which he had tied round his body, opened accidentally, and about a
-hundred crowns fell into the sea. The common cash of the expedition was
-conveyed on shore in the bottoms of their boxes of drugs, which were
-not searched, it being in Arabia a general opinion that physicians,
-having no need of money, seldom carry any about with them.
-
-Niebuhr had observed in Egypt that the populace looked with
-inexpressible contempt upon Christians, and thence inferred that in
-proportion as they approached the Holy City they should find this
-inhospitable bigotry on the increase; but his apprehensions were
-unfounded, for the people of Jidda, long accustomed to the sight of
-Europeans, and constantly experiencing the humanizing influence of
-commerce, were peculiarly refined, allowing strangers to do almost what
-they pleased. It was merely forbidden them to approach the Mecca gate;
-which, like the city to which it leads, is reputed holy. Our traveller,
-during his residence at Cairo, had formed an acquaintance with a poor
-sheïkh, who, for a Mohammedan, might be said to be as highly favoured
-by science as he was neglected by fortune; and this man, in gratitude
-for the knowledge he had derived from him, besides furnishing him
-with letters of recommendation to the Kihaya and Pasha of Jidda, had
-privately written to those important personages, who had honoured him
-for his knowledge, earnestly requesting them to show every possible
-mark of kindness and attention to his European friends. These were the
-letters from which they had least expectations, and presented last;
-nevertheless, when the recommendations of all their other friends
-had failed even to procure them a lodging, those of the poor sheïkh
-introduced them to powerful protectors. Niebuhr was here witness of the
-curious mode of catching wild ducks noticed by Pococke in Upper Egypt,
-and by another English traveller in China. When a number of these birds
-were observed in the water, the sportsman undressed, covered his head
-with seaweed, and then crept quietly into the water. By this means the
-ducks were deceived, so that they allowed the man to come near and
-catch them by the legs.
-
-They remained at Jidda until the 14th of December, when they embarked
-in one of the country vessels for Loheia. Niebuhr was not possessed
-of the art of painting what he saw with the fine colours of language.
-His narrative is frequently dry even to insipidity. He was observant,
-he was calm, he was judicious, but he was destitute of eloquence, and
-this deficiency is nowhere in his works more strongly felt than in his
-account of his various voyages through the Red Sea. On the 22d they
-landed on the coast of Yemen, near Fej el Jelbe, inhabited by Bedouins,
-who are suspected of being pagans. A few tents were discovered on the
-shore, and as soon as the travellers had landed, which they did unarmed
-lest they should be taken for enemies, several of the wild natives
-came down to meet them. Their appearance and dress were extraordinary.
-Their dark hair descended in profusion to their shoulders; and instead
-of a turban, several of them had merely a cord tied round the head,
-intended, I imagine, to keep their tresses in order. Others, more
-careful and industrious, had woven themselves a kind of bonnet with
-green palm-leaves. A miserable waist-cloth constituted the whole of
-their dress. From the eagerness of the sailors to get their lances out
-of their hands they immediately discovered that they were suspected;
-upon which they cast the weapons on the ground, assuring the strangers
-that they had nothing to fear. Notwithstanding that they had landed in
-search of provisions the Bedouins conducted them to their tents, where
-two women came out to meet them. Their salutation was curious. The
-women, who were unveiled, kissed the arm of the sheïkh, who, in return,
-pressed their heads with his lips. The ladies then advanced towards
-the strangers. Their complexion was sallow brown, they had blackened
-their eyelids with surme, and died their nails with henne; and, like
-the lower ranks of women in Egypt, exhibited marks of tattooing on the
-chin, cheeks, and forehead. Cosmetics being rare in those countries,
-they requested our travellers to favour them with a small quantity of
-kohol and al henne; but they had injudiciously neglected to provide
-themselves with any thing of the kind, and consequently saw themselves
-in the disagreeable predicament of being compelled to refuse.
-
-On their arrival at Loheia they were received with remarkable
-politeness by the emir and the chief merchants of the city. They
-had taken the small vessel in which they performed the voyage for a
-longer passage as far as Hodeida; and the captain, understanding that
-they had some intention of remaining at Loheia, secretly applied to
-the emir with a request that he would compel them to complete their
-engagement, either by proceeding all the way to Hodeida, or by paying
-the whole sum agreed upon. With a generosity not often displayed
-towards utter strangers by men in office, the emir replied, that should
-the travellers refuse payment of the sum in question, he himself would
-satisfy his demands; and the principal merchant to whom the suspicious
-navigator also applied entered into the same engagement. Of course they
-were not allowed to suffer by their grateful and astonished guests.
-
-The above merchant, in his eastern style of hospitality, gave them a
-house to live in during their stay. In return the travellers amused him
-and the emir with the effects of their microscopes, telescopes, &c.
-These things filled them with wonder; crowds of people, curious but
-well-behaved, thronged their court from morning till night, examining
-with attention whatever they saw, and expressing their astonishment
-at every thing. This was too much for Danish politeness. They hired a
-porter, and stationing him at their door, gave strict orders that none
-but professional men should be admitted. But the curiosity of the Arabs
-was not to be subdued so easily; for, when all other excuses failed,
-they feigned illness, and gained admittance under pretence of coming
-to consult the physician. Sometimes Dr. Cramer, who appears to have
-been an uncouth creature, was requested to favour sick persons with a
-visit at their own houses, and one day received a pressing entreaty to
-repair without delay to the _emir el bahr_, or captain of the port,
-who had need of consulting him. Cramer, not attending to this summons
-immediately, was shortly afterward informed that the _emir el bahr’s_
-saddle-horse was at the door waiting for him. This piece of attention
-was too flattering to be resisted; he therefore descended immediately,
-and was about to put his foot into the stirrup, when he was interrupted
-with the information that the horse was unwell, and had been brought
-there as a patient! Physicians in Arabia prescribe for horses as well
-as men; this, therefore, was not meant as an insult; but Cramer, who
-felt all his Danish blood curdle in his veins at the bare idea of
-prescribing for a Mohammedan horse, and was, moreover, mortified at not
-being allowed to mount his patient, indignantly refused to exercise
-the functions of a horse-doctor. Luckily, however, their European
-servant, who had served in a dragoon regiment, understood something of
-the veterinary art, and undertook the cure of the emir’s horse; which
-succeeding happily, he also was regarded as an eminent physician, and
-was allowed to elevate his ambition to the treatment of men.
-
-As our travellers continued, as far as possible, to live after the
-European fashion, their manners were necessarily as much an object of
-curiosity to the Arabs as those of the Arabs were to them. One day two
-young men came to see them eat. Of these, the one was a young nobleman
-from Sana, whose gentle manners announced a superior education; the
-other a young chief from the mountains, whose country was seldom
-visited by strangers. This the _naïveté_ and simplicity of his manners
-soon rendered manifest. Upon being invited to eat, he replied, “God
-preserve me from eating with infidels, who have no belief in God!”
-Niebuhr then demanded the name of his country; “What,” said he, “can
-my country concern thee? Hast thou formed the design of going thither
-to subdue it?” He afterward made several remarks upon their manners,
-the simplicity of which excited their laughter; at which the Arab
-felt ashamed, and ran away in confusion. His companion fetched him
-back, however, and he returned, wondering at the amazing quantity of
-food which they devoured. Fowl after fowl disappeared before these
-mighty eaters; the poor Arab, who began to entertain awful ideas of
-the capacity of a German stomach, and apprehending that they might
-bring about a famine in the land, for a while looked on in silent
-amazement; but when they had already eaten as much as would, perhaps,
-have satisfied a whole tribe of Bedouins, he started up, upon seeing
-Von Haven preparing to carve yet another fowl, and seizing him by the
-arm, exclaimed, “How much, then, dost thou intend to eat?” This sally
-produced still louder peals of laughter than ever, and the poor Arab,
-who probably apprehended that they might finish by eating him, rushed
-out of the house and disappeared.
-
-Having sufficiently observed whatever was interesting or new at Loheia,
-they departed thence on the 20th of February, 1763, their servants and
-baggage mounted on camels, and themselves on asses. Not that Europeans
-were here, as at Cairo, prohibited from riding on horseback, but that
-horses were dear and not easily to be hired, while the asses, though
-comparatively cheap, were large fine animals, of easy gait. Arabia, it
-is well known, is surrounded by a belt of burning sand, which has in
-all ages aided in protecting it from invasion. This our travellers had
-now to traverse, but they suffered no particular inconvenience from the
-heat, and in four days arrived at _Beit el Fakih_, the greatest coffee
-emporium in the world.
-
-Niebuhr, being now in a country where travelling was attended with
-no risk, and desiring, apparently, to escape from the society of
-his companions, hired an ass, and set out alone on an excursion to
-several neighbouring towns. This was succeeded by several other
-excursions, and at length he proceeded to the Coffee Mountains, a
-district which offers, perhaps, as many curious particulars to the
-observation of a traveller as any spot in Asia. These mountains could
-be ascended only on foot. The road, though rugged and broken, lay
-through coffee plantations and gardens, and to Niebuhr, who had just
-quitted the burning plains of the Tehama, afforded the most exquisite
-gratification. The prospects, moreover, which here meet the eye on all
-sides are rich and beautiful. They are precisely what the hills of
-Judea must have been before Sion had been profaned by the heathen, when
-every man, confident in the protection of the Lord, sat down tranquilly
-under his vine or under his fig-tree. The small chain of hills, called
-the Côte d’Or, which traverses nearly the whole of Burgundy from north
-to south, and is covered with vineyards to the summit, may probably
-represent to a European eye the ridge of the Coffee Mountains, except
-that the latter have necessarily a more woody appearance, and are
-beautified by numerous mountain streams, which frequently leap in long
-cascades from the rocks. The coffee-tree, which was at this time in
-full flower in many places, diffuses around an agreeable odour, and
-somewhat resembles the Spanish jasmin. The Arabs plant these trees so
-close that the rays of the sun can scarcely find their way between
-them, which prevents the necessity of frequent watering; but they have
-reservoirs on the heights from which they can, when necessary, turn
-numerous streamlets into the plantations.
-
-From the Coffee Mountains they returned to Beit el Fakih, whence they
-shortly afterward departed on another short excursion. The natives, who
-carefully abstained from exposing themselves to the sun during the heat
-of the day, expressed their well-grounded astonishment that Europeans
-should be imprudent enough to hazard so dangerous a step; and our
-travellers were, in reality, at this very time laying the foundation of
-those fatal diseases which shortly afterward swept them away, Niebuhr
-only excepted; for I am persuaded that they might have returned, even
-in spite of their execrable diet and destructive habits of drinking,
-to brave the climate of Yemen, had they timed their journeys more
-judiciously.
-
-By this time their appearance was tolerably oriental; the sun had
-bronzed their countenances, their beards had acquired a respectable
-length, their dress was exactly that of the country, and they had,
-moreover, adopted Arabic names. Even their guides no longer took them
-for Europeans, but supposed them to be members of the eastern church,
-who by forbidden studies had succeeded in discovering the art of making
-gold, and were searching among the lonely recesses of their mountains
-for some rare plant whose juices were requisite in their alchymical
-processes. Niebuhr’s assiduous observation of the stars considerably
-aided in strengthening this delusion, which upon the whole, perhaps,
-was rather beneficial to them than otherwise.
-
-In the hilly districts of Yemen our traveller observed among the
-Arabs a peculiar mode of passing the night. Instead of making use
-of a bed, each individual crept entirely naked into a sack, where,
-without closing the mouth of it, the breath and transpiration kept him
-sufficiently warm. Niebuhr himself never tried the sack, but very soon
-acquired the habit, which is universal among the Arabs of Yemen, of
-sleeping with the face covered, to guard against the malignant effects
-of the dews and poisonous winds. Here M. Forskaal discovered the small
-tree that produces the balm of Mecca, which happening to be in flower
-at the time enabled him to write a complete description of it, which he
-did seated under its branches. The inhabitants, who knew nothing of its
-value, merely made use of it as firewood, on account of its agreeable
-odour.
-
-Upon descending from these mountainous countries, where the climate
-is as cool and salubrious as in most parts of Europe, Niebuhr found
-the heat of the Tehama almost insupportable, and entering a little
-coffee-house, overwhelmed with fatigue, threw himself on his mat in
-a current of air, and fell asleep. This heedless action nearly cost
-him his life. He awoke in a violent fever, which hung about him for a
-considerable time, and reduced his frame to such an extreme state of
-weakness that the slightest exertion became painful. Von Haven, too,
-whose supreme delight consisted in brandy, wine, and good eating, and
-who seldom quitted his sofa, except for the purpose of placing himself
-before his gods at the dinner-table, now began to experience the
-impolicy of feeding like an ogre in the deserts of the Tehama, and very
-quickly fell a victim to his imprudence.
-
-From Beit el Fakih they proceeded to Mokha, where, as at Cairo,
-Europeans were compelled to enter the city by a particular gate,
-on foot, as a mark of humiliation. Niebuhr found that he and his
-companions were here taken for Turks, and they were accordingly
-directed to the khan, or inn, where the Osmanlis usually took up
-their abode. Though they understood that there was an English merchant
-at Mokha, they judged it unnecessary, in the first instance, to make
-application to him, as they had everywhere else in Yemen been received
-with politeness and hospitality; and besides, they were somewhat
-apprehensive that, from their dress and appearance, he might be led
-to regard them as vagabonds or renegades. They therefore addressed
-themselves to an Arab merchant, by whom they were well received.
-
-The people of Mokha made some pretensions to civilization, which is
-unfortunate, as the term, at least in the East, means custom-house
-officers, and insolence towards strangers. Our travellers, though no
-merchants, had large quantities of baggage, which, of course, was taken
-to the custom-house, before they could be allowed to enjoy the use
-of it. I have already observed, that although Niebuhr himself was a
-temperate, perhaps even an abstemious man, his companions set a high
-value on the gratification of their senses. Von Haven himself, who,
-as I have already observed, shortly afterward fell a victim to his
-indiscretion, was still among them, and it may therefore be easily
-imagined that the first articles they were desirous of obtaining from
-the custom-house were their cooking utensils and their beds. The
-Arabs, however, were differently minded. They allowed their curiosity
-to fasten upon the cases in which the natural history specimens were
-packed, and resolved to begin with them. Among these, unfortunately,
-there was a small barrel containing various fish of the Red Sea,
-preserved in spirits of wine. This M. Forskaal, who had collected
-these fishes himself, injudiciously requested the officers to allow to
-pass unopened. The request immediately roused all their suspicions.
-He might, for aught they knew, be a magician, who had confined the
-Red Sea itself in that barrel, for the purpose of carrying it off,
-with all its fishes, into Europe. It behooved them, therefore, to
-bestir themselves. Accordingly the barrel was the first thing opened;
-but when the operation had been performed, the result anticipated by
-the naturalist was produced, for so pungent, so atrocious a stink
-was emitted from the half-putrefied fish, that the authorities very
-probably apprehended them to be a troop of assassins, commissioned
-by the devil to administer perdition through the nostrils to all
-true believers. The custom-house officer, however, confiding in the
-protection of the Prophet, determined to brave the infernal odour, and
-in order to explore the abomination to the bottom, took out the horrid
-remains of the fish, and stirred up the liquor with a piece of iron.
-The entreaties of the travellers to have it put on one side probably
-caused them to be regarded as ghouls, who made their odious repasts
-upon such foul preparations. The Arab still stirred and stirred, and at
-length in an inauspicious moment upset the cask, and deluged the whole
-custom-house with its contents. Had Mohammed himself been boiled in
-this liquid, it could not have smelt more execrably; we may therefore
-easily imagine the disgust with which the grave assembly beheld it
-flowing under their beards, infecting them with a scent which it would
-take several dirrhems’ worth of perfume to remove. Their ill-humour
-was increased when, on opening another cask, containing insects, their
-nostrils were again saluted with a fresh variety of stink, which they
-inferred must possess peculiar charms for the nose of a Frank, since
-he would travel so far to procure himself the enjoyment of its savour.
-An idea now began to suggest itself to the Arabs, which still further
-irritated them, which was, that the insolent Franks had packed up
-these odious things in order to insult the governor of the city, at
-the expense of whose beard, it was not doubted, they intended to amuse
-themselves. This persuasion was fatal to many a cockleshell. They
-mercilessly thrust down a pointed iron bar through the collections,
-crushing shells, and beetles, and spiders. The worst stroke of all,
-however, was yet to come. This was the opening of a small cask, in
-which several kinds of serpents were preserved in spirits. Everybody
-was now terrified. It was suggested that the Franks had no doubt come
-to the city for the purpose of poisoning the inhabitants, and had
-represented themselves as physicians in order to commit their horrid
-crimes the more effectually. Even the governor was now moved. In fact,
-his anger was roused to such a pitch, that, though a grave and pious
-man, he exclaimed, “By God, these people shall not pass the night in
-our city!” The custom-house was then closed.
-
-While they were in this perplexity, one of their servants arrived in
-great hurry and confusion, with the news that their books and clothes
-had been thrown out through the window at their lodgings, and the door
-shut against them. They moreover found, upon inquiry, that it would
-be difficult to discover any person who would receive into his house
-individuals suspected of meditating the poisoning of the city; but at
-length a man bold enough to undertake this was found. Such was their
-position when they received from the English merchant above alluded to
-an invitation to dinner. “Never,” says Niebuhr, “was an invitation more
-gladly accepted; for we not only found at his house a dinner such as we
-had never seen since our departure from Cairo, but had at the same time
-the good fortune to meet with a man who became our sincere and faithful
-friend. The affair of the custom-house was long and tedious; but at
-length, by dint of bribery and perseverance, their baggage, snakes
-and all, was delivered to them, and they even rose, in consequence
-of a cure attempted by M. Cramer on the governor’s leg, into high
-consideration and favour.”
-
-Niebuhr was here again attacked by dysentery, and Von Haven died.
-This event inspired the whole party with terror, and having with
-much difficulty obtained the governor’s permission, they shortly
-afterward departed for the interior. They travelled by night, to escape
-the extreme heat of the sun, but soon found the roads so bad as to
-render this mode of journeying impracticable. The country during the
-early part of their route was barren, and but thinly inhabited; but
-in proportion as they departed from the shore the landscape improved
-in beauty and fertility. At the small city of Jerim, on the road to
-Sana, Niebuhr had the misfortune to lose his friend Forskaal, the best
-Arabic scholar of the whole party, and a man who looked forward with
-enthusiasm to the glory to be derived from the successful termination
-of their travels. The bigotry of the Mohammedans rendered it difficult
-to obtain a place of burial for the dead, who was interred in the
-European fashion; which, immediately after their departure, caused the
-Arabs, who imagine that Europeans bury treasures with their dead, to
-exhume the body. Finding nothing to reward their pains, they compelled
-the Jews to reinter him; and as these honest people complained that
-they were likely to have no remuneration for their labour, the governor
-allowed them to take the coffin in payment, and restore the body naked
-to the earth.
-
-On the 17th of July, 1763, they arrived in the environs of Sana, and
-sent forward a servant with a letter, announcing their arrival to the
-chief minister of the imam. This statesman, however, who had previously
-received tidings of their approach, and was desirous of receiving
-them with true Arab politeness, had already despatched one of his
-secretaries to meet them at the distance of half a league from the
-city. This gentleman informed them that they had been long expected
-at Sana, and that, in order to render their stay agreeable, the imam
-had assigned them a country-house at _Bir el Assab_. While they were
-conversing with the secretary, and secretly congratulating themselves
-on their good fortune, they arrived at the entrance into their garden,
-where the Arab desired them to alight. They of course obeyed, but soon
-discovered that their guide had played them a trick in the manner of
-the people of Cairo, for he remained on his ass during the rest of
-the way, which was considerable, enjoying the pleasure of beholding a
-number of Franks toiling along on foot beside his beast. This put them
-out of humour, and their spleen was increased when, on arriving at
-their villa, they found that, however elegant or agreeable it might be,
-it did not contain a single article of furniture, or a person who would
-provide them even with bread and water.
-
-Next day, however, they received from the imam a present of five sheep,
-three camel-loads of wood, a large quantity of wax-tapers, rice, and
-spices. At the same time they were informed that two days at least
-would elapse before they could obtain an audience, a matter about which
-they were indifferent; but that they could not in the mean time quit
-their house. Though considerably chagrined at the latter circumstance,
-they hoped in some measure to neutralize its effects, by receiving
-the visits of such natives as curiosity, or any other motive, might
-allure to the house; and accordingly were very much gratified at the
-appearance of a Jew, who had performed in their company the journey
-from Cairo to Loheia. This young Israelite, delighted to spend a
-few moments in the company of persons who received him without any
-demonstrations of contempt, appeared to experience a gratification in
-obliging them; and came on the second day accompanied by one of the
-most celebrated astrologers of his sect, from whom Niebuhr learned the
-Hebrew appellations of several stars. While he was yet conversing with
-this learned descendant of Abraham, the secretary of the imam arrived.
-They were ignorant of the etiquette of the court of Sana, according to
-which they should have abstained from receiving as well as from paying
-visits; but the secretary, whose business it was to have instructed
-them on these points, doubly enraged by their infraction of the rules
-of decorum, and by a sense of his own negligence, directed all the
-violence of his fury against the unfortunate Jews, whose society he
-imagined must have been equally disagreeable to the travellers as it
-would have been to him. He therefore not only expelled them from the
-house, but, in order to protect the imam’s guests from a repetition
-of the same intrusion, gave peremptory orders to their Mohammedan
-attendant to admit no person whatever until they should have obtained
-their audience.
-
-Two days after their arrival they were admitted into the presence of
-the imam. It is probable that, having previously formed an exalted
-idea of the splendour of oriental princes, the reader will be liable
-to disappointment on the present occasion. The riches and magnificence
-of the califs, however, of which we find so many glowing descriptions
-in the Thousand and One Nights, in D’Herbelot, and many other writers,
-have long passed away, leaving to the successors of those religious
-monarchs nothing but remembrance of ancient glory, which gleams like a
-meteoric light about their throne and diadem. Niebuhr, arriving at Sana
-from the sandy deserts of the Tehama, where poverty reigns paramount
-over every thing, enjoyed the advantage of possessing an imagination
-sobered by stern realities. His fancy depicted the court of the imam in
-the livery of the desert. He expected little. If he was disappointed,
-therefore, it was not disagreeably.
-
-The imam, with a vanity pardonable enough in a prince who learns from
-his cradle to estimate his own greatness by the pomp and glitter
-which surround him, had in fact employed the two days elapsed since
-the arrival of his guests in active preparations for their reception;
-and the rules of etiquette forbidding strangers to pay or receive
-visits during the interval, were originally intended to conceal this
-circumstance, and create the belief that the holyday appearance of
-the court was its ordinary costume. Our travellers were conducted to
-the palace by the minister’s secretary, who here performed what is
-called the mehmandar’s office in Persia. They found the great court
-of the edifice thronged with horses, officers, and other Arabs of
-various grades; so that it required the ministry of the imam’s grand
-equerry to open them a way through the crowd. The hall of audience was
-a spacious square apartment, vaulted above, and having on its centre
-several fountains of water, which, gushing aloft to a considerable
-height, and falling again incessantly, maintained a refreshing coolness
-in the air. A broad divan, adorned with fine Persian carpets, occupied
-the extremity of the hall, and flanked the throne, which was merely
-covered with silken stuffs, and rich cushions. Here the imam sat
-cross-legged, according to the custom of the East. He received the
-travellers graciously, allowed them to kiss the hem of his garment, and
-the back and palm of his hand--an honour which is but sparingly granted
-to strangers. At the conclusion of this ceremony a herald cried aloud,
-“God save the imam!” and all the people repeated the same words. As
-their knowledge of Arabic was still very limited, they conversed with
-the imam by means of an interpreter, a contrivance admirably adapted
-for shortening public conferences, since there are few persons who,
-under such circumstances, would be disposed to indulge in useless
-circumlocution.
-
-The result of this audience was, that they obtained the prince’s
-permission to remain in the country as long as they desired; and on
-their retiring, a small present in money was sent them, which they
-judiciously determined to accept. In the afternoon of the same day
-they were invited to the minister’s villa, where Niebuhr exhibited
-his mathematical instruments, his microscopes, books, engravings, &c.;
-at the sight of which Fakih Achmed expressed the highest satisfaction.
-From the various questions which he put to them, they discovered,
-moreover, that he himself was a man of very considerable knowledge,
-particularly in geography; while from his constant intercourse with
-foreigners his manners had acquired an ease and gracefulness which
-rendered his company highly pleasing. Nevertheless, Niebuhr, who feared
-that the cupidity of this minister, or of some other courtier, might be
-excited by the sight of his instruments, regretted to perceive these
-tokens of curiosity, and the necessity he was under of satisfying it;
-but his suspicions, which appear to have been as unfounded as they
-were illiberal, were not of long duration, for no man demanded of him
-any part of his property, or seemed to regard it with covetousness.
-He, in fact, learned shortly afterward that even the presents which it
-was judged necessary to make both to the imam and his minister were
-altogether unexpected, since they were not merchants, and demanded no
-favours of prince or courtiers.
-
-Niebuhr confesses that the reception which he and his companions met
-with at Sana was marked by a degree of civility and friendship that
-far surpassed their expectations. The Arabs would seem, indeed, to
-have derived so much gratification from their society, that it is
-more than probable they would willingly have made some sacrifice to
-retain them; but the death of Von Haven and Forskaal had cast a damp
-over their imaginations; they apprehended that disease might even
-then be undermining their constitutions, and were therefore more
-desirous of flying from the country than of studying its productions
-or its inhabitants. When they departed from Mokha several English
-ships were lying there, taking in cargoes of coffee for India; and
-this circumstance, by promising to facilitate their progress farther
-towards the east, operated strongly upon their determination to quit
-Arabia, the original object of their mission, for other regions which
-appeared more agreeable. One of Niebuhr’s biographers appears to
-think that it was mere solicitude to transmit to Europe an account of
-what had been performed by the expedition, and not any apprehension
-of danger, which rendered him so exceedingly desirous of quitting
-Yemen, for that he never clung to life with any great eagerness. I
-have by no means an unfavourable opinion of Niebuhr’s courage, which,
-on the contrary, I consider to have been in general equal to the
-dangers to which he was exposed; but I nowhere find any traces of that
-stoical indifference about life and death which his biographer seems
-to attribute to him; and am persuaded, that on the occasion of his
-departure from Sana, it was the apprehension of death, united, perhaps,
-with a longing for European society, which actuated his movements.
-At the same time I acknowledge that his fears were natural, and that
-most travellers under similar circumstances would have acted much the
-same way. We miss, however, in Niebuhr, both on this and on all other
-occasions, the chivalrous spirit of Marco Polo, Pietro della Valle,
-Chardin, and Bruce, as we miss in his writings the enthusiasm which
-casts so powerful a charm over the records of their adventures.
-
-The same reasons which induce me to acknowledge the rational nature
-of Niebuhr’s apology for suddenly quitting Yemen long before he had
-completed his examination and description of it, incline me likewise
-to accept his reasons for avoiding the road by Jerim and Táäs, which
-would have led him by Haddâfa and Dhâfar, where Hamyaric inscriptions
-were said to exist. He had already been frequently deceived by the
-misrepresentations of Arabic ignorance, and therefore doubted the
-accuracy of his informants. The three remaining members of the mission
-set out from Sana on the 26th of July, and, arriving at Mokha on the
-5th of August, found that their apprehensions of danger at Sana, which,
-though excusable, were not well founded, had precipitated them into
-real peril; for the English ship in which they intended to embark was
-by no means ready to sail, so that they had to remain in that burning
-climate nearly a whole month, during which almost every individual in
-the party, servants and all, fell sick.
-
-The ship in which Niebuhr at length set sail for India belonged to Mr.
-Francis Scott, a younger son of the Scotts of Harden, a jacobite family
-of Roxburghshire. With this gentleman Niebuhr ever after lived on terms
-of intimate friendship; and “five-and-thirty years afterward,” says our
-traveller’s son, the historian of the Roman republic, “when I studied
-in Edinburgh, I was received in all respects as one of the family in
-the house of this venerable man, who then lived at his ease in the
-Scottish capital on the fortune he had acquired by honourable industry.”
-
-On his arrival at Bombay he met with the most cordial reception from
-the English, in whose society he had first learned to delight while in
-Egypt. Here he spent a considerable time in studying the manners and
-customs of the Hindoos, and his observations, though now destitute of
-value, must at that time have possessed considerable interest, above
-all on the Continent. He here lost Cramer, the last of his companions;
-Baurenfeind, the artist, having died on the voyage. During his stay at
-Bombay he made a voyage to Surat, famous in the history of oriental
-commerce and in the Arabian Nights; but his stay was short, and he
-returned to Bombay without pushing his researches any farther into the
-interior. The passion for travelling was certainly never very powerful
-in Niebuhr; but he was posessed by considerable curiosity, and this
-passion induced him to form the design of proceeding in an English ship
-to China; but being unwell at the time of the ship’s departure, he
-relinquished the design, which he never afterward resumed.
-
-His residence at Bombay, a much less healthy place than Sana, was
-continued so long, that I am strongly inclined to suspect the want of
-European society may, after all, have numbered among his most powerful
-reasons for hurrying from Yemen. From this city he forwarded the
-manuscripts of his deceased companions as well as his own papers, by
-way of London, to Copenhagen; and at length, on the 8th of December,
-1764, set sail in one of the company’s ships of war, bound for Muskat
-and the Persian Gulf. During this voyage he beheld the surface of
-the sea for half a German mile in extent covered at night with that
-luminous appearance which we denominate “phosphoric fires;” and which,
-according to his opinion, arises entirely from shoals of medusas, which
-by the English sailors are called “blubbers.” A few days afterward,
-as they approached the shore of Oman, they were accompanied for a
-considerable distance by a troop of dolphins, which, by the persevering
-manner in which they followed the ship, seemed, as Lucian jocularly
-observes, to be animated by a kind of philanthropy, as when they bore
-Melicerta and Arion to the shore on their backs.
-
-They arrived at Muskat on the 3d of January, 1765; and here Niebuhr,
-had the interior of Arabia possessed any attractions for him, had once
-more an opportunity of indulging his curiosity, and fulfilling the
-original design of the expedition; for, from the humane and polished
-manners of the people of Oman, travelling was here, he says, attended
-with no more danger than in Yemen. He preferred, however, ascending the
-Persian Gulf in an English ship; and therefore, after a stay of a few
-days, set sail for Abusheher, where he arrived on the 4th of February.
-
-Here Niebuhr, who had learned the English language at Bombay, found
-himself still in the company of one of our countrymen, from whom
-he obtained a plan of the city, together with much curious and
-valuable information respecting the country and its inhabitants.
-This Englishman, whose name was Jervis, spoke, read, and wrote the
-Persian with fluency, and amused himself with making a collection of
-manuscripts in that language; among which was the “Life of Nadir Shah,”
-by his own private secretary Mohammed Mahadi Khan. The authenticity of
-this work was so highly spoken of in Persia, that Niebuhr was at some
-pains to procure a copy of it for the King of Denmark’s library; and
-it was from this copy that Sir William Jones afterward compiled his
-“History of Nadir Shah,” once celebrated, but now sunk into oblivion.
-At Abusheher our traveller saw several of that species of cat numbers
-of which are now brought into Europe from Angola. They were procured
-from Kermân, and it was said that they would nowhere breed except in
-those countries in which the shawl goat was found--an opinion which has
-long been proved to have been erroneous.
-
-Shortly after Niebuhr’s arrival at Abusheher, Mr. Jervis determined
-upon sending a quantity of merchandise to Shiraz; and his intention was
-no sooner made public, than a number of petty merchants, together with
-several families from the interior, who had been expelled from their
-homes by the troubles consequent upon the death of Nadir Shah, desired
-to unite themselves to his party; and thus a small kafilah was at once
-formed. So excellent an opportunity of visiting the most beautiful city
-of Persia, as well as the famous ruins of Persepolis, was not to be
-overlooked. Our traveller therefore joined the trading caravan, and on
-the 15th of February set out for the interior.
-
-For this journey, however, he was but badly prepared. He was wholly
-ignorant of the Persian language, and therefore, had he not by great
-good fortune found some persons among the party who spoke Arabic, as
-well as an Armenian who was a tolerable master of the Italian, he must
-have been reduced to depend upon the universal but scanty language of
-signs. Strange to say, likewise, he had abandoned the oriental costume,
-though fully aware, by his own account, of the advantages to be
-derived from it by a traveller. In other respects he conducted himself
-judiciously; for, understanding that the English, notwithstanding the
-troubled state of Persia, had nowhere any thing to fear, he represented
-himself as an Englishman; and thus, without passport or formal
-permission, he travelled with perfect freedom and safety. He observed
-during this journey a curious superstition among the Armenians, of
-which he had nowhere else discovered any traces: having despatched his
-servant upon some business at a distance from the encampment, he was
-one day compelled to act as his own cook, and was about to cut off
-the head of a fowl. His face at that moment happening to be turned
-towards the west, an Armenian who was present informed him that a
-Christian should turn his face to the east when he killed a fowl, no
-less than when he prayed. Others (as the affair was a serious business)
-conjectured that he turned towards Mecca, either that his servant,
-who was a Mohammedan, might conscientiously partake of the food, or
-because that in reality was his _kebleh_. Seeing, however, that people
-endeavoured to decide respecting his religion by the mode in which he
-slaughtered a hen, he for the future relinquished to his servant the
-art and mystery of cookery.
-
-Our traveller had an opportunity, near Firashbend, of visiting a
-Turkoman camp. He found them rich in camels, horses, asses, cows, and
-sheep. Their women, like those of the Bedouins, enjoyed the most
-perfect liberty, and wore no veils. These Turkoman women were said to
-be exceedingly laborious, and the small carpets so universal in Persia
-were of their workmanship. He likewise beheld a Kurdish family. Farther
-on, he had a very laughable adventure with a troop of Armenian women,
-which, as characteristic at once of the Armenians and of himself,
-merits some attention. Having travelled for some time through rain and
-hail, the kafilah at length halted, near the village of _Romshun_, in
-which Niebuhr hired a horse for a day, and purchased a quantity of
-wood, in the hope of enjoying a good fire until bedtime. Not desiring,
-however, to taste of these blessings alone, he invited several
-Armenians to share the advantage of his apartments, which they most
-readily accepted. Presently, however, a number of women and children
-presented themselves for admission, and appeared extremely well
-satisfied when he granted them permission to place themselves inside
-of the door. He had shortly afterward occasion to leave the house for
-a moment. Upon his return, he found the husbands of the women seated
-near the entrance of the house, while the whole harem had established
-itself round the fire! and conceiving that it might be imprudent to sit
-down by the fire among the women, or to drive them away from it, he
-allowed them, though certainly not from politeness, to dry themselves
-first. Here he was detained for twenty-four hours by bad weather.
-The apartments which he occupied were on the second story, and his
-horse, which had its quarters in the adjoining chamber, being somewhat
-restless in the night, broke through the floor, and fell down into the
-landlord’s apartment below!
-
-The kafilah reached Shiraz on the 4th of March. Here he was hospitably
-received and entertained by the only European in the city, a young
-English merchant, whose name he should have been at the pains to
-learn, for assuredly it was not, as he imagined, _Mr. Hercules_.
-His stay at Shiraz was rendered agreeable by the politeness of the
-governor, who, at his first audience, informed him that he would
-decapitate the first person who should offer him any injury in his
-territories. The audience being over, one of the governor’s friends
-undertook to show them the palace. Several of the apartments were
-coated with beautiful Tabriz marble, and covered with magnificent
-carpets; and among the ornaments of the palace were numerous European
-mirrors, and pictures of Persian workmanship, among which was one
-representing a woman bathing, almost wholly naked. Niebuhr was greatly
-surprised to find pictures of this kind in the house of a Mohammedan;
-but, in fact, the _Shiahs_ are far less rigid on this point than the
-_Soonnees_; and we learn from the Arabian Nights, that even so early
-as the time of Haroon al Rashid painting was encouraged in Persia and
-Mesopotamia, since that celebrated prince is said to have adorned his
-palace with the performances of the principal Persian artists.
-
-From Shiraz he proceeded to the ruins of Persepolis, the site and
-nature of which I have already had occasion to describe in the lives of
-Chardin and Kæmpfer. His head-quarters during his stay was at the small
-village of Merdast. From thence, as well as from the other villages,
-the peasants frequently came to observe him during his examination of
-the ruins, in which he constantly employed the whole day, from eight
-o’clock in the morning until five in the afternoon. The majority of
-these visiters were women and young girls, who were curious to see a
-European; and the whole of the population were so entirely harmless,
-that the traveller felt himself as safe in their company as he could
-have been in any village in Europe. He here received a visit from an
-Arab sheïkh, a learned, polished, and agreeable man, who had passed
-thirty years in Persia, during which time he had amassed considerable
-wealth, and now lived in independence and ease.
-
-From Persepolis he returned by the way of Shiraz to Abusheher, where
-he embarked in one of the country vessels for the island of Karak,
-where he was hospitably received and entertained by the Dutch merchants
-settled there; and after a short stay, proceeded to Bassorah. Here he
-embarked in a small vessel which was about to sail up the Euphrates
-to Hillah. His companion, during this voyage, was an officer of the
-janizary corps, who lay in a small chamber close to Niebuhr’s cabin,
-and appeared to be at the point of death. In other respects this little
-voyage, which occupied twenty-one days, was sufficiently agreeable.
-The passengers were remarkable for their good-humour and obliging
-disposition; and often, when our traveller set up his quadrant on the
-banks of the stream, they stood round him in a circle, while he was
-making his observations, to screen him from the wind with their long
-flowing dresses.
-
-At Rumahia, a small village on the Euphrates, he lodged with two of his
-Mohammedan companions at the house of a Soonnee, who happened to be the
-_moollah_ of a mosque. Soon after their arrival, our traveller entered
-into conversation with his host, and their discourse turning on the
-subject of marriage, he observed, among other things, that in Europe
-a man, when he gives his daughter to any one in wedlock, is generally
-accustomed to add a considerable sum of money. This custom greatly
-delighted the moollah. “Do you hear,” says he to his mother-in-law,
-who was sitting near him, while the daughter was preparing their
-_pilau_,--“do you hear what the stranger is saying? It was not thus
-that you acted towards me, my mother; I was compelled to pay you a sum
-of money before you would give me your daughter!” The mother-in-law,
-after patiently hearing him to the end, replied, “Ah! my son, upon
-what should I and my daughter have subsisted, had I given thee my
-field and my date-trees?” This slight interruption in the conversation
-having ceased, Niebuhr, resuming the thread of the discourse, remarked,
-that in Europe no man could possess more than one wife, under pain of
-death; that married persons enjoyed every thing in common; and that
-their property descended to their children. It was now the old lady’s
-turn to be eloquent. “Well, my son,” says she, “have you marked what
-the gentleman has just related? Ah! what justice prevails in those
-countries! Ah! had you no other wife than my daughter, and could I be
-sure you would never divorce her, how willingly would I relinquish to
-you my house, and all I possess!” The young woman, who had hitherto
-seemed to pay no attention to what was said, now likewise joined in the
-discussion. “Alas! my husband!” said she, “how can you desire that my
-mother should give you her house? You would soon bestow it upon your
-other wives. You love them better than me. I see you so seldom!”
-
-The mother and daughter proceeded in this style for some time, and at
-length Niebuhr, turning to the moollah, demanded how many wives he
-had.--“Four,” replied the man. This was the highest number permitted
-by the law. He had, therefore, indulged his affections to the utmost;
-and as each of his spouses had a separate house and garden, he flitted
-at pleasure from wife to wife, and was everywhere received as a man
-returning home from a long journey. Our traveller inquired of this
-zealous polygamist whether his private happiness had been increased
-or diminished by his having availed himself of the privilege of a
-Mohammedan; but, because his reply was contrary to his own European
-views, as that of every other Mussulman, whom he had questioned on the
-subject, had been, he absurdly accused him of insincerity.
-
-From this place he proceeded to _Meshed Ali_, where he was deterred
-from entering the mosque, by the fear that he might, as a punishment
-for his presumption, be compelled to profess Mohammedanism; but he
-admired the exterior of its gilded dome, which glittered like a globe
-of flame in the sun. The riches of this mosque, allowing much for the
-exaggeration of the _Shiahs_, must still be immense. The interior of
-the dome is no less superbly gilt than the exterior, and is adorned
-with Arabic inscriptions in rich enamel; other inscriptions, in letters
-of gold, glitter along the walls; while enormous candelabra, in silver
-and fine gold, set with jewels, support the tapers which afford light
-to the pious during the darkness of the night. This accumulation of
-gorgeous ornaments, though supplied from a commendable motive, affects
-the worshippers injuriously, and once occasioned a pious Arab to
-exclaim, “Verily, the treasures lavished upon this tomb have made me
-forget God!”
-
-Niebuhr next visited the ruins of Kufa, and Meshed Hussein, and then
-returned to Hillah, near which are found the misshapen ruins of
-Babylon. We must not, as he justly observes, expect to find among the
-remains of this city any thing resembling the sublime magnificence
-which cast a halo over the ruins of Persian and Egyptian cities.
-Babylon, like modern London, was a city of bricks, prodigious in
-extent, mighty in appearance, but calculated, from the nature of its
-materials, to give way, when war or time laid its giant hands upon
-its towers. Its very site is now become an enigma, “a place for the
-bittern, and pools of water.” Modern travellers, however, have since
-visited this celebrated spot, and described it so frequently, that it
-is unnecessary to pause and repeat what they have written, particularly
-as no two agree upon any one point.
-
-His stay at Babylon was brief, and on the 5th of January, 1766, he left
-it to proceed towards Bagdad, where he remained until the 3d of March,
-awaiting the departure of a caravan for Syria. At length, finding no
-better companions, he departed with a kafilah composed wholly of Jews,
-from one of whom, who had travelled much in the country, he expected
-to derive considerable information. He still possessed the sultan’s
-firman, which he had procured at Constantinople, and had likewise
-provided himself with a passport from the Pasha of Bagdad. He therefore
-anticipated no interruption on the way. In proceeding from Bagdad to
-Mousul, he traversed the plain on which the great battle of Arbela,
-which reduced Persia to a Macedonian province, was gained by Alexander.
-Ruin and desolation have since that day been busily at work in these
-countries. Among the vagabonds who now roam over or vegetate upon these
-renowned scenes, are a strange people, accused by many writers of
-worshipping the devil; I mean the _Yezeedis_, who, though suspected by
-Niebuhr of being an offshoot from the Beyazi sect of Oman, appear to
-be rather the descendants of the ancient Manichæans, or a remnant of
-the Hindoo population, worshippers of _Siva_, hurled into this obscure
-haunt by the storms of war.
-
-At Mousul, where he found numerous Catholic and Nestorian Christians,
-he was received with extreme scorn, because his worthy coreligionists
-learned that he did not fast during Lent. However, by allowing himself
-to be defrauded a little by a Dominican father, a dealer in coins and
-physic, he quickly regained his character, and, during the remainder of
-his stay, was reputed a very good Christian. From this city he departed
-with a numerous caravan, bound partly for Aleppo, partly for Mardin,
-Orfah, or Armenia. The whole number of the travellers, including
-a guard of fifty soldiers, and about three or four hundred Arabs,
-amounted to little less than a thousand men. Yet, notwithstanding
-their numbers, the slightest report of there being a horde of Kurds in
-their neighbourhood threw these gallant warriors into consternation,
-and, upon one particular occasion, their confusion was so extreme
-that, like the honest knight of La Mancha, they mistook a flock of
-sheep for an army. The robbers on this road are exceedingly expert
-in their vocation; and one of the merchants of the caravan, who
-had often travelled by this route, amused Niebuhr with an anecdote
-illustrative of their skill, which deserves to be repeated:--He was one
-night encamped, he said, on the summit of a steep hill, and for the
-greater security had pitched his tent on the edge of the precipice.
-He himself kept watch until midnight, at which time he was relieved
-by his servant, who, as it would appear, soon fell asleep. On awaking
-about daybreak he observed a robber in the tent. He had already
-fastened the hook, with which he meant to perform his feat, in a bale
-of merchandise; but sprang out of the tent, upon perceiving he was
-discovered, still holding fast the cord of his hook. The merchant,
-however, immediately detached the hook from the bale, and fastened it
-in the clothes of his slumbering domestic, who, as the robber continued
-tugging violently at the cord, was soon roused. The robber pulled,
-the servant rolled along like a woolsack, and the master had the
-satisfaction of seeing him tumble down to the bottom of the hill, that
-he might in future be somewhat more careful of his master’s property.
-
-Niebuhr himself, whose cautious temper generally defended him from
-danger, had on this journey a trifling adventure with an Arab sheïkh.
-It entered into the head of this fiery young Islamite that it would
-be amusing to have a frolic with a Giaour, and for this purpose he
-deprived our traveller of his bed and counterpanes. Niebuhr complained
-to the caravan bashi, but could only get a portion of his property
-restored. Next day, therefore, he applied to the sheïkh himself,
-who, instead of returning the articles, only jested with him upon
-his uncharitable disposition, which would not allow him to share his
-luxuries, even for a few days, with a true believer, who was willing
-to be condescending enough to sleep on the bed of an infidel. Our
-traveller, hoping to terrify the Arab, now produced the sultan’s
-firman, and the Pasha of Bagdad’s passport; but this only rendered
-matters worse. “Here in the desert,” said the sheïkh, “_I_ am thy
-sultan and thy pasha. Thy papers have no authority with me!” Some days
-afterward, however, the Arab returned him his effects, from fear,
-according to Niebuhr, of the Governor of Mardin; but more probably
-because he had never intended to retain them.
-
-From this point of his travels he proceeded by way of Mardin, Diarbekr,
-and Orfah, to Aleppo, where he arrived on the 6th of June. Here he
-remained some time, during which he acquired the friendship of the
-celebrated Dr. Patrick Russel, from whom he received much information
-respecting the Kurds and Turkomans, whose principal chiefs frequently
-visited our distinguished countryman at his house. His inquiries
-likewise extended to the Nassaireah and Ismaeleah, who, from the
-accounts of the Mohammedans and oriental Christians, would appear to
-have preserved among them the rites and ceremonies of the ancient
-worshippers of Venus. Nocturnal orgies, in which every man chose his
-mistress in the dark, and the adoration of the Yoni, in a young woman
-who exposed herself naked for the purpose of receiving this extravagant
-reverence, were likewise attributed to them; but, as Niebuhr observes,
-there is nothing too absurd or abominable to be related by the orthodox
-and dominant party of a persecuted heretical sect. He, in fact, found
-that the Roman Catholics everywhere in the East represented their
-Protestant brethren as persons who lived without hope and without God
-in the world; while we, on the other hand, look upon them as idolaters,
-as far removed as the pagans of old from the pure religion of Christ.
-
-After the death of his companions, Niebuhr had applied to the Danish
-government for permission to extend his journey in the East, and,
-through the benevolence of Count Bernstorf, his wishes had been readily
-complied with. He therefore passed from Syria into Cyprus, for the
-purpose of copying certain Phenician inscriptions at Cittium, the
-birth-place of Zeno, which had, it was suspected, been incorrectly
-copied by Pococke. Finding no inscriptions of the kind on the spot to
-which he had been directed, he, with an illiberality which was not
-common with him, imputed to Pococke the gross absurdity of having
-confounded Armenian with Phenician characters; but, as his recent
-biographer remarks, it is more probable that the stones had, in the
-interval, been removed.
-
-From Cyprus he passed over into Palestine, visited Jerusalem, Sidon,
-Mount Lebanon, and Damascus, and then returned to Aleppo. Here he
-continued until the 20th of November, 1766, when he set out with a
-caravan for Brusa, in Asia Minor; and in traversing the table-land
-of Mount Taurus, suffered, says one of his biographers, as much from
-frosts, piercing winds, and snow-drifts, as he could have done in a
-winter journey in northern regions. Lofty mountains are everywhere
-cold. Chardin nearly perished among the snows of Mount Caucasus; Don
-Ulloa suffered severely from the same cause in the Andes, almost
-directly under the equator; and the lofty range of the Himalaya, which
-divides Hindostan from Tibet, is so excessively cold, that Baber Khan,
-though a soldier and a Tartar, beheld with terror the obstacle which
-these mountains presented to his ambition; and their summits have
-hitherto been protected by cold from human intrusion. Upon reaching
-Brusa, however, he reposed himself for some time, and then set out for
-Constantinople, where he arrived on the 20th of February, 1767.
-
-Here he remained three or four months, studying the institutions of
-the empire, civil and military. He then directed his course through
-Roumelia, Bulgaria, Wallachia, and Moldavia, towards Poland, and on
-arriving at Warsaw was received with extraordinary politeness by King
-Stanislaus Poniatowsky, with whom he afterward corresponded for many
-years. From Warsaw he continued his journey towards Copenhagen, and
-visited on the way Göttingen and his beloved native place, when the
-death of his mother’s brother, during his absence, had left him in
-possession of a considerable marsh-farm. He arrived at Copenhagen in
-November, and was received in the most flattering manner by the court,
-the ministers, and men of science.
-
-Niebuhr now employed himself in preparing his various works for
-publication. The “Description of Arabia” was published in 1772, and
-although it must unquestionably be regarded as one of the most exact
-and copious works of the kind ever composed on any Asiatic country,
-it met with but a cold reception from the public. This, however, is
-not at all surprising. Written in the old style of books of travels,
-which appear to have aimed at imparting instruction without at all
-interesting the imagination, it can never be relished by the generality
-of readers, who at all times, and especially in these latter ages, have
-required to be cheated into knowledge by the secret but irresistible
-charms of composition. Niebuhr, unfortunately, possessed in a very
-limited degree the art of an author. His style has nothing of that
-life and vivacity which compensates, in many writers, for the want of
-method. But those who neglect his works on these accounts are to be
-pitied; for they abound with information, and everywhere exhibit marks
-of a remarkable power of penetrating into the character and motives
-of men, and a noble, manly benevolence, which generally inclines to a
-favourable, but just interpretation. He understood the Arabs better
-than almost any other traveller, and his opinion of them upon the
-whole was remarkably favourable. It is to him, therefore, that in an
-attempt to appreciate the character of this extraordinary people, I
-would resort, in preference even to Volney, who, whatever might be
-the perspicuity of his mind, had far fewer data whereon to found his
-conclusions.
-
-In 1773 he married, and his wife bore him two children, a daughter
-and B. G. Niebuhr, the author of the “Roman History.” Next year the
-first volume of his “Travels” appeared, and was received by the public
-no less coldly than the “Description of Arabia;” which was, perhaps,
-the cause why the second volume was not published until 1778; and why
-the third, which would have completed his “Travels’” history, was
-never laid before the world, or even prepared for publication. This is
-exceedingly to be regretted, as, whatever may be the defects of Niebuhr
-as an author, which it appeared to be my duty to explain, he was, as an
-observer, highly distinguished for sagacity; and his account of Asia
-Minor would have been still valuable, notwithstanding all that has
-since been written on that country.
-
-He continued to live at Copenhagen for ten years; but at length the
-retirement of Count Bernstorf from the ministry, and a report that
-General Huth designed to despatch him into Norway for the purpose
-of making a geographical survey of that country, disgusted him with
-the capital. He therefore demanded of the government permission to
-exchange his military for a civil appointment, and accordingly obtained
-the situation of secretary of the district of Meldorf, whither he
-removed his family in the year 1778. This town afforded Niebuhr few
-opportunities of entering into society. He consequently endeavoured to
-extract from solitude and from study the pleasures which he could not
-take in the company of mankind, and addicted himself to gardening and
-books. When his children had reached an age to require instruction, he
-undertook to conduct their education himself. “He instructed us,” says
-his son, “in geography, and related to us many passages of history.
-He taught me English and French--better, at any rate, than they would
-have been taught by anybody else in such a place; and something of
-mathematics, in which he would have proceeded much further, had not
-want of zeal and desire in me unfortunately destroyed all his pleasure
-in the occupation. One thing, indeed, was characteristic of his whole
-system of teaching: as he had no idea how anybody could have knowledge
-of any kind placed before him, and not seize it with the greatest
-avidity, and hold to it with the steadiest perseverance, he became
-disinclined to teach whenever we appeared inattentive or reluctant
-to learn. As the first instruction I received in Latin, before I had
-the good fortune to become a scholar of the learned and excellent
-Jäger, was very defective, he helped me, and read with me “Cæsar’s
-Commentaries.” Here again, the peculiar bent of his mind showed itself:
-he always called my attention much more strongly to the geography than
-the history. The map of Ancient Gaul by D’Anville, for whom he had
-the greatest reverence, always lay before us. I was obliged to look
-out every place as it occurred, and to tell its exact situation. His
-instruction had no pretensions to be grammatical; his knowledge of the
-language, so far as it went, was gained entirely by reading, and by
-looking at it as a whole. He was of opinion that a man did not deserve
-to learn what he had not principally worked out for himself; and that
-a teacher should be only a helper to assist the pupil out of otherwise
-inexplicable difficulties. From these causes his attempts to teach me
-Arabic, when he had already lost that facility in speaking it without
-which it is impossible to dispense with grammatical instruction, to his
-disappointment and my shame, did not succeed. When I afterward taught
-it myself, and sent him translations from it, he was greatly delighted.
-
-“I have the most lively recollection of many descriptions of the
-structure of the universe, and accounts of eastern countries, which he
-used to tell me instead of fairy tales, when he took me on his knee
-before I went to bed. The history of Mohammed; of the first califs,
-particularly of Omar and Ali, for whom he had the deepest veneration;
-of the conquests and spread of Islamism; of the virtues of the heroes
-of the new faith, and of the Turkish converts, were imprinted on my
-childish imagination in the liveliest colours. Historical works on
-these same subjects were nearly the first books that fell into my hands.
-
-“I recollect, too, that on the Christmas-eve of my tenth year, by
-way of making the day one of peculiar solemnity and rejoicing to me,
-he went to a beautiful chest containing his manuscripts, which was
-regarded by us children, and indeed by the whole household, as a kind
-of ark of the covenant; took out the papers relating to Africa, and
-read to me from them. He had taught me to draw maps, and with his
-encouragement and assistance I soon produced maps of Habbesh and Soudan.
-
-“I could not make him a more welcome birthday present than a sketch of
-the geography of eastern countries, or translations from voyages and
-travels, executed as might be expected from a child. He had originally
-no stronger desire than that I might be his successor as a traveller
-in the East. But the influence of a very tender and anxious mother
-upon my physical training and constitution, thwarted his plan, almost
-as soon as it was formed. In consequence of her opposition, my father
-afterward gave up all thoughts of it.
-
-“The distinguished kindness he had experienced from the English,
-and the services which he had been able to render to the East India
-Company, by throwing light upon the higher part of the Red Sea, led
-him to entertain the idea of sending me, as soon as I was old enough,
-to India. With this scheme, which, plausible as it was, he was
-afterward as glad to see frustrated as I was myself, many things, in
-the education he gave me, was intimately connected. He taught me, by
-preference, out of English books, and put English works, of all sorts,
-into my hands. At a very early age he gave me a regular supply of
-English newspapers: circumstances which I record here, not on account
-of the powerful influence they have had on my maturer life, but as
-indications of his character.”
-
-In the winter of 1788 he received from Herder a copy of his
-“Persepolis,” which afforded him one proof that he was not forgotten
-by his countrymen. He took a deep interest in the war which was then
-raging against Turkey; for, in proportion to his love for the Arabs,
-was his hatred of the Turks, whom he cordially desired to see expelled
-from Europe. The French expedition to Egypt, however, was no object
-of gratification to him; for his dislike of the French was as strong
-as his dislike of the Turks, convinced that their absurd vanity and
-want of faith would infallibly neutralize the good effects even of the
-revolution itself. I am sorry to discover that, among other prejudices,
-he was led, partly, perhaps, from vanity, to accuse Bruce of having
-copied his astronomical observations; of having fabricated his
-conversation with Ali Bey; as well as, to borrow the strange language
-of his recent English biographer, “the pretended _journey over the
-Red Sea_, in _the country of Bab el Mandeb_, as well as that on the
-coast south from Cosseir.” The same writer informs us that “Niebuhr
-read Bruce’s work _without prejudice_, and the conclusion he arrived
-at was the same which is, since the second Edinburgh edition, and
-the publication of Salt’s two journeys, _the universal and ultimate
-one_.” During the composition of these Lives, I have almost constantly
-avoided every temptation to engage in controversy with any man; I
-hope, likewise, that I have escaped from another, and still stronger
-temptation, to exalt my own countrymen at the expense of foreigners;
-but I cannot regard it as my duty, on the present occasion, to permit
-to pass unnoticed what appears to me a mere ebullition of envy in
-Niebuhr, and of weakness and want of reflection in his biographer.
-What is meant by a “_journey over the Red Sea?_” And where does Bruce
-pretend to have travelled in the “_country_ of _Bab el Mandeb?_” These
-Arabic words are, I believe, by oriental scholars acknowledged to
-signify the “Gate of Tears,” and were anciently applied to what is
-commonly called the “Strait of Bab el Mandel,” from the belief that
-those who issued through that strait into the ocean could never return.
-The biographer seems to misunderstand the state of the question. Bruce
-has often been charged with never having sailed down the Red Sea so far
-as the strait, notwithstanding his assertions in the affirmative. But
-who are his accusers? Lord Valentia, Salt, and others of that stamp;
-men who never dared to venture their beards amid the dangers which
-Bruce encountered intrepidly. With respect to the coast from Cosseir
-southward, what, I will venture to inquire, could Niebuhr have known
-about the matter? Had he ever set his foot upon it? Had he even beheld
-it from a distance? If he relied, as in fact he did, upon the testimony
-of others, who were they? what were their opportunities? and what their
-claims to be believed? I am far from insinuating that Lord Valentia
-and Mr. Salt have entered into a conspiracy to wound the memory of
-Bruce; but, to adopt the language of an old orator, I would ask these
-gentlemen if they themselves could have been guilty of the impudent
-mendacity which they impute to Bruce? If, as there can be no doubt on
-the subject, Lord Valentia and Mr. Salt would spurn the imputation, is
-it to be for a moment believed that the discoverer of the sources of
-the Nile, the honourable, the fearless, the brave Bruce, could have
-condescended to do what these individuals, who, compared with him, are
-insignificant and obscure, would, by their own confession, have shrunk
-from perpetrating? But my unwillingness to speak harshly of Niebuhr,
-whose name ranks with me among those of the most honest and useful of
-travellers, forbids me to carry this discussion any further. I honour
-him for his knowledge, for his integrity, for his high sense of honour;
-but, for this very reason, I vehemently condemn his unjust attack upon
-the memory of our illustrious traveller. The opinion of his recent
-biographer, an able and, I make no doubt, a conscientious man, appears
-evidently to have arisen from an imperfect knowledge of the subject,
-and is therefore the less entitled to consideration.
-
-The account given by his distinguished son of the latter days of
-this meritorious traveller is worthy of finding a place here. “His
-appearance,” says he, “was calculated to leave a delightful picture in
-the mind. All his features, as well as his extinguished eyes, wore the
-expression of the extreme and exhausted old age of an extraordinarily
-robust nature. It was impossible to behold a more venerable sight.
-So venerable was it, that a Cossack who entered an unbidden guest
-into the chamber where he sat with his silver locks uncovered, was so
-struck with it, that he manifested the greatest reverence for him, and
-a sincere and cordial interest for the whole household. His sweetness
-of temper was unalterable, though he often expressed his desire to go
-to his final home, since all which he had desired to live for had been
-accomplished.
-
-“A numerous, and as yet unbroken, family circle was assembled around
-him; and every day in which he was not assailed by some peculiar
-indisposition he conversed with cheerfulness and cordial enjoyment on
-the happy change which had taken place in public affairs. We found it
-very delightful to engage in continued recitals of his travels, which
-he now related with peculiar fulness and vivacity. In this manner he
-once spoke much and in great detail of Persepolis, and described the
-walls on which he had found the inscriptions and bas-reliefs, exactly
-as one would describe those of a building visited within a few days and
-familiarly known. We could not conceal our astonishment. He replied,
-that as he lay in bed, all visible objects shut out, the pictures of
-what he had beheld in the East continually floated before his mind’s
-eye, so that it was no wonder he could speak of them as if he had seen
-them yesterday. With like vividness was the deep intense sky of Asia,
-with its brilliant and twinkling host of stars, which he had so often
-gazed at by night, or its lofty vault of blue by day, reflected in the
-hours of stillness and darkness on his inmost soul; and this was his
-greatest enjoyment. In the beginning of winter he had another bleeding
-at the nose, so violent that the bystanders expected his death; but
-this also he withstood.
-
-“About the end of April, 1815, the long obstruction in his chest grew
-much worse; but his friendly physician alleviated the symptoms, which
-to those around him appeared rather painful than dangerous. Towards
-evening on the 26th of April, 1815, he was read to as usual, and asked
-questions which showed perfect apprehension and intelligence; he then
-sunk into a slumber, and departed without a struggle.”
-
-Niebuhr had attained his eighty-second year. He was a man rather
-below than above the middle size, but robust in make, and exceedingly
-oriental in air and gestures. As might be clearly enough inferred
-from his works, he was no lover of poetry; for, though he is said to
-have admired Homer in the German translation of Voss, together with
-the Herman and Dorothea of Goëthe, this might be accounted for upon
-a different principle. His imagination, however, was liable to be
-sometimes excited in a very peculiar way. “It is extraordinary,” says
-his son, “that this man, so remarkably devoid of imagination, so exempt
-from illusion, waked us on the night in which his brother died, though
-he was at such a distance that he knew not even of his illness, and
-told us that his brother was dead. What had appeared to him, waking or
-dreaming, he never told us.”
-
-
-
-
-MARIE GABRIEL AUGUSTE FLORENT, LE COMTE DE CHOISEUL-GOUFFIER.
-
-Born 1752.--Died 1817.
-
-
-I have frequently regretted, during the composition of these Lives,
-that the materials for the early biography of many celebrated men
-should be so scanty and incomplete as I have found them. It seems
-to be considered sufficient if we can obtain some general notion
-respecting their literary career, and, in consequence, criticism too
-frequently usurps the place of anecdote and narrative. The Comte de
-Choiseul-Gouffier occupied, however, too prominent a place among his
-contemporaries, both from his rank and talents, to allow any portion
-of his life to pass unnoticed; though it were to be wished that those
-who have spoken of him had been less eloquent and more circumstantial.
-The style of mortuary panegyric seems less designed, indeed, to make
-known the qualities or adventures of the deceased than to afford the
-orator an apology for casting over his memory a veil of fine language,
-which as effectually conceals from the observer the real nature of
-the subject as his stiff sombre pall conceals his hearse and coffin.
-Such, notwithstanding, are the only sources, besides his own works,
-from which a knowledge of this celebrated and able traveller is to be
-derived.
-
-Choiseul-Gouffier was born at Paris in 1752. His family was scarcely
-less ancient or illustrious than that of the kings of France, in every
-page of whose history, says M. Dacier, we find traces of its importance
-and splendour. He pursued his youthful studies at the College
-D’Harcourt. Like Swift, and many other literary men who have acquired
-a high reputation in after-life, Choiseul did not render himself
-remarkable for a rapid progress or precocious abilities at school.
-He was attentive to his studies, however; and while he exhibited a
-decided taste for literature, his passion for the fine arts was no less
-powerful. At this period, says M. Dacier, a great name and a large
-fortune had frequently no other effect than to inspire their owners
-with the love of dissipation and frivolous amusement, which they were
-aware could in no degree obstruct their career in the road to honour
-and office, which, however worthless might be their characters, was
-opened to them by their birth. From this general contagion Choiseul was
-happily protected by his studious habits. Every moment which he could
-with propriety snatch from the duties of his station was devoted to
-literature and the arts of design. Above all things, he admired with
-enthusiasm whatever had any relation to ancient Greece,--a country
-which, from his earliest boyhood, he passionately desired to behold, as
-the cradle of poetry, of the arts, and of freedom, rich in historical
-glory, and rendered illustrious by every form of genius which can
-ennoble human nature.
-
-Being in possession of a fortune which placed within his reach
-the gratification of these ardent wishes, he nevertheless did not
-immediately commence his travels. In defiance of the fashion of the
-times, which proscribed as unphilosophical the honest feelings of the
-heart, Choiseul seems to have fallen early in love, and at the age
-of nineteen was married to the heiress of the Gouffier family, whose
-name he ever afterward associated with his own. Like all other persons
-of noble birth, he as a matter of course adopted the profession of
-arms, and was at once complimented with the rank of colonel, which it
-was customary to bestow upon such persons on their entrance into the
-service.
-
-At length, after a protracted delay, which considering his years is not
-to be regretted, Choiseul-Gouffier departed for Greece in the month
-of March, 1776. Having enjoyed the advantages of the conversation
-and instruction of Barthélemy, who had himself profoundly studied
-Greece in her literary monuments, Choiseul-Gouffier was, perhaps, as
-well prepared to exercise the duties of a classical traveller as any
-young man of twenty-five could be expected to be. In aid of his own
-exertions he took along with him several artists and literary men, of
-whom some were distinguished for their taste or natural abilities.
-He was transported to Greece on board the _Atalante_ ship of war,
-commanded by the Marquis de Chabert, himself a member of the Academy of
-Sciences, and appointed by the government to construct a reduced chart
-of the Mediterranean. This gentleman, who seems in some measure to have
-possessed a congenial taste, engaged to transport Choiseul-Gouffier
-to whatever part of Greece he might be desirous of visiting, and to
-lie off the land during such time as he should choose to employ in his
-excursions and researches.
-
-On his arrival in Greece, Choiseul-Gouffier commenced at once his
-researches and his drawings. He was not a mere classical traveller;
-his principal object, it is true, was, as his French biographers
-assert, to study the noble remains of antiquity, the wrecks of that
-splendid and imperfect civilization which had once covered the soil on
-which he was now treading, with all the glory of the creative arts;
-but, besides this, he had an eye for whatever was interesting in the
-existing population, which, with every thinking and feeling man, he
-must have regarded as by far the most august and touching ruin which
-the traveller can behold in Greece. The mere undertaking of such an
-enterprise presupposes an intense enthusiasm for antiquity. Poetry,
-history, freedom, beauty, animate and inanimate, had separately and
-collectively produced on his mind an impassioned veneration for the
-Hellenic soil; and he saw with equal delight the scene of a fable and
-the site of a city.
-
-In pursuance of the plan which he had traced out for himself previous
-to leaving France, he examined with scrupulous care all the fragments
-and ruins within the scope of his researches. After touching on the
-southern coast of the Morea, and sketching the castle of Coron, with
-various Albanian soldiers whom he met with on the shore, he proceeded
-to the isles,--Milo, Siphanto, Naxia, Delos, where the wrecks of
-antiquity and the grotesque costume and manners of modern times
-exercised his elegant pencil and pen. Those persons who have visited
-countries where the ruins of former ages eclipse, as it were, the
-stunted heirs of the soil, will comprehend the difficulty of attending,
-amid monuments rendered doubly sublime by decay, to the rude attempts
-at architecture and the undignified circumstances which mark the
-existence of a population relapsed into ignorance. To these, however,
-Choiseul-Gouffier was by no means inattentive. He sketched, and it
-would seem with equal complacency, the ruins of some venerable temple
-and the beautiful dark-eyed girl of the Ionian Islands, plaiting her
-tresses, or sporting with her fat, long-haired Angola.
-
-In sketching the life of this traveller, I must beware that I am not
-carried away by classical recollections. Here, where
-
- Not a mountain rears its head unsung,
-
-it might, perhaps, be pleasing to a certain variety of minds to
-expatiate at leisure over the immortal fields of fable, and the scenes
-of actions which man is still proud to have performed; and if I abstain
-from entering upon the subject, it is not from any indifference
-to its charms, or that I want faith in its powers to produce, if
-properly handled, the same effect upon others which it has long
-exercised over me. But this is not the place to indulge in themes of
-this kind. Biography rejects all pictures of such a description, and
-requires narrative; and accordingly I proceed with the history of our
-traveller’s labours.
-
-In the course of his visits to the Grecian islands he beheld the famous
-Grotto of Antiparos, so eloquently described by Tournefort. Their
-opinions respecting its wonderful construction did not, as might very
-well be expected, agree; but if the botanist exaggerated, I think
-the young antiquarian underrated its richness and grandeur, probably
-from a desire to check his ardent imagination, or by an ill-timed
-application of his philosophy. From thence, touching at Skyros in
-his way, he proceeded to Lemnos, Mitelin, Scio, Samos, Patmos, and
-Rhodes, and thence into Asia Minor. Here he commenced operations with
-the ruins of Telmissus, in ancient Lycia. He sketched the sarcophagi,
-the Necropolis, the tombs, theatre, and other antiquities; and
-having also drawn up an account of his researches, and a description
-of the existing ruins, set off through Caria towards the river
-Mæander, and Ephesus, and Smyrna, and Troy. Throughout the whole of
-this incomparably interesting route, the same lavish researches
-were undertaken and conducted with vast expense and perseverance.
-But on arriving upon the plains of Troy, his exertions, everywhere
-enthusiastic, appeared to be redoubled. Choiseul-Gouffier was an
-impassioned admirer of Homer. No other poet, in fact, ever possesses so
-firm a hold upon the youthful mind as this ancient bard, because no one
-paints so truly those boiling passions which prevail in youth, and with
-which all men sympathize, until age or some other cause damps their
-energy, and makes them, as Shakspeare expresses it, “babble of green
-fields,” and tranquillity, and security, and civilization.
-
-For the admirers of Homer, our traveller’s researches in the ancient
-empire of Priam must possess more than ordinary charms. Having to the
-best of his ability determined the extent and limits of the Trojan
-territories, he fixes the site of the city, and traces to their sources
-the rivers Simois and Scamander. He then presents the reader with views
-of the most remarkable spots in the neighbourhood of the city, which
-are either mentioned by Homer, or referred to by celebrated writers of
-later date; Mount Gargarus, the camp of the Greeks, the tombs of Ilus,
-Achilles, and Patroclus.
-
-On his return to France he laboured assiduously at the arranging of the
-rich and various materials which he had collected during his travels.
-An author, and, above all, a traveller of distinguished rank, is
-always secure beforehand of a flattering reception. Choiseul-Gouffier
-experienced this truth. Fearful lest their compliments should come too
-late, and be paid, not to his rank, but to his merit, the members of
-the Académie des Belles-Lettres, in obedience, says M. Dacier, to the
-public voice, elected our traveller a member of their body in the room
-of Mons. Foncemagne in 1779, before the publication of the “Voyage
-Pittoresque de la Grèce.” This splendid work, which was at least equal
-to any thing which had been published of the kind, and in many respects
-superior, was expected with impatience, and read on its appearance with
-avidity. Praise, which in France is but too lavishly bestowed upon
-noble authors, was now showered down in profusion upon our traveller.
-He, however, deserved high commendation. The design of the work was in
-itself exceedingly praiseworthy, and its execution, whether we consider
-the literary portion or the embellishments, highly honourable to the
-taste and talents of the author. Barthélemy, in such matters a judge
-inferior to none, conceived so favourable an opinion of his accuracy,
-that he in many instances appealed to his authority in his “Travels of
-Anacharsis.”
-
-What tended still more powerfully to promote the success of the
-“Voyage Pittoresque de la Grèce” than all these praises was, the
-lively, elegant style in which it is composed. Although the polished
-simplicity of the preceding age had already begun to give way before
-laborious struggles after strength and originality, Choiseul-Gouffier
-belonged rather to the old than the new school. His learning a
-profession, which young men are rather apt to display than to hide,
-was not very profound, I suspect, in 1782, when the first volume of
-his travels appeared; and therefore the more credit is due to him for
-his moderation in the use of it. But I am far from thinking, with M.
-Dacier, that he purposely masked his acquirements, from the fear of
-frightening away the men of the world. He was not, as I have already
-observed, unmindful of the modern Greeks. Convinced that, next to the
-love of God, patriotism, expressed in Scripture by the love of our
-neighbour, is the best foundation of national and individual happiness,
-our traveller was vehement in his exhortations to the Greeks to recover
-their liberty. He even pointed out to them the means by which this was
-to be effected. He appealed to the priests, as to those who exercised
-the most powerful influence over the popular mind, to sanctify the
-enterprise; and, by associating the spirit of religion with that of
-liberty, to inspire their flocks with the zeal of martyrs by spiritual
-incitements or menaces.
-
-In 1784 the success of the first volume of his travels threw open to
-him the doors of the French Academy, where he was elected to fill up
-the vacancy occasioned by the death of D’Alembert. The circumstances
-attending his reception into this celebrated literary body were
-particularly flattering. Never, according to the records of the times,
-had there been collected together a more numerous or more brilliant
-assembly. The discourse of the traveller was finely conceived, and
-executed with ability. The subject was, of course, determined by usage;
-it was the eulogium of his predecessor. Having, according to custom, by
-which all such things are regulated, occasion to allude to the birth of
-D’Alembert, he executed this delicate part of his task in a manner so
-judicious and manly, that from a circumstance, in itself unfortunate
-and dishonourable, he contrived to attach additional interest to
-the memory of his predecessor. “And yet,” said he, “what was this
-celebrated man, whom Providence had destined to extend the boundaries
-of human knowledge? You understand me, gentlemen; and why should I
-hesitate to express what I consider it honourable to feel? Why should
-I, by a pusillanimous silence, defraud his memory of that tribute which
-all noble minds are fond to pay to unfortunate virtue and genius in
-obscurity? What was he?--An unhappy, parentless child, cast forth from
-his cradle to perish, who owed to symptoms of approaching death and the
-humanity of a public officer the advantage of being snatched from amid
-that unfortunate multitude of foundlings, who are kept alive only to
-remain in eternal ignorance of their name and race!”
-
-It was on this occasion that he received one of those compliments
-which men of genius sometimes pay to each other, and which, when
-deserved, are among the most cherished rewards that can be granted to
-distinguished abilities. Delille, whom he had long numbered among his
-friends, eagerly seized upon the opportunity which was now offered
-him of expressing his admiration of his enthusiasm and taste. He
-accordingly drew forth from his pocket a splendid fragment of his poem
-entitled “Imagination,” which was not published until twenty years
-afterward, and read it to the academy. It related to Greece, which
-Choiseul-Gouffier had visited and depicted. He represents the forlorn
-genius of that ancient country singling out from among the crowd of
-ordinary travellers one young lover of the arts, recommending to his
-notice the glory of her ancient monuments and brilliant recollections,
-and promising him as his reward the academic palm in a _New Athens_.
-The verses, in spite of the national vanity of comparing Paris with
-Athens, and some other defects which I need not pause to point out, are
-highly poetical and beautiful; and the reader will not, I think, regret
-to find them here subjoined.
-
- Hâte toi, rends la vie à leur gloire éclipsée
- Pour prix de tes travaux, dans un nouveau Lycée
- Un jour je te promets la couronne des arts.
- Il dit et dans le fond de leurs tombeau épars,
- Des Platon, des Solon les ombres l’entendirent:
- Du jeune voyageur tous les sens tressaillirent:
- Aussitôt dans ces lieux, berceau des arts naissans,
- Accourent à sa voix les arts reconnaissans;
- Le Dessin le premier prend son crayon fidèle,
- Et, tel qu’un tendre fils, lorsque la mort cruelle
- D’une mère adorée a terminé le sort
- A ses restes sacrés s’attache avec transport,
- Demande à l’air, au temps d’épargner sa poussière
- Et se plaît à tracer une image si chère;
- Ainsi par l’amour même instruit dans ces beaux lieux
- Le Dessin, de la Grèce enfant ingénieux,
- Va chercher, va saisir, va tracer son image;
- Et belle encor, malgré les injures de l’âge
- Avec ses monumens, ses héros, et ses dieux,
- La Grèce reparaît tout entière à nos yeux.
-
-Shortly after this Choiseul-Gouffier was appointed ambassador of
-France to the Ottoman Porte, and, in selecting the companions of his
-mission, was not unmindful of Delille. The poet, therefore, accompanied
-him to Constantinople; and according to the testimony of both, many
-years after their return, nothing could exceed the delight of their
-residence in the East, and their visits to the spots celebrated in
-Grecian story. Choiseul-Gouffier would, from all accounts, appear to
-have been a man of enlarged views, friendly towards all nations, as
-well as towards every art, and anxious to promote the general interests
-of civilization. His agreeable manners enabled him quickly to acquire
-the confidence of Halil Pasha, the Turkish grand vizier, and of Prince
-Mauro Cordato, first dragoman of the Porte; and he succeeded in
-inspiring both with a desire to introduce among the Turks the arts and
-civilization of Europe. By his advice, engineer, artillery, and staff
-officers were invited from France to Constantinople, to instruct the
-Ottomans in the theory and practice of war. The impulse once given,
-the grand vizier, seconded by the dragoman, who would appear to have
-possessed unusual influence, repaired the fortifications in the various
-strong cities of the empire, improved the system of casting cannon, and
-considerably ameliorated the discipline of the Turkish army. Shortly
-the public saw with surprise a fine seventy-four, constructed by Leroy,
-after the most approved European method, launched from the docks of
-Constantinople; and the system thus introduced has ever since been
-followed in all the docks of the empire. To crown all these efforts,
-our traveller prevailed on the vizier to send thirty Turkish youths to
-receive their education in Paris; and had not this part of the scheme
-been defeated by religious fanaticism, there is no foreseeing to how
-great an extent this measure might have influenced the destinies of
-Turkey.
-
-When war had broken out between the Porte and Russia, in spite of the
-efforts of the French ambassador to prevent the rupture, he continued
-to perform the part of a conciliator. It was by his intercession that
-the Russian ambassador, imprisoned contrary to the law of nations in
-the Seven Towers, was liberated, and placed on board a French frigate,
-commanded by the Prince de Rohan, which conveyed him to Trieste. And
-afterward, when Austria had determined to unite its forces with those
-of Russia to attack the common enemy of Christendom, Choiseul-Gouffier
-succeeded in preventing the imprisonment of its internuncio, whom he
-caused to embark with all his family and suite on board two French
-ships, which conveyed them to Leghorn. At the same time he effectually
-protected the Russian and Austrian prisoners detained in chains at
-Constantinople, and carefully caused to be distributed among them
-the provisions which their governments or families conveyed to them
-through his means. Several of these miserable beings he ransomed from
-captivity with his own money, particularly a young Austrian officer who
-had fallen into the hands of a cruel master, and who, resigned to his
-unhappy condition, appeared only to grieve for the affliction which the
-sad lot of their only son would cause his aged parents. His zeal for
-the interests of Turkey was not less remarkable. For not only did he
-in like manner protect the Turkish prisoners in Russia, but he caused
-French ships to transport provisions to Constantinople and the Black
-Sea, whose losses, when they incurred any, he made up out of his own
-private fortune.
-
-In the midst of those assiduous and important cares which the policy
-and critical position of the Ottoman empire required of him, he at no
-time lost sight of the commerce and other interests of his country. He
-moreover found leisure for the indulgence of his old classical tastes,
-and once more ran over, with the Iliad in his hand, the whole of the
-Troad and the other places celebrated by Homer. In addition to this,
-he despatched several artists to Syria and Egypt at his own expense,
-for the purpose of exploring and sketching ancient monuments, ruins,
-picturesque sites, and in general whatever was worthy of occupying the
-attention of the learned world. In 1791 he was appointed by the new
-government ambassador to the court of London; but as his political
-principles would not allow him to acknowledge the authority from which
-this nomination proceeded, he still continued at Constantinople, from
-whence he addressed all his despatches to the brothers of Louis XVI.,
-then in Germany. This correspondence was seized during the following
-year by the French army in Champagne, and on the 22d of November, 1792,
-a decree of arrest was passed against him.
-
-Not long after this event he departed from Constantinople, honoured
-with distinguished marks of respect both by the sultan and the grand
-vizier, and sincerely regretted by his brother ambassadors, and all the
-French established in the Levant. Being unable to return to France,
-he retired to Russia, where Catherine, who, as I have already had
-frequent occasion to observe, was an excellent judge of men, received
-him in the most flattering manner, and afforded him the most honourable
-protection. Paul I., on his accession to the throne, distinguished
-him by new favours, nominated him privy counsellor, director of the
-academy of arts and of all the imperial libraries, and also gave him
-many other solid proofs of his esteem. The favour of a madman, however,
-was necessarily liable to change. The Comte de Cobentzel, with whom
-Choiseul-Gouffier had lived on very intimate terms, falling into
-disgrace, he was uncourtly enough to continue the connexion; which so
-displeased Paul, that our traveller considered it unsafe to remain
-at court, and retired. No longer seeing his old favourite about him,
-the imperial lunatic commanded him to return, and upon his approach
-remarked, in a friendly tone, “M. le Count, there are stormy cloudy
-days in which it rains misunderstandings; we have experienced one of
-these; but as we are men of understanding, we have shaken it off, and
-are only upon the better footing.”
-
-Our traveller, who no doubt saw clearly enough the state of the
-emperor’s head, and dreaded his relapse into ill-humour, very quickly
-determined to return to France; where he at length arrived in 1802,
-stripped of his titles and fortune, and reduced to rely upon his
-literary rank for distinction. He, however, sought for no office or
-employment. All his thoughts were now directed towards the completion
-of his work on his beloved Greece, and during seven years he laboured
-assiduously at this agreeable undertaking. Other travellers had in the
-mean while visited and described the same countries; his ideas and
-views were regarded as antiquated; the interest inspired by his first
-volume, published twenty-seven years before, had in a great measure
-ceased; and, more than all this, he himself, worn down by misfortunes,
-sobered by long adversity, and somewhat unaccustomed to the art of
-composition, was no longer the same _naïve_, lively author that he had
-been. He now gave himself up to geographical disquisitions, learned
-dissertations, and geological remarks. Homer himself, though still his
-favourite, had undergone a transformation in his eyes. Losing sight of
-the poet, the matchless painter of human nature, he was satisfied with
-admiring him as an historian and geographer.
-
-Nevertheless there still remained a mixture of the old leaven in his
-composition. The sight of the rose harvest near Adrianople in Thrace
-reawakened all his enthusiasm, and his description of the festival
-with which it closes, in which the beautiful Grecian girls perform so
-elegant and classical a part, would certainly not disgrace the pages
-of Theocritus or Virgil. The completion of the third volume (or
-rather the 2d part of the second) seems to have been retarded, among
-other causes, by the composition of several memoirs for the Academy
-of Inscriptions and Belles-Lettres, on the Olympian Hippodrome, on
-the origin of the Thracian Bosphorus, and on the personal existence
-of Homer, which has been called in question by several critics more
-learned than wise.
-
-Before the completion of his work, however, he was seized with an
-apoplectic fit, which made his friends despair of his life. He was
-advised to make trial of the waters of Aix-la-Chapelle, whither he
-removed, accompanied by the Princess de Bauffremont, his second wife.
-Here he died on the 22d of June, 1817. It was now feared by all those
-who had properly appreciated his labours, that the concluding portion
-of his work, without which the former parts would be comparatively
-valueless, might never appear; but a publisher was at length found to
-undertake the expensive and hazardous enterprise. He purchased from the
-Princess de Bauffremont all the papers, charts, drawings, engravings,
-and copper-plates of her deceased husband, and with a taste, zeal, and
-industry for which the arts are indebted to him, completed the “Voyage
-Pittoresque de la Grèce” in a style worthy of the commencement. The
-portrait of the Comte de Choiseul, which M. Blaise, the publisher,
-caused to be engraved by a distinguished French artist, is a
-masterpiece of its kind; but there still remain many splendid drawings,
-and several valuable maps and charts of various parts of Greece, which
-may some day, perhaps, be published as a supplement, or in a second
-edition, should it be called for by the public.
-
-
-
-
-JOHN LEWIS BURCKHARDT.
-
-Born 1784.--Died 1817.
-
-
-This traveller, descended from an eminent family of Basle, in
-Switzerland, was born at Lausanne, in 1784. He was the eighth child of
-John Rodolph Burckhardt, whose prospects in life were early blighted
-by his adherence to the Austrian faction during the troubles in
-Switzerland, consequent upon the French revolution. Our traveller,
-led by hereditary prejudices to nourish an aversion for republican
-principles, or too young and hot-headed not to confound the agents with
-the cause, imbibed at a very early age a detestation for the French,
-at that period regarded as the representatives of republicanism;
-and, with the same spirit which induced Pietro della Valle to engage
-in a crusade against the Turks, he wished to serve in the armies of
-some nation at war with France. These wishes, however, were the mere
-hallucinations of a boy, or an echo of the sentiments which he heard
-uttered by others. His education had not been completed: his notions
-were necessarily crude, and he had neither discovered nor learned from
-others the paramount importance of freedom, without which even national
-independence is a vain possession.
-
-Burckhardt’s studies were, from various causes, conducted in the manner
-best calculated to create and nourish restless and adventurous habits.
-Having received the first rudiments of his education in his father’s
-house, he was removed to a school at Neufchatel, where he remained two
-years. At the age of sixteen he was entered a student at the university
-of Leipzig; from whence, after four years’ residence, he proceeded
-to Göttingen, where he continued another year. He then returned to
-his parents. The natural firmness and consistency of his character,
-of which his countenance was strikingly expressive, still taught him
-to keep alive his hatred of the French; but no continental nation had
-preserved itself wholly free from the influence of this people; and
-therefore, rejecting an offer which was made him by one of the petty
-courts of Germany, desirous of numbering him among its diplomatic
-body, he turned his thoughts towards England, which, like a separate
-world, had remained inviolate from the tread of the enemy. Accordingly,
-having provided himself with letters of introduction to several persons
-of distinction, among which was one from Professor Blumenbach to Sir
-Joseph Banks, he set out for London, where he arrived in the month of
-July, 1806.
-
-This step was the pivot upon which the whole circle of his short
-life was destined to turn. His introduction to Sir Joseph Banks, who
-had long been an active member of the African Association, almost
-necessarily brought him into contact with several other individuals
-connected with that celebrated society; and conversations with these
-persons, whose motives were at least respectable, and whose enthusiasm
-was unbounded, naturally begot in Burckhardt a corresponding warmth,
-and transformed him, from a Quixotic crusader against the French, into
-an ardent, ambitious traveller.
-
-It should not be dissembled that, upon Burckhardt’s desire to
-travel for the African Association being communicated to Sir Joseph
-Banks and Dr. Hamilton (then acting secretary to that body), strong
-representations of the dangers to be encountered in the execution
-of the plan were made to the youthful aspirant after fame; but such
-representations, which are a delusive kind of peace-offering placed for
-form’s sake on the altar of conscience, are seldom sincerely designed
-to effect their apparent purpose; and the actors in the farce would,
-for the most part, experience extreme chagrin should they find their
-eloquence prove successful. At all events, few men are so ignorant as
-not to know that the aspect of danger wears a certain charm for youth,
-which naturally associates therewith an idea of honour; and, provided
-success be probable, or even possible, reckons obstacles of every kind
-among the incentives to exertion. These dissuasive speeches, therefore,
-from persons whose sole object in constituting themselves into a
-public body was to produce a directly opposite result, were altogether
-hypocritical; and Burckhardt, if he possessed half the sagacity
-which seems to have entered into his character, must have distinctly
-perceived this, and have despised them accordingly.
-
-However this may be, his offer, which was laid before the association
-at the general meeting of May, 1808, was “willingly accepted;” and
-he immediately commenced all those preparations which were necessary
-to the proper accomplishment of his undertaking. He employed himself
-diligently in the study of the Arabic language both in London and
-Cambridge, as well as in the acquiring of a knowledge of several
-branches of science, such as chymistry, astronomy, mineralogy,
-medicine, and surgery; he likewise allowed his beard to grow, assumed
-the oriental dress, “and in the intervals of his studies he exercised
-himself by long journeys on foot, bare-headed, in the heat of the sun,
-sleeping upon the ground, and living upon vegetables and water.”
-
-On the 25th of January, 1809, he received his instructions, by which
-he was directed to proceed in the first instance to Syria, where,
-it was supposed, he might complete his knowledge of the Arabic, and
-acquire oriental habits and manners at a distance from the scene of his
-researches, and where he was not likely to meet with any individuals
-who might afterward recognise him at an inconvenient moment.
-
-Burckhardt sailed from Cowes on the 2d of March, 1809, in a
-merchant-ship, proceeding to the Mediterranean, and arrived at Malta in
-the middle of April. From thence, in a letter to Sir Joseph Banks, he
-transmitted an account of the attempt to explore the interior of Africa
-which was at that time meditated by Dr. Seetzen, a German physician,
-who shortly afterward perished, not without suspicions of poison, in
-Yemen; and of a recent eruption of Mount Etna, the description of which
-he obtained from the letter of an English gentleman.
-
-During his stay at Malta he completed his equipment in the oriental
-manner, and assumed the character of an Indian Mohammedan merchant,
-bearing despatches from the East India Company to Mr. Barker, British
-consul, and the company’s agent at Aleppo. Meanwhile he carefully
-avoided all intercourse with such persons from Barbary as happened to
-be in the island; and when he met parties of them in the street, as
-he often did, the _salaam alaikum_, given and returned, was all that
-passed between them. There was at this time a Swiss regiment in the
-English service at Malta, to many of the officers of which Burckhardt
-was personally known. To be recognised by these gentlemen would at once
-have proved fatal to his assumed character; he therefore appeared in
-public cautiously, and but seldom; but had at length the satisfaction
-of finding that his disguise was so complete as to enable him to pass
-unknown and unnoticed.
-
-Our traveller here entered into arrangements with a Greek, respecting
-his passage from this island to Cyprus; but on the very morning of his
-expected departure he received information that the owner of the ship
-had directed the captain to proceed to Tripoly. His baggage was in
-consequence transferred to another ship, said to be bound for the same
-island; “but the very moment I was embarking,” says Burckhardt, “the
-new captain told me that he was not quite sure whether he should touch
-at Cyprus, his ship being properly bound for Acre. I had now the option
-to wait at Malta, perhaps another month or two, for an opportunity for
-Cyprus or the coast of Syria, or to run the chance of disembarking at
-a place where there was no person whatever to whom I could apply for
-advice or protection. Luckily an Arab of Acre, then at Malta, happened
-to be known to Mr. Barker, jun.; in half an hour’s time a letter for
-a merchant at Acre, with another in case of need for the pasha, were
-procured, and I embarked and sailed the same morning, in the hope of
-finding, when arrived at Acre, a passage for Tripoly (Syria), or for
-Latakia. However, we were no sooner out of sight of the island, than
-it was made known to me that the real destination of the ship was the
-coast of Caramania, that the captain had orders to touch first at the
-port of Satalia, then at that of Tarsus; and that if grain could not be
-purchased at an advantageous price at either of these places, in that
-case only he was to proceed to Acre. My remonstrances with the captain
-would have been vain: nothing was left to me but to cultivate his good
-graces and those of my fellow-travellers, as the progress of my journey
-must depend greatly upon their good offices. The passengers consisted,
-to my astonishment, of a rich Tripoline merchant, who owned part of
-the ship, two other Tripolines, and two negro slaves. I introduced
-myself among them as an Indian Mohammedan merchant, who had been from
-early years in England, and was now on his way home; and I had the good
-fortune to make my story credible enough to the passengers as well
-as to the ship’s company. During the course of our voyage numerous
-questions were put to me relative to India, its inhabitants, and its
-language, which I answered as well as I could: whenever I was asked
-for a specimen of the Hindoo language, I answered in the worst dialect
-of the Swiss German, almost unintelligible even to a German, and
-which in its guttural sounds may fairly rival the harshest utterance
-of Arabic. Every evening we assembled upon deck to enjoy the cooling
-sea-breeze and to smoke our pipes. While one of the sailors was amusing
-his companions with story-telling, I was called upon to relate to my
-companions the wonders of the farthest east; of the grand mogul, and
-the riches of his court; of the widows in Hindostan burning themselves;
-of the Chinese, their wall, and great porcelain tower,” &c.
-
-They sailed along the southern coast of Candia, saw Rhodes at a great
-distance, and arrived in a few days at Satalia in Caramania. Here the
-plague, it was found, was raging in the town; but this circumstance did
-not prevent the Tripoline merchant from landing and disposing of his
-merchandise, nor the captain from receiving him again on board. When
-their business with this town was completed, they again set sail, and
-after coasting for three days along the shore of Caramania, arrived
-in the roads of Mersin, from whence Burckhardt and several of his
-companions proceeded by land on an excursion to Tarsus. Finding here
-a ship bound for the coast of Syria, our traveller left the Maltese
-vessel in order to proceed by this new conveyance: “In taking leave of
-the Tripoline,” says he, “I took off my sash, a sort of red cambric
-shawl, of Glasgow manufacture, which he had always much admired,
-thinking it to be Indian stuff, and presented it to him as a keepsake
-or reward for his good services. He immediately unloosened his turban,
-and twisted the shawl in its stead round his head: making me many
-professions of friendship, and assuring me of his hospitality, if ever
-the chance of mercantile pursuits should again engage me to visit the
-Mediterranean, and perhaps Tripoly in Barbary.”
-
-Burckhardt reached the coast of Syria at that point where the Aasi,
-the ancient Orontis, falls into the sea; and immediately prepared
-to depart for Aleppo with a caravan. Having been intrusted with
-several chests for the British consul at Aleppo, his baggage appeared
-considerable; and he was consequently sent for by the aga, who expected
-a handsome present for permitting them to pass. When questioned by this
-officer respecting the contents of the chests, he replied that he was
-entirely ignorant of the matter, but suspected that among other things
-there was a sort of French drink, called _beer_, with various kinds of
-eatables. The aga now sent an officer to examine them. A bottle of beer
-having been broken in loading, “the man tasted it by putting his finger
-into the liquor, and found it abominably bitter: such was his report to
-the aga. As a sample of the eatables, he produced a potato which he had
-taken out of one of the barrels, and that noble root excited general
-laughter in the room: ‘It is well worth while,’ they said, ‘to send
-such stuff to such a distance.’ The aga tasted of the raw potato, and
-spitting it out again, swore at the Frank’s stomach which could bear
-such food.” The mean opinion which these specimens inspired them with
-for such merchandise inclined the aga to be content with the trifling
-sum of ten piastres, which he probably thought more than the value of a
-whole ship’s cargo of potatoes and beer.
-
-Upon the arrival of the caravan at Antakia, our traveller, desirous of
-studying the manners of all ranks of men, took up his quarters in the
-khan of the muleteers, where, from a suspicion that he was a Frank in
-disguise, he was subjected to numerous indignities. The aga’s dragoman,
-some wretched Frenchman or Piedmontese, being sent by his master to
-discover the truth, and failing to effect his purpose by any other
-means, determined, as a last resource, on pulling him by the beard, and
-at the same time asked him familiarly why he had suffered such a thing
-to grow? To this Burckhardt replied by striking him on the face, which
-turned the laugh against the poor dragoman, and was an argument so
-peculiarly Mohammedan that it seems to have convinced the bystanders of
-the truth of his assertions.
-
-After a delay of four days he continued his journey with the caravan,
-with the motley members of which he was compelled to maintain an
-unceasing struggle in defence of his assumed character; a circumstance
-which proves one of two things, either that the Saonees of the west
-have by intercourse with Europeans been rendered more acute in
-discovering impostors, than the Shiahs of Afghanistan and Northern
-Persia, or that Burckhardt was hitherto somewhat unskilful in his
-movements; for the reader will no doubt remember that Forster, when he
-professed Mohammedanism, had much fewer suspicions to combat on his way
-through Central Asia.
-
-On his arrival at Aleppo, he determined, in pursuance of the advice
-of Mr. Barker, to put off his Mohammedan disguise, though he still
-retained the Turkish dress; and with the aid of an able master,
-recommenced the study of the Arabic, both literal and vulgar. He was
-attacked, however, shortly after his arrival, by a strong inflammatory
-fever, which lasted a fortnight; and was occasioned, as he conjectured,
-by the want of sleep, of which blessing he had been deprived by the
-prodigious colonies of that “friendly beast to man” which, according
-to Sir Hugh Evans, “signifies love,” which had established themselves
-in his garments during his stay at the khan of Antakia. When this
-seasoning was over, his health appeared to be improved, and he found
-the climate finer and more salubrious than he had expected.
-
-During his stay in this city, which was a very protracted one,
-Burckhardt laboured assiduously in fitting himself for the honourable
-performance of the task he had undertaken. His Arabic studies were
-uninterrupted. Besides seizing eagerly on every opportunity of
-improving himself by conversation with the natives, he laboured at
-an attempt to transform “Robinson Crusoe” into an Arabian tale. He
-moreover succeeded in making the acquaintance of several sheïkhs, and
-other literary men, who honoured him occasionally with a visit; a
-favour, he says, which he owed principally to Mr. Wilkins’s “Arabic
-and Persian Dictionary.” The ordinary lexicons of the country being
-very defective, the learned Turks were often obliged to have recourse
-to Wilkins, whose learning and exactness sometimes compelled them to
-exclaim, “How wonderful that a Frank should know more of our language
-than our first ulmas!”
-
-In the month of July, 1810, Burckhardt departed from Aleppo under
-the protection of an Arab sheïkh, of the Aenezy tribe, who undertook
-to escort him to Palmyra, and thence through the Haurān to Damascus.
-On the way they were attacked, while the sheïkh was absent at a
-watering-place, by the hostile Marváli Arabs, by whom our traveller
-was robbed of his watch and compass; after which he pushed on into the
-desert to rejoin the chief. Contrary to the well-known faith of the
-Arabs, this man transferred to another the protection of his guest,
-thereby exposing him to be robbed a second time, at Palmyra, where the
-bandit in authority, finding that he had no money, contented himself
-with seizing upon his saddle. Returning from these ruins, he found at
-Yerud a letter from the sheïkh, forbidding him to proceed towards the
-Haurān, because, as the writer asserted, the invasion of the Wahabis
-had rendered that portion of the country unsafe, even to himself and
-his Arabs. In consequence of this fraudulent conduct of the sheïkh,
-for the excuse was a fiction, he found himself necessitated to take
-the road to Damascus; disappointed in part, but upon the whole well
-satisfied with having beheld those magnificent ruins in the desert
-which have charmed so many strangers, and with having at the same time
-enjoyed so many occasions of observing the Bedouins under their own
-tents, where he was everywhere received with hospitality and kindness.
-
-The rich and well-cultivated environs of Damascus, which all
-travellers, from Mohammed to the present day, have admired, appeared to
-great advantage to the eye of Burckhardt, accustomed to be sickened by
-the signs of misery which surround Aleppo. “The unsettled state of the
-government of Damascus,” says he, “obliged me to prolong my stay there
-for upwards of six weeks. I again left it in the middle of September,
-to visit Baalbec and Libanus. My route lay through Zahle, a small but
-prosperous town on the western side of the valley Bekan, the ancient
-Cœlosyria, and from thence to Baalbec, where I remained three days;
-then to the top of the Libanus, the Cedars, and Kannobin, from whence,
-following the highest summits of the mountain, I returned to Zahle by
-the villages called Akoura and Afki.”
-
-After proceeding southward to the territory of the Druses, and Mount
-Hermon, he returned to Damascus; whence, after a short stay, he made an
-excursion into the Haurān, the patrimony of Abraham, which four years
-before had been in part visited by Dr. Seetzen, previous to his tour
-round the Dead Sea. “During a fatiguing journey of twenty-six days,”
-says Burckhardt, “I explored this country as far as five days’ journey
-to the south and south-east of Damascus; I went over the whole of the
-Jebel Haurān, or mountain of the Druses, who have in these parts a
-settlement of about twenty villages; I passed Bozra, a place mentioned
-in the books of Moses, and not to be confounded with Boostra; I then
-entered the desert to the south-east of it, and returned afterward to
-Damascus through the rocky district on the foot of the Jebel Haurān,
-called El Leja. At every step I found vestiges of ancient cities; saw
-the remains of many temples, public edifices, and Greek churches; met
-at Shohbe with a well-preserved amphitheatre, at other places with
-numbers of still standing columns, and had opportunities of copying
-many Greek inscriptions, which may serve to throw some light upon the
-history of this almost forgotten corner. The inscriptions are for
-the greater part of the lower empire, but some of the most elegant
-ruins have their inscriptions dated from the reigns of Trajan and M.
-Aurelius. The Haurān, with its adjacent districts, is the spring and
-summer rendezvous of most of the Arab tribes, who inhabit in winter
-time the great Syrian desert, called by them El Hammad. They approach
-the cultivated lands in search of grass, water, and corn, of which last
-they buy up in the Haurān their yearly provision.”
-
-Having to a certain extent satisfied his curiosity respecting this
-obscure country, he returned by way of Homs and Hamah towards Aleppo,
-where he arrived on the New-year’s day of 1811. He now meditated an
-excursion into the desert towards the Euphrates, but was for some time
-prevented from putting his design in execution by the troubled state
-of the country, two powerful Arab tribes, the one inimical, the other
-friendly to the Aleppines, having been for many months at war with each
-other. Burckhardt at length succeeded, however, in placing himself
-under the protection of the Sheïkh of Sukhne, and set out towards the
-desert: but his own account of this journey was lost, and all that can
-now be known of it is to be gathered from a letter from Mr. Barker,
-the celebrated British consul at Aleppo, to whose princely hospitality
-so many travellers of all nations have been indebted. “One hundred and
-twenty, or one hundred and fifty miles below the ruins of Membigeh, in
-the Zor,” says this gentleman, “there is a tract on the banks of the
-Euphrates possessed by a tribe of very savage Arabs. Not far from them
-is the village of Sukhne, at the distance of five days from Aleppo, and
-of twelve hours from Palmyra, in the road which Zenobia in her flight
-took to gain the Euphrates. The people of Sukhne are sedentary Arabs,
-of a breed half Fellah and half Bedouin. They bring to Aleppo alkali
-and ostrich feathers. It was upon one of these visits of the Sheïkh of
-Sukhne to Aleppo, that Burckhardt, after some negotiation, resolved to
-accept the protection of the sheïkh, who undertook, upon their arrival
-at his village, to place him under the protection of a Bedouin of
-sufficient influence to procure him a safe passage through the tribes
-of the country which he wished to explore. Burckhardt had reason to be
-satisfied both with the Sheïkh of Sukhne, and with the Arab whom he
-procured as an escort, except that, in the end, the protection of the
-latter proved insufficient. The consequence was, that poor Burckhardt
-was stripped to the skin, and he returned to Sukhne, his body blistered
-with the rays of the sun, and without having accomplished any of the
-objects of his journey. It was in this excursion to the desert that
-Burckhardt had so hard a struggle with an Arab lady, who took a fancy
-to the only garment which the delicacy or compassion of the men had
-left him.”
-
-After his return from this unfortunate journey, Burckhardt was delayed
-for a considerable time at Aleppo by incessant rains; but at length,
-on the 14th of February, he bade this city a final adieu, and hastened
-once more to Damascus. He was desirous, before quitting Syria, of
-performing another journey in the Haurān. This he completed, and
-having transmitted to England an account of his discoveries in this
-extraordinary region, he departed on the 18th of June for the Dead Sea.
-The reader will not, I imagine, be displeased to find the description
-of this journey given in the author’s own words: having reached
-Nazareth, “I met here,” says he, “a couple of petty merchants from
-Szalt, a castle in the mountains of Balka, which I had not been able
-to see during my late tour, and which lies on the road I had pointed
-out to myself for passing into the Egyptian deserts. I joined their
-caravan; after eight hours’ march, we descended into the valley of the
-Jordan, called El Gor, near Bysan; crossed the river, and continued
-along its verdant banks for about ten hours, until we reached the
-river Zerka, near the place where it empties itself into the Jordan.
-Turning then to our left, we ascended the eastern chain, formerly part
-of the district of Balka, and arrived at Szalt, two long days’ journey
-from Nazareth. The inhabitants of Szalt are entirely independent of
-the Turkish government; they cultivate the ground for a considerable
-distance round their habitations, and part of them live the whole year
-round in tents, to watch their harvests and to pasture their cattle.
-Many ruined places and mountains in the district of Balka preserve
-the names of the Old Testament, and elucidate the topography of the
-province that fell to the share of the tribes of Gad and Reuben. Szalt
-is at present the only inhabited place in the Balka, but numerous Arab
-tribes pasture there their camels and sheep. I visited from thence
-the ruins of Amān, or Philadelphia, five hours and a half distant
-from Szalt. They are situated in a valley on both sides of a rivulet,
-which empties itself into the Zerka. A large amphitheatre is the most
-remarkable of these ruins, which are much decayed, and in every respect
-inferior to those of Jerash. At four or five hours south-east of Amān
-are the ruins of Om Erresas and El Kotif, which I could not see,
-but which, according to report, are more considerable than those of
-Philadelphia. The want of communication between Szalt and the southern
-countries delayed my departure for upwards of a week; I found at last
-a guide, and we reached Kerek in two days and a half, after having
-passed the deep beds of the torrents El Wale and El Mojeb, which I
-suppose to be the Nahaliel and Arnon. The Mojeb divides the district of
-Balka from that of Kerek, as it formerly divided the Moabites from the
-Amorites. The ruins of Eleale, Hesebon, Meon, Medaba, Dibon, Arver, all
-situated on the north side of the Arnon, still subsist to illustrate
-the history of the Beni Israel. To the south of the wild torrent Mojeb
-I found the considerable ruins of Rabbab Moab: and, three hours’
-distance from them, the town of Kerek, situated at about twelve hours’
-distance to the east of the southern extremity of the Dead Sea....
-
-“The treachery of the Sheïkh of Kerek, to whom I had been particularly
-recommended by a grandee of Damascus, obliged me to stay at Kerek above
-twenty days. After having annoyed me in different ways, he permitted me
-to accompany him southward, as he had himself business in the mountains
-of Djebal, a district which is divided from that of Kerek by the deep
-bed of the torrent El Ahhsa, or El Kahary, eight hours’ distance
-from Kerek. We remained for ten days in the villages to the north
-and south of El Ansa, which are inhabited by Arabs, who have become
-cultivators, and who sell the produce of their fields to the Bedouins.
-The sheïkh, having finished his business, left me at Beszeyra, a
-village about sixteen hours south of Kerek, to shift for myself, after
-having maliciously recommended me to the care of a Bedouin, with whose
-character he must have been acquainted, and who nearly stripped me of
-the remainder of my money. I encountered here many difficulties, was
-obliged to walk from one encampment to another, until I found at last
-a Bedouin who engaged to carry me to Egypt. In his company I continued
-southward, in the mountains of Shera, which are divided to the north
-from Djebal by the broad valley called Ghoseyr, at about five hours’
-distance from Beszeyra. The chief place in Djebal is Tafyle, and in
-Shera the castle of Shobak. This chain of mountains is a continuation
-of the eastern Syrian chain, which begins with the Antilibanus, joins
-the Jebel el Sheïkh, forms the valley of Ghor, and borders the Dead
-Sea. The valley of Ghor is continued to the south of the Dead Sea; at
-about sixteen hours’ distance from the extremity of the Dead Sea its
-name is changed into that of Araba, and it runs in almost a straight
-line, declining somewhat to the west as far as Akaba, at the extremity
-of the eastern branch of the Red Sea. The existence of this valley
-appears to have been unknown to ancient as well as modern geographers,
-although it is a very remarkable feature in the geography of Syria
-and Arabia Petræa, and is still more interesting for its productions.
-In this valley the manna is still found; it drops from the sprigs of
-several trees, but principally from the Gharrab. It is collected by
-the Arabs, who make cakes of it, and who eat it with butter; they call
-it Assal Beyrook, or the honey of Beyrook. Indigo, gum-arabic, and the
-silk-tree, called Asheyr, whose fruit encloses a white silky substance,
-of which the Arabs twist their matches, grow in this valley.”
-
-In this valley, about two long days’ journey north-east of Akaba, is a
-small rivulet, near the banks of which Burckhardt discovered the ruins
-of a city, which he conjectured to be those of Petra, the capital of
-Arabia Petræa. No other European traveller had ever visited the spot,
-though few places in Western Asia seem more curious or deserving of
-examination. The red rocks composing the flanks of the valley contained
-upwards of two hundred and fifty sepulchral chambers, adorned with
-Grecian ornaments. Besides these there were numerous mausolea, some in
-the Egyptian style, with obelisks, others in the chaste manner of the
-Greeks; and among the latter there was one in perfect preservation,
-and of vast dimensions, with all its apartments, its vestibule, its
-peristyle, &c. cut out in the solid rock. On the summit of the mountain
-which forms the western boundary of the valley is the tomb of Aaron,
-which the Arabs, who are great Scriptural antiquarians, hold in
-extraordinary veneration. Our traveller, however, to his great regret,
-was necessitated to abandon to some more fortunate visiter the thorough
-examination of this interesting region, at which circumstances allowed
-him merely to cast a glance as he was hurrying along with his Bedouin
-conductor towards the Red Sea. In proceeding from this place towards
-Akaba he encountered a small party of Arabs who were conducting a few
-camels for sale to Cairo, and uniting himself to this little caravan,
-performed the remainder of the journey in their company. “We crossed
-the valley of Araba,” says he, “ascended on the other side of it the
-barren mountains of Beyane, and entered the desert called El Tih,
-which is the most barren and horrid tract of country I have ever seen;
-black flints cover the chalky or sandy ground, which in most places is
-without any vegetation. The tree which produces the gum-arabic grows
-in some spots; and the tamarisk is met with here and there; but the
-scarcity of water forbids much extent of vegetation, and the hungry
-camels are obliged to go in the evening for whole hours out of the road
-in order to find some withered shrubs upon which to feed. During ten
-days’ forced marches we passed only four springs or wells, of which one
-only, at about eight hours east of Suez, was of sweet water. The others
-were brackish and sulphureous. We passed at a short distance to the
-north of Suez, and arrived at Cairo by the pilgrim road.”
-
-On his arrival at Cairo, Burckhardt’s first employment was to draw up a
-detailed account of his journey through Arabia Petræa: he then turned
-his attention to the means of fulfilling the great design of his
-mission; but no opportunity of penetrating into the interior of Africa
-occurring, he undertook, in order to fill up the interval thus created,
-a journey into Nubia. During his residence at Cairo, and on his journey
-up the Nile to Assouan, he beheld the principal ruins of Egypt. His
-preparations for the Nubian excursion were soon made. He purchased two
-dromedaries, one for himself and the other for his guide, for about
-twenty-two pounds; provided himself with letters of recommendation,
-and a firman from the pasha; and leaving his servant and baggage at
-Assouan, set out with his guide on the 14th of February, 1813, carrying
-along with him nothing but a gun, a sabre, a pistol, a provision-bag,
-and a woollen mantle, which served by day for a carpet, and for a
-covering during the night.
-
-Their road lay along the eastern bank of the Nile; they passed Philæ
-(where, a few days before, a pregnant woman had been killed in a fray,
-as the softer sex always mix in the battles in which their husbands are
-engaged, which had created a deadly feud between the hostile villages);
-and then pushed on with rapidity towards Derr. The Mameluke chiefs,
-with their desperate followers, were at this period roaming about
-Nubia, amusing their imaginations with vain projects for the recovery
-of Egypt.--Every person coming from the north was of course an object
-of curiosity, if not of suspicion, to these baffled soldiers, as it
-was possible he might be the bearer of tidings of events upon the
-results of which their fate depended. Such was the state of things when
-Burckhardt entered Nubia. Everywhere reports calculated to create alarm
-were circulated. To-day it was said that the Mamelukes had descended,
-like famished tigers, from the mountains, and were about to deliver up
-the whole country to plunder and devastation; to-morrow they appeared
-to have passed away, like a thunder-cloud, towards Dongola and the
-desert, leaving behind them that sort of uneasy satisfaction with which
-we behold the quelling of unruly elements.
-
-Burckhardt arrived at Derr on the 1st of March, and, to his surprise,
-found two Mameluke beys at the palace of the governor. He had
-reckoned upon their utter disappearance, and had intended, under
-these circumstances, to represent himself as the secret agent of
-the Pasha of Egypt; but learning, upon inquiry, that the pasha and
-his enemies were regarded with nearly equal dread by the Nubian
-princes, he changed his resolution, and professed to be guided in his
-motions by no other motive than pleasure. Ignorant persons find it
-hard to conceive that men can expose themselves to difficulties and
-dangers from an enthusiasm for knowledge, or can find pleasure in
-encountering hardships and fatigue; however, a concurrence of fortunate
-circumstances extorted from the governor a permission to proceed, and
-accordingly, having provided himself with provisions for the road, our
-traveller departed for Sukkot.
-
-His guide on the present occasion was an old Arab of the Ababde tribe.
-The branch of the Ababde to which this man, whose name was Mohammed,
-belonged, feed their flocks on the uninhabited banks of the river, and
-on its numerous islands, as far south as Dongola. Though poor, they
-refuse to bestow their daughters, who are famed for their beauty, in
-marriage on the rich Nubians, and have thus preserved the purity of
-their race. They are, moreover, an honest and hospitable race, and
-during his journeys in Nubia, Burckhardt was constantly received and
-treated with kindness by these simple people.
-
-In pursuing his course up the Nile, our traveller passed a day at
-Ibrim, a town inhabited by Turks, where, though quarrels and bloodshed
-were frequent, property was more secure than in any other town he
-had visited in the eastern world; the corn was left all night in the
-field, and the cattle on the banks of the river, unwatched, and even
-the greater part of the household furniture remained all night under
-the palm-trees around their dwellings. Indeed, theft was here quite
-unknown. Proceeding a short distance to the south of this town, he
-dismounted from his dromedary, and directing his guide to continue his
-road to the next village, struck off into a narrow footpath along the
-lofty, precipitous shores of the river. Pursuing this mountain-track
-he arrived at an ancient temple hewn out of the rock, in as perfect a
-state of preservation as when first finished. Sepulchral chambers and
-mystic sculptures, the usual accompaniments of Egyptian temples, were
-found here.
-
-The reception which our traveller and his guide met with at the Nubian
-villages was generally hospitable; as soon as they alighted a mat was
-spread for them upon the ground, just before the door of the house,
-which none but intimate friends are permitted to enter; dhourra bread,
-milk, and sometimes dates were placed before the strangers, and their
-host, if earnestly pressed, sat down with them. Straw, when plentiful,
-was likewise given to their camels; and when the host desired to be
-particularly hospitable, a breakfast of hot milk and bread was served
-up before their departure in the morning.
-
-At length, on the 6th of March, they arrived on a sandy plain,
-sprinkled with rocky points, which thrust up their heads through the
-sand that concealed their bases. Here they encamped in the evening near
-one of the islands which are formed by the river. The noise of the
-cataract was heard in the night, at about half an hour’s distance. The
-place is very romantic: when the inundation subsides, many small lakes
-are left among the rocks; and the banks of these, overgrown with large
-tamarisks, have a picturesque appearance amid the black and green
-rocks; the lakes and pools thus formed cover a space of upwards of two
-miles in breadth.
-
-The Arabs who serve as guides through these wild districts “have
-devised,” says Burckhardt, “a singular mode of extorting small presents
-from the traveller: they alight at certain spots, and beg a present;
-if it is refused, they collect a heap of sand, and mould it into the
-form of a diminutive tomb, and then placing a stone at each of its
-extremities, they apprize the traveller that his tomb is made; meaning
-that henceforward there will be no security for him in this rocky
-wilderness. Most persons pay a trifling contribution rather than have
-their graves made before their eyes; there were, however, several tombs
-of this description dispersed over the plain. Being satisfied with my
-guide, I gave him one piastre, with which he was content.”
-
-On his arriving in the territory of Sukkot, he presented the letter to
-the governor of which he was the bearer; and received from this old
-savage a scrap of paper, containing an introduction to his son, who was
-the chief of the southern part of the district. Here the guide, who
-had been granted him at Derr, reached the extremity of his commission,
-and announced his intention of returning from thence; four piastres,
-however, overcame his determination, and he agreed to proceed to
-Mahass: “If Hassan Kashif,” said he, “upbraids me, I shall tell him
-that you rode on, notwithstanding my exhortations, and that I did not
-think it honourable to leave you alone.” An admirable custom prevails
-in this and every other part of Nubia: water-jars are placed under a
-low roof at short distances by the roadside, where the traveller may
-always quench his thirst; and every village pays a small monthly sum to
-some person to fill those jars morning and evening. The same thing is
-practised upon a much larger scale in Upper Egypt.
-
-Upon Burckhardt’s reaching the Mahass territory, he suddenly found
-himself in the midst of the worst description of savages. The governor,
-a ferocious black, received him in a hut, furiously intoxicated, and
-surrounded by numerous followers in the same condition. In the midst
-of their drunken mirth they called for their muskets, and amused
-themselves with firing in the hut. Burckhardt every moment expected
-that a random ball would put an end to his travels; but the palm wine
-at length extended the whole of this atrocious rabble upon the ground,
-and next morning, when sleep had somewhat restored the tone of the
-governor’s senses, he found time to question our traveller respecting
-the motives of his visit. The story which he related to them was not
-believed: “You are an agent of Mohammed,” said they; “but at Mahass we
-spit at Mohammed Ali’s beard, and cut off the heads of those who are
-enemies to the Mamelukes.” These suspicions, although they produced no
-immediate injury to his personal safety, entirely put a stop to his
-progress farther south; for he was now within two days and a half of
-the limits of Dongola, where the Mamelukes were lords paramount, and to
-enter their territories with the character of an agent of Mohammed Ali
-would be to court certain death. He therefore turned his face towards
-the north, and travelled with all possible celerity along the eastern
-bank of the Nile, until he arrived at Kolbe, where he swam across the
-river, holding by his camel’s tail with one hand, and urging on the
-beast with the other.
-
-Burckhardt now descended the Nile to Ipsambol, the vast rocky temple
-of which he supposed to be of extremely ancient date. He here found
-four colossal statues of enormous magnitude, which had been hewn
-out of the rock, on the face of an elevated cliff, with their backs
-adhering to the precipice. The fine sand of the desert had been blown
-up into mounds against the rock, and covered two of these statues
-almost entirely; the rest rose somewhat above the surface. The faces
-of these colossal statues are turned towards the north. “The head,
-which is above the surface,” says he, “has a most expressive youthful
-countenance, approaching nearer to the Grecian model of beauty than
-that of any ancient Egyptian figure I have seen; indeed, were it not
-for a thin, oblong beard, it might well pass for a head of Pallas.”
-
-From Ipsambol he continued his journey to Mosmos and Derr, where he
-parted with his guide, who, on taking his leave, begged as a present
-the mellaye, or cloak, which our traveller usually wore. To this
-request Burckhardt replied, “May God smooth your path!”--a phrase
-usually addressed to beggars, when they are civilly told to be gone.
-“No,” said the Arab, who had often employed this phrase when he desired
-to elude the questions of the traveller, “for once I will beg you to
-smooth it.” “So,” says Burckhardt, “I gave him the mellaye, and a small
-present in money; and am confident that Abou Saad will never forget me.”
-
-On his return to Assouan, Burckhardt’s first care was to repair, by
-repose, the inroads which fatigue had made upon his constitution. He
-then repaired to Esne, where he established his head-quarters. It being
-his policy to excite but little attention, he very seldom went into
-company, dressed meanly, and reduced his expenditure to the lowest
-possible sum. The cheapness of provisions was incredible. His whole
-expenditure for himself, his servant, his dromedary, and his ass not
-exceeding one shilling and sixpence per day, while his horse cost him
-no more than sixteen pence per month.
-
-Here he remained until the 2d of March, 1814, when he joined himself,
-as a petty trader, to another caravan, which was proceeding from Deraou
-to Berber. The caravan, consisting of about fifty merchants, with their
-slaves and beasts, moved under the protection of about thirty Ababde
-Arabs, who, though no heroes or philosophers, were not remarkably
-deficient either in courage or humanity. Burckhardt was a man more apt
-to blame than praise. If an individual performed a generous action,
-he generally evinced a disposition to attribute it to some selfish or
-mean motive, probably from the opinion that it might be considered
-vulgar and unphilosophical to betray a belief in disinterested virtue.
-It is to be regretted, however, that he should have indulged in this
-unamiable habit of thinking, as nothing more surely tends to awaken the
-resentment or suspicion of the reader, who will be led to imagine that
-he who constantly misrepresents the motives of men may sometimes, from
-unknown causes, be tempted to misrepresent their manners and actions
-also. If we do not entertain this opinion of Burckhardt, it is that we
-exercise towards him a higher degree of charity than he was accustomed
-to exercise towards others.
-
-The march of a caravan through the desert is a magnificent spectacle.
-There is a kind of sublime daring in thus venturing upon what seem
-to be the secret places of nature; the places whence the simoom, the
-hurricane, and the locust-cloud issue forth upon their fatal errands,
-and where many tremendous phenomena, peculiar to those dreary regions,
-present themselves, at intervals, to the astonished but delighted eye
-of the traveller.
-
-Burckhardt, on this occasion, possessed no command over his own
-movements. He travelled, halted, ate, slept, in obedience to the
-fantasy of the caravan-leaders; who were ignorant, however, that the
-humble trader, whom they regarded, at most, with compassion, was at
-that moment forming reflections, and bringing observations to maturity,
-which were, perhaps for ages, to affect the opinion entertained by
-the civilized world of their character and pursuits. Meanwhile the
-merchants, who were chiefly engaged in the debasing traffic of slaves,
-and, as may be supposed, cherished no respect for any thing but
-riches, and the power which commands riches, looked upon their humble
-companion with undisguised contempt; for imbecility and ignorance are
-of themselves incapable of appreciating intellectual superiority, and
-reverence it only when it is exerted for their defence or destruction.
-The scorn which our traveller entertained for those miscreants was,
-therefore, just. They constantly treated him with contumely, though he
-professed a belief in the same law and the same prophets; plundered
-his water-skins, or obstructed his filling them at the wells, thus
-exposing him to the danger of perishing of thirst; circulated, in the
-towns where they stopped, the report that he was a spy; and, in short,
-put in practice every art which their dastardly malice and shallow
-brains could conceive, in order to disgust him with the trade, and thus
-free themselves from a new competitor. But they were slave-dealers: an
-epithet which comprises every thing most loathsome and abominable; and
-their manners entirely corresponded with their occupation, being marked
-by a degree of depravity which language blushes to describe.
-
-At the end of a week’s journey, the caravan arrived at the celebrated
-wells of El Haimar, in the vicinity of which they found the tomb of a
-Mameluke chief, who died on this spot. “His companions, having enclosed
-the naked corpse within low walls of loose stones, had covered it over
-with a large block. The dryness of the air had preserved the corpse
-in the most perfect state. Looking at it through the interstices of
-the stones which enveloped it, it appeared to me a more perfect mummy
-than any I had seen in Egypt. The mouth was wide open, and our guide
-related that the man had died for want of water, although so near the
-wells.” Next day they passed Wady Ollaky, a fine valley, extending
-east and west from the Nile to the Red Sea. Here were numerous trees
-and excellent pasture; advantages which caused it to be regarded with
-peculiar veneration by the Bedouins; and every man, as he traversed it
-on his ass or camel, took a handful of dhourra, and threw it on the
-ground, as a kind of pious offering to the good genius of the Wady.
-
-On the following day, in crossing Wady El Towashy, or the Valley of
-the Eunuch, Burckhardt saw the tomb of that Mahomet Towash whose
-body was found on the sands by Bruce, three days after he had been
-murdered by his guides. The principal facts in Bruce’s narrative of
-this transaction Burckhardt found to be true, but he imagined that
-the details of the story must have been “made up.” Nothing can be
-conceived more insolent or absurd than this skepticism. Why should it
-be supposed that we were to accept the testimony of this young man,
-coming from a country where assuredly truth is not more respected than
-it is in Britain, and who, compared with Bruce, was an unknown and an
-inferior person, before that of an English gentleman, whose education
-was conducted with the utmost care, and who, except as a traveller,
-was never regarded, I believe, other than as a person of probity and
-honour? The principle which teaches the despots of the East to respect
-each other’s harems, when, by the chances of war, they fall into their
-hands, as Darius’s fell into those of Alexander, should, we think,
-be acted upon by travellers, who, unless upon the amplest and most
-satisfactory information, should beware of tampering with the integrity
-of each other’s characters. The contrary proceeding must, in the end,
-be productive of a degree of skepticism which would extinguish all
-enthusiasm and enterprise in travellers, who, at this rate, could
-expect no better fate than to be denounced as liars by every timid
-knave, who, skulking by his own fireside, might be impelled by envy
-to rail at those who boldly measure sea and land, and undergo the
-extremity of hardships to obtain an honourable reputation.
-
-Burckhardt, however, had acquired the habit of suspecting every thing,
-not because he himself could have been guilty of an untruth, for he
-was a high-spirited and honourable man, but because he generalized too
-hastily. I readily pardon his error, therefore, and trust that his
-involuntary injustice may be injurious neither to Bruce’s character,
-nor to his own. His picture of what he endured in the course of this
-journey is sufficient to account for any little asperity of manner
-observable in his travels. “For myself,” says he, in describing what
-daily occurred at their halting-places, “I was often driven from the
-coolest and most comfortable birth into the burning sun, and generally
-passed the midday hours in great distress; for besides the exposure to
-heat, I had to cook my dinner, a service which I could never prevail
-upon any of my companions, even the poorest servants, to perform for
-me, though I offered to let them share my homely fare. In the evening
-the same labour occurred again, when fatigued by the day’s journey,
-during which I always walked for four or five hours, in order to spare
-my ass, and when I was in the utmost need of repose. Hunger, however,
-always prevailed over fatigue, and I was obliged to fetch and cut wood,
-to light a fire, to cook, to feed the ass, and finally to make coffee,
-a cup of which, presented to my Daraou companions, who were extremely
-eager to obtain it, was the only means I possessed of keeping them in
-tolerable good-humour. A good night’s rest, however, always repaired
-my strength, and I was never in better health and spirits than during
-this journey, although its fatigues were certainly very great, and much
-beyond my expectation. The common dish of all the travellers at noon
-was fetyre, which is flour mixed up with water into a liquid paste, and
-then baked upon the sadj, or iron plate; butter is then poured over
-it, or honey, or sometimes a sauce is made of butter and dried bamyé.
-In the evening some lentils are boiled, or some bread is baked with
-salt, either upon the sadj or in ashes, and a sauce of bamyé, or onion,
-poured over lentils, or upon the bread, after it has been crumbled
-into small pieces. Early in the morning every one eats a piece of dry
-biscuit, with some raw onions or dates.”
-
-On the 14th of March, on arriving at the Wady el Nabeh, they found the
-celebrated wells of that valley insufficient to supply the caravan
-until they should reach the rocks of Shigre, and as no water was
-anywhere to be found in the intervening space they were reduced to the
-greatest perplexity. “Upon such occasions as these,” says Burckhardt,
-“every man gives his opinion: and mine was, that we should kill our
-thirty-five asses, which required a daily supply of at least fifteen
-water-skins, that we should load the camels to the utmost of their
-strength with water, and strike out a straight way through the desert
-towards Berber, without touching at Shigre; in this manner we might
-perform the journey in five forced marches.” This plan the Arabs
-refused to follow. They repaired their water-skins and their sandals,
-refreshed themselves with bathing in the cool wells, and then set out.
-But “it was not without great apprehension,” says our traveller, “that
-I departed from this place. Our camels and asses carried water for
-three or four days only, and I saw no possibility of escaping from the
-dreadful effects of a want of water. In order to keep my ass in good
-spirits, I took off the two small water-skins with which I had hitherto
-loaded him, and paid one of the Ababdes four dollars to carry four
-small water-skins as far as Berber; for I thought that if the ass could
-carry me, I might bear thirst for two days at least, but that if he
-should break down, I should certainly not be able to walk one whole day
-without water in this hot season of the year.”
-
-Notwithstanding all these difficulties and sufferings, our traveller
-considered the Nubian desert, at least as far south as Shigre, far
-less terrible than that of Syria or Tyh. Trees and water are much
-more frequent, and though it be intersected in various directions by
-shaggy barren rocks, the more desolate and awful appearance which it
-acquires from this circumstance is, in a great measure, compensated for
-by its consequent grandeur and variety. “Here,” says the traveller,
-“during the whole day’s march, we were surrounded on all sides by lakes
-of mirage, called by the Arabs Serab. Its colour was of the purest
-azure, and so clear that the shadows of the mountains that bordered
-the horizon were reflected on it with the greatest precision, and the
-delusion of its being a sheet of water was thus rendered still more
-perfect.” This mockwater, however, only served to heighten the terrors
-which the scarcity of real water excited. Every man now began to attach
-the greatest importance to the small stock he possessed. Burckhardt,
-who possessed but two draughts of water in the world, drank the moiety
-of it at once, reserving the remainder for the next day; but, observing
-the general scarcity, shared the dejection of his companions. At
-length, their condition having become nearly desperate, they adopted
-the course recommended by the Ababde chief, and despatched ten or
-twelve of their companions, mounted on as many camels, to the nearest
-part of the Nile, which was not more than five or six hours distant;
-but its banks being inhabited in this part by fierce hostile tribes,
-nothing but the fear of instant death could have forced them upon this
-step. They timed their march in such a manner that they would reach the
-banks of the river by night; when they were directed to select some
-uninhabited spot, and having there loaded their camels, to return with
-all speed. “We passed the evening,” says Burckhardt, “in the greatest
-anxiety, for if the camels should not return, we had little hopes
-of escape either from thirst or from the sword of our enemies, who,
-if they had once got sight of our camels, would have followed their
-footsteps through the desert, and would certainly have discovered us.
-Many of my companions came in the course of the evening to beg some
-water of me, but I had well hidden my treasure, and answered them by
-showing my empty skins. We remained the greater part of the night in
-silent and sullen expectation of the result of our desperate mission.
-At length, about three o’clock in the morning, we heard the distant
-hallooings of our companions; and soon after refreshed ourselves with
-copious draughts of the delicious water of the Nile.”
-
-This was the last of their sufferings on this route; on the 23d of
-March they entered on a plain with a slight slope towards the river,
-which was felt at more than two hours’ distance by the greater moisture
-of the air. The Arabs exclaimed, “God be praised, we again smell
-the Nile!” and about ten o’clock at night, the caravan entered the
-village of Ankhecreh, the principal place in the district of Berber.
-Burckhardt’s residence at this place was nothing but one continued
-series of annoyance. The principal delight of the whole population,
-among whom drunkenness and debauchery were scarcely accounted vices,
-seemed to consist in deluding and plundering travellers, who on all the
-envenomed soil of Africa could scarcely be exposed to more irritating
-insults or extortion than on this spot.
-
-The caravan, now reduced to about two-thirds of its original number,
-several of the merchants having returned to Egypt, while others
-remained at Berber to dispose of their goods, again put itself in
-motion on the 7th of April. Our traveller, who had hitherto attached
-himself to the merchant portion of the party, several of whom, previous
-to their leaving Egypt, had received benefits at his hands, was here
-driven by abuse and contumely to take refuge among the Ababde, who not
-only willingly received him as their companion, but exercised their
-influence, on more than one occasion, to protect him from violence.
-Pursuing a southerly direction for three days, they arrived at the town
-of Damer, which, under the government of a number of religious men,
-had attained a very high pitch of prosperity. Their sanctity, indeed,
-was considerably aided by their skill in magic, which, as Burckhardt
-was credibly informed, was so great that, on one occasion, the Faky el
-Kebir, or Great Fakir, caused a lamb to bleat in the stomach of the
-thief who had stolen, and afterward eaten it. There was no daily market
-at Damer, nor was there any thing whatever sold publicly, except on
-the weekly market-day. However, as our traveller needed a few measures
-of dhourra for his ass, and found it impracticable to purchase less
-than a dollar’s worth, which would have been more than he could carry,
-he was under the necessity of imitating his companions, and went from
-house to house with some strings of beads in his hands, offering them
-for sale at about four handfuls of dhourra for each bead. “I gained at
-this rate,” says he, “about sixty per cent. above the prime cost, and
-had at the same time an opportunity of entering many private houses. I
-repeated these walks every day during our stay. One afternoon, while
-crying my beads for sale, I was accosted by a faky, who asked me if I
-could read. On my answering in the affirmative, he desired me to follow
-him to a place where, he said, I might expect to get a good dinner.
-He then led me to a house where I found a great number of people,
-collected to celebrate the memory of some relative lately deceased.
-Several fakies were reading the Koran in a low tone of voice. A great
-faky afterward came in, whose arrival was the signal for reciting the
-Koran in loud songs, in the manner customary in the East, in which I
-joined them. This was continued for about half an hour, until dinner
-was brought in, which was very plentiful, as a cow had been killed
-upon the occasion. After a hearty meal, we recommenced our reading.
-One of the sheïkhs produced a basketful of white pebbles, over which
-several prayers were read. These pebbles were destined to be strewed
-over the tomb of the deceased in the manner which I had often observed
-upon tombs freshly made. Upon my inquiries respecting this custom,
-which I confessed to have never before seen practised in any Mohammedan
-country, the faky answered that it was a mere meritorious action: that
-there was no absolute necessity for it; but that it was thought that
-the soul of the deceased, when hereafter visiting the tomb, might be
-glad to find these pebbles, in order to use them as beads in addressing
-its prayers to the Creator. When the reading was over, the women began
-to sing and howl. I then left the room, and on taking my departure my
-kind host put some bones of roasted meat in my hand to serve for my
-supper.”
-
-In proceeding from this place to Shendy the caravan was accompanied by
-several fakies, whose presence was found to be a sufficient protection
-against the Nubian Bedouins. They reached Shendy on the 17th of April,
-and this being, next to Sennaar and Kobbe, the largest town in eastern
-Soudan, they remained here a whole month, during which time Burckhardt
-enjoyed an ample opportunity of collecting materials for an account
-of this and the neighbouring countries. Crocodiles are numerous in
-this part of the Nile. They are much dreaded by the inhabitants, who,
-when repairing to its banks for water or to wash their linen, are in
-constant fear of these creatures. Burckhardt ate of the crocodile’s
-flesh, which he found of a dirty white colour, not unlike young veal,
-with a slight fishy smell. To bring its flesh into fashion as an
-article of food would be the most certain way of rendering it rare.
-
-At this place Burckhardt abandoned all idea of proceeding farther
-south, and, in order to procure himself some little civility from his
-former companions, circulated the report that he intended to return
-directly to Egypt, where, by describing to the pasha their conduct
-towards him during the journey, he might do them considerable injury.
-This stratagem succeeded. Their civility and affected friendship now
-surpassed their former insolence. In the mean while, understanding that
-a caravan was about to set out for Suakin on the Red Sea, our traveller
-prevailed on the Ababde chief to introduce and recommend him as his
-own friend to its leader. Here he disposed of his merchandise, and
-purchased a slave-boy to attend upon him on the road; and having laid
-in the necessary quantity of provisions, joined the Suakin caravan, and
-departed from Shendy on the 17th of May. “After all my accounts were
-settled,” says he, “I had four dollars left; but the smallness of the
-sum occasioned me no uneasiness, for I calculated on selling my camel
-on the coast for as much as would defray the expenses of my voyage to
-Jidda, and I had a letter of credit on that place for a considerable
-sum, which I had procured at Cairo.”
-
-The road now traversed by the caravan crossed the Atbara, the Astaboras
-of the ancients, on the banks of which they found numerous groves of
-trees, and the most luxuriant vegetation. At the sight of this, the
-imagination even of the slave-dealers was touched with enthusiasm;
-and in alluding to the dreary track over which they had travelled,
-one of them exclaimed, “After death comes paradise!” “There was a
-greater variety of natural vegetation here than I had seen anywhere
-on the banks of the Nile in Egypt. I observed different species of
-the mimosa, doom-trees of the largest size, whose luxuriant clusters
-of fruit excited the wishes of the slaves, the nebek-tree, with its
-fruit ripe; the allobé, of the size of the nebek, besides a great
-number of others unknown to me; to these may be added an abundance of
-wild herbage, growing on a rich fat soil, similar to that of Egypt.
-The trees were inhabited by great numbers of the feathered tribe,
-whose song travellers in Egypt very rarely hear. I saw no birds with
-rich plumage, but observed small ones of several different kinds. Some
-sweet notes struck my ears, which I had never before heard, and the
-amorous cooings of the turtle-dove were unceasing. We hastened to the
-river, and eagerly descended its low banks to allay our thirst. Several
-camels, at the sight of the water, broke the halters by which they were
-led, and in rushing or stumbling down the banks threw off their loads,
-and occasioned great clamour and disorder.”
-
-In the vicinity of Goz Rajeb, Burckhardt saw on the summit of a hill
-the ruins of a huge fabric of ancient times, but was deterred from
-visiting it by the assertion of his companions that it was the haunt of
-banditti. On the 5th of June, while the caravan halted at an encampment
-of Hadendoa Bedouins, Burckhardt beheld the effects of a desert storm:
-“Towards evening we were visited by another hurricane, the most
-tremendous I ever remember to have witnessed. A dark blue cloud first
-appeared, extending to about 25° above the horizon; as it approached
-nearer, and increased in height, it assumed an ash-gray colour, with
-a tinge of yellow, striking every person in the caravan who had not
-been accustomed to such phenomena with amazement at its magnificent
-and terrific appearance; as the cloud approached still nearer, the
-yellow tinge became more general, while the horizon presented the
-brightest azure. At last, it burst upon us in its rapid course, and
-involved us in darkness and confusion; nothing could be distinguished
-at the distance of five or six feet; our eyes were filled with dust;
-our temporary sheds were blown down at the first gust, and many of
-the more firmly fixed tents of the Hadendoa followed; the largest
-withstood for a time the effects of the blast, but were at last obliged
-to yield, and the whole camp was levelled with the ground. In the mean
-time the terrified camels arose, broke the cords by which they were
-fastened, and endeavoured to escape from the destruction which appeared
-to threaten them; thus adding not a little to our embarrassment. After
-blowing about half an hour with incessant violence, the wind suddenly
-abated, and when the atmosphere became clear, the tremendous cloud was
-seen continuing its havoc to the north-west.”
-
-Next day they reached Taka, a district famous for its fertility, where
-hares, gazelles, wolves, giraffes, and limes as large, it was said, as
-cows, were found in the woods. Hence, after a stay of several days,
-they departed for Suakin, and after a not unpleasant journey through a
-wild, picturesque country, approached the termination of their toils.
-On the morning of the last day they started before sunrise. “The
-eastern hills,” says Burckhardt, “terminate in this latitude; and the
-sun was just rising beyond them, when we descried its reflection at
-an immense distance in the sea, affording a pleasing sight to every
-individual in the caravan, but most of all to me.” At length, on the
-26th of June, they reached Suakin, and pitched their little sheds at
-about twenty minutes’ walk from the town. Next day they were visited
-by the emir, who, understanding that our traveller’s camel was an
-excellent animal, determined on taking it as a part of the caravan
-dues; upon which Burckhardt insisted upon referring their difference
-to the Turkish custom-house officer. His wishes were quickly complied
-with, but the aga, instead of interfering to protect the stranger,
-immediately conceived the idea of uniting with the emir in seizing
-upon the whole of his property; and therefore, pretending to regard
-him as a Mameluke spy, began at once to overwhelm him with abuse. To
-all this Burckhardt returned no reply, but requested the aga to inform
-him whether the emir was entitled to his camel. “Not only thy camel,”
-replied the Turk, “but thy whole baggage must be taken and searched.
-We shall render a good account of them to the pasha, depend upon it.
-You shall not impose upon us, you rascal; and you may be thankful if
-we do not cut off your head!” Our traveller protested that he was
-nothing but an unfortunate merchant, and endeavoured, by a submissive
-deportment, to pacify his anger; but “he began cursing and swearing in
-Turkish,” says Burckhardt, “and then calling an old cripple, to whom he
-had given the title of waly, or police-officer, he ordered him to tie
-my hands, to put me in prison, and to bring my slave and baggage into
-his presence. I now thought it high time to produce my firmans, which
-I drew from a secret pocket in my thaboot; one of them was written in
-Turkish, upon a piece of paper two feet and a half in length, and one
-foot in breadth, and was sealed with the great seal of Mohammed Aly;
-the other, a smaller one, was written in Arabic, and bore the seal of
-Ibrahim Pasha, his son, in which Ibrahim termed me ‘Our man, Ibrahim,
-the Syrian.’ When Yemak saw the firmans unfolded, he became completely
-stupified, and the persons present looked at me with amazement. The
-aga could read the Arabic only; but he kissed them both, put them to
-his forehead, and then protested to me, in the most submissive terms,
-that it was the good of the public service alone that had led him to
-treat me as he had done, and for which he begged me a thousand pardons.
-Nothing more was said about the emir’s right to my camel, and he
-declared that I should pay no duty for my slave, though he was entitled
-to it.”
-
-Burckhardt now disposed of his camel, and took his passage to Jidda
-in one of the country vessels. After tossing about the Red Sea for
-nearly a fortnight, visiting Macouar, and several points of the
-African coast, he arrived at Jidda on the 18th of July, 1814. His
-first care now was to present his letter of credit, which being of
-an old date, however, he was refused payment, though the merchant
-offered him a lodging at his house. This he accepted, but removed, two
-days afterward, to a public khan, where he was attacked by a fever,
-in which he lay delirious for several days. His recovery from this
-violent disorder, which he attributed to his indulging in the fine
-fruits of the Jidda market, seems to have been chiefly owing to the
-kindness of a Greek captain, who, having been his fellow-passenger from
-Suakin, attended him during one of his lucid intervals, and, at his own
-request, procured a barber, who bled him copiously.
-
-Here our traveller was reduced to the hard necessity of parting
-with his slave, for whom he obtained forty-eight dollars, of which
-thirty-two were profit. With this he dressed himself in the guise of a
-reduced Egyptian gentleman, and determined to remain in the Hejaz until
-the time of the pilgrimage in the following November. However, as his
-funds were far too low to enable him to live independently until that
-period, he began to turn his thoughts towards manual labour; but first
-determined upon trying the effect of a direct application to Mohammed
-Aly, then at Tayef. He accordingly wrote to his highness’s Armenian
-physician, who was likewise at Tayef with his master, requesting him to
-learn from the pasha whether he would accept a bill upon Burckhardt’s
-correspondent at Cairo, and order his treasurer at Jidda to pay the
-amount of it. Before the result of this application could be known,
-he received an invitation to the house of Tousoun Pasha’s physician,
-who, upon being made acquainted with the state of his finances, kindly
-offered him the sum of three thousand piasters (about 100_l._) for a
-bill upon Cairo payable at sight. Mohammed Aly, to whom his condition
-was accidentally made known, immediately despatched a messenger with
-two dromedaries, an order for five hundred piasters, and a request that
-he would repair immediately with the same messenger to Tayef. With this
-invitation, which was, in fact, equivalent to a command, he thought
-it necessary to comply, and accordingly set off on the same afternoon
-(24th of August) for the interior of the Hejaz.
-
-They were accompanied during the first portion of the way by about
-twenty camel-drivers of the tribe of Harb, who were carrying money to
-Mecca for the pasha’s treasury. The road at first lay over a barren
-sandy plain, ascending slightly as it receded from the sea; it then
-entered the narrow gorges of a mountainous country, where they overtook
-a caravan of pilgrims, who were accompanying a quantity of goods and
-provisions destined for the army. The pasha, who, no doubt, suspected
-the sincerity of our traveller’s creed, had given orders to the guide
-to conduct him by a by-road to Tayef, which lay to the north of Mecca:
-“Just before we left Hadda,” says Burckhardt, “my guide, who knew
-nothing further respecting me than that I had business with the pasha
-at Tayef, that I performed all the outward observances of a Moslem
-pilgrim, and that I had been liberal to him before our departure, asked
-me the reason of his having been ordered to take me by the northern
-road. I replied that it was probably thought shorter than the other.
-‘That is a mistake,’ he replied; ‘the Mecca road is quite as short,
-and much safer; and if you have no objection we will proceed by it.’
-This was just what I wished, though I had taken care not to betray any
-anxiety on the subject; and we accordingly followed the great road, in
-company with the other travellers.”
-
-On this occasion, however, Burckhardt saw but little of the sacred
-city, as the guide, who had no curiosity to gratify, hurried through
-the streets without allowing him time for observation. Continuing
-their journey, therefore, towards the east, they arrived, on the 27th
-of August, at Ras el Kora, where they passed the night. “This,” says
-our traveller, “is the most beautiful spot in the Hejaz, and more
-picturesque and delightful than any spot I had seen since my departure
-from Lebanon, in Syria. The top of Jebel Kora is flat, but large masses
-of granite lie scattered over it, the surface of which, like that of
-the granite rocks near the sacred cataract of the Nile, is blackened by
-the sun. Several small rivulets descend from this peak, and irrigate
-the plain, which is covered with verdant fields, and large shady trees,
-on the side of the granite rocks. To those who have only known the
-dreary and scorching sands of the lower country of the Hejaz, this
-scene is as surprising as the keen air which blows here is refreshing.
-Many of the fruit-trees of Europe are found here; figs, apricots,
-peaches, apples, the Egyptian sycamore, almonds, pomegranates; but
-particularly vines, the produce of which is of the best quality.”
-“After having passed through this delightful district for about half an
-hour, just as the sun was rising, when every leaf and blade of grass
-was covered with a balmy dew, and every tree and shrub diffused a
-fragrance as delicious to the smell as was the landscape to the eye, I
-halted near the largest of the rivulets, which, although not more than
-two paces across, nourishes upon its banks a green alpine turf, such as
-the mighty Nile, with all its luxuriance, can never produce in Egypt.”
-
-Upon his reaching Tayef, he caused his arrival to be made known to
-the pasha, who, upon learning his desire to visit the Holy Cities,
-expressed a desire to see him late in the evening at his public
-residence, and observed jocosely to the Kadhy of Mecca, who happened to
-be present, “It is not the beard alone which proves a man to be a true
-Moslem; but you are a better judge in such matters than I am.” Our
-traveller, on learning these particulars, affected to be much hurt by
-the pasha’s suspicions, and let the physician, who was the bearer of
-the message, know that he should not go to the pasha’s public audience
-unless he was received as a Turk. When the physician delivered this
-message, Mohammed Aly smiled, and said that he was welcome, whether
-Turk or not. The audience passed off well. But Burckhardt clearly
-discovered that he was regarded as a spy of the English government;
-that his conduct was narrowly watched; and that, in being made the
-guest of the physician, he was a kind of prisoner, all whose words and
-actions were reported to the pasha. This was by no means an agreeable
-position. He therefore determined to be delivered from it; and, in
-order to effect his purpose, adopted the most prudent plan that could
-have been imagined: he rendered himself so troublesome and expensive to
-his host, that the latter, in order to be freed from him, represented
-him in the most favourable light to his master, and contrived to obtain
-him permission to spend the last days of the Ramadhan at Mecca.
-
-Accordingly, on the 7th of September, Burckhardt departed in company
-with the kadhy for the Holy City. On passing Wady Mohram, he assumed
-the _ihram_, the dress worn by all pilgrims during the Hadj, and
-consisting of two pieces of linen, woollen, or cotton cloth, one of
-which is wrapped round the loins, while the other is thrown over the
-neck and shoulders, so as to leave part of the right arm bare. In
-this dress he arrived at Mecca, on the 9th of September; and, as the
-law enjoins, proceeded immediately to visit the temple, before he had
-attended to any worldly concern whatever. The ceremonies practised
-on this occasion are long and tedious, the Mohammedans apparently
-believing, like our monkish madmen in Europe, that whatever is painful
-or disgusting to man must therefore be pleasing to God. Having
-completed these absurdities, he hired a ready-furnished lodging in
-the house of a metowaf, or guide to the holy places; who, while the
-poor hajjî was occupied with his devotions, employed his spare moments
-industriously in stealing whatever he could from his travelling-sack.
-
-Being desirous of completing his travelling equipments before the
-commencement of the Hadj, Burckhardt now proceeded to Jidda, where
-such things are more easily procured than at Mecca, and again returned
-about the middle of October, with a slave-boy whom he purchased. He
-hired apartments in an unfrequented part of the city, where he enjoyed
-the advantage of several large trees growing before his windows, “the
-verdure of which,” says he, “among the barren and sunburnt rocks of
-Mecca, was to me more exhilarating than the finest landscape could
-have been under different circumstances.” The principal curiosity of
-Mecca is the Beitullah, or House of God, a species of quadrangle, in
-the centre of which stands the Kaaba, “an oblong massive structure,
-eighteen paces in length, fourteen in breadth, and from thirty-five
-to forty feet in height. It is constructed of the gray Mecca stone,
-in large blocks of different sizes, joined together in a very rough
-manner, and with bad cement.” “At the north-east corner of the Kaaba,
-near the door, is the famous ‘Black Stone;’ it forms a part of the
-sharp angle of the building at four or five feet above the ground.
-It is an irregular oval of about seven inches in diameter, with an
-undulating surface, composed of about a dozen smaller stones of
-different sizes and shapes, well joined together with a small quantity
-of cement, and perfectly smoothed. It looks as if the whole had been
-broken into many pieces by a violent blow, and then united again. It
-is very difficult to determine accurately the quality of this stone,
-which has been worn to its present surface by the millions of touches
-and kisses it has received. It appeared to me like a laver, containing
-several small extraneous particles, of a whitish and of a yellowish
-substance. Its colour is now a deep reddish brown, approaching to
-black: it is surrounded on all sides by a border, composed of a
-substance which I took to be a close cement of pitch and gravel, of a
-similar, but not quite the same, brownish colour. This border serves to
-support its detached pieces; it is two or three inches in breadth, and
-rises a little above the surface of the stone. Both the border and the
-stone itself are encircled by a silver band, broader below than above,
-and on the two sides, with a considerable swelling below, as if a part
-of the stone were hidden under it. The lower part of the border is
-studded with silver nails.”
-
-I have purposely made use of Burckhardt’s own words in describing
-the Black Stone, and several other objects of curiosity, that the
-reader may see the exact impressions which they made on the mind
-of the traveller; though, as his style is very diffuse, it would
-frequently not have been difficult to compress his meaning into a much
-smaller compass. I cannot, however, pursue the same course with his
-description of the Hadj; which, notwithstanding its interest, is far
-too voluminous for the space which I can bestow upon it. On the 21st
-of November, 1814, the approach of the Syrian caravan was announced by
-a messenger, whose horse dropped down dead the moment he dismounted.
-Several other persons followed in about two hours after; and during
-the night, the main body, with the Pasha of Damascus at its head, came
-up, and encamped in the plain of Sheïkh Mahmoud. Next morning the
-Egyptian caravan likewise arrived; and at the same time Mohammed Aly,
-who desired to be present at the Hadj, appeared unexpectedly at Mecca,
-dressed in an ihram composed of two magnificent shawls of Kashmeer. All
-the hajjîs residing in the city now assumed the ihram, with the usual
-ceremonies, at their own lodgings, preparatory to their setting out
-for Arafat, and at noon heard a short sermon in the mosque.
-
-The city was now full of movement and activity: all the pilgrims were
-preparing to set out for Arafat, some running hither and thither
-in search of lodgings, others visiting the markets, or the Kaaba.
-Many Meccawys, engaged in petty traffic, were hastening to establish
-themselves on the mountain, for the accommodation of the pilgrims.
-Camel-drivers led their beasts through the streets, offering them to
-the pilgrims for hire. On the 24th of November, the Syrian caravan,
-with the Mahmal, or sacred camel, in front, passed in procession
-through the city. The majority of the pilgrims rode in a species of
-palanquin, placed upon their camels; but the Pasha of Damascus, and
-other grandees, were mounted in tackhtravans, or splendid litters,
-which were borne by two camels. The heads of these picturesque animals
-were decorated with feathers, tassels, and bells. Crowds of people of
-all classes lined the streets, and greeted the pilgrims as they passed
-with loud acclamations and praise. The martial music of the pasha,
-twelve finely-caparisoned horses led in front of his tackhtravan,
-and the rich litters in which his women rode, particularly attracted
-attention. The Egyptian caravan followed soon after, and, consisting
-entirely of military pilgrims in the splendid Turkish costume, was no
-less admired than its predecessor. Both continued, without stopping,
-their march to Arafat, and were almost immediately followed by the
-other pilgrims in the city, and by far the greater proportion of the
-population of Mecca and Jidda, among whom our traveller likewise
-proceeded to the sacred hill.
-
-Burckhardt reached the camp about three hours after sunset. The
-pilgrims were still wandering about the plain, and among the tents,
-in search of their companions, or of their resting-place, and many
-did not arrive until midnight. Numberless fires glimmered upon the
-dark plain to the extent of several miles; and high and brilliant
-clusters of lamps marked the different places of encampment of Mohammed
-Aly, Soleyman Pasha, and the Emir el Hadj of the Egyptian caravan.
-Few slept: “the devotees set up praying, and their loud chants were
-particularly distinguished on the side of the Syrian encampment. The
-merry Meccawys formed themselves into parties, singing jovial songs,
-accompanied by clapping of hands; and the coffee-houses scattered over
-the plain were crowded all night with customers. The night was dark
-and cold. I had formed a resting-place for myself by means of a large
-carpet tied to the back of a Meccawy’s tent; and having walked about
-for the greater part of the night, I had just disposed myself to sleep,
-when two guns, fired by the Syrian and Egyptian Hadj, announced the
-approaching dawn of the day of pilgrimage, and summoned the faithful to
-prepare for their morning prayers.”
-
-The scene which, on the unfolding of the dawn, presented itself to
-the eye of the traveller, was one of the most extraordinary upon
-earth. “Every pilgrim issued from his tent to walk over the plains,
-and take a view of the busy crowds assembled there. Long streets of
-tents, fitted up as bazaars, furnished all kinds of provisions. The
-Syrian and Egyptian cavalry were exercised by their chiefs early in
-the morning, while thousands of camels were seen feeding upon the dry
-shrubs of the plain all round the camp.” Burckhardt now ascended the
-summit of Arafat, whence he could enjoy a distant view of the whole,
-the mountain being an isolated mass of granite, and reaching the height
-of two hundred feet above the level of the plain. From this point he
-counted about three thousand tents, but the far greater number were,
-like himself, without tents. Twenty or twenty-five thousand camels
-were dispersed, in separate groups, over the plain; and the number
-of pilgrims of both sexes, and of all classes, could not amount to
-less than seventy thousand. “The Syrian Hadj was encamped on the south
-and south-west side of the mountain; the Egyptian on the south-east.
-Around the house of the Sherif, Yahya himself was encamped with his
-Bedouin troops, and in its neighbourhood were all the Hejaz people.
-Mohammed Aly, and Soleyman, Pasha of Damascus, as well as several of
-their officers, had very handsome tents; but the most magnificent of
-all was that of the wife of Mohammed Aly, the mother of Tousoun Pasha
-and Ibrahim Pasha, who had lately arrived at Cairo for the Hadj, with a
-truly royal equipage, five hundred camels being necessary to transport
-her baggage from Jidda to Mecca. Her tent was in fact an encampment,
-consisting of a dozen tents of different sizes, inhabited by her
-women; the whole enclosed by a wall of linen cloth, eight hundred
-paces in circuit, the single entrance to which was guarded by eunuchs
-in splendid dresses. Around this enclosure were pitched the tents of
-the men who formed her numerous suite. The beautiful embroidery on
-the exterior of this linen palace, with the various colours displayed
-in every part of it, constituted an object which reminded me of some
-descriptions in the Arabian Tales of the Thousand and One Nights.”
-
-Among the prodigious crowd were persons from every corner of the
-Mohammedan world. Burckhardt counted forty different languages, and
-did not doubt that there were many more. About three o’clock in the
-afternoon, the pilgrims, quitting their tents, which were immediately
-struck, and mounting their camels, pressed forward towards Mount
-Arafat, and covered its sides from top to bottom. The preacher now
-took his stand upon the platform on the mountain, and began to address
-the multitude. The hearing of the sermon, which lasts till sunset,
-constitutes the holy ceremony of the Hadj, and without being present
-at it, and at least appearing to hear, no pilgrim is entitled to the
-name of hajjî. “The two pashas, with their whole cavalry drawn up in
-two squadrons behind them, took their post in the rear of the deep
-line of camels of the hajjîs, to which those of the people of the
-Hejaz were also joined: and here they waited in solemn and respectful
-silence the conclusion of the sermon. Farther removed from the preacher
-was the Sherif Yahya, with his small body of soldiers, distinguished
-by several green standards carried before him. The two Mahmals, or
-holy camels, which carry on their backs the high structure that serves
-as the banner of their respective caravans, made way with difficulty
-through the ranks of camels that encircled the southern and eastern
-sides of the hill, opposite to the preacher, and took their station,
-surrounded by their guards, directly under the platform in front of
-him. The preacher, or khatyb, who is usually the Kadhy of Mecca, was
-mounted upon a finely-caparisoned camel, which had been led up the
-steps; it being traditionally said that Mohammed was always seated when
-he addressed his followers, a practice in which he was imitated by all
-the califs who came to the Hadj, and who from hence addressed their
-subjects in person. The Turkish gentleman of Constantinople, however,
-unused to camel-riding, could not keep his seat so well as the hardy
-Bedouin prophet; and the camel becoming unruly, he was soon obliged to
-alight from it. He read his sermon from a book in Arabic, which he held
-in his hands. At intervals of every four or five minutes he paused,
-and stretched forth his arms to implore blessings from above; while
-the assembled multitudes around and before him waved the skirts of
-their ihrams over their heads, and rent the air with shouts of _Lebeyk,
-Allah, huma Lebeyk!_--“Here we are at thy bidding, O God!” During the
-wavings of the ihrams, the side of the mountain, thickly crowded as
-it was by the people in their white garments, had the appearance of
-a cataract of water; while the green umbrellas, with which several
-thousand hajjîs, sitting on their camels below, were provided, bore
-some resemblance to a verdant plain.”
-
-Burckhardt was present at all the remaining ceremonies of the Hadj,
-which I shall not now pause to describe; and after observing whatever
-was worthy of examination both at Mecca and Jidda, he joined a small
-caravan of pilgrims who were going to visit the tomb of the prophet,
-and set out for Medina on the 15th of January, 1815. During this
-journey he imprudently advanced before the caravan, and was attacked
-by five Bedouins, from whom he was quickly delivered, however, by the
-approach of his companions. They reached Medina on the 28th of January.
-The ceremonies practised in this city were much less tedious than at
-Mecca, and did not occupy our traveller more than a quarter of an hour.
-Here, shortly after his arrival, he was attacked by an intermittent
-fever, accompanied by extraordinary despondency. His condition, indeed,
-was well calculated to inspire gloomy thoughts; for he had no society,
-and but one book, which was, however, as he observes, worth a whole
-shelf full of others. This was a pocket edition of Milton, which he had
-borrowed from an English ship at Jidda.
-
-Medina, it is well known, is chiefly indebted to the tomb of Mohammed
-for its celebrity. This mausoleum, which stands on the south-eastern
-corner of the principal mosque, is protected from the too near approach
-of visiters by an iron railing, painted green, about two-thirds the
-height of the pillars of the colonnade which runs round the interior
-of the mosque. “The railing is of good workmanship, in imitation
-of filligree, and is interwoven with open-worked inscriptions of
-yellow bronze, supposed by the vulgar to be of gold, and of so close
-a texture, that no view can be obtained of the interior except by
-several small windows about six inches square, which are placed in
-the four sides of the railing, about five feet above the ground.” On
-the south side, where are the two principal windows, before which
-the devout stand when praying, the railing is plated with silver,
-and the common inscription--“There is no God but God, the Evident
-Truth”--is wrought in silver letters round the windows. The tomb
-itself, as well as that of Abu Bekr and Omar, which stand close to it,
-is concealed from the public gaze by a curtain of rich silk brocade of
-various colours, interwoven with silver flowers and arabesques, with
-inscriptions in characters of gold running across the midst of it,
-like that of the covering of the Kaaba. Behind this curtain, which,
-according to the historian of the city, was formerly changed every six
-years, and is now renewed by the Porte whenever the old one is decayed,
-or when a new sultan ascends the throne, none but the chief eunuchs,
-the attendants of the mosque, are permitted to enter. This holy
-sanctuary once served, as the temple of Delphi did among the Greeks, as
-the public treasury of the nation. Here the money, jewels, and other
-precious articles of the people of the Hejaz were kept in chests, or
-suspended on silken ropes. Among these was a copy of the Koran in Kufic
-characters; a brilliant star set in diamonds and pearls, which was
-suspended directly over the prophet’s tomb; with all sorts of vessels
-set with jewels, earrings, bracelets, necklaces, and other ornaments,
-sent as presents from all parts of the empire. Most of these articles
-were carried away by the Wahabees when they sacked and plundered the
-sacred cities.
-
-On the 21st of April, 1815, Burckhardt quitted Medina with a small
-caravan bound for Yembo, on the seacoast. His mind was still
-exceedingly depressed by the weak state of his body; and his gayety
-and animal spirits, with the energy which accompanies them in ardent
-minds, having deserted him, the world assumed in his eyes a sombre
-aspect, which rendered travelling and every other pleasure insipid.
-All he now sighed for was rest. This mental condition seems strongly
-to have affected even his opinions. His views both of men and things
-became cynical. Vice seemed to have spread like a deluge over the
-eastern world, leaving no single spot whereon Virtue might rest the
-sole of her foot. “For my own part,” says he, “_a long residence_ among
-Turks, Syrians, and Egyptians _justifies me in declaring that they
-are wholly deficient in virtue, honour, and justice_; that they have
-_little true piety_, and _still less charity or forbearance_; and that
-_honesty_ is only to be found in their _paupers or idiots_.” His mind
-was certainly labouring under the effects of his Medina fever when he
-wrote this passage, and it would therefore be lost labour to analyze or
-confute it minutely. That people who are “wholly deficient in virtue,
-honour, and justice” should be destitute of honesty, is no more to be
-wondered at than that a black camel should not be half-white; but if
-“true piety” be, as most moralists will admit, to be numbered among
-the virtues, then the orientals are not, as Mr. Burckhardt asserts,
-“_wholly_ deficient in virtue,” &c., since he allows that they have
-some, though but little, “true piety.” Again, either the majority of
-the orientals are rich, or the majority of them are honest; for if the
-majority of them are poor, or paupers, then the majority of them are
-honest; for honesty, we are told, is only to be found among paupers and
-idiots. It would be easy to expose and refute our traveller’s assertion
-by the direct testimony of persons still more competent than he to
-decide on such points; but his opinion is palpably absurd, like most
-others formed by sick or gloomy individuals, since no society could
-subsist if formed entirely of vicious members. Had Burckhardt himself
-lived to see his works through the press, such passages as the above
-would, I am persuaded, have been expunged or modified; for he was much
-too judicious deliberately to have hazarded so monstrous an assertion.
-
-Upon his arrival at Yembo, dejected and melancholy, to add to his
-despondency, he found the plague raging in the city. The air, night and
-day, was filled with the piercing cries of those who had been bereaved
-of the objects of their affection; yet, as no vessel was ready to
-sail for Egypt, he was constrained to remain during eighteen days in
-the midst of the dying and the dead, continually exposed to infection
-through the heedlessness and the imprudence of his slave. At length,
-however, he procured a passage in an open boat bound for Cosseir, many
-of the passengers in which were sick of a disease which appeared to
-be the plague, though only two of them died. After remaining twenty
-days on board, he was, at his own request, put on shore in the harbour
-of Sherin, at the entrance of the Gulf of Akaba, where he agreed with
-some Bedouins to transport him and his slave to Tor and Suez. Learning
-on the way, however, that the plague was at Suez, he remained at a
-village in the vicinity of the former place, where the enjoyment of
-tranquillity and a bracing mountain air soon restored his strength,
-and enabled him, though still convalescent, to pursue his journey to
-Cairo, where he arrived on the 24th of June, after an absence of nearly
-two years and a half. As his health was not yet completely recovered,
-he undertook a journey into Lower Egypt during the following winter,
-which, as he seems to have believed, restored his constitution to its
-former tone.
-
-His time was now entirely occupied in writing the journal of his
-Nubian and Arabian travels, and in the necessary care of his health,
-which, notwithstanding his sanguine expectation to the contrary, was
-still in a somewhat equivocal state. In the spring of 1816 the plague
-again broke out at Cairo, and our traveller, to avoid the infection,
-undertook a journey to Mount Sinai, intending to remain, until the
-pestilence should be over, among the Bedouins, who are never visited by
-this scourge. During this excursion he traced the course of the eastern
-branch of the Red Sea to within sight of Akaba, the ancient Ælanas,
-which he was prevented by circumstances from visiting. On his return
-to Cairo, he united with Mr. Salt in furnishing Belzoni with money for
-transporting the head of Memnon from Gournou to Alexandria. The scheme,
-it would seem, originated with Burckhardt and Salt, to whom, therefore,
-we are chiefly indebted for the possession of that extraordinary
-specimen of ancient art.
-
-On the 4th of October, 1817, Burckhardt, who had so long waited in
-vain for an opportunity of penetrating with a Moggrebin caravan into
-Africa, was attacked with violent dysentery. The best medical advice
-which an eminent English physician (Doctor Richardson), then at Cairo,
-could afford was found unavailing. The disease prevailed, and on the
-15th of the same month our able, adventurous, and lamented traveller
-breathed his last. As he had lived while in the East as a Mussulman,
-the Turks, he foresaw, would claim his body, “and perhaps,” said
-he to Mr. Salt, who was present at his death-bed, “you had better
-let them.”--“The funeral, as he desired,” says this gentleman, “was
-Mohammedan, conducted with all proper regard to the respectable rank
-which he had held in the eyes of the natives.” This was honourable
-to his Cairo friends; and to those who are interested in the history
-of his manly career it is gratifying to discover how highly he was
-valued. I have closed the lives of few travellers with more regret.
-It would have given me extreme pleasure to have followed him through
-those undiscovered regions whither his ardent imagination so anxiously
-tended; and, instead of thus recording his untimely death, to have
-beheld him enjoying in the first capital of the world the reward
-of his courage and enterprise. That I cannot enter into all Mr.
-Burckhardt’s views, either of men or things, is no reason why I should
-not be sensible of his extraordinary merit. His character, upon the
-whole, admirably fitted him to be a great traveller. He was bold,
-patient, persevering, judicious. He penetrated with admirable tact
-into the designs of his enemies, and not only knew how to prevent
-them, but, what was more difficult, to turn them to the confusion
-of their inventors. Upon this very excellence, however, was based
-one of his principal defects; he interpreted men in too refined and
-systematical a manner, and often saw in their actions more contrivance
-than ever existed. He was too hasty, moreover, in believing evil of
-mankind, which, with too many other able speculators, he supposed to
-be the necessary consequence of a philosophical spirit. But he was a
-young man. His mind, had he lived, would unquestionably have purified
-itself from this stain, as truth, which he possessed the courage and
-the ability to search for with success, was his only object. The
-works which he has left behind him, exceedingly numerous considering
-his brief career, are an imperishable monument of his genius and
-enterprise, and, when the fate of the writer is reflected on, can never
-be read without a feeling of deep interest almost amounting to emotion.
-Fortunately for his fame, their publication has been superintended
-by editors every way qualified for the task, who, without in the
-least dissipating their originality, must in very many instances have
-infinitely improved their style and arrangement. A popular edition of
-the whole would at once be a benefit to the public and an additional
-honour to the memory of Burckhardt.
-
-
-
-
-CONSTANTIN FRANCOIS CHASSEBŒUF DE VOLNEY.
-
-Born 1757.--Died 1820.
-
-
-This traveller, who is very justly enumerated among the most
-distinguished which France has produced, was born on the 3d of
-February, 1757, at Craon, in Anjou. His father, an able provincial
-barrister, was unwilling that he should bear the name of _Chassebœuf_
-(ox or bull hunter), which in his own case had been, though we are
-not told how, a source of a thousand uneasinesses, and therefore gave
-his son the name of Boisgirais, under which appellation our traveller
-studied at the colleges of Ancenis and Angers, and was at first known
-in the world. At a later period, just as he was about to depart for the
-East, he quitted the name of Boisgirais, and assumed that of Volney,
-which he was shortly after to render so celebrated.
-
-Becoming his own master at the age of seventeen, with a small
-independence bequeathed him by his mother, he quitted the country for
-Paris, where he applied himself to the study of the severer sciences.
-Volney felt no inclination for the profession of a barrister, which
-it was his father’s desire he should follow; physic appeared to have
-greater charms for him, and he at first seemed disposed to adopt this
-as his profession; but his speculative turn of mind soon led him to
-look with disdain on its practical part. Scarcely had he reached his
-twentieth year when he entered with enthusiasm into the study of the
-science of nature, delighting to discover the relations which subsist
-between the moral and the physical world. He moreover devoted a
-portion of his time to the study of the history and languages of
-antiquity.
-
-When he had made these preparations, apparently without foreseeing to
-what use he should apply them, a small inheritance which fell to him
-put him in possession of two hundred and forty pounds. “The difficulty
-was,” he observes, “how to employ it. Some of my friends advised me to
-enjoy the capital, others to purchase an annuity; but, on reflection,
-I thought the sum too inconsiderable to make any sensible addition to
-my income, and too great to be dissipated in frivolous expenses. Some
-fortunate circumstances had habituated me to study; I had acquired a
-taste, and even a passion, for knowledge; and this accession of fortune
-appeared to me a fresh means of gratifying my inclination, and opening
-a new way to improvement. I had read, and frequently heard repeated,
-that of all the methods of adorning the mind and forming the judgment,
-travelling is the most efficacious. I determined, therefore, on a plan
-of travelling; but to what part of the world I should direct my course
-remained still to be chosen. I wished the scene of my observations to
-be new, or at least brilliant. My own country and the neighbouring
-nations seemed to me either too well known or too easy of access;
-the rising States of America and the savages were not without their
-temptations; but other considerations determined me in favour of Asia.
-Syria especially, and Egypt, both with a view of what they once have
-been, and what they now are, appeared to me a field equally adapted to
-those political and moral observations with which I wished to occupy my
-mind.”
-
-Foreseeing the fatigues and dangers of such a journey, he occupied a
-whole year in preparing himself to undertake it, by accustoming his
-body to the most violent exercises and the most painful privations.
-At length, all his preparatory arrangements being completed, he
-commenced his journey on foot, with a knapsack on his back, a musket
-on his shoulder, and two hundred and forty pounds in gold concealed in
-his girdle. “When I set out from Marseilles in 1783,” says he, “it was
-with all my heart; with that alacrity, that confidence in others and
-in myself which youth inspires. I gayly quitted a country of peace and
-abundance to live in a country of barbarism and misery, from no other
-motive than to employ the active and restless moments of youth, to
-acquire a new kind of knowledge, which might procure for the remainder
-of my days a certain portion of reputation and honour.”
-
-On arriving in Egypt he proceeded to Cairo, where he remained during
-seven months; after which, finding that there existed too many
-obstacles to a proper examination of the interior parts of the country,
-and that too little assistance in learning Arabic was to be obtained,
-he determined on travelling into Syria. M. Durozoir, the author of the
-Life of Volney, in the “Biographie Universelle,” to which I am greatly
-indebted, falls into a most unaccountable error in narrating this part
-of our traveller’s career. According to him, Volney had no sooner
-arrived in Egypt than he shut himself up in a Coptic convent, where
-he remained _eight months_, for the purpose of acquiring the Arabic;
-after which he traversed the country with more advantages than any
-other traveller had hitherto enjoyed. Volney himself asserts, on the
-contrary, that he resided but _seven months_ in the country; that he
-was prevented by obstacles which appeared to him insurmountable from
-traversing more than a very small portion of Egypt; that he did not
-acquire a competent knowledge of Arabic until he arrived in Syria,
-where (and not in Egypt) he shut himself up during eight months in an
-Arabian convent, in order to render himself master of the language.
-M. Durozoir must have forgotten Pococke, and Shaw, and Hasselquist,
-and Niebuhr and Bruce, every one of whom were superior in external
-_advantages_ to Volney, and probably understood the language of the
-country better than he did previous to his residence in Syria. It is
-surprising, therefore, to find a writer of respectable name speaking
-of the advantages which Volney possessed over all preceding travellers
-in Egypt, arising from his long residence and knowledge, while most of
-his predecessors saw ten times more of the country, enjoyed greater
-privileges, and possessed a more intimate knowledge of Arabic. The
-real advantage which Volney actually did possess over the majority of
-Egyptian travellers consisted in his superior genius, which enabled him
-to turn his short experience to good account, and to comprehend the
-meanings of things which thousands had seen without comprehending at
-all.
-
-The mode in which Volney has given the results of his travels to
-the public precludes the possibility of our following his track. He
-sedulously avoids, as Daru has justly remarked, placing himself upon
-the stage, and neither tells you by what route he travelled through
-the country, nor what were the impressions which the sight of certain
-objects produced upon his mind. The fact must be admitted, whether
-it make for or against the author; but when the count proceeds to
-inform us, in his inflated rhetorical style, that the traveller is
-suddenly transformed into a native of the country, who, after mature
-observation, describes its physical, political, and moral condition, we
-smile at his boyish enthusiasm.
-
-I cannot help regretting, however, that our traveller should have
-omitted to trace his route through Egypt, not only because his having
-done so would have been advantageous to me, but from a persuasion
-that the omission has been seriously injurious to his popularity. It
-is, moreover, a very great error, and one in which I myself formerly
-participated, to imagine that a traveller is more likely to impart
-just notions of the scene of his researches by giving the results only
-of his experience, suppressing the manner in which that experience
-was obtained. An attentive examination of the works of travellers of
-all ages and countries has at length created a contrary conviction
-in my mind. In a judicious personal narrative the traveller is but
-one interlocutor in a drama exhibiting innumerable characters and a
-perpetually changing scene. You in some sort behold him surrounded by
-strangers in a strange land; you observe them not, and hear them, as it
-were, converse together; and if the traveller himself sometimes feigns
-or walks in masquerade, it is rarely that the natives can be supposed
-to have sufficiently powerful motives for so doing. They exhibit
-themselves exactly as they are. It would seem to follow from this view
-of the case, that whatever its advantages in other respects may be, the
-method adopted by Volney is liable, on the grounds above stated, to
-very serious objections. It not only shuts out the traveller from our
-view, but, in lieu of an animated picture, presents us with reasoning
-and discussion, able, I admit, and frequently original, but wanting
-that irresistible charm which is possessed in so eminent a degree by
-beautiful narrative.
-
-Having examined such objects of curiosity in Lower Egypt as could
-easily be viewed, and collected ample materials for the defence of
-Herodotus, the greatest traveller of all antiquity, from the attacks
-of conceited and ignorant persons, Volney passed into Syria. “Here,”
-he observes, “eight months’ residence among the Druses, in an Arabian
-convent, rendered the Arabic familiar to me, and enabled me to travel
-through all Syria during a whole year.” His long residence in the
-mountains of Syria, during which he no doubt undertook numerous little
-excursions in various directions, furnished him with materials for a
-correct picture of the scene. This he has drawn with equal vigour
-and beauty. “Lebanon,” says he, “which gives its name to the whole
-extensive chain of the Kesraouan, and the country of the Druses,
-presents us everywhere with majestic mountains. At every step we
-meet with scenes in which nature displays either beauty or grandeur;
-sometimes singularity, but always variety. When we land on the coast,
-the loftiness and steep ascent of this mountainous ridge, which seems
-to enclose the country, those gigantic masses which shoot into the
-clouds, inspire astonishment and awe. Should the curious traveller then
-climb these summits which bound his view, the wide extended place which
-he discovers becomes a fresh subject of admiration; but completely to
-enjoy this majestic scene, he must ascend the very point of Lebanon,
-or the Sannia. There on every side he will view a horizon without
-bounds; while in clear weather the sight is lost over the desert, which
-extends to the Persian Gulf, and over the sea, which bathes the coasts
-of Europe. He seems to command the whole world, while the wandering
-eye, now surveying the successive chains of mountains, transports
-the imagination in an instant from Antioch to Jerusalem, and now
-approaching the surrounding objects, observes the distant profundity of
-the coast, till the attention, at length, fixed by distinctive objects,
-more minutely examines the rocks, woods, torrents, hillsides, villages,
-and towns; and the mind secretly exults at the diminution of things
-which before appeared so great. He contemplates the valley obscured by
-stormy clouds with a novel delight; and smiles at hearing the thunder,
-which had so often burst over his head, growling under his feet, while
-the threatening summits of the mountains are diminished till they
-appear only like the furrows of a ploughed field, or the steps of an
-amphitheatre; and he feels himself flattered by an elevation above so
-many great objects on which pride makes him look down with a secret
-satisfaction. When the traveller visits the interior parts of these
-mountains, the ruggedness of the roads, the steepness of the descents,
-the height of the precipices, strike him at first with terror, but the
-sagacity of his mule soon relieves him, and he examines at his ease
-those picturesque scenes which succeed each other to entertain him.
-There, as in the Alps, he travels whole days to reach a place that
-was in sight at his departure: he winds, he descends, he skirts the
-hills, he climbs; and in this perpetual change of position it seems as
-if some magic power varied for him at every step the decorations of
-the scenery. Sometimes he sees villages ready to glide from the steep
-declivities on which they are built, and so disposed, that the terraces
-of one row of houses serve as a street to the row above them. Sometimes
-he sees a convent standing on a solitary eminence, like Mar-shaya in
-the valley of the Tigris. Here is a rock perforated by a torrent, and
-become a natural arch, like that of Nahr-el-Leben. There another rock,
-worn perpendicular, resembles a lofty wall.”
-
-The same difficulty of tracing the footsteps of our traveller of
-which I complained when speaking of his Egyptian journey occurs again
-in Syria. It is, in fact, impossible to discover from his works any
-particulars, excepting a few dates, which are perfectly unimportant.
-After a protracted residence at the convent of Mar-hanna, or “St.
-John,” where, as already observed, he matured his knowledge of Arabic,
-he descended into the lower districts, and visited a Bedouin camp,
-near Gaza, where he remained several days. I know not whether it was
-upon this or on some other occasion that he so far recommended himself
-to the chief of a tribe by his agreeable manners, as to inspire in
-the Arabs a desire to retain him among them. Having remarked that the
-Bedouins enjoy an extraordinary freedom from religious prejudices,
-and are consequently disposed to be tolerant, he adds, “Nothing can
-better describe, or be a more satisfactory proof of this, than a
-dialogue which one day passed between myself and one of their sheïkhs,
-named Ahmed, son of Bahir, chief of the tribe of Wahidia. ‘Why,’ said
-this sheïkh to me, ‘do you wish to return among the Franks? Since you
-have no aversion to our manners, since you know how to use the lance
-and manage a horse like a Bedouin, stay among us. We will give you
-pelisses, a tent, a virtuous and young Bedouin girl, and a good blood
-mare. You shall live in our house.’--‘But do you not know,’ said I,
-‘that, born among the Franks, I have been educated in their religion?
-In what light will the Arabs view an infidel, or what will they think
-of an apostate?’--‘And do you not yourself perceive,’ said he, ‘that
-the Arabs live without troubling themselves either about the prophet,
-or the _Book_ (the Koran)? Every man with us follows the dictates of
-his conscience. Men have a right to judge of actions, but religion must
-be left to God alone.’ Another sheïkh, conversing with me one day,
-addressed me, by mistake, in the customary formulary, ‘Listen, and
-pray for the prophet.’ Instead of the usual answer, _I have prayed_,
-I replied with a smile, ‘_I listen_.’ He recollected his error, and
-smiled in his turn. A Turk of Jerusalem who was present took the matter
-up more seriously: ‘O sheïkh,’ said he, ‘how canst thou address the
-words of the true believers to an infidel?’--‘The tongue is _light_;’
-replied the sheïkh, ‘let but the heart be _white_ (pure); but you who
-know the customs of the Arabs, how can you offend a stranger, with whom
-we have eaten bread and salt?’ Then, turning to me, ‘All those tribes
-of Frankestan, of whom you told me that they follow not the law of the
-prophet, are they more numerous than the Mussulmans?’--‘It is thought,’
-answered I, ‘that they are five or six times more numerous, even
-including the Arabs.’--‘God is just,’ returned he; ‘he will weigh them
-in his balance.’”
-
-The most singular people, however, who came under the observation of
-Volney during his eastern travels, were unquestionably the Druses.
-Extraordinary stories respecting their origin and manners had from
-time to time prevailed in Europe. By some they were supposed to be
-the descendants of the crusaders, particularly of the English; others
-attributed to them a different origin; but all agreed in accusing them
-of believing in strange absurd dogmas, and of practising monstrous
-rites. At length he obtained from oriental writers the following
-account of the rise of this remarkable sect. In the year of the
-Hegira 386 (A. D. 996) the third calif of the race of the Fatimites,
-called Hakem-b’amr-ellah, succeeded to the throne of Egypt, at the
-age of eleven years. He was one of the most extraordinary princes of
-whom history has preserved the memory. He caused the first calif,
-the companion of Mahomet, to be cursed in the mosques, and afterward
-revoked the anathema. He compelled the Jews and Christians to abjure
-their religion, and then permitted them to resume it. He prohibited
-the making slippers for women, to prevent their coming out of their
-houses. He burnt one-half of the city of Cairo for his diversion, while
-his soldiers pillaged the other. Not content with these extravagant
-actions, he forbade the pilgrimage to Mecca, fasting, and the five
-prayers; and at length carried his madness so far, as to desire to pass
-for God himself. He ordered a register of those who acknowledged him
-to be so; and the number amounted to sixteen thousand. This impious
-pretension was supported by a false prophet, who came from Persia
-into Egypt; which impostor, named Mohammed-ben-Ismael, taught that it
-was not necessary to fast or pray, to practise circumcision, to make
-the pilgrimage to Mecca, or observe festivals; that the prohibition
-of pork and wine was absurd; and that marriage between brothers and
-sisters, fathers and children, was lawful. To ingratiate himself
-with Hakem, he maintained that this calif was God himself incarnate,
-and instead of his name being _Hakem-b’amr-ellah_, which signifies
-governing by the order of God, he called him _Hakem-b’amr-eh_,
-governing by his own order. Unluckily for the prophet, his god had
-not the power to protect him from the fury of his enemies, who slew
-him in a tumult, almost in the arms of the calif, who was himself
-massacred soon after on Mount Mokattam, where he, as he said, had held
-conversation with angels. The death of these two chiefs did not prevent
-the progress of their opinions: a disciple of Mohammed-ben-Ismael,
-named Hamzaben-Ahmud, propagated them with indefatigable zeal, in
-Egypt, in Palestine, and along the coast of Syria, as far as Sidon
-and Berytus. His proselytes, it seems, underwent the same fate as the
-Maronites; for being persecuted by the sect in power, they took refuge
-in the mountains of Lebanon, where they were better able to defend
-themselves; at least it is certain, that shortly after this era we find
-them established there, and forming an independent society like their
-neighbours.
-
-In the opinion of Volney the great body of the Druses are wholly
-destitute of religion; “yet,” says he, “one class of them must be
-excepted, whose religious customs are very peculiar. Those who compose
-it are to the rest of the nation what the _initiated_ are to the
-_profane_; they assume the name of Okkals, which means spiritualists;
-and bestow on the vulgar the epithet Djahel, or ignorant; they have
-various degrees of initiation, the highest orders of which require
-celibacy. These are distinguishable by the white turban they affect
-to wear, as a symbol of their purity; and so proud are they of this
-supposed purity, that they think themselves sullied by even touching
-a profane person. If you eat out of their plate, or drink out of their
-cup, they break them; and hence the custom so general in this country,
-of using vases with a sort of cock, which may be drunk out of without
-touching the lips. All their practices are enveloped in mysteries.
-Their oratories always stand alone, and are constantly situated on
-eminences: in these they hold their secret assemblies, to which
-women are admitted. It is pretended they perform ceremonies there in
-presence of a small statue resembling an ox or a calf; whence some have
-pretended to prove that they are descended from the Samaritans. But,
-besides that the fact is not well ascertained, the worship of the ox
-may be deduced from other circumstances.
-
-“They have one or two books which they conceal with the greatest care,
-but chance has deceived their jealousy; for, in a civil war, which
-happened six or seven years ago, the Emir Yousef, who is _Djahel_,
-or ignorant, found one among the pillage of their oratories. I am
-assured by persons who have read it, that it contains only a mystic
-jargon, the obscurity of which doubtless renders it valuable to adepts.
-Hakem-b’amr-ellah is there spoken of, by whom they mean God, incarnated
-in the person of the calif. It likewise treats of another life, of
-a place of punishment and a place of happiness, where the Okkals
-shall of course be most distinguished. Several degrees of perfection
-are mentioned, to which they arrive by successive trials. In other
-respects these sectaries have all the insolence and all the fears of
-superstition: they are not communicative, because they are weak; but it
-is probable that, were they powerful, they would be promulgators and
-intolerant.”
-
-On returning to France after an absence of nearly three years (which
-M. Durozoir, who loves to differ with the traveller upon such points,
-will have to be nearly _four years_), Volney employed himself in
-preparing his “Travels” for the press. Upon the appearance of the work
-the public, which is seldom in the wrong in such matters, received it
-as a masterpiece of its kind; and from that time to the present its
-reputation may be said to be on the increase. I am averse from adopting
-the unmeaning or exaggerated panegyrics of his French biographers, who
-are satisfied with nothing short of regarding Volney as the continuator
-of Herodotus, with whom they seem to consider him upon a par. No
-person can be more desirous than myself to enhance the just praises
-of Volney, who has exhibited, in his description of Syria and Egypt,
-remarkable force and depth of thinking, and powers of delineation of
-no ordinary class. But in Herodotus we have a picture of the whole
-world, as far, at least, as it was known in his time, sketched with
-inimitable truth and brevity, and adorned with a splendour of colouring
-which with matchless skill he has known how to unite with the severest
-accuracy. To many of the excellences of this writer Volney has no
-pretensions. Others he may have possessed in an equal degree; but I
-will not continue a comparison in itself absurd, never dreamed of by
-the traveller himself, and which could only have suggested itself to
-writers blinded by national vanity.
-
-To proceed, however, with the events of our traveller’s life. No sooner
-had the travels appeared, than the Empress Catherine II., who, besides
-her desire to wheedle every writer of distinction in Europe, was
-really actuated by an admiration for genius, sent him a gold medal in
-token of her satisfaction. This was in the year 1787. In the following
-year he published his “Considerations on the War between the Turks
-and Russians.” In this political pamphlet the knowledge which he had
-acquired in his travels was of course the basis of his reasoning; but
-he had likewise received, perhaps from the Russian court, information
-which would appear to have been correct, respecting the resources of
-the Scythians; for events, says his French biographer with a kind
-of triumph, have realized nearly all his predictions. He did not,
-continues the same writer, forget, in the consideration of this great
-quarrel, the interests of France, and dwelt more particularly on
-the project of seizing upon Egypt, in order to counterbalance the
-aggrandizement of Russia and Austria. But to the execution of this
-project he foresaw numerous obstacles. “In the first place,” said
-he, “it will be necessary to maintain three separate wars: the first
-against Turkey, the second against the English, and a third against
-the natives of Egypt, which, though apparently the least formidable,
-will be the most dangerous of the three. Should the Franks venture to
-disembark in the country, Turks, Arabs, and peasants would all arm
-against them at once: and fanaticism would serve them instead of art
-and courage.”
-
-From the period of his return into his country, being actuated by the
-desire of being useful, which seems to have been ever predominant in
-his mind, though it did not always manifest itself in a rational way,
-Volney conceived the idea of introducing improvements in agriculture in
-the island of Corsica. For this purpose he began to concert measures
-for purchasing an estate in that island, on which he meant to make
-several experiments in the culture of the sugar-cane, cotton, indigo,
-coffee, &c. The utility of these schemes induced the French government
-to nominate him Director of Agriculture and Commerce in Corsica; but
-other duties retained him in his country. Upon the convocation of the
-States General in 1789, he was elected deputy for the seneschalship
-of Anjou. Shortly after this he resigned the place he held under
-government, being persuaded that the duties of a representative of the
-people, and those of a dependant on the government, are incompatible.
-In the tribune of the Constituent Assembly Volney advocated the same
-opinions which are found in his writings. He was the declared enemy
-of despotism, whether exercised by one individual or by many; and
-constantly distinguished himself by his bold and liberal advocacy of
-popular rights. His intimate connexion with Cabanis, celebrated for
-the extravagance of his metaphysical opinions, frequently brought him
-into contact with Mirabeau, the Catiline of the revolution. This able
-improvisator, equally indifferent respecting the _meum_ and _tuum_ in
-ideas as in money, in a discussion concerning the clergy, borrowed from
-Volney his well-known rhetorical flourish _on the window of Charles
-IX._, from whence that gracious monarch amused himself with shooting
-at his subjects. Twenty deputies were besieging the tribune, and among
-these was Volney, who held a written discourse in his hand. “Show
-me what you are going to say,” said Mirabeau. “This is beautiful,
-sublime,” he exclaimed, after having glanced over the manuscript;
-“but it is not with a feeble voice and a clear countenance that such
-things should be uttered. Give the manuscript to me!” Such consummate
-arrogance was not to be resisted. Volney yielded up his speech to the
-audacious sophist, who, melting up our traveller’s original ideas
-with his own, poured out the whole with that artificial theatrical
-enthusiasm which produces upon inexperienced minds nearly the same
-effects as eloquence. It is said that Volney ere long began to perceive
-that the storm which had been raised with so much labour and artifice
-was likely to sweep away in its fury much more than was intended; and
-that he then began to think of moderating its rage. But if he was in
-earnest in his opposition, he very quickly had the mortification to
-discover that his efforts were futile; that revolution had, in fact,
-become a general movement, which bore down with irresistible violence
-every obstacle which might be opposed to it, whether by friends or foes.
-
-In the midst of these political labours Volney found time to produce
-two works of very different character and pretensions: “The Chronology
-of the Twelve Centuries preceding the Invasion of Greece by Xerxes,”
-and his well-known rhapsody called the “Ruins.” Shortly after this,
-the Empress Catherine, who found that she had been made the dupe of
-the French sophists, declared herself the enemy of France; upon which
-Volney, eager to display his contempt for his fickle admirer, returned
-the medal which she had formerly presented to him. Upon this, Grimm,
-the literary gladiator of the empress, and up to that moment the friend
-of Volney, addressed him a letter filled with the most biting sarcasms
-and unjust personalities, but written in so keen a style that it has
-been attributed to Rivarol, another clever advocate of ancient abuses.
-
-In 1792 Volney accompanied Pozzo di Borgo to Corsica, with his old
-design of making agricultural experiments. He accordingly purchased
-the estate of La Confina, near Ajaccio, and was proceeding to realize
-some of his useful plans, when he was driven from the island by the
-troubles excited by Pascal Paoli, who sold his estate by auction,
-notwithstanding that he had recently given him various assurances
-of friendship. During his residence in Corsica our traveller became
-acquainted with Napoleon, who was at that time only an officer of
-artillery. He is said to have divined the character of this ambitious
-man from the first; and some years later, upon learning in America that
-Napoleon had been appointed commander of the army of Italy, he remarked
-to several French refugees, “Provided that circumstances second him,
-he will be found to possess the head of Cæsar on the shoulders of
-Alexander.” This oracular saying, which is by no means the best thing
-of the kind attributed to our traveller, is remarkable merely for the
-pomposity of the expression, and signifies little or nothing, except
-that Napoleon was as able as he was ambitious. On his return to France,
-in 1793, he published a “Sketch of the State of Corsica,” and the
-“Law of Nature,” the latter of which M. Durozoir, with characteristic
-exaggeration, pronounces to be “one of the best treatises on morals
-which have ever been published in any language.” The “Law of Nature” is
-well known in England, and proves its writer to have been a man of an
-acute and vigorous mind, as well as an accomplished master of style;
-but it would be paying Volney an absurd compliment to place his little
-catechism, in which there are no ideas absolutely new, on a level with
-the “Ethics to Nichomachus,” or the great work of Panætius, of which
-we may form a tolerably clear conception from the “De Officiis” of
-Cicero, which is little more than a copy of it. Moreover, in the “Law
-of Nature,” man is considered too much in a material, and too little in
-a spiritual light; which, though it may be a merit in the eyes of such
-a writer as M. Durozoir, must to a person of a different creed appear
-to be a very remarkable defect. Considering the question merely in a
-philosophical point of view, it can, I think, admit of no dispute that
-the incentives to good actions can never be too numerous; but Volney,
-from his peculiar notions, could only speak of morals as of physical
-science, which, taken as a whole, it certainly is not. Whatever merit
-this little tract may possess, therefore, it seems to be essentially
-defective in attributing to one set of principles effects which they
-never produce unless in combination with others.
-
-In 1793 our traveller, whose political opinions were purely republican,
-was imprisoned ten months as a _royalist_, and only recovered his
-liberty after the events of the 9th of Thermidor. To console him in
-some degree for this injustice, he was shortly afterward appointed
-historical professor in the Normal School, which had just then been
-established by the friends of order and of their country. Volney was
-eminently well qualified to shine in this capacity. His reading,
-which was immense, had lain much, if not chiefly, among historical
-writers; and his calm, penetrating genius enabled him to discover with
-extraordinary precision the natural chain of events. Nevertheless,
-from a passion for vain paradox, which has of late been but too common
-both in France and Germany among persons who would be thought to be
-philosophers, he unfortunately exhibited in his historical researches
-a degree of skepticism highly absurd. He had perhaps read and admired
-the startling proposition of Aristotle, that doubt is the foundation of
-all science; but if doubt eternally generate doubt, upon what basis are
-the sciences to be erected? The Greek philosopher, I conceive, merely
-intends to say, that without doubt there can be no inquiry, and without
-inquiry no science. However, notwithstanding this radical defect,
-Volney’s lectures at the Normal School were received with applause,
-principally perhaps from the striking originality of the author’s
-style, and the novelty of his views. Truths long and familiarly known,
-appear to lose their beauty, and are eagerly exchanged for errors,
-tricked out in all the dazzling gloss of novelty.
-
-His oratorical career was not of long duration. The Normal School was
-quickly suppressed; and Volney, disgusted and fatigued with fruitless
-endeavours to benefit his country, determined on deserting it for ever,
-and seeking in the New World that tranquillity which he had failed to
-find in the Old. On his arrival in the United States of America, in
-1795, he was well received by Washington, who gave him many public
-marks of his confidence and friendship. It is said, however, though I
-know not upon what grounds, that John Adams, elected president in 1797,
-entertained feelings highly inimical to Volney, who, a short time
-before, had criticised severely, perhaps unjustly, his “Defence of the
-Constitutions of the United States.” It is even insinuated by Durozoir,
-whose unsupported testimony I should, however, refuse to accept in a
-matter of this kind, that our traveller was driven from America by the
-unmanly revenge of John Adams in the spring of 1798. Be this as it may,
-he was suspected by the Americans of being engaged in a conspiracy
-for delivering up Louisiana to the Directory; while in France, on the
-other hand, he was accused of having asserted that Louisiana could
-never become an advantageous possession of the French republic. While
-his mind was thus harassed by contradictory and absurd suspicions, Dr.
-Priestley published his “Observations on the Progress of Infidelity,”
-&c., in which Volney, says Durozoir, who probably had no more read
-Priestley’s pamphlet than I have, was denounced as an “atheist, an
-ignoramus, a Chinese, and a Hottentot.” Priestley was no doubt a rough
-polemic, too much addicted, perhaps, to hard names; but the work which
-he denounced had, in many respects, a highly mischievous tendency, and
-in refuting it some degree of warmth was pardonable.
-
-On our traveller’s return to France, where he had been elected a member
-of the Institute during his absence, he became once more intimately
-connected with Napoleon, whom, in 1794, he had dissuaded from seeking
-military employment in Turkey or Russia, and by his influence caused
-to be restored to his rank in the army. Napoleon was not ungrateful,
-and when elected to the consulate was desirous of naming Volney his
-colleague. This dignity, however, the traveller refused, as well as
-that of minister of the interior, which was soon afterward offered
-him. He was content with the mere rank of senator. When at a future
-period Napoleon was about to assume the title of emperor, Volney
-ventured to oppose him, observing that _it were better to restore the
-Bourbons_. From this time forward he was invariably found among that
-small minority in the senate who condemned and opposed the despotic
-measures of the emperor; yet he allowed himself to be decorated with
-the rank of count, and the title of commandant of the Legion of Honour.
-Still he took little share in political matters, preferring before all
-distinctions retirement and study.
-
-In 1803 appeared his “Description of the Climate and Soil of the United
-States,” a work possessing, no doubt, considerable merit, but which
-has been far from obtaining equal success with his “Eastern Travels.”
-He now resumed his chronological studies, which had been for some time
-interrupted. In these he gave vent to all his heterodox opinions,
-which it could answer no good purpose either to retail or refute in
-this place. Others, more deeply versed than I in the chronology of the
-world, have performed this task; which was not, however, extremely
-necessary, as Volney’s labours on this subject seem designed never
-to acquire popularity. In 1810 he married Mademoiselle Chassebœuf,
-his cousin, for whose amusement he purchased a large mansion, with
-extensive gardens, &c., in the Rue Vaugirard. Here he lived in a kind
-of morose and misanthropic retirement, heightened, if not caused, by
-his gloomy and unhappy opinions; and here he died, on the 25th of
-April, 1820, in the sixty-third year of his age.
-
-
-
-
-EDWARD DANIEL CLARKE.
-
-Born 1769.--Died 1822.
-
-
-Edward Daniel Clarke was born on the 5th of June, 1769, at Willingdon,
-in the county of Sussex. Even when a child he is said to have displayed
-great narrative powers, which he exercised as frequently as possible
-for the amusement of his father’s domestics and parishioners. In his
-boyish studies, however, he was wanting in application; a fault arising
-from the quickness and vivacity of his mind, actuated by insatiable
-curiosity, and characterized from the beginning by a decided partiality
-for natural history. Still, the loss sustained by this species of
-negligence he afterward severely felt, when, notwithstanding the habits
-of industry which he acquired at a later period of youth, it was found
-impossible by any degree of exertion to retrieve the moments misspent
-or wasted in boyhood. At the same time there was one advantage derived
-from his unstudious inclinations; they urged him to be much abroad
-in the open air, where he amused himself with running, leaping, and
-swimming, in which last accomplishment he was particularly skilled, and
-on one occasion had the satisfaction of saving by this means the life
-of his younger brother, who was seized by the cramp while bathing in
-the moat which surrounded his father’s house.
-
-In the spring of 1786, through the kindness of Dr. Beadon, afterward
-Bishop of Bath and Wells, Clarke obtained the office of chapel clerk
-at Jesus College, Cambridge, whither he removed about the Easter of
-the above year. Next year he sustained the heavy calamity to lose a
-pious, beneficent, affectionate father, by which misfortune, young and
-inexperienced as he was, without a profession, and with few prospects
-of advancement, he was entirely thrown upon his own resources, his
-remaining parent not possessing the means of aiding him with aught
-beyond her prayers. Fortunately his deceased father had, instead of
-wealth, bequeathed to his family a more valuable inheritance; a name
-revered for sanctity, and a number of noble-minded friends, who not
-only provided for the immediate necessities of its several members,
-but continued to watch over their progress, and on many important
-occasions to advance their interests in after-life. Nevertheless,
-Clarke had to contend with numerous difficulties. “Soon after the death
-of their father,” says Mr. Otter, “the two elder sons returned to
-college; and Edward, having now acquired a melancholy title to one of
-the scholarships of the society of Jesus College, founded by Sir Tobias
-Rustat, for the benefit of clergymen’s orphans, was elected a scholar
-on this foundation immediately upon his return. The emoluments of his
-scholarship, joined to those of an exhibition from Tunbridge school,
-and the profits of his chapel clerk’s place, amounting in the whole
-to less than 90_l._ a year, were his principal, indeed it is believed
-his only resources during his residence at college; and, however well
-they may have been husbanded, it must be evident that, even in those
-times of comparative moderation in expense, they could not have been
-sufficient for his support, especially when it is understood that
-he was naturally liberal to a fault. It does not appear, however,
-that he derived during this time any pecuniary assistance from his
-father’s friends; and as there is the strongest reason to believe that
-he faithfully adhered to the promise he had made to his mother, that
-he would never draw upon her slender resources for his support, it
-may excite some curiosity to know by what means the deficiency was
-supplied. The fact is, that he was materially assisted in providing for
-his college expenses by the liberality of his tutor, Mr. Plampin, who,
-being acquainted with his circumstances, suffered his bills to remain
-in arrear; and they were afterward discharged from the first profits he
-derived from his private pupils.”
-
-The indolent inactivity which had marked his school studies did not
-desert him at college. He seems, in fact, to have been disgusted with
-the system of education pursued at Cambridge, caring nothing for
-mathematics, which were there regarded as all in all, and finding
-among the other mental pursuits of the place nothing whatever to
-kindle the ardour of his ambitious mind. Still the desire of fame,
-without which man never performed any thing great, began gradually
-to manifest itself in his character both to himself and others.
-Exceedingly uncertain as to the mode, he yet determined to acquire
-in one way or another a reputation in literature; and while many of
-those around him were descanting complacently upon his failings, and
-the consequent backwardness of his acquirements, he silently felt the
-sting which was so soon to goad him on to a destiny more brilliant than
-his compassionate comrades ever dreamed of. His favourite studies,
-however, such as they were, he seems to have pursued with considerable
-eagerness; and by degrees his taste, after wavering for some time,
-settled definitively on literature.
-
-In the spring of 1790 Clarke obtained, through the recommendation of
-Dr. Beadon, then Bishop of Gloucester, the office of private tutor to
-the honourable Henry Tufton, nephew to the Duke of Dorset. The place
-selected for his residence with his pupil, says Mr. Otter, was a large
-house belonging to Lord Thanet, inhabited at that time only by one or
-two servants, situated in a wild and secluded part of the county of
-Kent, and cut off, as well by distance as bad roads, from all cheerful
-and improving society; a residence suitable enough to a nobleman with a
-large establishment and a wide circle of friends, but the last place,
-one would have thought, to improve and polish a young man of family
-just entering into active life. His pupil, moreover, had conceived
-a dislike for study and for tutors of every kind, which promised to
-enhance the tedium of a life spent in such a scene. But Clarke, who
-probably sympathized with the young man’s aversion from intellectual
-task-work, very quickly succeeded by his gay, lively, insinuating
-manners in winning his confidence, and, apparently, in convincing him
-that a certain degree of knowledge might be useful, even to a man of
-his rank. This agreeable result, which seems to have been somewhat
-unexpected, so raised our incipient traveller in the estimation of
-the Duke of Dorset, that the engagement, which appears to have been
-at first for nine months only, was prolonged another year, the latter
-part of which was occupied in making with his pupil the tour of Great
-Britain. Of these domestic travels he on his return published the
-history; but the performance appears to have been hastily and slovenly
-written, and, as has been the fate of many other youthful works, to
-have been severely judged by the mature author, jealous of his fame,
-and averse from exhibiting to the public the nakedness of his unformed
-mind.
-
-Shortly after the conclusion of this tour he accompanied his pupil
-in a little excursion to Calais, when he enjoyed the satisfaction,
-which none but a traveller can appreciate, of treading for the first
-time on foreign ground. In 1792 he was fortunate enough to obtain an
-engagement to travel with Lord Berwick, whom he had known at college,
-and in the autumn of that year set out in company with that young
-nobleman, through Germany and Switzerland into Italy. He was now in the
-position for which nature had originally designed him. “An unbounded
-love of travel,” says he, “influenced me at a very early period of my
-life. It was conceived in infancy, and I shall carry it with me to the
-grave. When I reflect upon the speculations of my youth, I am at a
-loss to account for a passion which, predominating over every motive
-of interest and every tie of affection, urges me to press forward and
-to pursue inquiry, even in the bosoms of the ocean and the desert.
-Sometimes, in the dreams of fancy, I am weak enough to imagine that the
-map of the world was painted in the awning of my cradle, and that my
-nurse chanted the wanderings of pilgrims in her legendary lullabies.”
-This was the spirit which urged the Marco Polos, the Chardins, and
-the Bruces to undertake their illustrious journeys; and if Clarke was
-compelled by circumstances to confine his researches to less remote and
-better known countries, he exhibited in his rambles through these a
-kindred enthusiasm, and similar devotion and energy.
-
-Clarke and his companion having passed the Alps, which, however
-frequently seen, still maintain their rank among the most sublime
-objects in nature, descended into Italy, visited Turin and Rome, and
-then proceeded to Naples, in which city and its environs they remained
-nearly two years. In the summer of 1793 there was, as is well known, an
-eruption of Mount Vesuvius, which our traveller, now an inhabitant of
-Naples, enjoyed ample opportunities of visiting. And here a striking
-manifestation of the daring intrepidity of the English occurred: for
-not only Clarke himself, part of whose business as a traveller it
-was to familiarize himself with danger, but numbers of other English
-gentlemen, and even ladies, ascended to the mouth of the burning crater
-and the sources of lava-streams in an active state for mere amusement;
-where, on one occasion, a lady narrowly escaped death from a large
-stone from the volcano, which flew by her like a wheel. At another time
-the whole party were menaced with the fate of the elder Pliny. It was
-in the month of February. “I found the crater in a very active state,”
-says Clarke, “throwing out volleys of immense stones transparent with
-vitrification, and such showers of ashes involved in thick sulphurous
-clouds as rendered any approach to it extremely dangerous. We ascended
-as near as possible, and then crossing over to the lava attempted
-to coast it up to its source. This we soon found was impossible,
-for an unfortunate wind blew all the smoke of the lava hot upon us,
-attended at the same time with such a thick mist of minute ashes from
-the crater, and such fumes of sulphur, that we were in danger of
-being suffocated. In this perplexity I had recourse to an expedient
-recommended by Sir W. Hamilton, and proposed immediately crossing
-the current of liquid lava to gain the windward side of it; but felt
-some fears, owing to the very liquid appearance the lava there had so
-near its source. All my companions were against the scheme, and while
-we stood deliberating, immense fragments of stone and huge volcanic
-bombs that had been cast out by the crater, but which the smoke had
-prevented us from observing, fell thick about us, and rolled by with a
-velocity that would have crushed any of us, had we been in the way. I
-found we must either leave our present spot, or expect instant death;
-therefore, covering my face with my hat, I rushed upon the lava and
-crossed over safely to the other side, having my boots only a little
-burnt and my hands scorched. Not one of my companions, however, would
-stir, nor could any persuasion of mine avail in getting a single guide
-over to me. I then saw clearly the whole of the scene, and expected
-my friends would every moment be sacrificed to their own imprudence
-and want of courage, as the stones from the crater fell continually
-around them, and vast rocks of lava bounded by them with great force.
-At last I had the satisfaction of seeing them retire, leaving me
-entirely alone. I begged hard for a torch to be thrown over to me, that
-I might not be lost when the night came on. It was then that André, one
-of the ciceroni of Resina, after being promised a bribe, ran over to
-me, and brought with him a bottle of wine and a torch. We had coasted
-the lava, ascending for some time, when looking back I perceived my
-companions endeavouring to cross the lava lower down, where the stream
-was narrower. In doing this they found themselves insulated, as it
-were, and surrounded by two different rivers of liquid fire. They
-immediately pressed forward, being terribly scorched by both currents,
-and ran to the side where I was; in doing which one of the guides fell
-into the middle of the red-hot lava, but met with no other injury than
-having his hands and face burnt, and losing at the same time a bottle
-of vin de grave, which was broken in the fall, and which proved a very
-unpleasant loss to us, being ready to faint with excessive thirst,
-fatigue, and heat. Having once more rallied my forces, I proceeded on,
-and in about half an hour I gained the chasm through which the lava had
-opened itself a passage out of the mountain. To describe this sight is
-utterly beyond all human ability. My companions, who were with me then,
-shared in the astonishment it produced; and the sensations they felt in
-concert with me were such as can be obliterated only with our lives.
-All I had seen of volcanic phenomena before did not lead me to expect
-such a spectacle as I then beheld. I had seen the vast rivers of lava
-which descended into the plains below, and carried ruin and devastation
-with them; but they resembled a vast heap of cinders on the scoriæ of
-an iron foundry, rolling slowly along, and falling with a rattling
-noise over one another. Here a vast arched chasm presented itself in
-the side of the mountain, from which rushed with the velocity of a
-flood the clear vivid torrent of lava in perfect fusion, and totally
-unconnected with any other matter that was not in a state of complete
-solution, unattended by any scoriæ on its surface, or gross materials
-of an insolvent nature; but flowing with the translucency of honey, in
-regular channels cut finer than art can imitate, and glowing with all
-the splendour of the sun.”
-
-In the July of the same year our traveller viewed Vesuvius under
-another aspect, when soft, tranquil beauty had succeeded to terrific
-sublimity. “While we were at tea in the Albergo Reale,” says he, “such
-a scene presented itself as every one agreed was beyond any thing of
-that kind they had ever seen before. It was caused by the moon, which
-suddenly rose behind the convent on Vesuvius; at first a small bright
-line silvering all the clouds, and then a full orb which threw a blaze
-of light across the sea, through which the vessels passed and re-passed
-in a most beautiful manner. At the same time the lava, of a different
-hue, spread its warm tint upon all the objects near it, and threw a
-red line across the bay, directly parallel to the reflection of the
-moon’s rays. It was one of those scenes which one dwells upon with
-regret, because one feels the impossibility of retaining the impression
-it affords. It remains in the memory, but then all its outlines and
-its colours are so faintly touched, that the beauty of the spectacle
-fades away with the landscape; which, when covered by the clouds of the
-night, and veiled in darkness, can never be revived by the pencil, the
-pen, or by any recourse to the traces it has left upon the mind.”
-
-In the autumn of 1793 Clarke received from Lord Berwick a proposal that
-he should accompany him to Egypt and the Holy Land, with which our
-traveller, whose secret wishes had long pointed that way, immediately
-closed. While preparations were making for the journey, Lord Berwick
-suddenly recollected that some living, to which he was to present his
-brother, might fall vacant during his absence, and be lost to his
-family. He determined, therefore, on sending an express to England; and
-when he had hired his courier, Clarke, who perhaps felt the want of
-violent exercise, offered to accompany the man, that no time might be
-lost. He accordingly set out for England, and having remained two or
-three days in London to execute the commission with which he had been
-intrusted, he hurried down to Shropshire, and arranged the business
-which had brought him to England. This being accomplished, he returned
-to London, where, to his infinite surprise and mortification, he found
-a letter from Lord Berwick, informing him that the expedition to Egypt
-had been postponed or abandoned. His engagement with this nobleman,
-however, had not yet expired. He therefore, after a short stay in
-England, hastened back to Italy, from whence he finally returned in the
-summer of 1794.
-
-Clarke now spent some time with his mother and family at Uckfield, and
-in the autumn of the same year undertook, at the recommendation of the
-Bishop of St. Asaph, the care of Sir Thomas Mostyn, a youth of about
-seventeen. This engagement continued about a year, during which period
-he resided with his pupil in Wales, where he became known to Pennant,
-with whom he afterward maintained a correspondence. When this connexion
-had, from some unexplained causes, ceased to exist, our traveller
-undertook a small periodical work called “Le Rêveur,” which, when
-twenty-nine numbers had been published without success, was judiciously
-discontinued, and sunk so completely into oblivion that not a single
-copy, it is believed, could now be found.
-
-In the autumn of 1796 Clarke entered into an engagement with the family
-of Lord Uxbridge, which, under whatever auspices begun, was highly
-beneficial to himself and satisfactory to his employers. The youth
-first placed under his care, delicate and feeble in constitution,
-soon fell a prey to disease; but the next youngest son of the family,
-the honourable Berkeley Paget, succeeded his brother; and with him,
-in the summer and autumn of 1797, our traveller made the tour of
-Scotland. This was in every respect an agreeable and fortunate journey
-for our traveller, who not only enjoyed the scenery, wild, varied,
-and beautiful, which the north of England and many parts of Scotland
-afford, but secured in his pupil a powerful friend, who, so long as our
-traveller lived, promoted his interests, and when his life had closed,
-continued the same benevolent regard to his family.
-
-On the termination of his connexion with Mr. Paget, who was now sent
-to Oxford, Clarke retired to Uckfield, where, for a time, he seemed
-entirely immersed in the pleasures of field-sports. His devotion
-to this species of amusement, however, was destined to be of short
-duration. A young gentleman of Sussex, whose education had been very
-much neglected, succeeded about this time to a considerable estate,
-upon which he intimated his desire of placing himself for three
-years under the guidance and instruction of our traveller, first at
-Cambridge, and afterward during a long and extensive tour upon the
-Continent. The pecuniary part of the proposal was very liberal, says
-Mr. Otter, and the plan was entered upon without delay. The traveller
-and his pupil remained a whole year at Cambridge, during which the
-former, who fully understood the advantages of knowledge, and had been
-hitherto prevented by his wandering life from pursuing any regular
-course of study, profited quite as much as the latter.
-
-The preliminary portion of their studies being over, Clarke and his
-pupil began to prepare for their travels. Two other individuals were
-at first associated with them, Professor Malthus, author of the
-celebrated treatise on population, and the Rev. Mr. Otter, afterward
-the biographer of our traveller. The party set out from Cambridge on
-the 20th May, 1799, and arrived at Hamburgh on the 25th. Here they
-made but a short stay before they set out for Copenhagen, and from
-thence, by way of Stockholm, across the whole of Sweden to Tornea, on
-the Gulf of Bothnia. Malthus and Otter left them at the Wener Lake.
-Clarke, with all the enthusiasm of a genuine traveller, could never
-imagine he had carried his researches sufficiently far; but, having
-reached the 66th degree of northern latitude, declared he would not
-return until he should have snuffed the polar air. His pupil, Cripps,
-seems to have shared largely in his locomotive propensity, and in the
-courage which prompts to indulge it. They therefore proceeded towards
-the polar regions together; but having reached Enontakis, in latitude
-68° 30´ 30´´ north, our traveller, who had previously been seized by a
-severe fit of illness, was constrained to abandon the polar expedition
-and shape his course towards the south. Writing from Enontakis to his
-mother, “We have found,” says he, “the cottage of a priest in this
-remote corner of the world, and have been snug with him a few days.
-Yesterday I launched a balloon eighteen feet in height, which I had
-made to attract the natives. You may guess their astonishment when they
-saw it rise from the earth.
-
-“Is it not famous to be here within the frigid zone, more than two
-degrees within the arctic, and nearer to the pole than the most
-northern shores of Iceland? For a long time darkness has been a
-stranger to us. The sun, as yet, passes not below the horizon, but he
-dips his crimson visage behind a mountain to the north. This mountain
-we ascended, and had the satisfaction to see him make his courtesy
-without setting. At midnight the priest of this place lights his pipe
-during three weeks in the year by means of a burning-glass from the
-sun’s rays.”
-
-Having, for the reason above stated, given up the design of visiting
-the polar regions, they returned to Tornea, and thence proceeded
-through Sweden and Norway; which latter country (probably for the same
-reason which made Pope of the opinion of the last author he read) he
-preferred for sublimity of scenery to Switzerland. They then entered
-Russia, and arrived at Petersburg on the 26th of January, 1800. Clarke,
-it is well known, entertained a very mean opinion of the Russians;
-but, judging from the testimony of Bishop Heber--a calmer and more
-dispassionate man--as well as from that of many other travellers, it
-would appear that his judgment was neither rash nor ill founded. “We
-have been here five days,” says he. “Our servants were taken from us
-at the frontiers, and much difficulty had we with the Russian thieves
-as we came along. Long accustomed to Swedish honesty it is difficult
-for us to assume all at once a system of suspicion and caution: the
-consequence of this is that they remove all the moveables out of their
-way. I wish much to like the Russians, but those who govern them will
-take care I never shall. This place, were it not for its magnificence,
-would be insufferable. We silently mourn when we remember Sweden. As
-for our harps there are no trees to hang them upon; nevertheless we sit
-down by the waters of Babylon and weep. They open all the letters, and
-therefore there is something for them to chew upon. More I dare not
-add; perhaps your experience will supply the rest.”
-
-To this, if we add his picture of the execrable despot who then
-governed Russia, enough will have been said of his experience at
-Petersburg. “It is impossible,” he writes, “to say what will be the end
-of things here, or whether the emperor is more of a madman, a fool, a
-knave, or a tyrant. If I were to relate the ravings, the follies, the
-villanies, the cruelties of that detestable beast, I should never reach
-the end of my letter. Certainly things cannot long go on as they do
-now. The other day the soldiers by his order cudgelled a gentleman in
-the street because the cock of his hat was not in a line with his nose.
-He has sent the Prince of Condé’s army to the right-about, which is
-hushed up, and it is to appear that they are ceded to Great Britain. He
-refuses passports even to ambassadors for their couriers. One is not
-safe a moment. It is not enough to act by rule, you must regulate your
-features to the whims of a police officer. If you frown in the street
-you will be taken up.”
-
-From Petersburg they proceeded in sledges to Moscow, which, like
-most oriental cities, seemed all splendour from a distant view,
-but shrunk upon their entering it into a miserable collection of
-hovels, interspersed with a few grotesque churches and tawdry
-palaces. This place, which is too well known to require me to dwell
-much upon its appearance, they quitted to proceed to the Crimea.
-Arriving at Taganrog, on the Sea of Azov, Clarke amused himself
-with swimming in the Don, the ancient Tanais, between Europe and
-Asia, and in thinking of the vast extent of country over which his
-good fortune had already carried him, and of the far more glorious
-scenes--Palestine--Egypt--Greece--which yet lay in his route. “Do, for
-God’s sake imagine,” says he in a letter to a friend, “what I must feel
-in the prospect of treading the plains of Troy!--Tears of joy stream
-from my eyes while I write.” To a person of such a frame of mind--and
-no others should ever leave their firesides--travelling, next to the
-performance of virtuous actions, affords the most exquisite pleasure
-upon earth. The imagination, impregnated by a classical education with
-glowing ideas of what certain scenes once were, invests them with
-unearthly splendour, of which no experience can ever afterward divest
-them.
-
-Upon their arriving at Achmedshid in the Crimea, they remained some
-time in the house of Professor Pallas, who entertained them in so
-hospitable a manner that Clarke, who spoke of men as he found them,
-could not forbear imparting to his friends at home the warm gratitude
-of his heart. “It is with him we now live,” says he, “till the vessel
-is ready to sail for Constantinople; and how can I express his kindness
-to me? He has all the tenderness of a father to us both. Every thing
-in his house he makes our own. He received me worn down with fatigue
-and ill of a tertian fever. Mrs. Pallas nursed me, and he cured me, and
-then loaded me with all sorts of presents; books, drawings, insects,
-plants, minerals, &c. The advantage of conversing with such a man is
-worth the whole journey from England, not considering the excellent
-qualities of his heart. Here we are in quite an elegant English house;
-and if you knew the comfort of lying down in a clean bed after passing
-months without taking off your clothes in deserts and among savages,
-you would know the comfort we feel. The vessel is at Kosloff, distant
-forty miles; and when we leave the Crimea Mr. and Mrs. Pallas and their
-daughter, who has been married since we were in the house to a general
-officer, go with us to Kosloff; and will dine with us on board the day
-we sail. They prepare all our provisions for the voyage.”
-
-The whole of their stay in Russia was rendered so exceedingly
-disagreeable--first by the savage tyranny of the emperor, and secondly
-by the evil character of his subjects, which, as being everywhere felt,
-was infinitely more annoying--that our traveller regarded himself among
-a civilized and hospitable people when he reached Constantinople. In
-fact, he found himself in a sort of English society which, congregating
-together at the palace of the embassy, engaged in the same round of
-amusements which would have occupied them in London. The time which
-these agreeable occupations left him was employed in searching for
-and examining Greek medals, and in viewing such curiosities as were
-to be found in Constantinople; among other things the interior of
-the seraglio, where no Frank, he says, had before set his foot. He
-moreover found time to peruse many of the various publications called
-forth by the Bryant controversy respecting the existence of Troy; and
-so unsteady was his faith on this point, that, after dipping a little
-into the subject, he began to imagine something like a new theory to
-explain the manner in which we are required to believe Homer might
-have invented the whole groundwork of the Iliad! However, upon shortly
-afterward arriving on the spot, this flimsy vagary vanished. Jacob
-Bryant and his followers were found to be the pettifogging skeptics
-which they have always been considered by sensible men. “The Plain
-of Troy now,” exclaims our traveller, “offers every fact you want;
-there is nothing doubtful. No argument will stand an instant[3] in
-opposition to the test of inquiry upon the spot; penetrating into
-the mountains behind the Acropolis the proofs grow more numerous as
-you advance, till at length the discussion becomes absurd, and the
-nonsense of Bryantism so ridiculous that his warmest partisans would be
-ashamed to acknowledge they had ever assented for an instant to such
-contemptible blasphemy upon the most sacred records of history.”
-
-[3] An intaglio purchased by Clarke at Constantinople is exceedingly
-remarkable, as throwing light upon the original story of Æneas, before
-it had been deformed by Virgil or Ovid. “There are poor Turks at
-Constantinople, whose business it is to wash the mud of the common
-sewers of the city, and the sand of the shore. These people found a
-small onyx, with an antique intaglio of most excellent workmanship,
-representing Æneas flying from the city, leading his boy by the hand,
-and bearing on his shoulders (who do you suppose?)--not his father--for
-in that case the subject might have been borrowed from Virgil or
-Ovid--but--his wife, with the Penates in her lap; and so wonderfully
-wrought that these three figures are brought into a gem of the smallest
-size, and wings are added to the feet of Æneas,
-
- ‘Pedibus timor addidit alas!’
-
-to express by symbols of the most explicit nature the story and the
-situation of the hero. Thus it is proved that a tradition, founded
-neither on the works of Homer nor the Greek historians (and perhaps
-unknown to Virgil and the Roman poets, who always borrowed their
-stories from such records as were afforded by the works of ancient
-artists), existed among the ancients in the remotest periods,
-respecting the war of Troy. The authenticity of this invaluable
-little relic, the light it strews on ancient history, its beauty, and
-the remarkable coincidence of the spot on which it was found, with
-the locality of the subject it illustrates, interested so much the
-late Swedish minister, Mr. Heidensham, and other antiquarians of the
-first talents in this part of the world, that I have given it a very
-considerable part of this letter, hoping it will not be indifferent to
-you.”
-
-From the Troad Clarke proceeded to Rhodes, the Gulf of Glaucus, on the
-coast of Asia Minor, and thence by sea to Egypt, where the English
-fleet was then lying in Aboukir Bay. He did not, however, see much of
-Egypt on this occasion, for the country was still in the possession
-of the French; and therefore, after a short visit to Rosetta, he
-sailed for Cyprus, and on returning from this voyage proceeded in the
-Romulus to Palestine. Here he visited Jerusalem, Nazareth, Bethlehem,
-and the Lake of Genesareth; near which he enjoyed an opportunity of
-conversing with a party of Druses. Almost every traveller in Syria has
-given us some new particulars respecting this curious people. “They
-are,” says Clarke, “the most extraordinary people on earth; singular
-in the simplicity of their lives by their strict integrity and virtue.
-They only eat what they earn by their own labour, and preserve at
-this moment the superstitions brought by the Israelites out of Egypt.
-What will be your surprise to learn that every Thursday they elevate
-the molten calf, before which they prostrate themselves, and having
-paid their adoration, each man selects among the women present the
-wife he likes best, with whom the ceremony ends. The calf is of gold,
-silver, or bronze. This is exactly that worship at which Moses was so
-incensed in descending from Mount Sinai. The cow was the Venus of the
-Egyptians, and of course the calf a personification of animal desire;
-a Cupid before which the sacrifices so offensive to Moses were held.
-For it is related they set up a molten calf, which Aaron had made from
-the earrings of the Israelite women; before which similar sacrifices
-were made. And certainly the Druses on Mount Lebanon are a detachment
-of the posterity of those Israelites who are so often represented in
-Scripture as deserters from the true faith, falling back into the old
-superstitions and pagan worship of the country from whence they came.
-I could not visit Mount Lebanon; but I took every method necessary to
-ascertain the truth of this relation; and I send it you as one of the
-highest antiquities and most curious relics of remote ages which has
-yet been found upon earth.”
-
-His stay in Palestine was exceedingly short, just sufficient to enable
-him to say he had looked at it. He then returned to Aboukir Bay, where
-his brother was commander of an English ship; which now, on the 6th of
-August, 1801, swarmed with French prisoners like a beehive. When the
-road to Cairo was rendered practicable by the defeat of the French,
-our traveller proceeded to that city, where the most interesting
-objects existing were the beautiful young women who had been torn by
-the French soldiers from the harems of the bey; and then, when they
-evacuated the country, deserted and abandoned to their fate. Here
-he procured a complete copy of the “Arabian Nights,” which, with
-many other works that were so many sealed books to him, gave rise to
-much unavailing regret that he had bestowed little or no attention
-on the Arabic language. The Pyramids he of course admired. “Without
-hyperbole,” says he, “they are immense mountains; and when clouds cast
-shadows over their white sides they are seen passing as upon the summit
-of the Alps.” From the pinnacle of the loftiest he dated one of his
-letters to England, all of which are filled with lively dashing gossip,
-accompanied with rash, headlong, unphilosophical decisions, which the
-reflections of a moment, perhaps, might have served to dissipate. The
-news of the capitulation of Alexandria induced him to hurry back to
-the coast. He found the French troops still in the city, but preparing
-to embark with all speed. Great disputes, he says, had already arisen
-between General Hutchinson and Menou respecting the antiquities and
-collections of natural history which had been made by the French; the
-former claiming them as public, and the latter refusing them as private
-property. The part performed by Clarke himself in this affair he shall
-relate in his own words:--“When I arrived in the British camp, General
-Hutchinson informed me that he had already stipulated for the stone in
-question (the Rosetta marble), and asked me whether I thought the other
-literary treasures were sufficiently national to be included in his
-demands. You may be sure I urged all the arguments I could muster to
-justify the proceeding; and it is clear they are not private property.
-General Hutchinson sent me to Menou, and charged me to discover
-what national property of that kind was in the hands of the French.
-Hamilton, Lord Elgin’s secretary, had gone the same morning about an
-hour before with Colonel Turner of the Antiquarian Society about the
-Hieroglyphic Table. I showed my pass at the gates, and was admitted.
-The streets and public places were filled with the French troops, in
-desperate bad-humour. Our proposals were made known, and backed with a
-menace from the British general that he would break the capitulation
-if the proposals were not acceded to. The whole corps of sçavans and
-engineers beset Menou, and the poor old fellow, what with us and them,
-was completely hunted. We have been now at this work since Thursday
-the 11th, and I believe have succeeded. We found much more in their
-possession than was suspected or imagined. Pointers would not range
-better for game than we have done for statues, sarcophagi, maps, MSS.,
-drawings, plans, charts, botany, stuffed birds, animals, dried fishes,
-&c. Savigny, who has been years in forming the beautiful collection
-of natural history for the republic, is in despair. Therefore we
-represented to General Hutchinson, that it would be the best plan to
-send him to England also, as the most proper person to take care of the
-collection, and to publish its description if necessary.”
-
-No man, I suppose, who has passed beyond the frontiers of his own
-country, can fail to have experienced frequent depressions of spirit,
-during which he has probably repented him of his wandering habits.
-But Clarke was like a weathercock, now pointing to the east, now to
-the west. In the island of Zea, off the promontory of Sunium, he
-repented heartily of having undertaken the voyage to Greece. “Danger,
-fatigue, disease, filth, treachery, thirst, hunger, storms, rocks,
-assassins,--these,” he exclaims, “are the realities which a traveller
-in Greece meets with!” Anon, at Athens, he writes, “We have been here
-three days; we sailed into the port of the Piræus after sunset on the
-28th. The little voyage from Cape Sunium to Athens is one of the most
-interesting I ever made. The height of the mountains brings the most
-distant objects into the view, and you are surrounded by beauty and
-grandeur. The sailors and pilots still give to every thing its ancient
-name, with only a little difference in the pronunciation. They show you
-as you sail along, Ægina and Salamis, Mount Hymettus and Athens, and
-Megara, and the mountains of Corinth. The picture is the same as it was
-in the earliest ages of Greece. The Acropolis rises to view as if it
-were in its most perfect state: the temples and buildings seem entire;
-for the eye, in the Saronic Gulf, does not distinguish the injuries
-which the buildings have suffered, and nature, of course, is the same
-now as she was in the days of Themistocles. I cannot tell you what
-sensations I felt: the successions were so rapid I knew not whether to
-laugh or to cry,--sometimes I did both.
-
-“Our happiness is complete, we have forgotten all our disasters, and I
-have half a mind to blot out all I have written in the first part of
-this letter. We are in the most comfortable house imaginable, with a
-good widow and her daughter. You do not know Lusieri. He was my friend
-in Italy many years ago. Think what a joy to find him here, presiding
-over the troop of artists, architects, sculptors, and excavators that
-Lord Elgin has sent here to work for him. He is the most celebrated
-artist at present in the world. Pericles would have deified him. He
-attends us everywhere, and Pausanias himself would not have made a
-better cicerone.
-
-“Athens exceeds all that ever has been written or painted from it.
-I know not how to give an idea of it; because, having never seen
-any thing like it, I must become more familiar with so much majesty
-before I can describe it. I am no longer to lament the voyage I lost
-with Lord Berwick; because it is exactly that which a man should see
-_last_ in his travels. It is even with joy I consider it is perhaps
-the end of all my admiration. We are lucky in the time of our being
-here. The popularity of the English name gives us access to many things
-which strangers before were prohibited from visiting, and the great
-excavations that are going on discover daily some hidden treasures.
-Rome is almost as insignificant in comparison with Athens as London
-with Rome; and one regrets the consciousness that no probable union of
-circumstances will ever again carry the effects of human labour to the
-degree of perfection they have attained here.”
-
-No one after this will accuse Clarke of being deficient in enthusiasm;
-but this is not all. On reaching the summit of Parnassus, he
-bursts forth into expressions of admiration, which, if they were
-not justified by the sublime beauty of the scenes themselves,
-or by the historical glory with which they must be eternally
-associated, would be absurd. “It is necessary to forget all that
-has preceded--all the travels of my life--all I ever imagined--all
-I ever saw! Asia--Egypt--the Isles--Italy--the Alps--whatever you
-will! Greece surpasses all! Stupendous in its ruins! Awful in its
-mountains!--captivating in its vales--bewitching in its climate.
-Nothing ever equalled it--no pen can describe it--no pencil can portray
-it!
-
-“I know not when we shall get to Constantinople. We are as yet only
-three days’ distance from Athens; and here we sit on the top of
-Parnassus, in a little sty, full of smoke, after wandering for a
-fortnight in Attica, Bœotia, and Phocis. We have been in every spot
-celebrated in ancient story--in fields of slaughter, and in groves of
-song. I shall grow old in telling you the wonders of this country.
-Marathon, Thebes, Platæa, Leuctra, Thespia, Mount Helicon, the grove
-of the Muses, the cave of Trophonius, Cheronea, Orchomene, Delphi, the
-Castalian fountain, Parnassus; we have paid our vows in all! But what
-is most remarkable, in Greece there is hardly a spot which hath been
-particularly dignified that is not also adorned by the most singular
-beauties of nature. Independently of its history, each particular
-object is interesting.”
-
-From Athens they proceeded by land to Constantinople through ancient
-Thrace, by a route partly trodden by Pococke. After a short stay at
-this city, they directed their course homewards through Roumelia,
-Austria, Germany, and France, and arrived in England after an absence
-of upwards of three years. Cripps now returned for a short period
-to his family, and Clarke, who had by this time acquired an immense
-reputation, took up his residence at Cambridge, where, with very
-few intervals of absence, he remained nearly twenty years. He was
-very soon rejoined by his pupil, the completing of whose education,
-together with the arranging of his curiosities and antiquities, and the
-composition of his travels, fully occupied his leisure for some time.
-A statue of Ceres which our traveller had dug up, and sent home from
-Greece, was presented, on his return, to the university; in consequence
-of which the degree of LL.D. was conferred upon Clarke, and that of
-M.A. upon his companion.
-
-In 1805 Dr. Clarke published a “Dissertation on the Sarcophagus in the
-British Museum,” which, though necessarily neglected by the public,
-is said to have given considerable satisfaction to the learned, and
-procured for its author many valuable acquaintances. Another and a
-very different subject employed his mind throughout a great part of
-the following year. This was no less a thing than matrimony; which,
-as soon as the idea got footing in his brain, occupied his ardent
-imagination to the exclusion of every thing else. His suit, however,
-was successful. The lady of his choice became his wife; and to increase
-this piece of good fortune, two livings, for he had entered into
-orders, were presented him by his friends, the one shortly before,
-and the other immediately after his marriage. He now occupied himself
-with lectures on mineralogy, which were delivered at the university to
-crowded audiences, and were a source of considerable profit. This, as
-he expected, led to his appointment as professor of mineralogy; and
-“thus,” says Mr. Otter, “were his most sanguine wishes crowned with
-success; and thus were his spirit and perseverance rewarded with one of
-the rarest and highest honours which the university could bestow.”
-
-Dr. Clarke now began to think of turning the treasures he had picked up
-in his travels to account; he sold his MSS. to the Bodleian Library at
-Oxford for 1000_l._, and his Greek coins to Mr. Payne Knight for 100
-guineas. The publication of his travels next followed, and produced him
-a clear sum of 6595_l._ In the year 1814 his old passion for travelling
-revived, and an expedition was projected into the Grecian Archipelago
-for the purpose of collecting antiquities, manuscripts, &c. But he was
-overruled by his friend, who probably believed that his constitution
-was now unequal to the fatigue which would be the inevitable attendant
-on such a mission. To this scheme he would appear to have been urged by
-the extravagant manner in which he had for some time lived; but a more
-practicable, or at least a more certain mode of recovering from the
-effects of this false step presented itself; which was no other than
-reducing his expenses, and living within his income. This he had the
-courage to undertake and execute; and from that day forward seems to
-have led the life of a sensible man. His passion now took a new turn,
-and he was wholly absorbed by chymistry. In September, 1816, he wrote
-as follows to a friend: “I sacrificed the whole month of August to
-chymistry. Oh how I did work! It was delightful play to me, and I stuck
-to it day and night. At last, having blown off both my eyebrows and
-eyelashes, and nearly blown out both my eyes, I ended with a bang that
-shook all the houses round my lecture-room. The Cambridge paper has
-told you the result of all this alchymy, for I have actually decomposed
-the earths, and obtained them in a metallic form.”
-
-I adopt from Mr. Otter the following account of Clarke’s death. It was
-hastened, if not entirely caused, by continued high-wrought mental
-excitement. He was carried to town for advice by Sir William and Lady
-Rush, where he was attended by Sir Astley Cooper, Dr. Bailey, and Dr.
-Scudamore, but their efforts to save him were in vain; the rest of
-his life, about a fortnight, over which a veil will soon be drawn,
-was like a feverish dream after a day of strong excitement, when the
-same ideas chase each other through the mind in a perpetual round,
-and baffle every attempt to banish them. Nothing seemed to occupy his
-attention but the syllabus of his lectures, and the details of the
-operations he had just finished; nor could there exist to his friends
-a stronger proof that all control over his mind was gone, and that the
-ascendency of such thoughts at a season when the devotion so natural
-to him, and of late so strikingly exhibited under circumstances far
-less trying, would, in a sounder state, have been the prime, if not
-the only, mover of his soul. One lucid interval there was, in which,
-to judge from the subject and the manner of his conversation, he had
-the command of his thoughts, as well as a sense of his danger; for in
-the presence of Lieut. Chappel and Mr. Cripps, he pronounced a very
-pathetic eulogium on Mrs. Clarke, and recommended her earnestly to the
-care of those about him; but when the currents of his thoughts seemed
-running fast towards those pious contemplations on which they would
-naturally have rested, his mind suddenly relapsed into the power of its
-former occupants, from which it never more was free. At times, indeed,
-gleams of his former kindness and intelligence would mingle with the
-wildness of his delirium, in a manner the most striking and affecting;
-and then, even his incoherences, to use his own thoughts respecting
-another person who had finished his race shortly before him, was as
-the wreck of some beautiful decayed structure, when all its goodly
-ornaments and stately pillars fall in promiscuous ruin. He died on
-Saturday, the 9th of March, and was buried in Jesus College chapel on
-the 18th of the same month.
-
-
-
-
-FRANCOIS LE VAILLANT.
-
-Born 1753.--Died 1824.
-
-
-In commencing the life of this traveller I experience some apprehension
-that the interest of the narrative may suffer in my hands; since his
-exploits, as Sallust observes of those of the Athenians, appear to
-acquire much of their importance from the peculiar eloquence with which
-they are described. The style of Le Vaillant, though regarded by many
-as declamatory and negligent, is in fact so graceful, natural, and full
-of vivacity,--his sentiments are so warm,--his ideas, whether right or
-wrong, so peculiarly his own, that, whether he desires to interest you
-in the fate of his friends or of his cattle, of his collections or of
-his cocks and hens, the result is invariably the same: he irresistibly
-inspires you with feelings like his own, and for the moment compels
-you, in spite of yourself, to adopt his views and opinions. I cannot,
-however, flatter myself with the hope of equal success. Things really
-trifling in themselves might, I am afraid, continue to appear so
-when dressed in my plain style; and it therefore only remains for me
-to select, to the best of my judgment, such actions and events as
-really deserve to be remembered, and must always, with whatever degree
-of simplicity they may be described, command a certain degree of
-attention. The scene of this writer’s adventures had in many instances
-all the charm of novelty when his travels first appeared. No European
-had preceded him in his route. He could form no conjecture respecting
-the nature of the objects with which the morrow was to bring him
-acquainted, and at every step experienced the
-
- Novos decerpere flores.
-
-In all the pleasures to be derived from pursuing an untrodden path,
-from penetrating into an unknown world; for such then was Africa,
-and such, in a great measure, it still continues--from beholding new
-species of birds and animals which his enthusiasm and perseverance
-were about to make known to mankind;--in all these pleasures, I say,
-he skilfully makes his readers his associates, and thus, apparently
-without effort, accomplishes the intention of the most consummate
-rhetorical art, the object of which is only to lead the imagination
-captive by the allurements of pleasure, or to urge it along by the keen
-sting of curiosity.
-
-François le Vaillant was born in 1753, at Paramaribo, in Dutch Guiana,
-where his father, a rich merchant, originally from Metz, filled the
-office of consul. Even while a child the tastes and habits of his
-parents inspired him with a partiality for a wandering life, and for
-collections of objects of natural history, which quickly generated
-another passion, the passion for hunting; and this amusement,
-unphilosophical as it may seem, not only occupied his boyish days, in
-which man is cruel from thoughtlessness, but his riper and declining
-years, when suffering and calamity might have taught him to respect the
-lives even of the inferior animals.
-
-His father, actuated by the love of science, or by the vanity of
-forming a collection, employed much of the leisure which he enjoyed in
-travelling through the less frequented parts of the colony, accompanied
-by his wife and son; and to this circumstance may be attributed Le
-Vaillant’s twofold passion for travelling and for natural history.
-The desire of possessing a cabinet of his own soon arose. Birds and
-beasts being as yet beyond his reach, he commenced with caterpillars,
-butterflies, and other insects; but his ambition increasing with his
-acquisitions, he at length armed himself with the Indian sarbacan and
-bow, and before he had reached his tenth year had slain innumerable
-birds.
-
-In 1763 he proceeded with his parents to Europe, where every object
-which presented itself to his eye was new. They first landed in
-Holland, where the phlegmatic Dutchmen, who, like the Chinese, pique
-themselves upon being “slow and sure,” viewed with astonishment the
-pert and forward urchin, who, at ten years of age, began to babble of
-science, cabinets, and collections. From Holland, however, they soon
-removed to the more congenial soil of France. Here precocity, which
-too frequently generates hopes never destined to be fulfilled, has
-always been viewed with more complacency than in any other country in
-Europe; and accordingly our youthful traveller, whose vanity amply
-made up for his want of knowledge, was flattered and encouraged to his
-heart’s content. In this particular instance the flowers were succeeded
-by fruit. Being capable of existing in solitude, which is difficult
-in youth, but yet absolutely necessary to the acquisition of studious
-habits, he yielded to his natural inclination for the chase, and spent
-whole weeks in the forests of Lorrain and Germany, intently studying
-the manners of animals and birds. His education, meanwhile, was not
-in other respects neglected; but the books which occupied him most
-agreeably were voyages and travels, as his mind seems already to have
-turned towards that point from which he was to derive his fame.
-
-In the course of the year 1777 some fortunate circumstance conducted
-him to Paris, where the collections and cabinets of learned and
-scientific men at first afforded him extraordinary delight; but
-ended, he says, by inspiring him with contempt, the richness of the
-treasures which they contained being equalled only by the confusion
-and absurdity observable in their arrangement. He discovered likewise
-in the current works on natural history, even in those of Buffon, so
-much exaggeration, and so many errors, notwithstanding the masterly
-eloquence with which those errors are clothed, that, convinced that no
-degree of genius could preserve from delusion the man who describes
-nature at second-hand, he at length determined to become a traveller
-before he became a natural historian, that he might observe in their
-native woods and deserts the animals which he wished to make known to
-the world. With these views, without communicating his plans to any
-person, he departed from Paris on the 17th of July, 1780, and proceeded
-to Holland.
-
-Having visited the principal cities of the republic, and admired at
-Amsterdam the superb collection and aviary of M. Temminck and others,
-he obtained permission to proceed to the Cape of Good Hope in one
-of the ships of the Dutch East India Company, and set sail for that
-country on the 3d of December, 1780, the day before England declared
-war against the Dutch. Had this event taken place twenty-four hours
-sooner, the company, he observes, would not have allowed them to
-depart; in which case all his projects might have been frustrated.
-During the voyage the ship was cannonaded during several hours by a
-small English privateer, while the Dutch captain, rendered incapable
-of reflection by terror, never returned a single shot; and although
-exceedingly superior in men and metal to the enemy, would undoubtedly
-have suffered himself to be taken prisoner, had not another Dutch
-ship-of-war hove in sight, and put to flight the audacious Englishman.
-This was the only incident worthy of mention which occurred to
-dissipate the _ennui_ of their long voyage; and they arrived at Cape
-Town three months and ten days after their departure from the Texel.
-
-Le Vaillant, who had taken care to provide himself previous to his
-departure from Amsterdam with numerous letters of recommendation,
-was received with remarkable attention by several individuals of
-distinction at the Cape. His design of exploring the remoter districts
-of the colony and the adjacent countries fortunately excited no
-jealousy or suspicion in their minds, and therefore, instead of
-labouring, as petty colonial governments too frequently do, to obstruct
-the interests of science, they evinced a disposition to favour the
-views of the traveller, entertained him with profuse hospitality during
-the many months which the preparations for his journey required him to
-remain among them, and, which to him was still more important, exerted
-their influence and authority to facilitate his movements towards the
-countries of the interior. So agreeable a reception could not, of
-course, fail to produce its effect upon the mind of the traveller.
-It quite melted away his affected misanthropy. He found himself in
-good-humour with mankind, and, as if benevolence and philanthropy were
-the peculiar attributes of the natives of Holland, observes, that this
-species of politeness was what he had reckoned upon, for that he knew
-he had to deal with Dutchmen!
-
-His remarks upon Cape Town, now no longer in the possession of the
-Dutch, are sufficiently curious, as they enable us to contrast its
-appearance fifty years ago with that which it at present wears under
-English government. Though a large proportion of the houses were
-spacious and handsome, the streets, in spite of their great breadth,
-appeared disagreeable even to a Frenchman, on account of the badness of
-the pavement, and the stench which everywhere offended the nostrils,
-arising from the heads, feet, and intestines of slaughtered animals
-which the butchers of the company were in the habit of casting forth
-in heaps before their doors, and which, with more than Ottomite
-negligence, the authorities allowed to putrefy upon the spot. The
-effluvia proceeding from these abominations Le Vaillant with reason
-regarded as one of the active causes of those epidemics which usually
-prevailed in the city during those seasons in which the violent
-south-east wind had not blown. While this cleansing wind was performing
-its operations, the streets were almost rendered impassable. The
-hurricane, precipitating from the mountains dense masses of vapour,
-raged for several days with indescribable impetuosity, overthrowing
-every thing in its course, and filling all places, even to the closets,
-trunks, and drawers, with dust. Trees and plants were frequently torn
-up by the roots; and well-planted gardens were rendered in the course
-of twenty-four hours as bare and naked as a desert.
-
-Le Vaillant found the native colonists of the Cape handsome and well
-formed, particularly the women; but, although they studied with
-perseverance the important science of dress, they were still very far,
-in his opinion, from the ease and elegance of the ladies of France;
-a result which he in a great measure attributes to the practice of
-employing slaves as wet-nurses, and of otherwise living with them in
-habits of great familiarity. Slavery under any form is a thing to be
-abhorred; but our traveller here seems to exaggerate its deformities.
-Gracefulness, taste, decorum, which should, perhaps, be numbered among
-the virtues in a well-regulated state, are things with which slavery
-is by no means incompatible. The most polished nation of antiquity,
-which every person but a Frenchman will allow to have at least equalled
-the Parisians in refinement, constantly employed domestic slaves, and
-lived with them on terms of considerable familiarity. But ignorance
-and refinement are necessarily repugnant to each other; and in general
-the Dutch inhabitants of the Cape were, according to Le Vaillant,
-remarkable for their ignorance, which, without the aid of slavery,
-would sufficiently account for the absence of graceful and elegant
-manners.
-
-Strangers, however, arriving at the Cape were almost invariably
-received with great hospitality, more particularly the English, who
-were admired for their generosity, as much as the French, for their
-sordid avarice and egotism, were despised and hated. Le Vaillant, in
-fact, observes that he has frequently heard colonists declare they
-would prefer being conquered by the English to their owing their
-safety to a nation whom they regarded with such aversion as the
-French; and the French troops which shortly afterward arrived in the
-colony, spreading around them vice and profligacy like a pestilence,
-debauching the wives and daughters of those who hospitably received
-them into their houses, and sowing dissension and eternal regrets in
-the bosoms of a hundred families, fully justified this deep-rooted
-hatred. The great number of persons in France who from selfish motives
-remain unmarried, and speculate upon the gratification of their feeble
-passions at the expense of the weak-minded and the miserable, must
-always render the nation an object of aversion among a remote people
-like the Dutch colonists of the Cape, whose ignorant simplicity
-necessarily exposes them to the shame of suffering by such immorality.
-
-But if the English were so much the objects of admiration to the
-people, their numerous and powerful fleets, which have for centuries
-exercised an undisputed omnipotence on the ocean, rendered them no less
-terrible to the authorities, who, to secure the company’s vessels from
-their dreaded cannon, commanded them to be removed from Table Bay to
-that of Saldanha, where, it was hoped, their chances of escape would be
-more numerous. On board of one of these our traveller embarked on the
-10th of May, and next morning arrived safely in the Bay of Saldanha,
-happy that the dreaded English flag had not encountered them on their
-passage.
-
-In the waters of this bay, which was then but seldom visited, great
-numbers of whales were continually seen sporting about; and Le
-Vaillant, whose hunting propensities were immediately awakened by the
-sight of a wild animal, frequently amused himself with firing at this
-new species of game. He could never perceive, however, that his balls
-produced the least effect upon them. But in Mutton Island, situated
-in the entrance of the bay, his fowlingpiece was more fortunate; for,
-from the prodigious number of rabbits with which that isle abounded, he
-found it easy on all occasions to kill as many as he pleased. In fact,
-this little isle became the warren of the whole fleet.
-
-Various species of game abounded in the neighbourhood, among which
-the principal were the partridge and the hare, and that small kind of
-gazelle denominated steen-bock by the colonists. The panther, too,
-following in the track of his prey, was found in great numbers in
-this district. A few days after his arrival Le Vaillant was invited
-by the commandant to join him in a hunting-party. Their chase was
-unsuccessful: they killed nothing. Towards the close of the day, as if
-fate had decreed that his courage should at once be put to the proof,
-Le Vaillant found himself separated from his companion; and continuing
-as he proceeded to fire at intervals, in the hope of arousing the game,
-he started a small gazelle, which his dog immediately pursued. The
-gazelle was quickly out of sight, but the dog, which still seemed to be
-upon his track, stopped on the skirts of a large thicket, and began to
-bark. Le Vaillant, who had now no doubt that the game had taken refuge
-there, hastened to the spot with all the eagerness of a sportsman.
-His presence encouraged the dog, and he every moment expected to see
-the gazelle appear; but at length, growing impatient, he entered
-into the thicket, beating the bushes aside with his fowlingpiece.
-It is difficult, however, to describe the terror and confusion he
-experienced when, instead of a timid and feeble gazelle, he saw before
-him a tremendous panther, whose glaring eyes were fixed upon him, while
-its outstretched neck, gaping jaws, and low, hollow growl seemed to
-announce its intention of springing. He regarded himself as lost. But
-the calm courage of his dog saved his life. It kept the animal at bay,
-hesitating between rage and fear, until the traveller had retreated out
-of the thicket. He then made towards the house of the commandant with
-all possible speed, frequently looking behind him as he ran.
-
-Another kind of terror shortly after seized upon him at sea. He was
-sitting at supper with the captain and the other officers, when
-a sudden strange motion was observed in the ship. Every person
-immediately ran on deck. The whole crew were alarmed. Some imagined
-they had run upon their anchors, and were beating against the rocks;
-others accounted for the shock in a different manner; but, perceiving
-from the position of the other ships that they were still exactly where
-they had been before, no one could conjecture the cause of what had
-happened, and their alarm was redoubled. Presently, however, upon more
-careful observation, a whale was discovered entangled by the tail,
-between the ship’s cables, and making furious efforts to disengage
-itself. This was the cause of the singular motion they had felt. All
-hands now rushed with harpoons into the boat; but the obscurity of the
-night retarding their movements, the whale, just as they were ready to
-attack it, succeeded in disentangling its tail, and escaped.
-
-In the entrance to Saldanha Bay there is a second small island, to
-which the colonists have given the name of the Marmotte. Upon this
-sequestered spot the captain of a Danish vessel, as our traveller
-had learned from tradition, having been long detained in the bay
-by contrary winds, had died there, and been buried by his crew. Le
-Vaillant now conceived the desire of visiting his grave. In sailing
-by this lonely rock, in the passage to and from Mutton Island, he
-had invariably been struck by a dull but startling sound, proceeding
-from the isle. He mentioned the circumstance to the captain. The
-good-natured navigator, anxious to oblige his guest, and perhaps
-himself desirous of beholding the Dane’s grave, replied, that if his
-wishes pointed that way they should immediately be gratified.
-
-Next morning, accordingly, they proceeded towards the island. In
-proportion as they advanced, the noise, increasing in loudness, more
-and more excited their curiosity; and the sound of the waves, which
-broke with great violence against the rocks, contributed not a little
-to swell the deep murmur, the cause of which no one could conjecture.
-They landed at length amid spray and foam, and, clambering up the
-cliffs, succeeded with much difficulty in reaching the summit. Here
-they beheld a sight such, in the opinion of our traveller, as no mortal
-ever beheld before. There arose in a moment from the surface of the
-earth an impenetrable cloud, which formed, at the height of forty
-feet above their heads, a prodigious canopy, or rather sky, of birds
-of every kind and colour. “Cormorants, sea-swallows, pelicans,--in
-one word,” says he, “all the winged creatures of Southern Africa were
-collected, I verily believe, in that spot. The screams of so enormous
-a multitude of birds mingling together formed an infernal species of
-music, which seemed to rend the ear with its piercing notes.
-
-“The alarm,” he adds, “was so much the greater, among these innumerable
-legions of birds, in that it was the females with whom we had
-principally to deal, it being the season of nesting. They had therefore
-their nests, their eggs, their young ones to defend, and were as fierce
-as so many harpies. They deafened us with their cries. They stooped
-upon the wing, and in darting past us, brushed our faces. It was in
-vain that we fired our pieces; nothing could frighten away this living
-cloud. We could scarcely take a single step without crushing some eggs
-or young birds: the earth was covered by them.”
-
-They found the caverns and hollows of the rocks inhabited by seals
-and sea-lions, of the latter of which they killed one specimen of
-enormous size. The various creeks of the island afforded a retreat to
-the manchot, a species of penguin, two feet in height, the wings of
-which, being entirely devoid of feathers, are only used in swimming. On
-land they hang down by the side of the body in a negligent manner, and
-communicate to the appearance and air of the bird something peculiarly
-sinister and funereal. These dismal-looking birds crowded every part
-of the island, but were nowhere so numerous as about the Dane’s tomb,
-around which they clustered as if to defend it from violation, and with
-their startling, melancholy cry, which mingled with the roar of the
-seal and the sea-lion, gave an air of sadness to the scene which deeply
-affected the soul. In itself the tomb was rude and simple,--a single
-block of stone, without name or inscription.
-
-During the whole of his stay on this part of the coast Le Vaillant
-was actively employed in adding to his collection, which, with his
-money, clothes, and papers, continued on board the Middleburg, the
-principal ship on the station. He had now been three months in this
-neighbourhood, which he had traversed in every direction. He still
-continued, however, to roam about with his dog and gun in search of
-birds and animals; but one day, on approaching the shore, the roaring
-of cannon struck his ear. He at first supposed it might be some _fête_
-given on board the ships, and hastened his march as much as possible,
-in the hope of sharing in the rejoicings. Upon his reaching the downs
-overlooking the bay, a very different spectacle presented itself. The
-Middleburg had just been blown up, and its burning fragments still
-filled the air, or lay widely scattered upon the sea! Here, then, was
-the end of all his hopes; for not only the results of his labours, but
-his fortune, the basis upon which all his projects were founded, was
-now destroyed.
-
-The cause of this calamity was soon discovered. The English fleet,
-having obtained intelligence of the retreat of the Dutch, had burst
-upon them so suddenly, that the terrified commanders had all, with the
-exception of Vangenep, the commander of the Middleburg, been taken
-unawares, and prevented from executing the orders they had received,
-rather to run aground, sink, or blow up their ships, than suffer
-them to fall into the hands of the enemy. Instead of this, they all
-abandoned their vessels at the first appearance of the English, the
-sailors, notwithstanding their apprehensions of the enemy, carrying
-away with them every thing they could bring on shore, though the desire
-to escape beyond reach of the English cannon quickly compelled them
-to cast their burdens on the ground. Everywhere the roads and paths
-were crowded with fugitives, and covered with the plunder which they
-had abandoned on the way. Among the rest, an English prisoner was
-flying from the shore. Le Vaillant met him, and having, as well as he
-could, questioned him in English respecting the horrible catastrophe,
-was expecting an answer, when a cannon-ball carried off his head, and
-the answer with it. A large dog, which was running about wild and
-trembling, apparently in search of his master, was next moment killed
-by another ball; and Le Vaillant, apprehensive that the third might
-reach himself, immediately fled over the downs, and ensconced himself
-behind an eminence.
-
-His position at this moment, it must be confessed, was sufficiently
-calamitous. To repair to the Cape, there to petition among a crowd of
-adventurers and unfortunates for pecuniary aid, was a step he could
-ill brook; yet, unless he submitted to this humiliation, what must
-be his fate? His family, his friends, his adopted country were two
-thousand leagues distant. His whole resources now consisted in his
-fowlingpiece, the clothes he then wore, and ten ducats. His misfortunes
-presented themselves to his mind in all their horrors, and he burst
-into tears,--a trait of weakness for which he might have pleaded the
-example of Homer’s and Virgil’s poetical heroes. An honest colonist,
-however, to whose house he repaired in this extremity, received him
-with a frank hospitality, which in some degree dissipated his chagrin;
-and he next day returned, though not without melancholy, to the first
-elements of his collection.
-
-His misfortunes were soon known at the Cape, and in a few days after
-this occurrence he was again placed, by the friendship of M. Boers,
-the fiscal, in a condition to act as if nothing had happened. He
-therefore directed his attention to the preparations required by his
-projected journey into the interior; and these, from the style in
-which he designed to travel, were numerous and considerable. He caused
-to be constructed two large four-wheeled wagons, covered above with
-double canvass, in one of which were placed five large packing-cases,
-which exactly filled the bottom of the vehicle, and could be opened
-without being removed. Over these was spread a mattress, on which he
-might occasionally sleep; and on this mattress, which during the day
-was rolled up in the back of the wagon, he placed the cabinet fitted
-up with drawers, in which he intended to preserve his insects. The
-other cases were filled with powder, lead for casting balls, tobacco,
-hardware, brandy, and toys. He had sixteen fowlingpieces, one of which,
-calculated for shooting elephants, rhinoceroses, and hippopotami,
-carried a quarter of a pound ball. Besides these he had several pairs
-of double-barrelled pistols, a scimitar, and a dagger.
-
-The second wagon carried his kitchen utensils, which, as he was
-rather addicted to luxurious eating, were numerous for a traveller: a
-gridiron, a frying-pan, two kettles, a caldron, tea-kettles, tea-pots,
-coffee-pots, basins, plates, dishes, &c. of porcelain. To supply these
-he laid in a large store of white sugar, coffee, tea, chocolate, and
-sugar-candy. His brandy and tobacco, to the use of which he was not
-at all addicted, were designed to purchase friends among the natives,
-and to keep his Hottentot attendants in good-humour. In addition
-to his wagons he had a great and a small tent, and numerous other
-conveniences, which he describes with great complacency. His train
-consisted of five Hottentots, nine dogs, and thirty oxen; but both his
-servants and his cattle were afterward considerably increased.
-
-Le Vaillant judged rightly, that on proceeding on such an expedition
-it would be imprudent to have any associate of equal rank. Few men are
-calculated by nature to become travellers, though every person whose
-constitution will endure fatigue may perform a journey; but there are
-still fewer who are gifted with those happy qualities which render
-men desirable companions in an undertaking whence fame is expected to
-be derived. Some, from feebleness of purpose, desert you almost at
-the outset, and, to conceal their own pusillanimity, represent you
-in their coteries as feeble, or selfish, or impracticable; others,
-more mischievous still, proceed so far that they cannot return, but,
-clinging to your skirts, contrive on every trying occasion to impede
-your movements, or cast a damp upon your energies; while a third class,
-too brave to feel alarm, too consistent to shrink from an enterprise
-begun, too honest to misrepresent you, will yet thwart your designs
-through obstinacy, or through the pardonable but fatal desire to follow
-a plan of their own. For these reasons our traveller, though solicited
-by many who would have gladly borne him company, steadily refused to
-admit of an associate, and determined to proceed on his journey alone.
-
-His preparations being at length completed, he took leave of his
-friends, and departed from Cape Town on the 18th of December, 1781.
-Whatever be the natural condition of man, his mind never so powerfully
-experiences the emotions of delight as when, escaping voluntarily from
-the restraints of society and civilization, he finds himself his own
-master, and trusting to his own prowess for protection, on the virgin
-bosom of the earth; for of all the enjoyments which Heaven bestows upon
-mankind perfect liberty is the sweetest. Something of this Le Vaillant
-now tasted; for, although still within the pale of the laws and the
-purlieus of government, he saw himself on the way to the freedom of
-the woods, and partook by anticipation of those pleasures which to the
-savage are, perhaps, an ample equivalent for the gratification which
-letters and refinement afford.
-
-The direction of his course lay along the eastern coast, towards the
-country of the Kaffers. At intervals the houses of colonists, with
-their orchards and plantations, appeared; but they became thinner
-as he advanced, while the woods and general scenery increased in
-magnificence; and the troops of wild animals, such as the zebra and
-the antelope, which stretched themselves out like armies on the plain,
-became strikingly more numerous and of more frequent occurrence. “We
-likewise,” says the traveller, “saw several ostriches; and the variety
-and the movements of these vast hordes were particularly amusing. My
-dogs fiercely pursued all these different species of animals, which,
-mingling together in their flight, often formed but one enormous
-column. This confusion, however, like that of theatrical machines,
-lasted but for a moment. I recalled my dogs, and in an instant each
-animal had regained his own herd, which constantly kept at a certain
-distance from all the others.” Among these animals were the blue
-antelope, the rarest and most beautiful of all the known species of
-gazelle.
-
-The habits of a small kind of tortoise, which afforded them the
-materials of various feasts during this part of the journey, are very
-remarkable. When the great heats of summer arrive, and dry up the ponds
-in which they pass the winter, they descend into the earth in search of
-humidity, deeper and deeper in proportion as the sun penetrates farther
-and farther into the soil. In this position they remain plunged in a
-kind of lethargy until the return of the rainy season; but those who
-require them for food may always, by digging, discover an ample supply.
-Their eggs, which they lay on the brink of the small lakes and ponds
-which they inhabit, and abandon to be hatched by the sun, are about the
-size of those of the pigeon, and extremely good eating.
-
-Le Vaillant was careful as he went along to augment his followers, both
-rational and irrational. He hired several new Hottentots, and purchased
-a number of oxen, with a milch-cow, and some she-goats, whose milk he
-foresaw might be an important possession in various circumstances. He
-likewise purchased a cock to awake him in the morning, and a monkey,
-which, besides serving as an almost unerring taster, his instinct
-enabling him immediately to distinguish such fruits and herbs as were
-innoxious and wholesome from such as were hurtful, was a still better
-watchman even than the dog, as the slightest noise, the most distant
-sign of danger, instantly awakened his terrors, and, by the cries and
-gestures of fear which it extorted from him, put his master upon his
-guard.
-
-Thus accompanied, he continued his journey towards the east, until his
-progress was stopped by the Dove’s River, upon the banks of which he
-determined to encamp until the decrease of its waters should render
-it fordable. His mode of life, which the hospitable invitations of
-the neighbouring colonists, to whom the sight of a stranger was like a
-spring in the desert, were not suffered to interrupt, was exceedingly
-agreeable. “I regulated,” says he, “the employment of my time, which
-was usually spent in the following manner:--At night, when not
-travelling, I slept in my wagon or in my tent; awakened by the break
-of day by my cock, my first business was to prepare my coffee, while
-the Hottentots, on their part, were busied about the cattle. As soon
-as the sun appeared I took my fowlingpiece, and, setting out with my
-monkey, beat about the neighbourhood until ten o’clock. On returning to
-my tent, I always found it well swept and clean. The superintendence
-of this part of my economy had been confided to the care of an old
-African whose name was Swanspoel, who, not being able to follow us
-in our rambles, was intrusted with the government of the camp, and
-invariably maintained it in good order. The furniture of my tent was
-not very abundant; a camp-stool or two, a table appropriated to the
-dissection of my animals, and a few instruments required in their
-preparation constituted the whole of its ornaments. From ten o’clock
-until twelve I was employed in my tents, classing in my drawers the
-insects I had found. I then dined. Placing upon my knees a small board
-covered with a napkin, a single dish of roasted or broiled meat was
-served up. After this frugal meal I returned to my work, if I had left
-any thing unfinished, and then amused myself with hunting until sunset.
-I then retired to my tent, lighted a candle, and spent an hour or two
-in describing my discoveries or the events of the day in my journal.
-Meanwhile, the Hottentots were employed in collecting the cattle, and
-penning them around the tents and wagons. The she-goats, as soon as
-they had been milked, lay down here and there among the dogs. Business
-being over, and the customary great fire kindled, we gathered together
-in a circle. I then took my tea; my people joyously smoked their
-pipes, and for my amusement related stories, the humorous absurdity
-of which almost made me crack my sides with laughter. I delighted to
-encourage them, and they were by no means timid with me, as I was
-careful to treat them with frankness, cordiality, and attention. On
-many occasions, in fact, when the beauty of the evening succeeding the
-fatigues of the day had put me in good-humour with myself and with
-every thing about me, I involuntarily yielded to the spell, and gently
-cherished the illusion. At such moments every one disputed with his
-neighbour for the honour of amusing me by his superior wit; and by the
-profound silence which reigned among us, the able story-teller might
-discover how highly we appreciated his art. I know not what powerful
-attraction continually leads my memory back to those peaceful days!
-I still imagine myself in the midst of my camp, surrounded by my
-people and my animals; an agreeable site, a mountain, a tree,--nay,
-even a plant, a flower, or a fragment of rock scattered here and
-there,--nothing escapes from my memory; and this spectacle, which daily
-grows more and more affecting, amuses me, follows me into all places,
-and has often made me forget what I have suffered from men who call
-themselves civilized.”
-
-Provisions were plentiful; partridges as large as pheasants, and
-two kinds of antelopes, whose flesh was tender and nourishing. The
-colonists of the vicinity, rendered generous by abundance, gratuitously
-furnished him with an ample provision of milk, fruit, and vegetables,
-which the traveller shared with his monkey and his Hottentots. From
-this position, however, he was at length, by the shrinking of the
-river, enabled to remove; and, continuing to pursue his route in the
-same direction as before, he crossed several diminutive streams, and
-arrived on the banks of the river Gaurits, where, the stream not being
-fordable, he encamped for three days among groves of mimosa-trees.
-Perceiving no sign of abatement in the waters, he then constructed a
-raft, upon which his wagons and baggage were ferried over, while the
-oxen and other animals swam across.
-
-His road during this part of the journey lay at no great distance from
-the sea, which therefore communicated a refreshing coolness to the
-breezes, presented him at intervals with magnificent prospects, and
-at the same time administered pabulum to his passion for shooting,
-its solitary margin affording a retreat to thousands of flamingoes
-and pelicans. His animals, meanwhile, fared luxuriously. The soil
-throughout these districts was remarkable for its fertility; but a
-small canton, a little to the east of Mossel Bay, called the country of
-the Auteniquas, surpassed in beauty and magnificence all the landscapes
-of southern Africa. Having with considerable toil ascended to the
-summit of a mountain, “we were well repaid,” says Le Vaillant, “for
-the fatigue which we had undergone. Our admiration was excited by the
-loveliest country in the world. In the distance appeared the chain of
-mountains covered with forests, which bounded the prospect on the west;
-beneath our feet the eye wandered over an immense valley, the aspect
-of which was diversified by hillocks, infinitely varied in form, and
-descending in wavy swells towards the sea. Richly enamelled meadows
-and splendid pasture-grounds still further increased the beauty of
-this magnificent landscape. I was literally in ecstasy. This country
-bears the name of Auteniquas, which, in the Hottentot idiom, signifies
-‘the man laden with honey;’ and, in fact, we could not proceed a
-single step without beholding a thousand swarms of bees. The flowers
-grew in myriads, and the mingled perfume which exhaled from them, and
-deliciously intoxicated the senses, their colours, their variety, the
-cool pure air which we breathed, every thing united to arrest our
-footsteps. Nature has bestowed the charms of fairy-land upon this spot.
-Almost every flower was filled with exquisite juices, and furnished the
-bees with abundant materials for the fabrication of their honey, which
-they deposited in every hollow rock and tree.”
-
-This description, which no doubt falls far short of the reality--for
-what language can equal the beauties of nature?--reminds me strongly
-of Spenser’s noble picture of the Gardens of Adonis. Poetry itself,
-however, with all its metaphors and picturesque expressions, is faint
-and dim compared with the splendour of a summer landscape, where earth,
-air, and sea unite their rich hues and sublime aspect to entrance and
-dazzle the eye. But our old bard, whom no man ever excelled in minute
-painting of inanimate nature, contrives, by careful and repeated
-touches, to unfold before the imagination an exquisite view. “There,”
-says he, speaking of the gardens of the Assyrian youth,
-
- “There is continual spring, and harvest there
- Continual, both meeting at one time:
- For both the boughs do laughing blossoms bear
- And with fresh flowers deck the wanton prime,
- And eke at once the heavy trees they climb,
- Which seem to labour under their fruit’s load:
- The while the joyous birds make their pastime,
- Among the shady leaves, their sweet abode,
- And their true loves without suspicion tell abroad.
-
- * * * * *
-
- And all about grew every sort of flower,
- To which sad lovers were transformed of yore,” &c.
-
-The dwellings which the few colonists, who had been led by poverty so
-far from the Cape, erected in the midst of this smiling scene, offered
-a striking contrast with it. Huts covered with earth, like the dens
-of wild animals, in which the inhabitants passed the night stretched
-upon a buffalo’s hide, afforded shelter to men who lived in plenty,
-and were thus badly lodged from mere idleness. It is now inhabited by
-Englishmen, and the contrast, it may well be imagined, no longer exists.
-
-Le Vaillant, who apprehended that the country of the Auteniquas
-might prove a kind of Capua to his followers, made no stay in it,
-but pushed forward with all speed, and encamped on the skirts of an
-immense forest. This wood abounded with touracos, a species of bird
-of which he had hitherto been able to procure no specimen. His first
-business therefore was, if possible, to possess himself of this bird.
-His scientific ardour was kindled. He scoured the woods. The touraco
-presented itself before him, but its habits unfortunately inclining it
-always to perch upon the tops of the loftiest trees, he could never
-succeed in bringing it down. One afternoon, however, his eagerness
-increasing with his disappointments, he determined not to desist from
-the pursuit of his prey, and the bird, which appeared to delight in
-mocking him, confined itself to short flights, flitting from tree to
-tree, until it had drawn him to a considerable distance from his camp.
-Growing impatient, at length the traveller, though still believing
-the bird beyond the reach of his fowlingpiece, fired, and had the
-unexpected satisfaction of seeing it drop from the tree. His joy now
-knew no bounds. He rushed on to snatch up his prey,
-
- Thorough bush, thorough briar,
-
-until his hands and legs were dripping with blood; but when he came
-up to the spot where the touraco should have been, he could discover
-nothing. He searched the surrounding thickets again and again; he
-proceeded farther, he returned, he examined the same spots twenty
-times, he peeped into every bush, into every hole; his labour was
-in vain. No touraco. “I was,” says he, “in despair, and the thick
-brushwood and thorny shrubs, which had now covered even my very face
-with blood, had irritated me in an indescribable manner. Nothing less
-than the appearance of a lion or a tiger could at that moment have
-calmed my rage. That a wretched bird, which, after so many wishes
-and so much toil, I had at length succeeded in bringing down, should
-after all escape from me in so unaccountable a manner! I struck my
-fowlingpiece against the earth, and stamped with passion. All at once
-the ground gave way under my feet; I disappeared, and sunk, with my
-arms in my hand, into a pit twelve feet deep. Astonishment, and the
-pain caused by the fall, now succeeded my rage. I saw myself in one
-of those covered pitfalls which the Hottentots construct for the
-taking of wild beasts, particularly the elephant. When I had recovered
-from my surprise I began to reflect upon the means of escaping, and
-congratulated myself that I had not fallen upon the sharp stake fixed
-up at the bottom of the pit to impale the wild animals, and that I
-found no company in the snare. But as it was every moment possible that
-some might arrive, particularly during the night, should I be compelled
-to remain there so long, my terrors quickly increased as darkness
-approached, and retarded the execution of the only plan I could imagine
-for extricating myself without assistance; this was to cut out a kind
-of steps with my sabre in the sides of the pit, but this operation
-would be a tedious one. In this dilemma the idea of the only rational
-plan suggested itself; which was, to pick up and load my fusil. I did
-so, and fired shot after shot. It was possible I might be heard by
-my attendants. I therefore listened from time to time with the most
-painful anxiety and a palpitating heart, in order to discover whether
-my signal had been heard. At last two shots re-echoed through the wood,
-and overwhelmed me with joy. I now continued firing at intervals, in
-order to guide my deliverers to the spot, and in a short time they
-arrived, armed to the teeth, and full of uneasiness and alarm.”
-
-He was immediately delivered from the elephant-trap; but having
-incurred so much risk in searching for the touraco, he made it a point
-of honour not to be balked, and recommencing his scrutiny, with the
-dogs which had arrived with his servants, found it jammed close under
-a small bush. He immediately seized upon his prey, and the pleasure of
-possessing this new and rare bird very quickly obliterated from his
-memory the trouble and danger which it had cost him.
-
-In this encampment they remained until the setting in of the rains,
-when storms, accompanied by tremendous thunder, succeeded each other
-with singular rapidity. The thunderbolt several times fell near them
-in the forest. The whole country round was flooded, but they still
-clung to their encampment, until the whole was at length overflowed
-during the night. They then removed; but could proceed but a very short
-distance, for every paltry stream was now swelled to a furious torrent,
-which rushed down with impetuosity from the hills, rolling along with
-it mud, trees, and fragments of rock, and threatening whoever should
-attempt to traverse them with destruction. Meanwhile his cattle,
-pressed by hunger, had escaped from the camp; his dogs, which no degree
-of want could estrange, were reduced to skeletons, and fought with each
-other for the most revolting food; his Hottentots, less affectionate
-than the dogs, began to murmur, but could discover no just cause of
-complaint, and were but little disposed to aid themselves. A drowned
-buffalo, however, which was accidentally found in one of the torrents,
-came opportunely to appease their hunger; they dragged it on
-shore with shouts of joy, and having cut it in pieces, and given the
-dogs their share, they feasted upon the remainder and were happy.
-
-At length the month of March arrived, and the rains abated. The
-torrents, ceasing to receive their aliments from the clouds--for,
-like the Nile, they are strictly διϊὲες--shrunk to their ordinary
-insignificance, the camp was immediately put in motion, and pushing
-onwards for a few leagues, they discovered a more convenient site on
-the acclivity of a hill, where they remained some time to recruit
-themselves and their cattle. Le Vaillant travelled for pleasure,
-and was gifted with the happy faculty of discovering at a glance
-its springs and sources. Near the site of his camp there was a
-small eminence, the summit of which was crowned with a diminutive
-grove, where the trees had so grown into each other that the whole
-seemed one solid mass of foliage. He immediately conceived the idea
-of transforming this thicket into a palace; and causing a covered
-entrance to be cut into the centre, he there hewed out two large square
-apartments, one of which was immediately converted into a study, and
-the other into a kitchen. If we keep out of sight the kitchen, and the
-share which art had in its formation, Spenser has admirably described
-this arbour, as well as the hill on which it stood:
-
- Right in the middest of that paradise
- There stood a stately mount, on whose round top
- A gloomy grove of myrtle-trees did rise,
- Whose shady boughs sharp steel did never lop,
- Nor wicked beasts their tender buds did crop.
- But like a girlond compassed the height,
- And from their fruitful sides sweet gum did drop,
- That all the ground, with precious dew bedight,
- Threw forth most dainty odours and most sweet delight.
-
- And in the thickest covert of that shade
- There was a pleasant arbour, not by art,
- But of the trees’ own inclination, made,
- Which knitting their rank branches, part to part,
- With wanton ivy-twine entrailed athwart,
- And eglantine and caprifole among,
- Fashioned above within their inmost part,
- That neither Phœbus’ beams could through them throng,
- Nor Æolus’ sharp blast could work them any wrong.
-
-But, whatever charms his arbours might possess for him, his plans
-rendered it necessary soon to leave them. He therefore, after spending
-a pleasant week with M. Mulder, the last of the colonists in his route,
-pushed on towards the Black River, which he crossed on rafts, and at
-length found himself beyond the Dutch settlements. Here an accident
-occurred which might at once have terminated his journey. In toiling
-up a rough, precipitous mountain, where it was found necessary to yoke
-twenty oxen to a wagon, the traces of the principal vehicle snapped
-asunder, immediately in front of the great shaft-oxen, which being
-unable to resist the enormous weight to which they were attached,
-reeled back, and the wagon at once rolled down along the edge of an
-abyss; while Le Vaillant and his whole party stood still, watching,
-with uplifted hands and looks of dismay, each shock and slide of
-the cumbrous machine, which, after twenty hair-breadth escapes, ran
-against a large rock on the edge of the torrent, and stopped, without
-receiving any material injury. Loss of time, therefore, was the only
-injury he sustained. By patience and industry they succeeded in passing
-the mountain, which being effected, they descended into a magnificent
-country, watered by numerous rivers, covered with woods, abounding in
-game, and affording numerous specimens of birds and quadrupeds unknown
-to natural history.
-
-In the midst of this new scene he was overtaken by disease. Though of
-a disposition naturally intrepid, the idea that he might be destined
-to perish in the wilderness, surrounded by savages, two thousand
-leagues from home, disturbed his imagination. Charles the Twelfth of
-Sweden, attacked by a fever when flying through the Ukraine after the
-battle of Pultowa, experienced a diminution of courage, and, unless my
-memory deceive me, was seen to shed tears; and Cæsar, when the fit, as
-Shakspeare has it, was on him, cried, “Give me some drink, Titinius,
-like a sick girl.” Le Vaillant, therefore, had good authority for
-his melancholy. His temperament, moreover, in proportion as it was
-more susceptible of exhilarating impressions in health, was proner in
-sickness to yield to despondency. He was, besides, entirely ignorant
-of medicine; knew nothing of the nature of the disease by which he
-was attacked; and was surrounded by persons still more ignorant than
-himself. All he could do, therefore, was to remain quiet, and allow
-nature to work. For twelve days he lingered on the confines of life
-and death, kept in a perpetual bath of perspiration by the heat of the
-atmosphere; and this heat was his Pæon and Æsculapius, for by its sole
-aid the fever, which had so fiercely menaced him, was entirely subdued.
-However, it is extremely probable that he owed the disease as well as
-the remedy to the climate. To enhance his misfortunes, his Hottentots
-were at the same time attacked by dysentery; but, by strictly attending
-to regimen, a difficult task to a gross and sensual people, they all,
-without exception, recovered.
-
-This danger being removed, they proceeded on their journey, the
-interest of which was every day increased by the greater solitude
-of the scene, and the more frequent occurrence of wild animals, or
-their traces. I would willingly describe at length the pleasures and
-the adventures of this romantic excursion; but my plan forbids me to
-indulge in voluminous details, and I want the art to present by a few
-masterly strokes the whole of a complicated and animated scene to the
-mind. However, I must attempt what I can. After wandering a full month
-in a vast plain, intersected by forests, and, in a manner, walled
-round by precipices, they were driven back upon their own footsteps,
-fatigued and mortified, and unable to conjecture in what direction it
-would be possible to advance. While they were in this humour, they
-discovered in their route the footmarks of a herd of elephants. To
-Le Vaillant, who had never yet enjoyed the satisfaction of hunting
-this enormous animal, though it might, perhaps, be said to have
-constituted one of his principal reasons for travelling in Africa, the
-sight was sufficient to restore his equanimity. The order for halting
-was immediately given, and having, as soon as the tents were pitched,
-selected five of his best marksmen, our traveller set out in pursuit of
-the game.
-
-The traces were so fresh and striking, that they had no difficulty in
-following them. They therefore pushed on vigorously, expecting every
-moment to come in sight of the herd. But still they saw nothing; and
-night coming on, they bivouacked in the woods, and having supped gayly,
-lay down to sleep, though not without considerable agitation and alarm.
-At every puff of wind rustling through the leaves, at every hum of a
-beetle, the whole party was roused, and put upon its guard. It was
-feared that the monsters of which they were in search might rush upon
-them unawares, and trample them to atoms. However, the night passed
-away, as did likewise the day and night ensuing, without their being
-disturbed by any thing more formidable than a stray buffalo, which
-approaching the fire, and discovering that it was in the vicinity of
-man, rushed back with all speed into the woods.
-
-On the third day, after a painful march among briers and underwood,
-they arrived in a rather open part of the forest, when one of the
-Hottentots, who had climbed up into a tree to reconnoitre, perceived
-the herd in the distance, and putting his finger on his lips to enjoin
-silence, informed them by opening and closing his hand of the number
-of the elephants. He then came down; a council was held; and it was
-determined they should approach them on the lee-side that they might
-not be discovered. The Hottentot now conducted Le Vaillant through
-the bushes to a small knoll, and desiring him to cast his eyes in a
-certain direction, pointed out an enormous elephant not many paces
-distant. At first, however, Le Vaillant could see nothing; or, rather,
-he mistook what he saw of the animal for a portion of the rock by
-which it stood. But when at length a slight motion had corrected his
-mistake, he distinguished the head and enormous tusks of the beast
-turned towards him. He instantly levelled his musket, and, aiming at
-the brain, fired, and the elephant dropped down dead. The report of the
-gun put the whole herd, consisting of about thirty, to instant flight;
-and our traveller beheld with amazement their huge ears flapping the
-air with a violence in proportion to the rapidity of their motion.
-
-The whole party now experienced that joyous alacrity which man always
-feels when engaged in the work of destruction. They fired upon the
-enemy, for as such the beasts were now to be regarded, and the sight
-of the excrements mingled with blood, which escaped from the wounded
-animal, and informed them that their bullets had taken effect,
-delighted them exceedingly. Their pursuit now became more eager. The
-elephant, writhing with pain, at one moment crouched to the earth, at
-another rose, but only to fall again. The hunters, however, who hung
-close upon his haunches, constantly by fresh volleys compelled him to
-rise. In this condition he rushed through the woods, snapping off, or
-uprooting trees in his passage. At length, becoming furious with pain,
-he turned round upon his pursuers, who immediately fled in their turn.
-Le Vaillant, more eager than the rest, had unhappily advanced before
-them, and was now but twenty-five paces from the animal. His gun of
-thirty pounds’ weight impeded his movements. The enemy gained upon
-him every moment. His followers gave him up for lost; but just as the
-elephant had overtaken him, he dropped down, and crept under the trunk
-of a fallen tree, over which the furious beast, whose great height
-prevents it, at least in such situations, from seeing under its feet,
-bounded in an instant. Being terrified, however, by the noise of the
-Hottentots, it had not advanced many paces before it stopped, and with
-a wild but searching eye, began to reconnoitre the spot. Our traveller
-had his long gun in his hand, and might, had he chosen, have fired
-upon his enemy; but he knew that instant destruction must ensue should
-he miss his aim, and he therefore preferred trusting to the chances
-of concealment. Presently the elephant faced about, and drew near the
-tree; but he again leaped over it without perceiving Le Vaillant, who,
-as soon as he retreated to a sufficient distance, sprang from his
-hiding-place, and shot him in the flank. Notwithstanding all this, he
-succeeded in effecting his escape, though his bloody traces too clearly
-showed the terrible condition to which their balls had reduced him. In
-this critical conjuncture, Klaas, his principal Hottentot, exhibited
-proofs of courage and affection which infinitely endeared him to his
-master, who thenceforward regarded him more in the light of a brother
-than a servant.
-
-To those who have all their lives been accustomed to live upon the
-flesh of the ox and the sheep, elephant cutlets may appear revolting;
-but in the deserts of Africa, where imperious hunger silences the
-objections of prejudice, and teaches man to regard the whole animal
-creation as his farmyard, the palate quickly accommodates itself to
-the viands within its reach, and even learns to discover delicacy in
-things which, in a fashionable dining-room, it might have loathed.
-However this may be, Le Vaillant and his Hottentots, whose appetites
-were grievously sharpened by fatigue, immediately employed themselves
-in cutting up and cooking their game. For the former, as the most
-dainty personage of the party, a few slices off the trunk were broiled,
-and he found them so exquisite that, being as I have already said,
-to a certain degree, an epicure, they gave him a taste for elephant
-hunting, which he afterward seized every occasion of indulging. But he
-was informed by Klaas that by far the greatest delicacy, which would
-cause him to forget the flavour of the trunk, was yet to come. This
-consisted of the elephant’s foot, which his people undertook to dress
-for his breakfast.
-
-The reader who has perused Captain Cook’s “Voyages in the South Seas,”
-or Ledyard, or the “Histoire Naturelle de l’Homme” of Lesson, will
-remember the description given by those navigators of the curious
-subterranean ovens employed by the native islanders in cooking. A large
-opening is made in the earth, which is filled with red-hot stones or
-charcoal, and upon these a great fire is kept up for several hours.
-The hole is then cleared, and the thing which is to be baked inserted
-in the centre. Then the top is again closed, and a blazing fire once
-more kindled; which, having burned during a great part of the night,
-is at length extinguished, when the oven is opened, and the meat taken
-out, more exquisitely cooked than any man accustomed to the ordinary
-culinary processes can conceive.
-
-Such was the process by which the elephant’s feet were baked for Le
-Vaillant. When they presented him one for breakfast, “The cooking,”
-says he, “had enlarged it prodigiously; I could scarcely recognise
-the form. But it looked so nice, and exhaled so delicious an odour,
-that I was impatient to taste it. It was a breakfast for a king. I
-had heard much of the excellence of bears’ feet, but could not have
-conceived that an animal so awkward, so material as the elephant, could
-have afforded so tender, so delicate a meat. Never have our modern
-Luculluses, thought I, seen any thing comparable upon their tables; it
-is in vain that they confound and reverse the seasons by the force of
-gold, and lay all the countries in the world under contribution: there
-are bounds to their craving sensuality; they have never been able
-to reach this point.” I do not see, however, what should prevent our
-rearing elephants, as we rear sheep and oxen, for the slaughter; in
-which case many persons, not ambitious of rivalling Lucullus in luxury,
-might enjoy the sight of this _ne plus ultra_ of cooking upon their
-tables.
-
-In proceeding eastward from this spot they encountered a horde of
-wandering Hottentots, with whose women our traveller’s followers, now
-considerably increased in number, contracted connexions with that
-easy effrontery which, at first consideration, would appear to be an
-attribute peculiar to civilized man. Le Vaillant is the apologist
-of the Hottentots; they were the instruments of his pleasure. His
-imagination associated them with romantic wanderings, with adventures,
-with dangers, with escapes; and when, after his return to France, he
-wished to remember and paint them in their true colours, the idea
-that they had been his companions, that they had suffered privations,
-and tasted of many enjoyments together, rushed into his mind, and
-blinded his judgment by interesting his heart. This natural result
-is not dishonourable to his feelings; but it can have no influence
-with me. I have received from them neither good nor harm. I must,
-therefore, confess that in my estimation they rank very low, even in
-the scale of savage excellence. Timid even to cowardliness, they are
-not urged by their temperament towards violence and bloodshed: but
-this induces cringing and dastardly habits, and causes them to desert
-their dearest friends when in danger. Gratitude is a plant which
-flourishes only in noble breasts. Among the Hottentots it is feeble
-and shortlived, unless nourished by a constant stream of benefits.
-That they have little religion, or superstition, though no proof of
-immorality, is an incontrovertible evidence of want of capacity and
-genius; for intellect, wherever it exists, is skilful in the discovery
-of intellect, and few, even among savage nations, are cursed with
-perceptions so obtuse that they cannot, if I may venture so to express
-myself, discover the footsteps of the sovereign intellect among the
-phenomena of the visible world. How far the profound indifference in
-which they are said to grovel on this point may exist, however, I will
-not presume to determine. It is possible that travellers may sometimes
-make these and similar savages the interpreters of their own thoughts.
-
-On approaching the country of the Kaffers, a brave and warlike people,
-exceedingly hostile to the Hottentots, whom they regarded as the slaves
-and spies of the colonists, the most terrible apprehensions were
-awakened in his camp. Night and day they were on the alert. Every sound
-which startled the darkness was transformed, by their terror, into the
-footsteps of a Kaffer; and if they did not at once burst into open
-mutiny against their chief, it was rather the fear of the dangers to
-which the loss of him might expose them, than any ideas of discipline
-or fidelity, that restrained them.
-
-Le Vaillant’s determination, nevertheless, still was to advance into
-Kaffraria; but finding after repeated endeavours that no argument
-could prevail upon his attendants, a very small number excepted, to
-accompany him, he contented himself with despatching an envoy to the
-Kaffer king, or chief. Meanwhile he continued to roam about on the
-frontiers, hunting, shooting, and adding to his collections. Here he
-encountered the fury of an African tempest. “The rain,” he observes,
-“fell all night in such abundance, that, in spite of all our efforts,
-it extinguished our fires. Our dogs made an indescribable clamour, and
-kept us awake all night, though no wild beast appeared. I have observed
-that during these rainy nights the lion, the tiger, and the hyena are
-never heard; but the danger is increased twofold; for, as they still
-roam about, they thus fall suddenly and unexpectedly on their prey.
-Still further to increase the fright which this unfortunate fact must
-occasion, the great humidity almost entirely deprives the dogs of the
-power of smelling, which renders them of little use. Of this danger my
-people were well aware, and therefore laboured with remarkable energy
-to keep alive the fires.
-
-“It must be confessed,” he continues, “that the stormy nights of the
-African deserts are the very image of desolation, and that terror, on
-such occasions, involuntarily comes over one. When you are overtaken by
-these deluges, your tents and mats are quickly drenched and overflowed;
-a continual succession of lightning-flashes causes you twenty times in
-a minute to pass abruptly and suddenly from the most terrific light to
-entire darkness: the deafening roarings of the thunder, which burst
-from every side with horrible din, roll, as it were, against each
-other, are multiplied by the echoes, and hurled from peak to peak; the
-howling of the domestic animals; short intervals of fearful silence;
-every thing concurs to render those moments more melancholy. The danger
-to be apprehended from wild beasts still further increases the terror;
-and nothing but day can lessen the alarm, and restore nature to her
-tranquillity.”
-
-In the interim between the departure and return of his messengers to
-the Kaffer chief, he fell in with a horde of wild Hottentots whom he
-denominates Gonaquas. A small party of them arrived at his camp during
-the night, and on awaking in the morning he saw himself with surprise
-surrounded by about twenty strange savages. They were accompanied by
-their chief, who advanced in a polite manner to pay his respects to the
-traveller, while the women, at once curious and timid, followed close
-behind, adorned with all their ornaments. Their bodies, the greater
-part of which was naked, were all newly anointed and sprinkled with
-red powder, which exhaled an agreeable perfume; while their faces had
-been painted in a variety of fashions. Each came, in the manner of the
-East, bringing or bearing a present. From one he received a number of
-ostrich’s eggs, a lamb from a second, while a third presented him with
-a quantity of milk in baskets. These baskets, woven with exquisite
-ingenuity with fine reeds or roots, are of so close a texture, that
-they may be used in carrying water. The chief’s present consisted of
-a handful of ostrich feathers of rare beauty, which Le Vaillant, to
-show how highly he valued them, immediately fixed in his hat, instead
-of his own plume. He then, in return, laid before the old chief, whose
-name was Haabas, several pounds of tobacco, which the Gonaqua at once
-distributed in equal portions among his people, reserving merely his
-own share, which did not exceed any other person’s, for himself. Other
-gifts, highly valued by savages, such as tinder-boxes, knives, beads,
-and bracelets, were added to the tobacco, and diffused universal joy
-among the tribe.
-
-Among the women there was a girl of sixteen, who, by the pleasure
-with which she seemed to regard his person, particularly attracted
-the attention of Le Vaillant. Considered as an African she might be
-pronounced beautiful, and her form, which would have tempted the pencil
-of an Albano, possessed all those amorous contours which we admire in
-the Graces. Our traveller appears to have been in general but little
-susceptible of the charms of women; but the beautiful Gonaqua quickly
-caused him to feel that when accompanied by a desire to please, female
-attractions are everywhere irresistible, and to express his admiration
-he bestowed upon the savage beauty the name of Narina, which, in the
-Hottentot idiom, signifies “a flower.” Presents, it may be easily
-imagined, were not spared in this instance. The riches of his camp were
-in her power,--shawls, necklaces, girdles, every ornament which his
-European taste loved to contemplate on the female form, was lavished
-on Narina, who, in the intoxicating delight of the moment, scarcely
-knew whether she was in heaven or earth. She felt her arms, her feet,
-her head; and the touch of her dress and ornaments caused fresh
-pleasure every moment. He then produced a small mirror, more faithful
-than the lake or stream which had hitherto served for this purpose, and
-put the finishing stroke to the picture by showing her her own image
-reflected from its surface. His days now passed in one uninterrupted
-series of feasts, visits, dances, amusements of every kind. Nothing
-could have been more favourable to his views of studying Hottentot
-manners; but with respect to his ulterior design of penetrating far
-into the solitudes of the desert, the case was different, for his
-followers contracted in these Circean bowers a disease from which
-their chief himself, perhaps, was not altogether exempt; that is, an
-effeminate aversion to fatigue, a secret repugnance to toil, and, what
-was still worse, the habit of viewing dangers in the light thrown over
-them by an enamoured fancy, which distorts even more powerfully than
-the mirage of the desert.
-
-It was now three weeks since the departure of his messengers for
-Kaffer-land, and he began to entertain apprehensions for their safety.
-His attendants, who partook of the same fears, became more than ever
-averse to advance eastward, and, as he was quickly informed by Klaas,
-began to concert among themselves various schemes of desertion. The
-camp at this period was stationed near a river, on the rich banks of
-which his oxen were turned out to graze, under the care of several
-Hottentots, who were kept by their fear of the Kaffers in a strict
-attention to their duty. One day, when Le Vaillant was accidentally
-detained in his tent, a messenger from the herdsmen arrived in
-breathless haste, to announce the fearful intelligence that a party of
-the enemy was approaching, and had already reached the opposite side
-of the river. Klaas and four fusileers were immediately despatched to
-reconnoitre, while the traveller called out and examined his forces
-and his arms, and prepared to give the Kaffers a warm reception should
-their intentions be found to be hostile; but it was shortly discovered
-that they had been invited to his camp by his envoys, whom they had
-accordingly accompanied on their return.
-
-Our traveller had with laudable patience acquired a knowledge of the
-Hottentot language, but the people who now thronged his camp spoke
-a different dialect, not one word of which could he conjecture the
-meaning. But the languages of savages are easy in proportion as
-they are simple and poor, and the acquisition of Greek or Arabic
-would probably cost more pains and study than would render a man
-master of half the uncultivated languages of the world. It was not
-long, therefore, before he learned to disentangle, as it were, the
-intertwisted sounds which re-echoed around him, and to assign a meaning
-to them. The Kaffers employed much gesticulation and grimace in
-speaking, which aided him, likewise, in divining their thoughts; and he
-soon began to entertain reasonable hopes that an interpreter might not
-always be necessary in his intercourse with this lively people.
-
-He imagined that his firearms, and the skill with which he made use of
-them, inspired the Kaffers with wonder; but he was no doubt mistaken.
-His fancy placed him among those simple tribes described by early
-travellers and navigators, to whom our weapons were utterly unknown;
-while the savages who were now his guests had frequently fought hand
-to hand with the colonists, and not only beheld their firearms, but
-learned, at the expense of their blood, how destructive they were.
-This illusion, however, appears to have afforded him pleasure, and
-he honestly cherished it; and as no injury can arise from it to the
-reader, it will have been sufficient to allude to it thus briefly.
-
-The history of his intercourse with this people affords a striking
-example of the incalculable benefits which one civilized man, who
-possessed courage to make the experiment, might confer upon a wild
-nation, whose Menû or Manco Capæ he would thus become. For genius the
-Kaffers are decidedly superior to the Hottentots; and if the picture
-which Le Vaillant draws of them be correct, it would require no very
-extraordinary impulse to launch them into the career of civilization.
-He saw them, however, but for a moment, as it were; for not long after
-their arrival, it was discovered that several half-castes, or bastards,
-as they are termed at the Cape, had been commissioned by the colonists
-to insinuate themselves into his camp, for the purpose of discovering
-whether or not he was entering into an alliance with the Kaffers. This,
-at least, was the interpretation which, after all the information
-he could obtain, he was induced to put upon the matter; but, like
-Rousseau, he seems to have amused himself with the idea that spies
-were continually placed upon his movements, and by this hypothesis he
-explained many little events resulting much less from design than from
-a fortuitous concourse of circumstances. Still, the poor Kaffers, who
-had suffered grievously by the Dutch, fully participated in his alarm,
-and made a precipitate retreat into their own country, but not before
-they had given him a pressing invitation to follow them.
-
-Upon considering the state of the camp, and the inclinations of his
-people, it was judged imprudent to attempt against their will to lead
-them away farther from the colony; and therefore, selecting from
-among them a small number of the bravest, and leaving the remainder
-under the care of Swanspoel, he departed on his long-desired journey
-into Kaffer-land. Upon quitting the encampment they ascended the
-banks of the Great Fish River, and having forded its stream, entered
-Kaffer-land, moving in a north-easterly direction. The whole plain
-was covered with mimosa-trees, which, as Burckhardt observes, cast
-but a scanty shade. They were, therefore, greatly exposed to the heat
-of the sun, which was now intense. After marching for several days
-in this manner through a country which had once been inhabited, but
-was deserted now, and abandoned to the wild beasts, fires at night,
-deserted kraal, gardens overrun with weeds, and fields, the culture
-of which had recently been interrupted, inspired the belief that some
-half-stationary, half-wandering hordes must be in the neighbourhood.
-
-The fatigue of the journey, united with a scarcity of water, began at
-length to cause the luxuries of the camp and the neighbourhood of the
-Great Fish River to be regretted; but although Le Vaillant himself
-evidently shared to a certain degree in these regrets, he was still
-unwilling to relinquish his enterprise before he caught a single
-glimpse of the Kaffers. At length a small party was discovered, whose
-dread of the whites equalled at least the terror with which they
-themselves inspired the pusillanimous Hottentots. From these men Le
-Vaillant learned that the greater part of the nation had retreated
-far into the interior, and as his imagination, at this time, seems to
-have exaggerated every difficulty and danger, for he was weary of the
-journey, he gladly seized upon the first excuse for relinquishing his
-enterprise, and returned with all possible celerity to his camp.
-
-All his thoughts and wishes now pointed towards the Cape. Narina and
-the friendly Gonaquas in vain exerted their influence. The desert had
-lost its charms. For the moment he was weary of travelling. However,
-not to encounter in vain the fatigue of a long journey, he formed the
-design of verging a little to the north of his former route, through
-the immense solitudes of the Sneuw Bergen. The caravan, therefore,
-quitted the vicinity of the sea, and proceeded towards the west through
-forests of mimosa-trees, which were then in full flower, and imparted
-all the charms of summer to the landscape. The extreme silence of the
-nights during this part of the journey was sublime. All the functions
-of life seemed for the time to be suspended; except that, at intervals,
-the roaring of the lion resounded through the forests, startling the
-echoes, and according to the interpretation of the fancy, hushing the
-whole scene with terror.
-
-At length, on the 3d of January, 1782, he discovered in the north-west
-the formidable summits of the Sneuw Bergen, which, though surrounded
-on all sides by burning plains, it being in those southern latitudes
-the height of summer, bore still upon its sides long ridges of snow.
-Prodigious herds of antelopes, amounting to more than fifty thousand
-in number, now crossed their route, driven by insufferable heat and
-drought towards the north. The scenery every league became more dreary.
-Wastes of sand, rocks piled upon each other, chasms, precipices,
-barrenness, sublimity, but no pasturage; and men in want of the
-necessaries of life regard as insipid whatever refuses to minister to
-their wants. Thus we can account for the little interest with which the
-sight of the Sneuw Bergen inspired Le Vaillant, who would otherwise
-appear to have been constitutionally deprived of that masculine energy
-which impels us rather to rejoice than be depressed at the sight of
-steril and desolate mountains, seldom trodden but by the brave, and
-seeming to have been expressly thrown up by nature as a rampart upon
-which freedom might successfully struggle against the oppressors of
-mankind. This is the true source of that indescribable delight with
-which we all tread upon mountain soil. A secret instinct seems to
-whisper to the heart the original design, if it may be said without
-impiety, with which those inexpugnable fastnesses were fashioned by
-the hand of God. “Here,” say we to ourselves, “here at least we may be
-free;” and we look down from these arid heights with scorn upon the
-possessors of the fattest pastures, if the mark of tyranny, like that
-of the Beast in the Apocalypse, is set upon the soil.
-
-Le Vaillant’s enthusiasm, which greatly depended upon the state
-of his animal spirits, was now evaporating rapidly. His care and
-circumspection were likewise proportionably diminished, and, in
-consequence, the want of provisions and water was frequently
-experienced. To give a keener edge to these calamities and privations,
-it was rumoured among his followers that the recesses of the snowy
-mountains afforded a retreat to numerous Bushmans or banditti, men whom
-necessity or inclination had arrayed in opposition to the laws, and
-those who lived under their protection. Every privation was therefore
-borne with greater impatience. They considered themselves as persons
-wantonly exposed to danger by the caprice of their leader; hence his
-authority was daily less and less respected. Nevertheless, he drew near
-the mountains, and climbing up with difficulty to the summit of one of
-their peaks, enjoyed the wide prospect it afforded. This satisfied his
-curiosity, more particularly as three men, supposed to be bandits, were
-discovered among the ravines, but made their escape at their approach.
-A few days afterward one of these fierce robbers was killed in an
-attempt to murder one of the Hottentots of the escort.
-
-The want of water, which they had already begun to experience,
-continued to increase as they advanced. The oxen, like the men,
-suffered extremely, and several of them dropped down, and were unable
-to rise again. The feet of the dogs were exceedingly lacerated; they
-limped along painfully, and with the greatest exertion. In one
-word, every man and animal in the camp required repose; and with
-inexpressible joy they at length saw the day of their arrival at the
-Cape, which put an end to the toils and sufferings of sixteen months.
-
-Le Vaillant had not yet satisfied his locomotive passion, and had,
-indeed, notwithstanding the interest which his adventures inspire, seen
-but little of Africa. He now amused himself with visiting the various
-districts of the colony, and, among other spots, the extreme point of
-the promontory, which opposes its rocky snout to the eternal storms
-and waves of the Southern Ocean. Here, as with a sombre melancholy,
-he viewed the constant succession of the billows, which, confused and
-foaming under the influence of the winds, hurled themselves against
-the cliffs, a depression of soul came over him, and he compared
-the phenomenon before him to the life of man, and the annihilation
-which, according to his creed, succeeds it. This miserable dogma, the
-offspring of insane reasoning, and a distrust in the power or goodness
-of the Divinity, was at that period in dispute among the sophists
-of Europe; but I pity the man who could make so bestial a creed the
-companion of his soul amid the vast solitudes of the desert, where we
-might expect that the very winds of heaven would have winnowed away so
-vile a chaff, and rendered back its native whiteness and purity to the
-mind.
-
-Returning to Cape Town, he began, but with less enthusiasm than on
-the former occasion, his preparations for a second journey into the
-interior. Experience, he imagined, had enabled him to improve upon his
-former plans. He had seen the country, he had studied its inhabitants.
-Had he not laid the foundation for almost certain success? The result
-showed how dim, how bounded, how little to be depended upon is human
-foresight.
-
-His followers were now more numerous than formerly: eighteen men, one
-woman, three horses, thirteen dogs, three milch cows, eleven goats, and
-fifty-two oxen. With this train he departed from Saldanha Bay, June
-15th, 1782, directing his course towards the north, along the western
-coast of Africa. During the early part of the journey, in the district
-of the Twenty-four Rivers, he found the prodigious nests of the
-Termites or white ant, which, though inferior in dimensions to those
-described by other travellers, were yet four feet in height. These
-ants, which are accounted a delicacy by the Chensu Karir, a wandering
-people of the Deccan, are likewise eaten by the Hottentots, who seem to
-regard them with a more favourable eye even than locusts, which are,
-however, highly esteemed.
-
-Notwithstanding that, in pursuance of the advice of his Cape friends,
-he had set out in the rainy season, the party had not advanced far
-before the want of water was experienced. The men and oxen suffered
-extremely, but the dogs were still more severely afflicted, and
-several of them, after exhibiting symptoms of their approach to a
-state bordering upon hydrophobia, ran off into the desert, where they
-perished, or relapsed into their original wildness. The party was in
-this position when Le Vaillant, whose mind was tortured by the most
-gloomy forebodings, was startled from his reveries by the sharp cry
-of a bird which was passing over his head. It was a mountain duck,
-which, he doubted not, was proceeding towards a spring. He therefore
-put his horse to the gallop, and earnestly pursuing the flight of the
-bird with his eye, had very quickly the satisfaction of observing it
-alight upon a great rock, where it disappeared. Persuaded that it had
-stopped to drink, he clambered up the rock, and found in fact a large
-basin, or hollow in the rock, filled with water, in which the duck was
-gayly swimming about and amusing itself. He had not the ingratitude to
-fire at it, but he frightened it away, in the hope that, not having
-sufficiently quenched its thirst, it might fly to another cistern
-within sight; but in this he was disappointed. They now laid up a
-provision of water for several days, and having allowed all the cattle
-to quench their thirst, proceeded on their journey. During those
-excessive droughts, it was curious, when a shower came on, to behold
-the contrivance of the animals: observing that whatever water fell upon
-the sands was immediately absorbed and lost, while the quantity with
-which their own bodies were drenched ran down in little tread-like
-streams over their sides, they drew near to each other, and by applying
-their mouths to those diminutive currents, thus succeeded in quenching
-their excruciating thirst. I am surprised that, in the tremendous
-extremities to which our traveller and his followers were reduced by
-want of water, they never had recourse to a method which, disgusting
-and terrible as it may seem, has, I believe, been successfully tried
-for quenching thirst by other travellers, as well as by certain tribes
-of savages; I mean, to drink the blood of the animals they slaughtered.
-Man has no doubt a natural repugnance to such expedients, but may
-yield, under the pressure of imperious necessity, to whatever means,
-short of injustice, Providence may afford him of preserving life.
-
-Upon arriving, after extraordinary privations and fatigue, upon the
-banks of the Elephant’s River, they indeed found water in abundance;
-but there was no pasture for the cattle, not even under the shade of
-the mimosas and willows which bordered the stream. All was burnt up.
-They proceeded farther inland, therefore, in search of verdure, and
-arrived on the banks of the Koïgnas, where they encamped upon a spot
-called the “Bat’s Rock.” From the fresh footmarks of the lion in the
-sand, they knew that there were enemies in the neighbourhood, and
-accordingly were more than ordinarily cautious in keeping watch, and in
-the kindling of their night-fires. But,--
-
- Incidit in Scyllam qui vult evitare Charybdin:
-
-for no sooner had the fires begun to blaze, than there issued forth
-from the hollows of the rocks myriads of bats, which, flittering hither
-and thither, struck against their faces, and stunned them with their
-obscene cries, until, no longer able to endure their clamour, they
-struck their tents and decamped. Virgil probably derived the idea of
-his famous description of the Harpies from some such adventure as this;
-for he had travelled a good deal in the Grecian islands, where bats, I
-believe, are numerous:
-
- At subitæ horrifico lapsu de montibus adsunt
- Harpyiæ, et magnis quatiunt clangoribus alas,
- Diripiuntque dapes, contactuque omnia fœdant
- Immundo: tum vox tetrum dira inter odorem.
-
-Le Vaillant, who had a partiality for adventure, was here engaged
-in one which I must describe at some length. Leaving the greater
-number of his people encamped on the banks of the Elephant River, he
-had descended with a small detachment to the seashore. Here a whale
-was found, from which the Hottentots drew several skins of oil. The
-traveller, having been disappointed in his expectations of meeting with
-elephants on the right bank of the stream, concluded, with some degree
-of probability, that they had crossed the river, and taken refuge on
-the opposite side: he was therefore desirous of following them. But he
-was near the mouth of the river, which, at all times wide and rapid,
-had been exceedingly increased by the late rains, and now presented a
-formidable appearance. Unhappily, he was incapable of swimming, and
-for constructing a raft there was no time. After much consideration,
-therefore, it was resolved to attempt the stream in a novel mode. The
-trunk of a fallen tree was selected; the tent, with the garments of the
-Hottentots, was fastened upon its centre, the oil-skins at each end;
-while Le Vaillant himself, having suspended his watch and powder-flasks
-about his neck, and tied all their fowling-pieces on his shoulders, got
-astride upon the tree as soon as it was afloat. The Hottentots, having
-fastened strips of leather to the end of the trunk, then jumped into
-the water, and pushed off from the shore. They were four in number,
-and it was agreed that two should tow the tree along, while the other
-two pushed it forward from behind, taking these different offices in
-turn. As long as they remained in smooth water their progress was
-rapid. Nothing could appear more easy than their undertaking. They
-laughed, they jested with each other, and already thought themselves
-on the opposite shore. But their triumph was premature: for they had
-no sooner entered the current than the tree became unmanageable; now
-pitching forward upon the swimmers, now recoiling with invincible force
-against those who laboured to impel it from behind; dragging the former
-after it, submerging the latter in the waves. No jests were now heard.
-Every limb was plied, every nerve strained, to force a way through the
-impetuous current; every man exerted himself to the utmost; but the
-river rushed along with irresistible violence, and instead of making
-way towards the shore, they saw themselves hurried down by the stream
-towards the sea, where inevitable death awaited them. Meanwhile Le
-Vaillant perceived with dismay that their strength began to fail them.
-They breathed short, their strokes became irregular, their efforts
-grew fainter and fainter; yet they tugged desperately at the tree,
-apparently resolved at least to perish at their posts, and to share the
-fate of him whom they could not save. Still they drew nearer and nearer
-to the sea, and their hopes diminished in proportion. Observing this,
-the two men who had been placed in the rear sprang forward, and by
-their united strength endeavoured to force along the trunk. At length
-Le Vaillant thought he perceived a diminution in the violence of the
-current, and this discovery being communicated to the swimmers, they
-redoubled their efforts, and in a few minutes one of them found that
-he could touch the bottom. This he announced by a loud cry of joy,
-which was re-echoed by the others. They now began to recover their
-tranquillity, and pushing forward with vigour, were quickly landed on
-the shore. Here they joyously kindled an immense fire, and having along
-with them a small quantity of brandy, they drank it, dried themselves,
-and next day departed on their return to the camp.
-
-Here fresh troubles awaited the traveller. His oxen were dying of
-hunger and fatigue; his followers were discouraged; even his own
-resolution was shaken. But the shame of succumbing to surmountable
-difficulties,--of entertaining a base fear of dangers which other
-men had braved,--of returning, in fact, baffled and defeated to the
-Cape, urged him forward, and he accordingly struck his tents, and
-moved once more towards the north. Courage and intrepidity are of vast
-importance in every circumstance of life, in none more so than in
-the circumstances in which an African traveller is placed; but these
-virtues will not draw wagons, or silence the murmurs of the appetite
-when clamouring for food. Le Vaillant was prepared to endure, and he
-cheerfully abandoned his chariots in the desert when oxen were wanting
-to drag them along; but he abandoned at the same time much of that
-merchandise with which he was accustomed to purchase the friendship and
-aid of the savage, and from that moment all rational hope of traversing
-the whole continent, from the Cape of Good Hope to the Mediterranean,
-vanished. He continued his journey, however, from the laudable desire
-of performing what he could, though what he had projected might prove
-impracticable.
-
-Le Vaillant’s difficulties were far from being imaginary. Thirst,
-that most maddening of human privations, was now felt once more, and
-the parched herbage afforded neither nourishment nor cooling juices
-to the cattle. All their hopes now centred in those thunderstorms
-which, at certain seasons of the year, are common in southern Africa,
-and the jocular extravagance of Aristophanes, who represents men as
-cloud-worshippers, was now scarcely an exaggeration: for both our
-traveller and his followers almost bowed down in religious adoration
-to every cloud that sailed aloft in the blue firmament, and seemed to
-announce a tempest. At length vast masses of black vapour began to
-gather together in heaps over their heads, and to spread in sombre
-files along the sky. Flashes of lightning were perceived on the edge of
-the horizon; and all the forerunners of a storm successively presented
-themselves to their delighted senses.
-
-It came at length. “I heard,” says the traveller, “the sound of some
-large drops, the happy precursors of an abundant shower. All my senses,
-dilated at once by joy and gladness, unfolded themselves to the vital
-influence. I crept out from under my covering, and lying down on my
-back, with my mouth open, I received with delight the drops which
-chanced to fall on me, every one of which seemed to be a refreshing
-balm to my parched lips and tongue. I repeat it, the purest pleasure
-of my whole life was what I tasted in that delicious moment, which
-had been purchased by so many sighs and hours of anguish. It was not
-long before the shower poured down from all sides; during three hours
-it fell in torrents, seeming in noise to rival the thunder, which all
-the while continued roaring over our heads. My people ran about in all
-directions through the storm, seeking for one another, with triumphant
-mutual congratulations for the drenching they experienced; for they
-felt themselves revived; and appeared as if desirous of inflating
-their bodies that they might thus offer a larger surface to the rain,
-and imbibe a greater quantity of it. For my own part, I enjoyed so
-delicious a pleasure in soaking myself like them, that, in order the
-longer to preserve the refreshing coolness, I would not at first change
-my dress, which I was at length, however, compelled to do by the cold.”
-
-On the following night one of his followers disappeared, a circumstance
-which, as they were now in the country of the Bushmen, to whom it was
-possible the fugitive might betray them, was a source of peculiar
-uneasiness. However, after causing considerable alarm among the whole
-party, each of whom indulged a different conjecture, the man returned,
-announcing the discovery of a Hottentot kraal at no great distance.
-Towards this spot the whole party immediately proceeded, again and
-again quenching their thirst on the way, in reservoirs of crystal
-purity, which had been formed in the hollows of the rocks by the recent
-storm. Arrived, Le Vaillant found that the horde of which they had come
-in search was fortunately that of a man to whom he had been strongly
-recommended by a friend at the Cape. He was received with hospitality.
-The chief, flattered by the visit, undertook for a time to become his
-guide; and having generously and successfully exerted himself for
-the recovery of the chariots abandoned in the desert, and performed
-numerous other kind offices for his guest, the caravan was once more
-put in motion.
-
-In the evening, on their arriving at the halting-place, Le Vaillant
-observed with surprise a tent, guarded by Hottentots, pitched a
-little in advance of him; and upon inquiry, found that it belonged to
-a M. Pinard, one of the individuals he had rejected at Cape Town. A
-presentiment of evil immediately flashed upon his mind. He regarded
-the tent with inquietude. Misfortune seemed to perch upon its summit.
-And in the sequel he learned, with vexation, how well-founded his
-apprehensions had been. However, for the moment, the encounter seemed
-to offer nothing but pleasure. Pinard was the bearer of letters from
-some of his dearest friends, and to a man of sound feelings a person
-thus armed is irresistible; but to an evil disposition the very
-counterfeiting of goodness is too painful long to be endured. Our Dutch
-adventurer, whose wealth chiefly consisted in brandy, a commodity which
-experience had taught him was omnipotent with Hottentots, seemed to
-consider his casks as too weighty, and habitually exerted himself in
-diminishing the burden. In one word, he was a drunkard; and having
-indulged himself with an extraordinary dose on the very evening of Le
-Vaillant’s arrival, the brandy-casks were abandoned to the Hottentots,
-and in a short time both camps were a scene of wild revelry and
-intoxication.
-
-To those who have observed the manners of savages, whether in our
-own country or in the woods, it must be well known that the Circean
-transformations are not fabulous. Brandy has everywhere the power
-of changing men into beasts, and into beasts which are the more
-dangerous, inasmuch as they retain, under their new forms, a memory
-morbidly retentive, which seems to rejoice at its escape from the
-restraints of reason. Le Vaillant’s followers, having nothing to
-fear from the reproaches of decorum, now plunged into the delights
-of drunkenness with an avidity which appeared as if intended as an
-imputation on his want of generosity; for they considered his prudent
-economy as a niggardly doling out of a necessary of life, brandy being
-by them regarded in that light. Though he had given orders that the
-caravan should be put in motion at the break of day, the men, with
-the exception of Klaas and two or three of his companions, were all
-furiously intoxicated before the oxen could be yoked to the wagons.
-Even old Swanspoel, who had hitherto conducted himself with prudence,
-yielded to the seduction, and endeavouring with reeling steps to mount
-the wagon, his foot slipped, and he rolled under the wheel, which
-immediately passed over his body. Le Vaillant, who loved the old man,
-feared he had been crushed to pieces; but it was afterward found, upon
-examination, that he merely had two ribs broken; though this fracture
-caused him such terrible anguish on the road, that he conjured his
-master, with clasped hands, to blow out his brains with one of his
-pistols. As our traveller was utterly ignorant of surgery, it was
-necessary to leave the treatment of the fracture to nature. The pain,
-meanwhile, was excruciating, and in order to blunt its point, the old
-Hottentot continued to drink immoderate quantities of brandy, which, as
-it failed to kill him, obtained, in the sequel, the honour of a cure.
-In six weeks he was able to resume his occupations.
-
-At length, after enduring his company with a patience which it were
-easier to praise than to imitate, he separated from Pinard. He now
-discovered another remarkable person, a sailor, who, having deserted
-from the Dutch navy, had retired into the wilderness, where he had
-adopted, as far as possible, the manners of a savage; married several
-wives, by whom he had numerous children, and laid the foundation of
-what might have proved a powerful horde. But this individual affords
-an example of how difficult it is for the civilized man, of whatever
-rank he may be, to retrograde; for, although possessed of considerable
-wealth, and, which is still sweeter, of independence, and the germs
-of power, he yearned after that society in which he must always be as
-nothing; and afterward, upon Le Vaillant’s obtaining him his pardon,
-deserted his harem, returned with his children to the colony, married,
-and sunk into the dull lethargy of ordinary Dutch life.
-
-This man, whose name was Shoenmaker, became our traveller’s guide
-through the neighbouring regions. They continued still to advance
-towards the north, passed through the countries of the Lesser and
-Greater Namaquas, and arrived at length in the district in which
-the giraffe is found. Here all his ardour for the chase was at once
-revived by the sight of one of these animals’ skins, which, in one
-of the kraals he visited, served as a covering to a hut. A few days
-afterward, while he was admiring the nest of the constructor bird, one
-of his Namaqua guides came in great haste to inform him that he had
-just seen a giraffe browsing upon the leaves of a mimosa-tree. “In an
-instant,” says the traveller, “I mounted my horse, being intoxicated
-with joy, and causing Bernfry” (a deserter from the colony whom he
-encountered in the desert) “to follow my example, I hurried with my
-dogs towards the mimosa-tree. The giraffe was no longer there. We saw
-her crossing the plain towards the west, and put spurs to our horses
-in order to overtake her. She then got into an easy trot, but did not
-seem at all hurried. We galloped after her, firing at her from time to
-time; but she insensibly gained ground upon us in such a manner that,
-after continuing the chase for three hours, we were compelled to stop,
-our horses being out of breath, and we immediately lost sight of her.”
-He now found himself alone, at a distance from his camp; and, what
-was worse, knew not how to shape his course towards it. Meantime he
-suffered considerably from thirst and hunger; but having killed and
-cooked some birds, his wants were soon satisfied, and he had leisure
-for reflection. In the midst of his reveries he was found by some of
-his attendants, and conducted back to the camp. Next day the hunting
-of the giraffe was continued with equally bad success. On the third
-day seven of these animals were discovered, and immediately pursued by
-his dogs. “Six of them,” says he, “went off together; but the seventh,
-cut off by my pack, took a different direction. Bernfry, who happened
-just then to be on foot, immediately vaulted into the saddle, and set
-off in pursuit of the former. I pursued the latter at all speed; but in
-spite of the swiftness of my horse, she gained upon me so much that, on
-turning a small eminence, I lost sight of her, and gave up the chase.
-My dogs, however, had quickly overtaken her, and pressed her so closely
-that she was compelled to stop in her own defence. From the place where
-I was I heard them give tongue with all their might; but as their
-voices all appeared to come from the same spot, I conjectured that
-they had got the animal into some corner, and I again pushed forwards.
-As soon as I had turned the hill, I in fact discovered her surrounded
-by the dogs, and making desperate efforts to drive them off by heavy
-kicks. In a moment I was on my feet, and a single shot from my carbine
-brought her to the earth. Enchanted with my victory, I returned to call
-my people about me, that they might skin and cut up the animal. As I
-was looking about, I observed Klaas Bastard eagerly making signals
-to me, which I could not at first comprehend; but on turning towards
-the direction in which he pointed, I perceived a giraffe assailed by
-my dogs under an ebony-tree. Supposing it to be another animal, I ran
-towards it; but it was the same, which had risen again, and just as I
-was about to fire a second time dropped down dead.
-
-“Who could have believed that a conquest like this would have excited
-me to a transport almost approaching to madness! Pains, fatigues, cruel
-privations, uncertainty as to the future, disgust sometimes as to the
-past--all these recollections and feelings fled at the sight of this
-new prey. I could not satisfy my desire to contemplate it. I measured
-its enormous height. I looked from the animal to the instrument which
-had destroyed it. I called and recalled my people about me. Although
-we had combated together the largest and the most dangerous animals,
-it was I alone who had killed the giraffe. I was now able to add to
-the riches of natural history; I was now able to destroy the romance
-which attached to this animal, and to establish a truth. My people
-congratulated me on my triumph. Bernfry alone was absent; but he came
-at last, walking at a slow pace, and holding his horse by the bridle.
-He had fallen from his seat, and injured his shoulder. I heard not what
-he said to me. I saw not that he wanted assistance; I spoke to him only
-of my victory. He showed me his shoulder; I showed him my giraffe. I
-was intoxicated, and I should not have thought even of my own wounds.”
-
-He now paid a visit to the Kameniqua horde. His camp abounded with
-provisions; but his people, who had for some time been accustomed to
-the company of women, drew so many of these fair ones about them, that
-it was feared nothing else would be thought of. However, Le Vaillant
-was obliged to wink at this irregularity, to prevent the desertion
-of the whole body, and his complaisance, as it happened, drew after
-it no evil consequences. In proceeding through the country of the
-Greater Namaquas he arrived at a kraal, which had been thrown by the
-death of its chief into the utmost confusion, and, upon his making
-strenuous exertions to restore order, was himself elected chief. This
-dignity, however, he delegated to another, and had the satisfaction of
-observing, at his departure, tranquillity and good order taking the
-place of discord and bloodshed.
-
-Our traveller now drew near the country of the most extraordinary
-people which he ever met with during his travels. These were the
-Hoozwanas, a nation by the Hottentots confounded with the Bushmen, but
-which, in the opinion of Le Vaillant, differed from them entirely;
-as while the latter were a collection of vagabonds from all nations,
-living in holes and caves, and subsisting chiefly by plunder, the
-former were as nearly as possible homogeneous. They differed in a
-remarkable manner from the Hottentots in being enterprising and brave,
-and enjoyed among their neighbours so great a reputation for these
-qualities, that their very name was a talisman which struck terror
-into all who heard it. For this reason Le Vaillant could not, in this
-instance, pursue his ordinary practice of sending forward native
-ambassadors or agents to prepare him a welcome reception among the
-horde. At the bare mention of the Hoozwanas his followers and allies
-felt their blood curdle with fear, and not only refused to advance
-before him, but endeavoured likewise to dissuade him from the attempt,
-which, in their opinion, could terminate no otherwise than fatally.
-
-Le Vaillant, who remembered their vain terrors in the case of the
-Kaffers, was thoroughly convinced that their present apprehensions
-had no better foundation. His wagons and a considerable number of
-his attendants had been left encamped on the banks of the Gariep, or
-Orange River; he was now resolved rather to dismiss the remainder, and
-proceed alone, than shrink from his undertaking; and Klaas and five
-of his companions voluntarily engaging to undertake the expedition,
-he informed the remainder that they were at liberty to depart, their
-services being no longer required. But if they were afraid to advance,
-to retreat seemed no less terrible; so that, whipped into enterprise by
-their very fears, they one and all announced their readiness to follow
-the fortunes of their chief.
-
-He therefore proceeded towards the north; but, while he despised the
-fears of his Hottentots, and somewhat doubted the correctness of their
-representations, he nevertheless considered it prudent to move along
-in a guarded manner, seeing that every thicket might contain an enemy.
-For some days silence and solitude prevailed around. There appeared no
-traces of man; or if any human beings ever started up in the distance,
-it was only to flit immediately away like phantoms among the rocks
-and sandhills, leaving behind them strong doubts of the reality of
-their apparition. Meanwhile their route led them over a burning desert,
-covered with saline dust, which, lifted up by the winds, entered
-their eyes and almost maddened them. The vehement heat of the sun,
-from which no contrivance could wholly shield them, likewise began to
-disorder their senses and their imaginations; so that, like mariners in
-a calenture, they saw mountains, green fields, or groves, or running
-streams, where in reality there was nothing but a prodigious plateau of
-scorching sand.
-
-At length, upon halting in the evening, they observed, as the darkness
-came on, several vast fires among the peaks of the distant hills, which
-they doubted not belonged to the Hoozwanas. With this discovery all
-their old terrors returned. The watch, therefore, it may be easily
-imagined, was vigilant that night; and as soon as the morning appeared,
-Le Vaillant, taking a few of his attendants along with him, proceeded
-to reconnoitre. The scene which now presented itself was desolate
-beyond description. Steep ridges of barren rock, rising from a plain of
-sand, and broken into ravines, gullies, chasms, precipices; beyond a
-few stunted, miserable plants, no signs of life; while a dead silence
-brooded over all, save when the wild daman sent forth its shrill cry
-from among the rocks, or when the vulture or the eagle screamed aloft
-over their heads.
-
-After a fatiguing march through these savage mountains, they reached
-a slender stream which flowed from a narrow opening in the rocks, and
-discovered upon its banks a small Hoozwana encampment. No persons but
-a few women were visible; but upon their uttering a cry of alarm, the
-men immediately rushed out, armed with bows and arrows, and taking
-their families along with them, retreated, and took up their position
-on a small eminence commanding their huts. Failing to make himself
-understood by the ordinary signs of friendship and good-will, he
-advanced towards their huts, deposited a quantity of beads and tobacco,
-and then retired to observe their movements. When they considered
-him at a sufficient distance, they returned, and upon examining the
-presents exhibited tokens of extraordinary satisfaction; but upon the
-approach of the traveller a second time they again retreated, though
-to a smaller distance than before. He now resolved to endeavour, by
-going forward alone and unarmed, to remove their apprehensions; and,
-taking in his hand a new present, he proceeded towards them. This
-manœuvre succeeded. One of the savages immediately came to meet him;
-and addressing him in the Hottentot language, demanded who he was, and
-whence he came. Le Vaillant replied that he was a traveller, desirous
-of examining the country, and, if possible, of finding friends in it.
-The man then came up to him. The Hottentots likewise drew near, and
-entered into conversation with the stranger, who, they found, belonged
-to their nation. Observing that no evil had befallen their friend, the
-remainder of the horde now joined the group, and were rendered, by a
-few trifling presents, as friendly and peaceful in their deportment as
-the least ferocious of the Hottentot tribes.
-
-The manners of this people were remarkable. They remained in their
-rocky fastnesses, to which they were habitually confined by the
-hostility of their neighbours, as long as the gazelles, white ants, or
-locusts, which abound in those districts, afforded them provisions.
-When a scarcity happened, however, then wo to the surrounding nations.
-They stood upon the lofty summits of their mountains, and casting their
-eyes around, selected for the scene of their desperate foray the region
-which presented the richest aspect. Flocks and herds were seized, and
-killed upon the spot, or driven to the mountains, as circumstances
-required; but, unless when attacked and put in actual peril, the
-Hoozwanas abstained from shedding human blood. Their appearance, when
-engaged in war, was peculiarly striking. Naked, excepting that small
-portion of the body which instinct alone teaches man to conceal, they
-yet wore a species of helmet or war-cap on their heads, upon which
-there was a crest formed of the hyena’s mane. Though considerably below
-the middle size, their well-formed active bodies, and daring character,
-the evidence of which was deeply written in their countenance,
-admirably fitted them for warriors. In peace, however, no men could
-exhibit more gentleness, or regard for strangers; and our traveller
-observes, that had he attempted the traversing the African continent
-from the Cape to the Mediterranean, he should have chiefly founded his
-hopes of success on the active, faithful character of the Hoozwanas.
-
-The Hoozwana women exhibited that peculiar conformation of the nates
-which is generally supposed to be a characteristic of the Hottentot
-race. With the latter, however, it is the growth of years, and
-commences only at a late period of life; while in the former it is
-a portion of the original form with which the infant is born, and
-which increases merely in proportion as the whole body is developed.
-Upon this strange projection mothers carry their children, which,
-when two or three years old, stand upon it as a footman does behind a
-carriage. But, notwithstanding that they were in this respect deformed,
-they possessed hands and arms of extraordinary beauty. They wore the
-war-bonnet and sandals like their husbands; but were in other respects
-naked, with the exception of a small apron. A small wooden, ivory, or
-tortoise-shell case hung by their side, in which they carried their
-ointment; and the tail of some small animal, fastened on a staff,
-served, instead of a pocket handkerchief, to wipe away the dust or
-perspiration from their faces.
-
-Having spent some time in the country of the Hoozwanas, he bent his
-course towards his camp on the Gariep, his gallant hosts serving him as
-guides across the mountains. In the course of the journey one of the
-oxen threw from off its back the box of toys and cutlery, which, making
-a frightful clatter, terrified the animal, which ran off roaring in a
-furious manner. Le Vaillant, in endeavouring to force it back, found
-himself engaged in a dangerous adventure; for, instead of returning
-towards his companions, it rushed impetuously at the horse, which,
-springing suddenly aside, threw his rider and took to flight. The ox
-now rushed with stooping head at the traveller, who, having fortunately
-fallen with his musket in his hand, pointed his piece, and carefully
-levelling it at his enemy, fired, and shot him dead upon the spot.
-
-This accident seemed to be merely the forerunner of that which happened
-immediately after his arrival at the camp. He had crossed the Gariep
-with his tents and baggage; but the oxen, never having seen so broad a
-stream, could by no means whatever be induced to attempt the passage.
-They resisted all the efforts of their drivers, and even their very
-blows seemed to render them more stubborn. It was therefore determined
-to take them farther up the stream, and renew their endeavours next
-morning. The herdsmen, however, rendered heedless or confident by the
-vicinity of the camp, fell asleep, and allowed their fires to die away.
-At this moment the Bushmen, who had been lying in wait for them, stole
-quietly into the circle, and, driving off the oxen, escaped, and before
-the break of day were already far on their way towards their secret
-haunts.
-
-Next morning, early, Le Vaillant was suddenly awakened by Klaas, who
-informed him of what had happened; and counselled him to arm a number
-of his followers, and pursue the robbers. This advice was instantly
-adopted. He took thirteen of the bravest, and following the track of
-the oxen, which was visible enough upon the sand, during six hours,
-found that it struck off from the river. Here they passed the night.
-Next morning before day they continued the pursuit, and finding that
-the herd had been divided into two parts, pursued the track of the
-more numerous, not doubting that the division had been made merely
-for the purpose of distracting their attention. From a Hottentot
-village by which they passed they obtained two guides, who, being
-perfectly acquainted with the country, undertook to conduct them to the
-hiding-places of the Bushmen. They therefore again set forward, and
-after tracking the robbers for several leagues, found that they had
-crossed the river, in which they discovered the body of one of the oxen
-which had been drowned in the passage. The stream being here deep and
-rapid rendered the passage both difficult and dangerous. They, however,
-succeeded in gaining the opposite shore, but what was their vexation
-when, having ascended a short distance up the river, it was perceived
-that the artful bandits had again crossed, and were therefore on the
-other side. This manœuvre was repeated three times, for so frequently
-had the Bushmen crossed and recrossed the stream. But at length the
-track was lost in the path leading to a kraal, in which, therefore,
-they concluded the oxen must be concealed.
-
-The guides, fearful lest their presence among the traveller’s
-attendants might occasion a war between these bandits and their
-nation, here demanded permission to remain behind during the attack
-upon the kraal, and their request was unhappily complied with. Le
-Vaillant himself, conceiving that darkness would be favourable to
-his views, resolved to defer the execution of his project until
-night. They accordingly encamped upon the spot, and a little after
-midnight set off in the greatest silence. “Soon afterward,” says he,
-“we perceived, at the distance of about three-quarters of a league,
-the light of several fires; and advancing a little farther, we heard
-songs, cries of joy, and immoderate shouts of laughter. The bandits
-were amusing themselves, and making good cheer at my expense. Their
-clamour, however, had one good effect; for my dogs began to set up so
-loud a barking on drawing near the kraal, that it became necessary to
-muzzle them, so that but for the frightful tumult within we should
-infallibly have been betrayed. I was now, therefore, in a state of
-warfare with savages, and resolved to employ against them the resources
-of art, should they oppose me with superior force. The moment not being
-favourable for commencing the attack, I put it off until the break
-of day, and in order to conduct it in the most advantageous manner,
-I intrenched myself and my troop behind a copse, which, by affording
-us an impenetrable shield against the attacks of our enemies, would
-render our own doubly terrible. The copse, in fact, was sufficiently
-extensive to contain and conceal all my musketeers; and each of us, by
-pushing aside or breaking off a few branches, immediately formed a sort
-of porthole through which we could fire. In this position we patiently
-and silently awaited the moment for action. The villains themselves
-appeared, by their conduct, to favour our views. Their noisy merriment
-died away by degrees; and at length, yielding to fatigue, they retired
-into their huts to rest, and the noise entirely ceased.
-
-“The day soon appeared, when we discovered that the position we had
-taken up was too far from the kraal. Leaving our oxen, and my two
-horses, ready saddled in case of a defeat, behind the bushes, under the
-care of one of my people, we advanced, therefore, and posted ourselves
-within gunshot of the kraal. It was a considerable hamlet, consisting
-of not less than thirty or forty huts, and occupied the slope of a
-hill, behind which a range of high mountains swept round in the form
-of an amphitheatre. Though our muskets were all loaded, it was not
-my intention to commence hostilities with the effusion of blood. I
-designed merely to alarm the brigands, and by the consternation caused
-by a sudden attack, to compel them to take to flight. For this reason
-I commanded my followers to fire in the air, and on no account to take
-aim at a single individual unless by my express orders. I began the
-assault by firing my large carbine, the report of which, multiplied by
-the echoes of the neighbouring mountains, produced a terrible noise.
-We had persuaded ourselves that at the sound of this thunder the whole
-horde would fly in consternation, and my companions were preparing to
-augment their terrors by a general discharge. But, to our astonishment,
-not a creature appeared. It was in vain that we fired round after
-round; every thing remained calm, and I knew not what to conjecture.
-This security was merely apparent. While external appearances announced
-sleep and peace, every soul within was given up to terror and
-confusion. But by a stratagem to which they, no doubt, had been long
-accustomed, no one wished to appear before the whole body were armed;
-and it is probable that they communicated with each other by signals.
-When they were ready for battle, they all at the same moment rushed out
-of their huts, and advancing with frightful howlings towards us, let
-fly a cloud of arrows, which falling far short of their mark, we still
-replied to by firing over their heads. Observing that none of their
-party were hurt, they began to imagine that our muskets would not carry
-so far, and therefore uniting into one body, they came on with fury. We
-awaited the assault with firmness. My people, in the mean time, called
-aloud to them to restore my oxen. Whether they heard us or not I cannot
-determine; but they had now advanced so near that their arrows fell
-about us in showers. I now thought it full time to fire in earnest,
-and issuing my orders to aim at their bodies, we fired several volleys
-in rapid succession, and had very quickly the satisfaction to see
-this numerous band of men scattered about like emmets, flying in all
-directions, and uttering fearful shrieks, which were no longer, as at
-first, cries of valour and defiance, but the howlings of despair. Their
-wives and children had retreated, during the combat, to the summit of
-the hill, where the oxen were grazing; and it was thither that they
-now fled; whence, having rapidly collected the cattle, they plunged
-down into the hollow on the opposite side, and disappeared. Being well
-persuaded that, should they once reach the defiles of the mountains,
-all pursuit would be vain, I mounted my horse, and dividing my men into
-two bodies, directed one party to cut off their retreat on one side,
-while I myself with the remainder should attack them on the other. It
-was not many minutes before we discovered the savages hurrying down the
-hill towards a plain, in which there was a small wood; and, in fact,
-the greater number of them quickly disappeared a second time, but those
-who drove the cattle were necessarily more slow, and seeing us close
-upon their heels, they likewise took to flight, leaving the oxen behind
-them. At this moment my other detachment coming up, fired at them, and
-stretched one of their number upon the earth. The rest escaped.”
-
-Having thus regained possession of his cattle, and fearing he might
-fall into some ambush laid for him by the savages, he hastened back
-to the kraal, where he found their own herd. In lieu of one of the
-oxen which had been killed and eaten, he took away a young cow and two
-sheep, and hurried towards the spot where he had left his Kameniqua
-guides. Here he was shocked by a very horrible spectacle. One of the
-men had been torn to pieces during the night, and the other likewise
-had suffered severely. They had, in fact, neglected to keep alive their
-fire, and had been attacked by a lion in their sleep. Le Vaillant
-caused them to be placed upon his horses, and carried along with them;
-but abandoned the dying man at the first halting-place. The other
-eventually recovered.
-
-Though dogged all the way by the Bushmen, he reached his camp in
-safety, from whence, having now entirely abandoned the idea of
-traversing the African continent, he turned his face southwards, and
-directed his course towards the Cape. His constitution had considerably
-suffered during this journey, and he suddenly began to experience
-unequivocal symptoms of illness. While he was in this condition he
-encountered a white family, who, having endured signal misfortunes in
-the world, had succeeded in snapping asunder the links which ordinarily
-bind men to society, and were now, with a few Hottentot servants, and a
-wagon which contained all their worldly possessions, proceeding towards
-Namaqua-land in search of a better fortune than they had hitherto met
-with. Le Vaillant, who could easily read indolence and inactivity in
-the countenance of the father, was still deeply interested in his
-fate, by an air of goodness which accompanied the indication of those
-qualities; and anticipating the consent of the owner, he bestowed upon
-them a small house and ground in the vicinity, four sheep, a goat,
-a dog, together with a quantity of toys and cutlery, wherewith to
-purchase the friendship of the savages. With these riches they departed
-on their way, blessing the friendly hand which had enabled them to live
-in comfort, and praying for the happiness of him who, under Providence,
-had been the creator of theirs.
-
-He now pushed forward to the banks of the Kansi, where his progress
-was put a stop to by a buinsy, accompanied by violent fever. This
-disease is generally mortal in Africa. Of this circumstance he was
-perfectly aware, and accordingly from the beginning began to fear the
-worst, and gave himself up for lost. But his followers, who, with
-ignorance of physic equal to his own, indulged more sanguine hopes,
-requested his permission to apply the only remedy known among them;
-and having obtained his consent, applied round his neck towels dipped
-in boiling milk, until the skin was nearly scalded off. This treatment
-was continued during three days; but finding no benefit from it, he
-abandoned the physicians, and resolved to leave the whole to nature.
-Meanwhile his condition was alarming. His throat and tongue were so
-much swelled that he could swallow nothing but a few drops of weak tea,
-and at length lost entirely the power of speaking, except by signs.
-The fears of his Hottentots were no less than his own. When Klaas or
-Swanspoel entered his tent, the other attendants would thrust their
-black woolly heads in after them, in the expectation of gathering
-from their looks whether there was still any hope. Such was the state
-of the case when several persons of the Lesser Namaqua horde arrived
-in the camp, among the rest a little man, who, when informed of the
-disorder of the chief, immediately undertook his cure. Our traveller,
-willing to make trial of every means within his power, permitted the
-Hottentot Æsculapius to treat him as he pleased; and had once more to
-endure a hot cataplasm on his throat, which, together with a gargle of
-sage-juice, formed the whole remedy. In the course of one night his
-freedom of respiration and the power of swallowing were restored, and
-in three days he was well.
-
-This danger being over, Le Vaillant returned to the Cape, dismissed his
-Hottentots, and taking leave of his South African friends, set sail
-for Europe, July 14th, 1784. He arrived in Paris in the beginning
-of the January following, and from thenceforward his whole life was
-occupied in putting his collections in order, in compiling the account
-of his travels, and in composing the various works which he afterward
-published or left in MS. on the natural history of the birds and
-quadrupeds of Africa.--Though his occupations were thus simple and
-peaceful, he was not able during the stormy days of the Revolution
-to escape unsuspected; he was apprehended and imprisoned in 1793,
-and is supposed to have escaped the guillotine only by the fall of
-Robespierre. His habitual residence during the latter part of his life
-was on a small estate that he possessed at La Noue, near Sezanne.
-There, when not engaged in his literary labours, he amused himself with
-hunting; and in this manner he lived during nearly thirty years. He
-died on the 22d of November, 1824. During the whole of that time he had
-seldom quitted his retreat to visit Paris, except for the purpose of
-seeing his works through the press. His “Travels,” upon which his hopes
-of fame must chiefly rest, appear to have occupied him nearly eleven
-years, the first part having been published in 1790, and the second in
-1796. It has often been asserted, says M. Eyriès, that these travels
-were compiled from the author’s notes by Casimir Varron but this is a
-mistake; he merely read the proof sheets for the purpose of correction,
-Le Vaillant not being sufficiently acquainted with the French language
-to enable him to confide in his own judgment.
-
-It was Le Vaillant who first made the giraffe known in France, and the
-stuffed specimen in the king’s collection is the one which was brought
-over by him. His other works are, “The Natural History of the Birds of
-Africa,” of the parroquet, and of the birds of Paradise. The figures,
-designed under his inspection by Barraband, are said to possess great
-merit; and his scientific works occupy the first rank among books of
-that kind.
-
-
-
-
-BELZONI.
-
-
-This able and interesting traveller, descended from a respectable
-Roman family, was born at Padua, whither his relations had many years
-previously removed. Being designed by his parents for some monastic
-order, he was at a very early age sent to Rome, the original abode of
-his ancestors, where he received his education, and spent the greater
-part of his youth. Here the sciences would appear to have obtained
-a decided preference in his mind, over every other branch of study;
-particularly hydraulics, to which he owed the reputation which he
-afterward acquired in the world, and a success which was by no means
-equal to his deserts. The invasion of Italy, and the capture of Rome by
-the French, disturbed the peaceful but insignificant plan of life which
-he had traced out for himself. Instead of a monk he became a traveller.
-Departing from Rome in the year 1800, he for some time wandered about
-the Continent, deriving his subsistence, as he himself observes, from
-his own knowledge and industry, and occasional remittances from his
-family, who, though by no means wealthy, seem to have been generously
-disposed to afford him a support, which he, in a short time, no less
-generously refused to accept.
-
-In the year 1803 he arrived in England, where he not long afterward
-married. In this country he supported himself, as is well known, by
-performing in public feats of prodigious strength, and by scientific
-exhibitions; still, with a manly independence, preferring the gaining
-of a precarious subsistence by these means to the idea of draining the
-slender resources of his family, or of resorting to those more easy
-but less reputable sources of gain which too frequently employ the
-talents of foreigners in England. Having remained nine years in Great
-Britain, Belzoni conceived the desire of visiting the south of Europe;
-and, taking his wife along with him, travelled through Portugal, Spain,
-and Malta. It seems to have been during this part of his travels that
-he learned, from what he considered unexceptionable authority, that his
-scientific knowledge might be turned to good account in Egypt, where an
-hydraulic machine would be of the greatest utility in irrigating the
-fields, which want water only to make them produce at any season of the
-year.
-
-He accordingly took his passage on board of some ship bound for Egypt,
-and arrived in the harbour of Alexandria on the 9th of June, 1815. The
-plague, he was informed, was now in the city, but gradually decreasing
-in malignity. St. John’s day, the 24th of June, was likewise at hand,
-on which it usually ceases entirely, through the interference, as the
-vulgar believe, of the saint, but in reality from the intense heat of
-the sun, which has by that time exhaled those damp miasmata which are
-the immediate cause of the plague. Belzoni, who was accompanied by his
-wife and a young Irish lad, named Curtain, landed, notwithstanding the
-disease; and having remained secluded in the occale, or khun, until
-after the 24th, set off for Cairo. On reaching this city, where he
-meant to make an offer of his services to the pasha, to whose principal
-interpreter he brought letters of recommendation, he obtained lodgings
-in an old house, which from its vast size and ruinous condition would
-have made a handsome figure in one of Mrs. Ratcliffe’s romances. Though
-antiquities, as he observes, were not at that time his object, he could
-not refrain from visiting the Pyramids. He accordingly accompanied an
-English gentleman to the spot, where they passed the night, and long
-before dawn had ascended the summit of the highest pile, to behold the
-sun rise over the land of Egypt.
-
-“The scene here,” says he, “is majestic and grand far beyond
-description: a mist over the plains of Egypt formed a veil, which
-ascended and vanished gradually as the sun rose, and unveiled to the
-view that beautiful land, once the site of Memphis. The distant view
-of the smaller pyramids on the south marked the extension of that vast
-capital; while the solemn endless spectacle of the desert, on the west,
-inspired us with reverence for the all-powerful Creator. The fertile
-lands on the north, with the serpentine course of the Nile, descending
-towards the sea; the rich appearance of Cairo, and its minarets, at
-the foot of the Mokatam mountain, on the east; the beautiful plain
-which extends from the Pyramids to that city; the Nile, which flows
-magnificently through the centre of the Sacred Valley; and the thick
-groves of palm-trees under our eyes, altogether formed a scene of which
-a very imperfect idea can be given by the most elaborate description.”
-
-A few days after his return to Cairo he was to have been presented
-to the pasha, but on the way to the citadel was attacked and wounded
-by a Turkish soldier in such a manner that he was compelled to defer
-his presentation for thirty days. Mohammed Ali had not at that time
-properly established his power; for, when informed of the injury which
-had been inflicted on his guest, he only observed that such accidents
-were not to be prevented in cities filled with troops. This point
-was very soon made still clearer. In a few days the soldiers burst
-out into open rebellion, pillaged the inhabitants, committed every
-description of atrocity, and pursued his highness himself into his
-castle, where they for some time held him besieged. When this storm
-had blown over, Belzoni, whose hydraulic project was highly approved
-of by the pasha, commenced the construction of his machine in his
-highness’s gardens at Soubra, three miles from Cairo. As Mohammed Ali
-is not bigotedly attached to oriental fashions, he freely permitted
-Belzoni to be witness of his amusements, which he was sometimes even
-called upon to multiply. During his stay at Soubra business frequently
-required his presence at Cairo, where, on one occasion, he narrowly
-escaped being shot by a Turkish soldier. The ruffian having struck
-him in the street, he returned the blow; upon which the Turk drew his
-pistol, fired at him, singed his hair, and killed one of his comrades
-who happened to be standing behind the traveller. The man was next day
-apprehended by the pasha, and never more heard of. When the hydraulic
-machine was completed, its power was made trial of in the presence of
-Mohammed, who, perceiving that as an innovation it was regarded with
-extraordinary dislike by the Turkish and Arabic cultivators, abandoned
-the project altogether, without even remunerating the traveller for the
-loss of time and money which he had incurred.
-
-Notwithstanding these circumstances, which reflect but little honour
-on Mohammed Ali, Belzoni found, upon calculation, that his finances
-would still enable him to ascend the Nile as far as Assouan; and was
-about to proceed up the country when Burckhardt and Mr. Salt, who had
-previously discussed the point together, determined upon the removal
-of the colossal head of young Memnon to England, for the purpose of
-being presented to the British Museum; and requested our traveller,
-as one of the fittest persons that could be thought of, to undertake
-the task. The expenses Burckhardt and Mr. Salt were to defray between
-them. A report was, it seems, circulated even during the lifetime of
-Belzoni, and previous to the publication of his travels, that in this
-affair he was merely the paid agent of Mr. Salt (for, as a professed
-Mohammedan, Burckhardt did not choose to appear). This, however, was
-clearly not the case. The expenses incurred in the undertaking they
-could do no other than defray. Mr. Salt’s instructions are written,
-as Belzoni himself observes, in an assuming style, but nevertheless
-have not the air of being addressed to a paid agent. But the testimony
-of Sheïkh Burckhardt, which I insert in justice to the memory of an
-enterprising and worthy man, completely sets the matter at rest. In
-a letter addressed to the African Association, dated Cairo, February
-20th, 1817, he says, “You will be pleased to hear that the colossal
-head from Thebes has at last, after many difficulties, safely arrived
-at Alexandria. Mr. Belzoni, who offered himself to undertake this
-commission, has executed it with great spirit, intelligence, and
-perseverance. The head is waiting now at Alexandria for a proper
-conveyance to Malta. Mr. Salt and myself have borne the expenses
-jointly; and the trouble of the undertaking has devolved upon Mr.
-Belzoni, whose name I wish to be mentioned, if ever ours shall, on this
-occasion, because he was actuated by public spirit fully as much as
-ourselves.”
-
-Few things are more interesting in themselves, or less captivating
-in description, than a search after antiquities. Belzoni, after
-visiting Hermontis and Dendara, arrived at Thebes, which, from the
-time of Germanicus to the present moment, has excited the wonder and
-admiration of every traveller who has beheld it. “It is absolutely
-impossible,” says Belzoni, “to imagine the scene displayed, without
-seeing it. The most sublime ideas that can be formed from the most
-magnificent specimens of our present architecture would give a very
-incorrect picture of these ruins; for such is the difference, not only
-in magnitude, but in form, proportion, and construction, that even the
-pencil can convey but a faint idea of the whole. It appeared to me
-like entering a city of giants, who, after a long conflict, were all
-destroyed, leaving the ruins of their various temples as the only proof
-of their existence.”
-
-After a brief examination of these mighty ruins, he crossed to
-the western bank of the Nile, where, amid the vast remains of the
-Memnonium, was the colossal head which he was to remove. He found it,
-he says, near the remains of its body and chair, with its face upwards,
-and apparently smiling on him at the thought of being taken to England.
-The implements which he had brought from Cairo were sufficiently
-simple: fourteen poles, eight of which were employed in making a sort
-of car to lay the bust on, four ropes of palm-leaves, and four rollers,
-without tackle of any sort. Their boat lying too far to be used as a
-lodging every night, they established themselves in the Memnonium,
-where, as the traveller remarks, they were handsomely lodged in a small
-hut formed of stones. Mrs. Belzoni seems, in fact, to have been as
-enterprising and romantic as her husband, and made no difficulty about
-the rudeness of their accommodation. Into a detail of his laborious
-exertions, or those of the Arabs in conveying the head to the Nile, I
-do not think it necessary to enter. It will be sufficient to state,
-that after incredible toil and perseverance, it was at length brought
-to the edge of the stream on the 12th of August, 1816.
-
-This object being effected, he made an excursion to the sepulchral
-excavations in the mountain of Gornou, celebrated for the quantity of
-mummies which they contain. Into this vast labyrinth he entered with
-two Arabs and his interpreter. They were in search of a sarcophagus
-which was said to have been discovered by Drovetti; but, in roaming
-about amid the dreary passages, lost their way, which, without
-extraordinary good fortune, might have been the first step to losing
-their lives. In labouring to find a passage out, they came to a small
-aperture, through which the interpreter and one of the Arabs passed
-easily, but Belzoni, who was a very large man, found it too small.
-“One of the Arabs, however, succeeded, as did my interpreter; and it
-was then agreed,” says he, “that I and the other Arab should wait till
-their return. They proceeded evidently to a great distance, for the
-light disappeared, and only a murmuring sound from their voices could
-be distinguished as they went on. After a few moments I heard a loud
-noise, and the interpreter distinctly crying, ‘O mon Dieu! O mon Dieu!
-je suis perdu!’ after which a profound silence ensued. I asked my Arab
-whether he had ever been in that place. He replied, ‘Never.’ I could
-not conceive what could have happened, and thought the best plan was to
-return to procure help from the other Arabs. Accordingly, I told my man
-to show me the way out again; but, staring at me like an idiot, he said
-he did not know the road. I called repeatedly to the interpreter, but
-received no answer. I watched a long time, but no one returned, and my
-situation was no very pleasant one.”
-
-At length, however, by dint of laborious perseverance, they issued into
-upper air; and as the sarcophagus, which they had discovered, could not
-at that moment be removed, our traveller conceived the design of making
-a small excursion into Nubia. Accordingly, he proceeded up the river
-to Assouan, where, after much altercation, he procured a fresh boat to
-carry him to the second cataract. He admired, in passing, the beautiful
-island of Phile, rich in the ruins of antiquity. On the next day
-several natives, armed with spears and shields of crocodile skins, came
-in boats to attack them on the river; but observing them, Mrs. Belzoni
-and all, to be armed with pistols, they very prudently retired. At
-Deir, the capital of Lower Nubia, our traveller purchased with a small
-looking-glass permission to continue his voyage. Previous to this,
-many of the people of the country had never enjoyed the gratification
-of contemplating the reflection of their own countenances, unless,
-like Polypheme, they made a mirror of the glassy stream. On arriving
-at Ipsambul, he saw with amazement the great rock-temple discovered
-by Burckhardt. He immediately conceived the design of clearing away
-the sand which obstructed the entrance into the temple, and made the
-proposal to the villagers, promising, in order to excite them to the
-task, a present in money; but soon found that he had at length arrived
-in a region where money had ceased to be omnipotent. The people stared
-at his piasters as they would have stared at a letter in an unknown
-language, and inquired who would give them any thing for such small
-bits of metal as those? However, he by degrees succeeded in convincing
-them that money possessed over civilized men, and all who came within
-their influence, a mysterious power which they could not resist, and
-thus awakened in their souls the “accursed thirst of gold.” This
-seemed at first to produce a good effect; but the love of money once
-excited, they knew not where to stop; and their avarice, which he had
-reckoned his best ally, soon exhausted his means, so that before he had
-half-completed his undertaking he was compelled to desist, and continue
-his voyage up the Nile to Ibrim and the first cataract.
-
-Having gratified his curiosity with a glance at these celebrated spots,
-Belzoni returned to Assouan, and from thence proceeded to Thebes,
-where he immediately put in train the measures necessary for conveying
-down the river the Memnon’s head, and various other antiquities. The
-obstacles which were thrown in his way by the obstinacy of the natives,
-and the intrigues of Drovetti, and other collectors of antiquities,
-were numerous, and highly disgraceful to their originators.
-Nevertheless, on the 17th of November, 1816, he succeeded in placing
-the head on board of a boat, in which he set sail on the 21st for
-Cairo, where he arrived on the 15th of December, after a voyage of
-twenty-four days. All professions reckon among their members many
-knaves and many fools; but the antiquarians with whom Belzoni came in
-contact deserved, in several instances, to be sent to the galleys. His
-labours were, as a matter of course, depreciated by several foreigners
-of this cast, who absurdly misrepresented his researches. In this
-number must be reckoned Count Forbin, who was frightened away from
-Thebes by beholding the apparition of an English waiting-maid in a
-blue pelisse among the ruins. This gentleman, in his absurd “Travels,”
-represents our traveller as having employed six months in placing the
-colossal bust on board the boat, although he knew, or should have
-known, that the operation did not occupy a sixth part of that time. The
-origin of this contemptible fiction was the jealousy which the idea
-of seeing this extraordinary piece of antiquity in the possession of
-the English inspired. An able writer in the Quarterly Review, after
-animadverting in a very spirited manner upon the meanness of these
-proceedings, observes, “But detraction, it would appear, is not all
-that Mr. Belzoni has had to sustain from this irrational jealousy. M.
-Drovetti, French consul, has, as Count Forbin observes, two agents at
-Thebes,--the one a Mameluke, named Yousuf, originally a drummer in the
-French army; the other a Marseillese renegade of the name of Riffo,
-‘small in stature, bold, enterprising, and choleric; beating the Arabs
-because they had neither time nor taste to understand the Provençal
-language.’ These persons are more than suspected of being concerned
-in a plot against the life of Mr. Belzoni, who was recently fired at
-from behind a wall, while employed in his researches among the ruins
-of Carnac, where these two fellows were then known to be lurking. The
-affair has been brought before the Consular Court at Cairo; and we
-trust that M. Drovetti, for the sake of his own character and that of
-his country, will not interfere with the judicial proceedings, nor
-attempt to shelter his agents from the punishment which awaits them.”
-
-From Cairo Belzoni proceeded with the bust down the Nile to Rosetta and
-Alexandria; from whence, after having placed his charge in the pasha’s
-warehouses, he quickly returned, for the purpose of proceeding on a
-second voyage up the Nile. It was on this occasion that he had the good
-fortune to become known to Mr. Briggs, with whom he returned to Cairo.
-Captain Caviglia had at this period commenced his researches in the
-interior of the first pyramid of Ghizeh; but was about to discontinue
-them for lack of means, when Mr. Briggs munificently engaged to furnish
-funds for the purpose, in which he was seconded by Mr. Salt. It was
-proposed by this latter gentleman that Belzoni should join Captain
-Caviglia in his researches; but our traveller, with commendable
-ambition, preferred some undertaking in which all the credit should
-redound to himself; and, having left his wife at the house of a friend
-at Cairo, he once more ascended the Nile, accompanied by Mr. Beechey,
-to whom he had been introduced at Alexandria.
-
-At Eraramoun, near Ashmouneir, Belzoni obtained intelligence that two
-agents of M. Drovetti were hurrying on towards Thebes, in the hope of
-forestalling him in the purchase of antiquities; upon which he hired
-two asses, and, leaving Mr. Beechey to come up slowly with the boat,
-hurried off by night. On reaching the ruins, after an incredibly
-fatiguing journey of five days, he found that, although the agents were
-not arrived, Mr. Salt’s neglect, in not paving the way with a handsome
-present, had so completely irritated the bey, that he had appropriated
-to the French ex-consul the very ground upon which Belzoni had
-commenced his excavations during his first journey. Into the details
-of these wretched squabbles, which it is humiliating to the lovers of
-art even to peruse, I shall of course not enter. Belzoni, it should be
-observed, was forced into them much against his feelings; for he was
-an educated, liberal, and high-minded man, altogether averse from low
-caballing and intrigue, which appear to have formed the native element
-of Drovetti and his congenial coadjutor, the Count de Forbin.
-
-The most interesting transaction, perhaps, in which our traveller was
-anywhere engaged, was his visit to the Necropolis of Thebes, in the
-mountain of Gournou. This is a tract of about two miles in length, at
-the foot of the Libyan ridge. Every part of these rocks is scooped out
-into a sepulchre, which, however close it may be to other sepulchral
-chambers, has rarely any interior communication with them. It is
-impossible, as Belzoni observes, to convey by description an adequate
-idea of these subterraneous abodes and their inhabitants. No other
-sepulchres in the world resemble them. There are no excavations or
-mines that can be compared with those astonishing places, which, when
-once seen, for ever after haunt the imagination, like a glimpse of the
-regions beyond the grave. Few travellers see more of these catacombs
-than the exterior chambers, from which the dead have been removed.
-In the interior sepulchres the air is suffocating, and frequently
-causes fainting. The dust of decayed mummies, which is so fine that
-it quickly penetrates in vast quantities to the lungs, and causes a
-difficulty of respiration; the strong effluvia of decomposed bodies;
-the dark, dismal, lonesome nature of the place;--every thing tends to
-discourage the intruder. Belzoni was not, however, to be deterred. In
-describing the difficulties which he here encountered, he observes, “In
-some places there is not more than the vacancy of a foot left, which
-you must contrive to pass through in a creeping posture, like a snail,
-on pointed and keen stones that cut like glass. After getting through
-these passages, some of them two or three hundred yards long, you
-generally find a more commodious place, perhaps high enough to sit.
-But what a place of rest! surrounded by bodies, by heaps of mummies, in
-all directions, which, previous to my being accustomed to the sight,
-impressed me with horror. The blackness of the wall; the faint light
-given by the candles or torches for want of air; the different objects
-that surrounded me seeming to converse with each other; and the Arabs
-with the candles or torches in their hands, naked and covered with
-dust, themselves resembling living mummies,--absolutely formed a scene
-that cannot be described. In such a situation I found myself several
-times, and often returned exhausted and fainting, till at last I became
-inured to it, and indifferent to what I suffered except from the dust,
-which never failed to choke my throat and nose; and though fortunately
-I am destitute of the sense of smelling, I could taste that the mummies
-were rather unpleasant to swallow. After the exertion of entering into
-such a place, through a passage of fifty, a hundred, three hundred, or
-perhaps six hundred yards, nearly overcome, I sought a resting-place,
-found one, and contrived to sit; but when my weight bore on the body
-of an Egyptian, it crushed it like a bandbox. I naturally had recourse
-to my hands to sustain my weight, but they found no better support; so
-that I sank altogether among the broken mummies, with a crash of bones,
-rags, and wooden cases, which raised such a dust as kept me motionless
-for a quarter of an hour, waiting till it subsided again. I could not
-move from the place, however, without increasing it, and every step
-I took crushed a mummy in some part or other. Once I was conducted
-from such a place to another resembling it, through a passage of about
-twenty feet in length, and no wider than that the body could be forced
-through. It was choked with mummies, and I could not pass without
-putting my face in contact with that of some decayed Egyptian; but as
-the passage inclined downwards, my own weight helped me on. However, I
-could not help being covered with bones, legs, arms, and heads, rolling
-from above. Thus I proceeded from one cave to another, all full of
-mummies, piled up in various ways, some standing, some lying, and some
-on their heads. The purpose of my researches was to rob the Egyptians
-of their papyri, of which I found a few hidden in their breasts, under
-their arms, and in the space above the knees, or on the legs, and
-covered by the numerous folds of cloth that envelop the mummy.”
-
-Belzoni continued indefatigably making new researches both at Gournou
-and Carnac, but was at length put to flight by the machinations of
-the French, who had succeeded in gaining over to their party the bey
-of the province. He then resolved once more to ascend the Nile to
-Ipsambul, and was fortunate enough to meet with two English travellers,
-Captains Irby and Mangles, who were desirous of performing the same
-voyage. They hired a boat between them at Philo, where they celebrated
-the birth-day of George the Third, and setting out together in high
-spirits, visited the second cataract, and then returned to Ipsambul.
-Here the wrong-headedness and quarrelsome disposition of the Nubians
-considerably obstructed their labours in clearing away the entrance
-to the temple. But at length, having dismissed the native labourers,
-and undertaken the task themselves, they succeeded, and enjoyed the
-satisfaction of beholding one of the most perfect and beautiful
-rock-temples in the world.
-
-Having completed this laborious operation, our traveller returned to
-his old station at Thebes, where he continued his researches in the
-valley of Beban el Malook. Here, among other remarkable antiquities,
-he discovered one relic of the ancient world, which certainly appears
-to rank among the most beautiful that have ever been exhumed. “It is,”
-says he, “a sarcophagus of the finest oriental alabaster, nine feet
-five inches long, and three feet seven inches wide. Its thickness is
-only two inches, and it is transparent when a light is placed inside
-it. It is minutely sculptured within and without with several hundred
-figures which do not exceed two inches in height, and represent, as I
-suppose, the whole of the funeral procession and ceremonies relating
-to the deceased, united with several emblems, &c. I cannot give an
-adequate idea of this beautiful and invaluable piece of antiquity, and
-can only say, that nothing has been brought into Europe from Egypt that
-can be compared to it. The cover was not there; it had been taken out
-and broken into several pieces.”
-
-Of the tomb in which this extraordinary monument was found a model
-was many years afterward exhibited in London, and so exceedingly well
-executed was the representation, that had it not been for the crowds of
-visiters, one might easily have imagined one’s self in the sepulchres
-of the Egyptian kings. Belzoni wanted but one thing to render him one
-of the greatest antiquarian collectors in the world: this one thing
-was money. But for the lack of this, many of his most arduous and
-well-planned enterprises came to nothing.
-
-From Thebes, with which he was now as familiar as he was with London,
-he some time after this proceeded to Cairo. He had by this time
-acquired quite a passion for excavations, tomb-opening, and all those
-other pursuits by which travellers aim at diving into the mysteries of
-Egyptian manners and arts; and reflecting upon the success of Captain
-Caviglia in descending into the well of the Great Pyramid, the project
-of attempting the opening of the second occurred to him. It were
-beside my purpose to describe the difficulties which he encountered
-and overcame in the execution of this design. His labours were
-incessant; his expenses considerable; but, at length, after success had
-frequently appeared hopeless, the entrance to the interior chambers
-was found. “After thirty days’ exertion,” says he, “I had the pleasure
-of finding myself in the way to the central chamber of one of the
-two great pyramids of Egypt, which have long been the admiration of
-beholders!”
-
-This object having been happily effected, Belzoni again set out for
-Thebes. There he was made acquainted with the history of a pretended
-discovery, which became a motive for a journey to the coast of the
-Red Sea. The history of this expedition is given in a very few words
-by a writer in the Quarterly Review whom I have already cited. “A
-French mineralogist, of the name of Caillaud, had accompanied some
-Arab soldiers sent by the pasha of Egypt in search of emeralds among
-the mountains between the Nile and the Red Sea. On their return, this
-person gave out (as we learn from an intelligent correspondent in the
-Malta Gazette) that in this expedition he had discovered the ancient
-city of the Ptolemies, the celebrated Bernicé, the great emporium of
-Europe and the Indies, of which he gave a magnificent description. Mr.
-Belzoni, doubtful of the accuracy of the story, set out from Edfoo,
-with one of the former party, to visit the supposed Bernicé; where,
-instead of the ruins of 800 houses and three temples, as stated by M.
-Caillaud, he could find no more than eighty-seven scattered houses,
-or rather cells; the greater number of which did not exceed _ten feet
-square_, built with unhewn stones, and without cement; and the only
-appearance of a temple was a niche in a rock, without inscription or
-sculpture of any kind; there was no land for cultivation, nor any water
-within twenty-four miles; no communication with the sea but by a rough
-road over the mountains of twenty-four miles; and the shore was so
-covered with projecting rocks for twenty or thirty miles on each side,
-that there was no security even for the smallest boats, much less for
-ships trading to India. These, therefore, he was quite certain, could
-not be the remains of Bernicé.
-
-As, however, the site of this celebrated city had been fully described
-by the ancient writers, Mr. Belzoni determined to prosecute his
-researches; and at the end of twenty days he discovered, close to the
-shore, the extensive ruins of an ancient city near the Cape Lepte
-Extrema, the Ras el Auf of the present day; the projection of which
-forms an ample bay (now named Foul Bay), having at the bottom an
-excellent harbour for vessels of small burden. These ruins, which are
-beyond dispute those of the celebrated emporium founded by Ptolemy
-Philadelphus, were four days’ journey from the rude cells of the
-quarrymen or miners, which M. Caillaud is stated to have so strangely
-mistaken for the magnificent vestiges of the ancient Bernicé. Several
-wells of bitter water were found among the ruins; and between them and
-the mountains was an extensive plain fit for cultivation. The remains
-of more than 3000 houses were counted, about the centre of which were
-those of a temple with sculptured figures and hieroglyphics.”
-
-Having made this discovery, he again returned to the valley of the
-Nile, where he was for some time occupied in the removal of various
-antiquities. He then descended to the seacoast, and on the 20th of
-April, 1819, set out from Rosetta, on an excursion to the district
-of Fayoum, and the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon. After roaming about the
-shores of Lake Mœris for some time, for he had no leisure for making
-researches, he visited the ruins of Arconde, consisting of a few
-granite columns and fragments and mounds of burnt bricks. He then
-prepared to cross the desert to the Oasis, which was an affair of
-some difficulty. Nevertheless, he at length succeeded in completing
-his preparations, and commenced his journey, accompanied by a Bedouin
-guide, and three or four other persons. Even here, in the desert,
-ruins of Egyptian edifices, beautifully sculptured with hieroglyphics,
-were found. The scene at first lay among low rocks, sandy hills, and
-barren valleys, which were gradually exchanged for a plain of sand, as
-level as the sea, and thickly strewed with brown and black pebbles.
-They continued during five days their journey over this dreary waste,
-at the end of which time they perceived the rocks of the Oasis, and
-beheld two crows coming, as it were, to meet them. In the afternoon
-they entered the valley, which is surrounded by high rocks, and forms
-in the midst a spacious plain, about twelve or fourteen miles long,
-and about six in breadth. “There is only a very small portion of the
-valley cultivated on the opposite side to that which we reached, and it
-can only be distinguished by the woods of palm-trees which cover it.
-The rest of the valley is wholly covered with tracts of sand, but it
-is evidently seen it has once been cultivated everywhere. Many tracts
-of land are of a clayey substance, which could be brought into use
-even now. There are several small hills scattered about, some with a
-natural spring at the top, and covered with rushes and small plants.
-We advanced towards a forest of date-trees, and before evening we
-reached within a mile of a village named Zaboo, all of us exceedingly
-thirsty: here we observed some cultivation, several beds of rice and
-some sunt-trees, &c. Before the camels arrived, they scented the water
-at a distance; and as they had not drank since they left Rejan, they
-set off at full gallop, and did not stop till they reached a rivulet,
-which was quite sweet, although the soil was almost impregnated with
-salt. I observed here a great many wild birds, particularly wild ducks,
-in greater abundance than any other.”
-
-The first man who perceived them after their entrance into the valley
-evinced a disposition to shoot Belzoni; but, upon the explanation of
-the Bedouin guide, consented to conduct them to the village. “We
-advanced,” says our traveller, “and entered a lane between these
-plants; and as we penetrated farther, we entered a most beautiful
-place, full of dates, intermixed with other trees, some in blossom and
-others in fruit: these were apricots, figs, almonds, plums, and some
-grapes. The apricots were in greater abundance than the rest, and the
-figs were very fine. The soil was covered with verdure of grass and
-rice, and the whole formed a most pleasing recess, particularly after
-the barren scenes of the desert.”
-
-His reception at this village was equivocal: there being several
-sheïkhs, each of whom made pretensions to authority. Some were disposed
-to treat him kindly, while others, more morose, kept at a distance; but
-a few cups of coffee, judiciously distributed, and followed by a sheep
-boiled in rice, reconciled the whole; although they next morning, when
-they were again hungry, relapsed into their former rude manners. Like
-all other ignorant people, they supposed that he must necessarily be
-in search of treasure, and for some time refused to conduct him to the
-ruins of which he was in search; but upon being assured that whatever
-treasures might be discovered should fall to their share, while all he
-stipulated for were a few stones, they consented to accompany him. The
-ruins, which, with much probability, he concluded to be those of the
-temple of Jupiter Ammon, now served, he found, as a basement for nearly
-a whole village, in the vicinity of which he discovered the famous
-“Fountain of the Sun,” which is warm at midnight and cold at noon.
-This is a well of sixty feet deep by eight square, which, overflowing
-in a considerable rivulet, serves to irrigate some cultivated lands.
-All around it is a grove of palm and other trees. The temperature of
-the water, however, continues at all times the same; all its apparent
-changes being accounted for by the greater or less degree of heat in
-the atmosphere.
-
-From this excursion Belzoni returned to Egypt, from whence he embarked
-for Europe about the middle of September, 1819. After an absence of
-twenty years he returned to his family; whence he departed for England,
-where he completed and published his travels. A few years afterward
-this enterprising and able traveller fell in an attempt to penetrate
-into the interior of Africa.
-
-
-
-
-DOMINIQUE VIVANT DENON.
-
-Born 1754.--Died 1825
-
-
-This traveller was born at Givry, near Chalons-sur-Soane, in Burgundy.
-He was descended from a noble family, and commenced his career in life
-as a royal page. When he had for some time served in the palace in
-this capacity, he was nominated gentleman in ordinary to the king; not
-long after which he obtained the office of secretary to an embassy.
-In this capacity he accompanied the Baron de Talleyrand, ambassador
-of France to Naples, where, during the absence of the ambassador, he
-remained _chargé des affaires_. At the epoch of the emigration he
-incurred the displeasure of Queen Marie Caroline, and in consequence
-removed to Venice, where he was known under the name of the Chevalier
-Denon, and became one of the most distinguished members of the society
-of Madame Albrizzi. This lady has sketched his portrait in her
-_Ritratti_. After having spoken in a highly laudatory strain of his
-passion for knowledge, his intrepidity in danger, the constant gayety
-of his mind, the fertility of his imagination, the versatility of his
-character, his irresistible inclination to drollery, she adds, “He
-is generally supposed to resemble Voltaire. For my own part, I would
-admit that in his physiognomy you may discover that of Voltaire, but
-in the physiognomy of Voltaire you would look in vain for that of
-Denon. That which, in my opinion, they possess in common, is simply
-an indication of sprightliness, vivacity, versatility, and a certain
-sarcastic air in the look and smile, which amuses while it terrifies;
-but the physiognomy of Voltaire indicates none of those qualities which
-characterize the soul of Denon.”
-
-During his stay in Italy, Denon diligently applied himself to the art
-of design, in which, as was afterward seen, he acquired a remarkable
-facility and power. On the breaking out of the revolution he adopted
-its principles, and even connected himself with the most furious
-jacobins, with the intention, it has been said, of snatching a few
-victims from their fangs. But, notwithstanding all this, he would
-probably have sunk into that oblivion which has already devoured
-the memory of so many actors in those sanguinary times, had not the
-Egyptian expedition placed him in an advantageous position before the
-world. He had all his life, he says, been desirous of travelling in
-Egypt, and easily obtained the consent of Napoleon to accompany him.
-Embarking at Marseilles on the 14th of May, 1799, he sailed along
-the shores of Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily, and Malta, where he landed
-and made some stay, and then proceeded to Egypt. Having had the good
-fortune to escape the English fleet in a fog, he landed near Alexandria
-with the French troops, of whose movements I shall take no further
-notice, except in as far as they may be connected with the actions of
-Denon.
-
-It has been truly remarked by Volney, that on arriving any foreign
-country, how many descriptions soever you may have read of it, you
-nevertheless find every thing new and strange; as if, in fact, you had
-just discovered it. Denon was precisely in this predicament. He had, no
-doubt, read what had been written respecting Egypt; yet he looked upon
-it as a country of which little beyond the name was known in Europe,
-and consequently commenced the study of its antiquities with all
-possible enthusiasm. His views, though vanity had some influence in the
-formation of them, were tolerably correct. Egypt has indeed been often
-visited, and in many instances by able men and accomplished scholars;
-but no one who has toiled, as I have, through the descriptions of these
-various travellers, can avoid making the discovery that very much
-remains yet to be done before we can be said to possess a thorough
-knowledge of Egypt, ancient or modern.
-
-From Alexandria Denon proceeded with Kleber’s division towards Rosetta;
-clouds of Arabs hung on their front and in their rear, cutting off
-every man who lagged behind, or strayed to the distance of fifty yards
-from the main body. Desaix himself narrowly escaped; and several young
-officers, less on the alert, were either made prisoners or shot. After
-making numerous little excursions in the Delta, he set out for Upper
-Egypt, which, in his opinion, had never before been visited by a
-European; so that, if we interpret him literally, all the travellers
-who had previously described that country were so many fiction-mongers.
-In ascending the Nile, he beheld at ten leagues’ distance from Cairo
-the points of the Pyramids piercing the horizon. These prodigious
-monuments, which, even more powerfully than Thebes itself, command the
-attention of every traveller in Egypt, he soon visited with an escort,
-and sketched from various positions. The city of Cairo disappointed his
-expectations, which appear to have been absurd, since he had formed his
-ideas of the place from the “Arabian Nights,” rather than from the
-descriptions of travellers.
-
-The population of Cairo, which, though far less numerous than is
-commonly supposed, is still very great, saw with disgust and horror
-the triumph of the Franks; who, they feared, might soon introduce
-among them the eating of the “unclean beast,” abhorred by Jews and
-Mussulmans, with drinking, gambling, and other accomplishments which
-Mohammed had prohibited to his followers. They therefore determined to
-shake off the yoke which they had too tamely suffered to be placed on
-their necks. Rushing fiercely to arms, they attacked their invaders
-with fury. The house which had been appropriated to the learned men
-who accompanied the expedition stood apart from the city, and was
-surrounded by gardens. Here they were collected together when the
-revolt began. The report of musketry and symptoms of increasing
-consternation soon informed them, however, of what was going forward
-in the more populous quarters, and their alarm was proportioned to the
-solitude by which they were surrounded. Presently a report reached them
-that the house of General Caffarelli had been sacked and pillaged,
-and that several members of the commission of arts had perished. They
-now reviewed their numbers, and four of the party were missing. In
-an hour after this it was ascertained that they had been massacred.
-Meanwhile no one could give any account of Napoleon; night was coming
-on; the firing continued; shouts and clamours filled the air; and it
-was evident that the insurrection was general. A tremendous carnage had
-already taken place, but the inhabitants still held out, having in one
-half of the city adopted that barricading system in which they were
-recently imitated by the people of Paris; and in others, taken refuge,
-to the number of four thousand, in a spacious mosque, from whence they
-repulsed two companies of grenadiers. Night produced a pause in the
-struggle. At the commencement of the insurrection the literati had been
-granted a guard, but about midnight the exigences of the moment caused
-this to be withdrawn; when they themselves took arms, and, though every
-man was disposed to command and none to obey, prepared to receive the
-insurgents. Thus the night passed away in confusion and slaughter, and
-in the morning the French were again masters of the city.
-
-It must be acknowledged, to the honour of the French, that, whatever
-their conduct in Egypt may have been in other respects, nothing could
-be more constant than their ardour for the sciences. In the midst
-of battles, revolts, and dangers of every kind, their researches
-were still continued. We accordingly find Denon, just escaped from
-becoming a mummy himself, busily engaged in dissecting an ibis, five
-hundred mummies of which bird had just been discovered in the caverns
-of Saccara. He next witnessed an exhibition of the achievements of
-the Psylli; but his incredulity and self-sufficiency disinclined
-him from making any serious inquiries on the subject of their power
-over serpents, which he was contented with turning into ridicule: an
-unfortunate propensity for a traveller, who should abandon all such
-absurd displays of littleness to the wits of the metropolis.
-
-Shortly after this Denon accompanied General Desaix on an expedition
-into Upper Egypt. The Mamelukes, though forced to retire, still
-continued to make head against their enemies, who, if they triumphed
-over them through the effects of discipline, were assuredly neither
-more brave nor more enterprising. When they drew near the place where
-the Mamelukes under Murad Bey were reported to be encamped, Desaix was
-informed that Murad was already putting himself in motion to attack
-him. The French general, no less chivalrous than Murad, determined
-at once to anticipate the attack. Both armies came in sight of each
-other in the evening. It was too late for battle. The victory which
-both parties promised themselves was deferred until the morrow.
-In the Mameluke camp the night was spent in rejoicings; and their
-sentinels approached, with laughter and insult, the advanced posts of
-the French. The battle commenced with the dawn. Murad, at the head of
-his redoubtable Mamelukes and eight or ten thousand Arabs, appeared
-ready for the attack. The French formed with rapidity, and the combat
-commenced. Never, on any occasion, was more impetuous bravery displayed
-than by Murad and his Mamelukes on this day. Finding that the chances
-of battle were turning against them, their habitual courage degenerated
-into fury: they galloped up, reckless of danger, to the ranks of their
-enemies, and endeavoured to open themselves a way through the bayonets
-and muskets of the French, which they attempted to hew in pieces with
-their sabres. Failing in this, they made their horses rear and plunge
-into the opposing lines, or backed them against the bayonets, in the
-hope of breaking and dispersing them. When this desperate measure also
-deceived their hopes, they lost all government of their rage, and
-in the madness of their despair, threw their muskets, pistols, and
-blunderbusses at the enemy; or, if dismounted, crept along the ground,
-beneath the bayonets, to cut at the legs of the soldiers. It was in
-this fight that an instance of ferocity on both sides, unsurpassed
-by any thing of the kind recorded in history, occurred: a French
-soldier and a Mameluke, engaged in mortal struggle on the ground, were
-discovered by an officer, just as the Frenchman was cutting the throat
-of his enemy. “How can you be guilty of so horrible an action,” said
-the officer, “in the state in which you are?” The soldier replied, “You
-talk very finely, at your ease, sir; for my own part, however, I have
-but a moment to live, and I mean to enjoy it!” The Mamelukes retired,
-but they did not fly; and it cost the French torrents of blood before
-the victory was completed.
-
-This victory caused Desaix to return once more to Cairo for a
-reinforcement, after which the journey towards the south was resumed.
-At Miniel Guidi, while Denon was sitting beside the general in the
-shade, a criminal, who had been caught in stealing the muskets from the
-volunteers, was brought up for judgment. It was a boy not more than
-twelve years of age, beautiful as an angel, but bleeding from a large
-sabre wound which he had received in his arm. He paid no attention to
-his wound, but presented himself with an ingenuous and confident air
-before the general, whom he soon discovered to be his judge. How great
-is the power of unaffected grace! The anger of every person present
-immediately disappeared. He was first questioned respecting the person
-who had instigated the crime. “No one,” he replied. The question was
-repeated under another form: he answered that “he did not know--the
-powerful--the Almighty.”--“Have you any relations?”--“Only a mother,
-very poor, and blind.” He was then informed, that if he confessed who
-had sent him nothing would be done to him; whereas certain punishment
-would ensue upon his concealing the truth. “I have told you,” he said,
-“I was sent by no one; God alone inspired me!” Then placing his cap
-at the feet of the general, he continued, “Behold my head, command
-it to be struck off.”--“Poor fellow!” exclaimed Desaix, “let him be
-dismissed.” He was led away, and divining his fate from the looks of
-the general, he departed with a smile.
-
-Here they enjoyed the unusual pleasure of a shower of rain. On visiting
-the ruins of Oxyrinchus, Denon suffered one of the penalties attached
-to a hopeless creed; beholding around him nothing but desolation and
-sterility, a thousand melancholy ideas glided into his mind; he saw
-the desert encroaching upon the cultivated soil, as the domain of
-death encroaches upon life; the tombs in the pathless waste seemed the
-emblems of death and annihilation. The gayety described by Signora
-Albrizzi had now fled. He thought himself alone, and felt all that
-awful solitude inspired by a want of faith in the spiritual nature
-of man, that faith which sheds around us, wherever we move, a light
-by which we discern the links that unite us to our Creator, and to
-every thing noble and immortal in the works of his hands. He was not,
-however, alone. Desaix had wandered to the same spot, and having
-apparently yielded, like himself, to the fatal error of the times,
-experienced the same sensations, and was oppressed by the same gloom.
-
-They shortly afterward set out together, escorted by three hundred
-men, on an excursion to the ruins of Hermopolis; which, being the
-first monument of ancient Egyptian architecture that he beheld,
-the Pyramids excepted, became in his mind the type of that sublime
-style. Notwithstanding the number of his escort, Denon soon found
-that, although arms might indeed open him a way to places which had
-hitherto been inaccessible to travellers, other circumstances, over
-which neither himself nor Desaix could exercise any control, prevented
-him from maturely studying what he beheld. A few hours satisfied the
-curiosity of the general, and overwhelmed the soldiers, who felt no
-curiosity about the matter, with fatigue. It was therefore necessary
-to be contented with a few fugitive glances, as it were, with a few
-sketches hastily made, and the hope of returning again under more
-favourable auspices.
-
-On approaching Tentyris Denon ventured, he says, to propose that the
-army should halt there. Desaix, though no less sensible than himself
-of the charms of these antique ruins, had his mind filled with other
-cares, and met the proposal with anger. Passion, however, could possess
-but a momentary influence over that beautiful mind; shortly afterward
-he sought out the enthusiastic traveller, in whose company he visited
-Denderah, and admired the sublimity of its ponderous architecture. In
-the evening, Latournerie, a young officer remarkable for his courage
-and the delicacy of his taste, observed to Denon, “Ever since I
-have arrived in Egypt, continual disappointment has made me ill and
-melancholy. The sight of Denderah has revived me. What I have seen this
-day has repaid me for all my fatigues; and whatever may be the fate to
-which the present expedition shall lead me, the remembrance of this day
-will cause me to rejoice, as long as I live, that I was engaged in it.”
-
-Two days after this, on turning the point of a chain of mountains, the
-army came in sight of the ruins of Thebes. Denon loved above all things
-to be original. In approaching the wreck of this mighty city, Homer’s
-phrase, “Thebes with its hundred gates,” occurred to him; he repeated
-it, and then descanted upon its poetical vanity, and the folly of those
-who harped upon this string. As soon as the army came in sight of
-these gigantic ruins, the whole body stopped spontaneously as one man,
-and clapped their hands with admiration and delight. The conquest of
-Egypt appeared to be complete. Our traveller, who rivalled Dr. Syntax
-himself in his love of the picturesque, immediately set about sketching
-the view, as if it had been merely a city of vapour, like that which
-appears under the name of the “Palace of the Rajah Harchund,” in the
-desert of Ajmere. Being desirous of beholding at once all the wonders
-of this stupendous city, he quickly visited those colossal statues
-which are found in a sitting posture in the neighbouring plain, which
-he supposed to be those of the mother and son of Ossymandyas.
-
-From Thebes he proceeded with General Belliard to Syene, while Desaix
-struck off into the desert in search of a detachment of Mamelukes.
-Here he resided for some time, making the island of Elephantina his
-country-house, and Syene his head-quarters. He visited the cataracts,
-the island of Phile, and made drawings of whatever was striking or
-remarkable in the vicinity. After a considerable stay, he returned
-towards the north, where he bade adieu to his friend Desaix, never to
-meet again. He afterward made a second excursion to Thebes, Denderah,
-and other celebrated spots; and experienced, during one of these
-rambles, the effects of the Khamsyn wind, variously described by
-travellers, according to the variety of their temperaments. It was
-about the middle of May, the heat was almost intolerable, a complete
-stagnation seemed to have taken place in the air. “At the very moment,”
-he says, “when to remove the painful sensation occasioned by such a
-state of the atmosphere, I was hastening to bathe in the Nile, all
-nature seemed to have put on a new aspect: the light and colours were
-such as I had never seen before; the sun, without being concealed,
-had lost its rays; become dimmer than the moon, it yielded but a pale
-light, diffused around every object without shadows; the water no
-longer reflected its rays, and appeared troubled: the aspect of every
-thing was changed; it was the earth which now appeared luminous, while
-the air was dim, and seemed opaque; the trees, beheld through a yellow
-horizon, wore a dirty blue colour; a long column of birds swept before
-the cloud; the terrified animals wandered wild through the plain, and
-the peasants, who pursued them with shouts, failed to collect them
-together. The wind, which had raised this prodigious mass of sand,
-and transported it along through the atmosphere, had not yet reached
-us, and we hoped, by entering into the water, to escape from its
-effects. But we had scarcely stepped into the river before its waves
-were lifted up by the hurricane, dashed over our heads, and carried
-in an instantaneous inundation over the plain. The bed of the Nile
-seemed shaken under our feet, and its banks with our garments appeared
-to have been blown away. We hurried out of the water, the dust fell
-upon us like rain, we were immediately covered as with a crust. Too
-much terrified even to put on our garments, we crept along through a
-reddish, insufficient light, partly guiding our steps by the walls,
-until at length we found refuge in our lodgings.”
-
-Denon, who really possessed all the genuine enthusiasm of a traveller,
-shortly after this undertook a journey to Cosseir on the Red Sea, where
-he enjoyed an opportunity of beholding the manners of the Arabs under
-less disadvantages than in the valley of the Nile. He then returned
-again to Thebes, where he visited the sepulchres of Gournon, and
-descending the Nile to the seacoast, embarked with Napoleon on board
-a frigate, and sailed for France. The ship, fearful of encountering
-the English, coasted along the shores of Africa, as far as the Gulf
-of Carthage and Biserta; then, after passing close to Sardinia, and
-touching at Corsica, arrived safe on the coast of Provence.
-
-On his return to France, Napoleon, of whom he was a devoted admirer,
-and in whose praise he was frequently guilty of adulation, conferred
-upon him the office of superintendent of museums and the striking of
-medals. The triumphal column in the Place Vendôme was erected under
-his direction. On the fall of Napoleon, the king, who was not ignorant
-of the merits of Denon, continued him in his offices; but as on the
-reappearance of Napoleon in 1815 he returned to his allegiance to his
-first sovereign, he naturally sank with him upon his final fall. In his
-place of superintendent of the medal mint he was succeeded by M. de
-Puymaurin and by the Comte de Farbin, as director-general of museums.
-Denon enjoyed the reputation, however, of being the most competent
-person in Paris for filling the offices of which he had been deprived.
-Remarking upon those changes, “It would be difficult,” says the
-Quarterly Review, “to discover on what grounds an old and meritorious
-servant, who, like Denon, had distinguished himself by his knowledge of
-antiquities, by his taste and execution in the fine arts, and by his
-zeal for their promotion among his countrymen, was dismissed to make
-room for the present Apollo of the Museum, who has not the good fortune
-to be gifted with science, art, or taste, or even with the semblance of
-zeal or respect for any of them.” Denon died in 1827, leaving behind
-him an extensive and well-merited reputation, which is likely long to
-survive. His travels have been translated into English, and are still
-highly esteemed.
-
-
-
-
-REGINALD HEBER.
-
-Born 1783.--Died 1826.
-
-
-Reginald Heber, equally distinguished for his talents and for his
-piety, was born on the 21st of April, 1783, at Malpas, in the county of
-Chester. From his earliest years religion was the predominant feeling
-of his mind. His passions, which would seem to have been naturally
-ardent, he quickly learned to hold in subjection; and was thus happily
-delivered from those stormy agitations and poignant regrets to which
-those who are formed of more fiery materials are but too frequently
-liable. Like most other men who have been remarkable for their
-attainments in after-life, Heber was strongly addicted, while a boy,
-to extensive miscellaneous reading. Guicciardini and Machiavelli were
-among his early favourites. He admired the great Florentine historian
-for his style, and with a freedom from prejudice which indicated
-the purity of his mind, ventured to make the discovery, that this
-much-calumniated advocate of freedom was a far better man than the
-world was inclined to admit. At the same time his study of the sacred
-Scriptures was incessant. Even while a child, the principal events
-which they record were so firmly imprinted on his memory, that his
-friends used to apply to him, when at a loss where to find the account
-of any important transaction, or any remarkable passage.
-
-In the year 1800 Heber was entered a student of Brazen Nose College,
-Oxford, where he exhibited on all occasions the same high sense of
-religion and primitive piety which had distinguished him in his
-earlier years. His studies in the mean while were pursued with a
-passionate ardour, particularly all those which were connected with
-poetry, for the mind of Heber was eminently imaginative; and although
-circumstances, which I know not whether to denominate fortunate or
-unfortunate (since in either case he would, like the divine Founder of
-his religion, have been employed in doing good), prevented him from
-devoting himself to the study and building of the “lofty rhyme,” his
-soul was yet a fountain, as it were, of poetry, which, if possible,
-cast additional beauty and splendour on his faith. However, as I am
-not, on the present occasion, engaged in viewing Heber as a poet, or
-as a divine, it will not be necessary for me to enter minutely into a
-description of his poetical or theological studies. His “Palestine,”
-the principal contribution which he has made to our rich poetical
-literature, was a juvenile performance, written before or soon after
-he had completed his twentieth year; but the effect which it produced
-on those who heard it recited in the theatre of the college was more
-extraordinary, perhaps, than the bare reading of the poem would lead
-one to conceive; though the judgment of those who then heard it has
-since been confirmed by the public. “None,” says an able writer in
-Blackwood’s Magazine, who heard Reginald Heber recite his ‘Palestine’
-in that magnificent theatre, “will ever forget his appearance--so
-interesting and impressive. It was known that his old father was
-somewhere sitting among the crowded audience, when his universally
-admired son ascended the rostrum; and we have heard that the sudden
-thunder of applause which then arose so shook his frame, weak and
-wasted by long illness, that he never recovered it, and may be said
-to have died of the joy dearest to a parent’s heart. Reginald Heber’s
-recitation, like that of all poets whom we have heard recite, was
-altogether untrammelled by the critical laws of elocution, which were
-not set at defiance, but either by the poet unknown or forgotten; and
-there was a charm in his somewhat melancholy voice, that occasionally
-faltered, less from a feeling of the solemnity and even grandeur of
-the scene, of which he was himself the conspicuous object--though that
-feeling did suffuse his pale, ingenuous, and animated countenance--than
-from the deeply-felt sanctity of his subject, comprehending the most
-awful mysteries of God’s revelations to man. As his voice grew bolder
-and more sonorous in the hush, the audience felt that this was not
-the mere display of the skill and ingenuity of a clever youth, the
-accidental triumph of an accomplished versifier over his compeers, in
-the dexterity of scholarship, which is all that can generally be truly
-said of such exhibitions; but that here was a poet indeed, not only of
-bright promise, but of high achievement; one whose name was already
-written in the roll of the immortals. And that feeling, whatever might
-have been the share of the boundless enthusiasm with which the poem was
-listened to, attributable to the influence of the ‘genius loci,’ has
-been since sanctioned by the judgment of the world, that has placed
-‘Palestine’ at the very head of the poetry on divine subjects of this
-age. It is now incorporated for ever with the poetry of England.”
-
-In this eloquent tribute to the memory of Heber there appears to be but
-one error; it is that which attributes the death of Reginald’s father
-to the influence of excessive joy on a frame debilitated by illness; a
-report which we are assured by the widow of our traveller was wholly
-without foundation. During the same year, Napoleon conceived the insane
-design of invading England; and thus roused in the ardent breasts of
-our countrymen a fierce spirit of resistance, which affected even the
-peaceful college student, who, to use the familiar expression of Heber
-in describing himself thus engaged, “fagged and drilled by turns.”
-Neither Napoleon nor his army, however, had been doomed by Providence
-to lay their bones in English clay, as, had the invasion taken place,
-they must have done; and our traveller’s military enthusiasm was
-quickly suffered to cool.
-
-Early in the year 1804, Heber sustained one of the heaviest calamities
-which men can experience on this side of the grave--the loss of a
-father; which he bore with that deep but meek sorrow which a youth full
-of religious hope and untiring resignation to the will of Providence
-might be naturally expected to feel. In the autumn of the same year he
-was elected a fellow of All Souls; shortly after which his academical
-career terminated, and he exchanged the mimic world of the university
-for that far more arduous scene where many an academical star has grown
-dim, though Heber, with the happy fortune which usually attends the
-virtuous, continued even in the great theatre of the world to command
-the approval and admiration of mankind.
-
-About the middle of the year 1805, he accompanied his early friend,
-Mr. John Thornton, whose virtues would appear to have been akin to his
-own, on a tour through the north of Europe. They proceeded by sea
-to Gottenburg in Sweden, where they experienced the effect of that
-strangeness and novelty, which is felt once by all persons who travel
-in a foreign country, but which can never, by any possibility, visit
-the mind a second time. Here they purchased a carriage, and proceeded
-through the wildest and most sublime scenery, interspersed with meadows
-and corn-fields, on a tour among the mountains of Norway. At intervals,
-dispersed over craggy, desolate heaths, immense numbers of cairns and
-Runic columns were discovered,--which, with pine forests of sombre hue,
-large bays of the sea nearly land-locked, and appearing like so many
-lakes; cascades, rocks, cloud-capped mountains,--produced a series
-of impressions upon the mind, characterized by so high a degree of
-solemn grandeur, that even the vast solitudes of the Brenner Alps or
-Wetterhorn could scarcely inspire a deeper sense of sublimity. Amid
-those wild landscapes the natives amused themselves with wolf-hunting
-on sledges, during the winter; but their ferocious game sometimes come
-out in such multitudes from the woods, that even the most skilled
-huntsmen were in danger.
-
-At Munkholm, or Monk’s Island, called the Bastille du Nord, Heber saw,
-among other prisoners, a very old man, who had been confined there
-for above fifty years, and had lost in a great measure the use of his
-faculties; they were much moved by his appearance, and the answers
-which he gave. On being asked how old he was, he answered three hundred
-years. His crime was variously reported: some said he was sent there by
-his relations for violent behaviour to his father; others as being a
-spend-thrift; and M. Leganger said, as being mad. A pretty government
-this, where a man is shut up for his whole life, and three or four
-different reasons given for his imprisonment, all equally uncertain!
-In Norway, as well as in some parts of Hadramaut and the Coromandel
-coast, the cattle are fed upon the refuse of fish, which fattens them
-rapidly, but seems, at the same time, totally to change their nature,
-and render them unmanageably ferocious.
-
-Heber’s stay in Norway was short. He had the talent to describe
-whatever was presented to his view, but his mild and gentle nature
-inspired him with no sympathy for the craggy, barren, desolate scenery
-of the Norwegian mountains; and he appears to have hastened his return
-to the abodes of civilization from an instinctive perception of this
-fact. Upon passing from Norway into Sweden, they spent some time at
-Upsala and the capital; from whence they crossed the Gulf of Bothnia in
-a fishing-boat, to Abo, in Finland. From hence, however, as it seems to
-have contained nothing worth seeing, they proceeded with all possible
-celerity, the approved English mode of travelling, to Petersburg.
-Notwithstanding the rapidity of their movements, they found time to
-make one discovery, which, as it is the echo of what most travellers
-repeat of the countries they visit, I insert for the honour of the
-Finns and Russians: “In one point,” says he, “both the Finlanders and
-Russians are unfortunately agreed, I mean in the proverbial knavery of
-the lower classes. In Sweden every thing was secure from theft, and our
-carriage, with its harness, cushions, &c., stood every night untouched
-in the open street. But we soon found how very inferior the Sclavonian
-race is to the Gothic in honesty, and were obliged to keep a constant
-watch. I cannot account for this apparently generic difference. If the
-Russians only had been thieves I should have called it the effects of
-the slavery of the peasants, but Swedish Finland is just as bad, and
-the peasants are as free as in England.”
-
-Our travellers remained at St. Petersburg until the 30th of December,
-amusing themselves with learning the German language, and in seeing
-sights, and then departed for Moscow, travelling at the same
-prodigious rate as when they fled thither from Abo. “Our mode of
-travelling,” says Heber, “deserves describing, both as very comfortable
-in itself, and as being entirely different from every thing in England.
-We performed the journey in kabitkas, the carriages usually employed
-by the Russians in their winter journeys: they are nothing more than a
-very large cradle, well covered with leather, and placed on a sledge,
-with a leather curtain in front; the luggage is placed at the bottom,
-the portmanteaus serving for an occasional seat, and the whole covered
-with a mattress, on which one or more persons can lie at full length,
-or sit supported by pillows. In this attitude, and well wrapped up in
-furs, one can scarcely conceive a more luxurious mode of getting over a
-country, when the roads are good, and the weather not intense; but in
-twenty-four or twenty-five degrees of frost (Reaumur), no wrapping can
-keep you quite warm; and in bad roads, of which we have had some little
-experience, the jolting is only equalled by the motion of a ship in a
-storm.”
-
-From Moscow, where they arrived on the 3d of January, 1806, they
-shortly afterward made an excursion eastward to Yaroslav, on the banks
-of the Volga, during which Heber made the remarkable discovery that
-the Russian clergy almost universally were inimical to the government;
-being more connected than most other classes of men with the peasants,
-many of whose sufferings and oppressions they shared. They witnessed at
-Yaroslav a wolf-hunt on the frozen Volga. It should rather, however,
-be termed a “wolf-baiting;” for the animals, which had been previously
-caught for the purpose, were at once set upon by a number of dogs,
-and beaten almost blind by the long whips of savages, whom I cannot
-term hunters. A couple of hares were likewise chased upon the ice by
-Siberian greyhounds, very beautiful creatures, with silky hair and a
-fan tail, which, though less swift, were said to be more hardy than our
-greyhounds.
-
-Heber, somewhat dazzled, as was natural, by the gorgeous taste of
-the Muscovites, seems to have been highly gratified by the reception
-which he and his fellow-traveller experienced at the ancient capital
-of the empire: “The eastern retinues and luxuries,” says he, “which
-one meets with here are almost beyond belief. There are few English
-countesses have so many pearls in their possession as I have seen in
-the streets in the cap of a merchant’s wife. At a ball in the ancient
-costume, which was given by M. Nedilensky (secretary of state to the
-late empress, whose family we have found the most agreeable in Moscow),
-the ladies all wore caps entirely of pearls, and the blaze of diamonds
-on their _saraphaus_ (the ancient Russian tunic) would have outshone,
-I think, St. James’s. The pearl bonnet is not a becoming dress, as
-it makes its wearer look very pale, a fault which some ladies had
-evidently been endeavouring to obviate.” The heads which were thus
-gaudily garnished on the outside were generally exceedingly empty, as
-may safely be inferred from the degree of information possessed by
-their fathers, husbands, and brothers; so that the comparison with
-English ladies, in whom beauty and intelligence usually go hand in
-hand, could, I imagine, be carried no further.
-
-Upon leaving Moscow about the middle of March, our traveller proceeded
-southward through the Ukraine, the country of the Cossacks, at Charkof,
-the capital of which, a university had recently been established. The
-professors of this establishment, who were all very handsomely paid,
-presented a motley assemblage of Russians, Germans, and Frenchmen,
-nearly every individual of which was big with some new scheme of
-teaching or college government; but this ludicrous appearance would
-wear off in time, while the benefit conferred on the people would
-be extensive and permanent. From hence they hurried on, for they
-were still rapid in their motions, to Taganroy, or the “Cape of the
-Teakettle,” so called from the form of the rock on which the fortress
-stands; and from thence to Nakitchivan on the Don. “This town,” says
-Heber, “is a singular mixture of Cossack houses and the black felt
-tents of the Kalmucs, all fishermen, and with their habitations almost
-thrust into the river. From the windows of the public-house where I am
-writing, the view is very singular and pleasing. The moon is risen, and
-throws a broad glare of light over the Don, which is here so widely
-overflowed that the opposite bank is scarcely visible; the foreground
-is a steep limestone hill covered with cottages and circular tents; and
-we hear on every side the mingled characteristic sounds of the singing
-of the boatmen on the river, the barking of the large ferocious Kalmuc
-dogs, which in all these countries are suffered to prowl about during
-the night, blended with the low monotonous chant of the Cossack women,
-who are enjoying the fine evening, and dancing in a large circle in the
-streets.”
-
-Tcherkask, their next station, which in spring was mostly under water,
-seemed in some degree to resemble Venice. It was, in the opinion of
-our travellers, one of the most singular towns in the world, where, in
-the season of the inundation, the communication between one house and
-another was preserved by a kind of balcony or gallery, raised on wooden
-pillars, and running along the streets on both sides. From hence they
-continued their journey along the banks of the Kuban and the frontiers
-of Circassia, having in view the wild range of the Caucasus, with vast
-forests of oak at its roots. The population of these districts, fierce
-marauding mountaineers, beheld with regret the efforts which were
-making by the Russian government to wean them from their sanguinary
-habits. Their whole delight consisted in bloodshed and plunder. But
-their frays had gradually become less and less frequent: “Formerly,”
-said their guide, “we were ourselves a terror to our neighbours--but
-we are now,” added he with a sigh--“a civilized people!” “The land on
-the Russian side of the river (Kuban),” says Heber, “is but scantily
-wooded; on the southern side it rises in a magnificent theatre of oak
-woods, interspersed with cultivated ground, and the smoke of villages,
-with the ridges of Caucasus above the whole. The nearest hills are by
-no means gigantic; but there are some white peaks which rise at a vast
-distance, and which proved to us that these were only the first story
-of the mountain.”
-
-Our travellers now traversed the Crimea, and proceeded across a stepp
-intersected by numerous streams, inlets of the sea, and some large
-salt-water lakes, to Odessa, an interesting town, which in the opinion
-of Heber owed its prosperity to the administration of the Duc de
-Richelieu far more than to any natural advantages. Their route now lay
-across Russian Poland, Hungary, Austria, and Northern Germany. They
-arrived at Yarmouth on the 14th of October, 1806, and Heber immediately
-set forward to join the family circle at Hodnet, where he enjoyed the
-satisfaction which every wanderer feels when returning, after a long
-and toilsome journey, to his native home.
-
-In the year 1807 Heber took orders, and obtained the living of Hodnet,
-in Shropshire, which was in his brother’s gift; he then returned to
-Oxford for the purpose of taking his degree as master of arts. It
-will readily be supposed that he, whose piety was truly apostolical,
-even while in a secular station, now that he had assumed the habit of
-a Christian minister, became doubly anxious to render not only his
-conduct, but the very thoughts of his mind, pure as became his holy
-calling. The church has in no age been destitute of teachers remarkable
-for their virtue and benevolence; but even among preachers of the
-gospel it is not often that a man so gifted as Heber with genius,
-with enlarged knowledge of mankind, with almost boundless charity and
-benevolence, can be found, the perusal of whose life must create in
-the reader as well as in me the vain wish that we had numbered him
-among our friends. Yet Heber was far from being an ascetic. Like all
-men of high imaginative powers who have never suffered vice to brush
-away the down from their nobler feelings, he had a bold faith in the
-enduring nature of affection, and spoke of love, not like a pert
-worldling, whom no excellence could kindle, but like a philosopher,
-aware of the prejudices of the vulgar, but far above being swayed by
-them. “To speak, however, my serious opinion,” says he, in a letter to
-a friend, “I believe that were it possible for a well-founded passion
-to wear out, the very recollection of it would be more valuable than
-the greatest happiness afforded by those calm and vulgar kindnesses
-which chiefly proceed from knowing no great harm of one another. You
-remember Shenstone’s epitaph on Miss Dolman: _Vale, Maria, Puellarum
-Elegantissima, heu quanto minus est cum reliquis versari quam tui
-meminisse._ I am not sure how long that romance of passion may continue
-which the world shows such anxiety to wean us of as soon as possible,
-and which it laughs at because it envies; but, end when it may, it
-is never lost, but will contribute, like fermentation, to make the
-remainder of the cup of happiness more pleasant and wholesome.”
-
-In the April of 1809 Heber married Amelia, youngest daughter of Dr.
-Shipley, dean of St. Asaph. On this occasion he undertook an excursion
-in Wales, the beauties of which, notwithstanding the variety of scenes
-he had beheld, he seemed to consider equal to those of any country
-in the world. He then settled on his rectory, and employed himself
-earnestly in diffusing among his parishioners a proper sense of
-religion, and habits of piety and virtue. “He became, indeed,” says
-his excellent widow, “their earthly guide, their pastor, and friend.
-His ear was never shut to their complaints, nor his hands closed to
-their wants. Instead of hiding his face from the poor, he sought out
-distress; he made it a rule, from which no circumstances induced him
-to swerve, to ‘give to all who asked,’ however trifling the sum; and
-wherever he had an opportunity, he never failed to inquire into, and
-more effectually to relieve their distress. He could not pass a sick
-person, or a child crying, without endeavouring to sooth and help
-them; and the kindness of his manner always rendered his gifts doubly
-valuable.”
-
-Heber, whose leisure, however, was not considerable, was now led,
-by a praiseworthy literary ambition, to become a contributor to the
-Quarterly Review, where many of the excellent critiques on books of
-travels which appeared about that period were of his writing. Having
-himself travelled, he knew how to appreciate the historian of foreign
-manners, while the high tone of his Christian virtues emancipated him
-from that mean jealousy with which little minds are inspired by the
-success of a rival. He was, moreover, admirably calculated by the
-extent and variety of his reading, in which perhaps, he was scarcely
-excelled even by Dr. Southey or Sir Walter Scott, for determining the
-amount of information which any particular observer added to the common
-stock; without which no critic, however able or acute, can possibly
-judge with accuracy of the merits of a traveller. The Castalian rill,
-which Providence had intrusted to our traveller’s keeping, was not,
-in the mean while, permitted to stagnate. Various poems, of different
-character and pretensions, he from time to time composed, and submitted
-to the world; and in 1812 published a collected edition of all his
-poetical works. In the same year he was afflicted by a severe and
-somewhat protracted illness. Indeed, he continued through life,
-observes Mrs. Heber, subject to inflammatory attacks, though rigid
-temperance and exercise enabled him to pursue his studies without
-inconvenience. He was an early riser, and having performed his daily
-devotions, devoted the larger portion of the day to literature; from
-which, nevertheless, he was ready to separate himself at the call of
-duty.
-
-I have before observed that Heber’s character was by no means morose
-or ascetic; he was full of vivacity, good-humour, wit, and no enemy
-to amusements; but he conceived that on Sunday it was the Christian’s
-duty to abstain as far as possible from every species of business. An
-anecdote illustrative of this point, which is related by Mrs. Heber,
-is well worth repeating: As Mr. Reginald Heber was riding one Sunday
-morning to preach at Moreton, his horse cast a shoe. Seeing the village
-blacksmith standing at the door of his forge, he requested him to
-replace it. The man immediately set about blowing up the embers of his
-Saturday night’s fire, on seeing which, he said, “On second thoughts,
-John, it does not signify; I can walk my mare; it will not lame her,
-and I do not like to disturb your day of rest.”
-
-In 1815 he was appointed Bampton lecturer. His subject was necessarily
-theological, so that it is not within my competence to decide
-respecting the merit of his mode of treating it; but notwithstanding
-that it excited the opposition of one antagonist, who called in
-question his orthodoxy, the lectures appear, when published, to have
-been generally approved of by the clergy, the legitimate judges in
-such matters. Two years after this he was promoted to a stall in the
-cathedral of St. Asaph, an appointment which led to many journeys into
-Wales, during which he yielded up his mind to the delight of poetical
-composition. In the midst of these and similar enjoyments, which, to
-a mind so purely and beautifully constituted as his, must have been
-secondary only to those arising from the exercise of virtue, Heber
-underwent the affliction of losing at a very early age his only child.
-This bereavement, however, severely as it affected his heart, he
-submitted to with that religious resignation which his character would
-have led us to expect from him.
-
-Our traveller himself appeared, in the spring of 1820, in extreme
-danger of being snatched away from the world. By constantly attending
-in the chambers of the sick, during the prevalence of putrid
-sore-throat in his neighbourhood, he caught this dangerous disorder,
-which from himself was communicated to seven members of his household,
-to none of whom, however, did it prove fatal. In the autumn of the same
-year he paid a visit to Oxford, “when,” says Mrs. Heber, “he had the
-gratification of hearing ‘Palestine’ performed as an oratorio in the
-same theatre, where, seventeen years before, he had recited it to an
-equally, or perhaps a more crowded audience than was then assembled.
-To the eye the scene was the same, but its component parts were widely
-different. Of the relations who were present at the former period, some
-had paid the debt of nature; the greater number of his contemporaries
-were scattered abroad in the pursuit of their respective professions;
-new faces occupied the arena.”
-
-About the close of the year 1822 Heber received, through his friend,
-the Right Honourable Watkins Williams Wynn, the offer of the bishopric
-of Calcutta. Our traveller had long viewed with deep interest the
-progress of Christianity in the East, and the prospect opened to him
-by this offer, of contributing by his own zeal and exertions to the
-success of so holy a cause, seems quickly to have outweighed in his
-mind every consideration of personal interest, and to have determined
-him, at all hazards, to accept of that distinguished but dangerous
-post. The conduct of Mr. Wynn on this occasion, his ardent desire that
-India should not be deprived of the services of so good, so great a
-man (for virtue like Heber’s is true greatness), while he was scarcely
-less unwilling to lose, certainly for a considerable time, if not, as
-it happened, for ever, a friend of incomparable value, reflects the
-highest honour on his heart and character. “The king,” said he, “has
-returned his _entire_ approbation of your appointment to Calcutta, and
-if I could only divide you, so as to leave one in England and send the
-other to India, it would also have mine; but the die is now cast, and
-we must not look on any side but that which stands uppermost.” To this
-Heber replied, “For this last, as well as for all former proofs of your
-kindness, accept my best thanks. God grant that my conduct in India may
-be such as not to do your recommendation discredit, or make you repent
-the flattering confidence which you have placed in me.”
-
-When Heber’s intention of leaving England was made known, he received
-from every quarter those warm voluntary testimonies of affection and
-regret which nothing but virtue, distinguished, persevering, exalted,
-can command. His own parishioners, as was natural, were the foremost
-in their demonstrations of their profound esteem. Rich, poor, old, and
-young--all joined in presenting their exemplary pastor with a lasting
-mark of the veneration in which his character was held among them.
-“Almost the last business,” says Mrs. Heber, “which Dr. Heber (he had
-recently been created D.D. by the University of Oxford) transacted
-before he left Shropshire was settling a long-standing account,
-in which he had been charged as debtor to the amount of a hundred
-pounds; but it was believed by those who were best acquainted with
-the circumstances, that he was not bound either in law or probity to
-pay it. As he himself, however, did not feel certain on this point,
-he resolved to pay the money, observing to a friend who endeavoured
-to dissuade him, ‘How can I reasonably hope for a blessing on my
-undertaking, or how can I commence so long a voyage with a quiet
-conscience, if I leave even the shadow of a committed act of injustice
-behind?’ About the same time an unknown person sent him a small sum of
-money through the hands of a clergyman in Shrewsbury, confessing that
-he had defrauded him of it, and stating that he could not endure to see
-him leave England for such objects without relieving his own conscience
-by making restitution. On the 22d of April, 1823,” she continues, “Dr.
-Heber finally took leave of Shropshire: from a range of high grounds
-near Newport, he turned back to catch a last view of his beloved
-Hodnet; and here the feelings which he had hitherto suppressed in
-tenderness to others burst forth unrestrained, and he uttered the words
-which have proved prophetic, that he ‘should return to it no more!’”
-
-Heber, having made all necessary preparations for his long voyage,
-and received consecration, repaired on the 16th of June on board the
-Company’s ship Grenville, in which he and his family were to proceed
-to India. As our traveller’s first desire, in whatever position he
-happened to be placed, was to effect all the good in his power, he no
-sooner found himself on board than he endeavoured to communicate to
-the sailors a sense of their religious duties; which he did with all
-that authority and effect which genius and virtue invariably exert over
-inferior individuals. His exhortations were listened to attentively and
-respectfully; and there can be no doubt produced, in many instances
-at least, conviction and amendment of life. The influence which the
-majestic simplicity of his character enabled him to exercise over his
-rude audience may in some measure be conceived from the following
-anecdote: “We had divine service on deck this morning,” says he; “a
-large shoal of dolphins were playing round the ship, and I thought
-it right to interfere to check the harpoons and fishing-hooks of
-some of the crew. I am not strict in my notions of what is called the
-Christian Sabbath; but the wanton destruction of animal life seems to
-be precisely one of those works by which the sanctity and charity of
-our weekly feast would be profaned. The sailors took my reproof in good
-part.” Such were his occupations until, on the 3d of October, the ship
-safely anchored in Sangor roads, in the Hoogly, or great western branch
-of the Ganges.
-
-Heber was now arrived in the most extraordinary region, Greece and
-Egypt perhaps excepted, which has ever been inhabited by mankind. And
-he was well calculated by his high enthusiasm, extensive learning,
-and remarkable freedom from prejudice, to conceive all the splendour
-of the scene before him, to enter profoundly into the spirit of its
-institutions, and to describe with graceful and simple eloquence the
-picturesque variety of manners which the natives of this vast empire
-present to the contemplation of a stranger. “Two observations struck
-me forcibly,” says he; “first, that the deep bronze tint (observable
-in the Hindoos) is more naturally agreeable to the human eye than the
-fair skins of Europe, since we are not displeased with it even in the
-first instance, while it is well known that to them a fair complexion
-gives the idea of ill health, and of that sort of deformity which in
-our eyes belongs to an Albino. There is, indeed, something in a negro
-which requires long habit to reconcile the eye to him; but for this
-the features and the hair, far more than the colour, are answerable.
-The second observation was, how entirely the idea of indelicacy, which
-would naturally belong to such naked figures as those now around us,
-if they were white, is prevented by their being of a different colour
-from ourselves. So much are we children of association and habit, and
-so instinctively and immediately do our feelings adapt themselves to
-a total change of circumstances! It is the partial and inconsistent
-change only which affects us.”
-
-They now entered the mighty Ganges, and sailing up towards Calcutta
-through the Sunderbunds, or rather along their western limit, beheld
-their dark impenetrable forests stretching away interminably towards
-the right, while a rich vegetable fragrance was wafted from the shore.
-The current of the river, when increased by the ebb-tide, was found
-as they ascended to be tremendously rapid, running at no less a rate,
-according to their pilot, than ten or eleven miles an hour. On arriving
-at Calcutta, Heber found that the ecclesiastical business of his
-bishopric, at all times multiplex and extensive, had now, since the
-death of Dr. Middleton, accumulated prodigiously; so that, although
-he had come out neither with the expectation nor the wish to find his
-place a sinecure, he felt somewhat alarmed at the laborious prospect
-before him. However, he was a man accustomed to labour, and not easily
-discouraged. He therefore diligently applied himself to business, and
-had soon the satisfaction to find that, notwithstanding the formidable
-appearance of things on his first arrival, it was still possible, after
-fully performing his duty, which no consideration could induce him
-to neglect, to command sufficient leisure for studying whatever was
-curious or striking in the natural or moral aspect of Hindostan. Former
-travellers, he now found, were, notwithstanding their numbers, very
-far from having exhausted the subject, either because the phenomena of
-Asiatic manners are, like those of the heavens, in a state of perpetual
-change, or because these, continuing the same, which however they do
-not, appear under various phases to different men, from being viewed by
-each individual from the peculiar point of observation afforded by his
-character and acquirements.
-
-In the course of seven months, Heber had achieved that portion of
-his task which was to be performed in the capital. Next to this
-in importance was his visitation through the Upper Provinces, an
-expedition in which he had hoped to be accompanied by his family;
-but this being rendered impracticable by the delicate health of his
-wife, and the tender age of his infant child, he departed with his
-domestic chaplain, Mr. Stowe, in a sixteen-oared pinnace, for Dacca.
-The shores of the Ganges, though flat almost throughout Bengal, are
-far from wanting in stately or picturesque objects. Lofty pagodas,
-with their fantastic angular domes, towering over forests of bamboos,
-banyans, and cocoa-trees; ruins of Mussulman palaces; wild tracts of
-jungle inhabited by tigers; groves of peepul or tamarind-trees; with
-Hindoo villages or hamlets, perched upon artificial mounds to escape
-the periodical inundations of the river. But no scene is possessed of
-all advantages. There is always some small drawback, to afford man an
-excuse for enjoying the delicious pleasure of complaining. “One of the
-greatest plagues we have yet met with in this journey,” says Heber, “is
-that of the winged bugs. In shape, size, and scent, with the additional
-faculty of flying, they resemble the ‘grabbatic’ genus, too well
-known in England. The night of our lying off Barrackpoor, they were
-troublesome; but when we were off the rajah’s palace, they came out,
-like the ghosts of his ancestor’s armies, in hundreds and thousands
-from every bush and every heap of ruins, and so filled our cabins as
-to make them barely endurable. These unhappy animals crowded round our
-candles in such swarms, some just burning their feet and wings on the
-edge of the glass shade, and thus toppling over, others, more bold,
-flying right into the crater, and meeting their death there, that we
-really paid no attention to what was next day a ghastly spectacle,--the
-mighty army which had settled on the wet paint of the ceiling, and
-remained there, black and stinking, till the ants devoured them. These
-last swarm in my pinnace: they have eaten up no inconsiderable portion
-of my provisions, and have taken, I trust to their benefit, a whole
-box of blue pills; but as they do their best to clear it of all other
-vermin, I cannot but look upon them with some degree of favour.”
-
-A gentleman travelling as Heber travelled in India is likely to meet
-with few personal adventures. He runs no risk, except from the climate,
-and moves on smoothly from one station to another, in that state of
-tranquillity which is useful, if not necessary, to calm, dispassionate
-observation. Thus our traveller sailed from Calcutta to Dacca, once
-renowned for the spaciousness and splendour of its palaces, but now
-ruined, deserted, and reduced to be the haunt of bats, serpents, and
-every loathsome thing. Here, in an interview with the nawâb, who, like
-his imperial master of Delhi, has long been reduced to subsist upon the
-bounty of the Company, Heber exhibited that delicate regard for the
-feelings of a man,
-
- Fallen from his high estate,
-
-which a careful observation of his previous life would have led us to
-expect from him. Here he had the misfortune to lose Mr. Stowe, his
-domestic chaplain, who, by his many excellent and amiable qualities,
-had long occupied the place of a friend in his affections.
-
-From Dacca, where his stay was much longer than he had anticipated, he
-proceeded up the river. Furreedpoor, his next station, did not long
-detain him. Near Rajmahal he approached, but did not visit, the ruins
-of Gour, an ancient city, which almost rivalled Babylon or Nineveh
-in extent, and which fell to decay, because the Ganges, which once
-flowed under its walls, changed its bed, and took another direction,
-six or seven miles south of the city. However, on arriving next day
-at the town of Rajmahal, to make up in some measure for this loss,
-he undertook a short excursion to the ruined palace of Sultan Sujah,
-brother of Araungzêbe. “I was a little at a loss,” says he, “to find
-my way through the ruins and young jungle, when a man came up, and
-in Persian, with many low bows, offered his services. He led me into
-a sort of second court, a little lower on the hill, where I saw two
-European tombs, and then to three very beautiful arches of black slate,
-on pillars of the same, leading into a small but singularly elegant
-hall, opening immediately on the river, though a considerable height
-above it, through similar arches to those by which we entered. The
-roof was vaulted with stone, delicately carved, and the walls divided
-by Gothic tracery into panels, still retaining traces of gilding
-and Arabic inscriptions. At each end of this beautiful room was a
-Gothic arch, in like manner of slate, leading into two small square
-apartments, ornamented in the same way, and also opening on the river.
-The centre room might be thirty feet long, each of the others fifteen
-square. For their size I cannot conceive more delightful apartments.
-The view was very fine. The river, as if incensed at having been
-obliged to make a circuit round the barrier of the hills, and impeded
-here again by the rocks under the castle, sweeps round this corner with
-exceeding violence, roaring and foaming like a gigantic Dee. The range
-of hills runs to the left-hand, beautiful, blue, and woody.”
-
-From thence he proceeded, as before, up the Ganges, observing whatever
-was remarkable, making a short stay at each of the European stations on
-his way, for the purpose of preaching or baptizing, and arrived on the
-20th of August at Patna. At this city, which is extensive, and situated
-in a commanding position, he remained several days, for the purpose
-of preaching and administering confirmation. He then continued his
-voyage to Ghazeepoor, famous for its rose-gardens and salubrious air.
-“The rose-fields, which occupy many hundred acres in the neighbourhood,
-are described as, at the proper season, extremely beautiful. They are
-cultivated for distillation, and for making ‘attar.’ Rose-water is both
-good and cheap here. The price of a seer, or weight of two pounds (a
-large quart), of the best, being eight anas, or a shilling. The attar
-is obtained after the rose-water is made, by setting it out during the
-night and till sunrise in the morning, in large open vessels exposed to
-the air, and then skimming off the essential oil which floats at the
-top.” “To produce one rupee’s weight of attar, two hundred thousand
-well-grown roses are required.” This small quantity, when warranted
-genuine, for they begin to adulterate it on the spot, costs one hundred
-sicca rupees, or ten pounds sterling.
-
-A short way farther up the stream, Heber quitted his pinnace, and
-providing himself with bearers, continued his journey to Benares by
-land. Of Benares I have already given a brief description in the Life
-of Bernier. Heber’s stay in it was short. He visited with attention its
-principal curiosities, and conversed on several points with some of
-its Brahminical professors, whose belief in Hindooism he regarded as
-very equivocal. He then continued his voyage up the river to Allahabad,
-where he dismissed his pinnace, and made the necessary preparations for
-performing the remainder of his journey by land. Archdeacon Corrie,
-who had accompanied him from Calcutta, and Mr. Lushington, whom he
-joined on the way, were now his travelling companions, and with their
-attendants helped to increase his motley caravan, which consisted
-of twenty-four camels, eight carts drawn by bullocks, twenty-four
-horse-servants, ten ponies, forty bearers, and coolies of different
-descriptions, twelve tent-pitchers, and a guard of twenty sepoys
-under a native officer. With this retinue, which in the eyes of a
-European would have had something of a princely air, Heber proceeded
-by the way of Cawnpoor to Lucknow, the capital of the kingdom of Oude,
-where he enjoyed the honour of breakfasting with the monarch of this
-ill-governed state, who, on this occasion at least, appeared desirous
-of imitating the manners of the English.
-
-At Lucknow Heber separated from his companions; and, accompanied merely
-by his attendants, directed his course towards the wild districts at
-the foot of the Himalaya. On arriving at Barelly, not more than fifty
-miles distant from the nearest range, he vainly looked out for the
-snowy peaks of this “monarch of mountains;” but, instead, discovered
-nothing but a ridge of black clouds, and a gray autumnal haze through
-which no object was discernible. The features of the country now became
-wild and striking. Forests infested by malaria, tigers, and lions,
-and half-desolate plains, announced the termination of the fertile
-provinces of Hindostan, and the approach to a different region. Here
-“we had,” says Heber, “a first view of the range of the Himalaya,[4]
-indistinctly seen through the haze, but not so indistinctly as to
-conceal the general form of the mountains. The nearer hills are blue,
-and in outline and tints resemble pretty closely, at this distance,
-those which close in the vale of Clwyd. Above these rose what might,
-in the present unfavourable atmosphere, have been taken for clouds,
-had not their seat been so stationary, and their outline so harsh and
-pyramidical--the patriarchs of the continent, perhaps the surviving
-ruins of a former world, white and glistening as alabaster, and even at
-this distance, of probably one hundred and fifty miles, towering above
-the nearer and secondary range, as much as those last (though said to
-be seven thousand six hundred feet high) are above the plain in which
-we were standing. I felt intense delight and awe in looking on them,
-but the pleasure lasted not many minutes; the clouds closed in again,
-as on the fairy castle of St. John, and left us but the former gray
-cold horizon, girding in the green plain of Rohiland, and broken only
-by people and mango-trees.”
-
-[4] The Himalaya mountains have been said, by some other travellers,
-to be visible, in clear weather, from Patna, a distance of two
-hundred miles. The fact appears to be by no means improbable. From
-the window of the library in which these pages are written, the snowy
-mountains of Switzerland and Savoy--Mont Blanc, the Great and Little
-St. Bernard, and the peaks of St. Corvin and St. Gothard--are almost
-constantly visible during the prevalence of the south-west wind. From
-the appearance of these mountains a tolerable idea may be formed of the
-aspect of the Himalaya. During summer thin vapours commonly obstruct
-the view, except in the early dawn; and if, as sometimes happens, the
-white peaks appear in the afternoon, when the sun’s rays are streaming
-upon them from the west, they are generally, by the unpractised
-observer, mistaken for clouds. But in the cool autumnal mornings just
-before the sun rises above the horizon, Mont Blanc, though one hundred
-and twenty-five miles distant, is painted with astonishing distinctness
-upon the sky, and towering above the sea of white vapour which
-overspreads the great plain of Burgundy and rises almost to the summit
-of the Jura, seems but a few leagues distant. A little before sunset it
-presents a totally different aspect. Instead of the dusky mass which we
-beheld in the morning, we discover the “monarch of mountains” clothed
-in dazzling white, rising far above every surrounding object; while the
-glittering pinnacles of the inferior mountains seem to stretch away
-interminably to the right and left, until their peaks are confounded
-and lost in the dimness of the horizon. The Mont St. Gothard, which is
-very distinctly visible, at least during clear weather, is distant one
-hundred and seventy miles from the point of observation. With respect
-to Mont Blanc, its whole aspect, when viewed through a good telescope,
-is so admirably defined, that every inequality in its surface is
-clearly discernible, so that an excellent sketch of it might be taken
-from my library. The dark chain of the Jura, which conceals its base,
-and stretches from Geneva almost to the Rhine, increases by contrast
-the magnificence of the view, which, for extent and grandeur, falls
-very little short, perhaps, of any landscape in Europe.
-
-Next day, soon after sunrise, he saw distinctly, painted on a clear
-blue sky, the prodigiously lofty pinnacles of these mountains, the
-centre of earth,
-
- Its altar, and its cradle, and its throne,
-
-which, as he justly observes, “are really among the greatest earthly
-works of the Almighty Creator’s hands--the highest spots below the
-moon--and overtopping by many hundred feet the summits of Cotopaxi and
-Chimborazo.” To approach these mountains, however, from the south, the
-traveller has to traverse a belt of forest and jungle, where the air
-is impregnated with the most deadly qualities. “I asked Mr. Boulderson
-if it were true,” says Heber, “that the monkeys forsook these woods
-during the unwholesome months. He answered that not the monkeys only,
-but every thing which has the breath of life instinctively deserts
-them, from the beginning of April to October. The tigers go up to the
-hills, the antelopes and wild hogs make incursions into the cultivated
-plain; and those persons, such as dâkbearers, or military officers
-who are obliged to traverse the forests in the intervening months,
-agree that not so much as a bird can be heard or seen in the frightful
-solitude.” Yet the insalubrity of these districts is not of any ancient
-date. Thirty years ago, though fever and ague were common, the plains
-were populous and productive, and considerable progress was made in
-reclaiming the forest; but the devastation consequent upon the invasion
-of Meer Khan, in 1805, checked the course of population, which has
-never since been able to recover itself.
-
-Through this deadly region Heber passed with all possible rapidity,
-though the majestic trees which bordered the road, the songs of the
-birds in their branches (for it was now November), and the luxuriant
-vegetation which on all sides covered the soil, conferred a kind of
-syren beauty upon the scene, which tempted the wayfarer to a fatal
-pause. At length, after a long, fatiguing march, they found themselves
-upon rising ground, at the entrance to a green valley, with woody
-mountains on either side, and a considerable river running through it,
-dashing over a rocky bottom, with great noise and violence. The scenery
-now put on features of surpassing beauty. Mountains, precipices,
-narrow romantic dells; with rivers which were sometimes seen, and
-sometimes only heard rolling at the bottom of them; trees inhabited by
-innumerable white monkeys and singing birds, and copses abounding in
-black and purple pheasants. When they had climbed up to a considerable
-height upon the lower range of the mountains, there burst suddenly
-upon their sight the most awfully magnificent spectacle which the
-earth furnishes for the contemplation of man. Language always fails to
-convey an adequate conception of the tumultuous delight experienced
-in such positions. The mind, wrought upon by history, by poetry, by a
-secret hungering after the sublime, instantaneously feels itself in the
-presence of objects which, by their prodigious magnitude and elevation,
-enhanced by an idea of their unapproachableness, seem for a moment
-to surpass the most ambitious aspirations of the imagination, and in
-reality carry our thoughts
-
- Extra flammantia mænia mundi.
-
-Our traveller, standing on the platform from whence the Indian Caucasus
-can be most advantageously contemplated, beheld a range of snow-white
-pinnacles, which, stretching like an interminable line of shining
-spears from east to west, appeared with their glittering points to
-pierce the deep blue sky, which formed the ground of this landscape of
-unrivalled glory and splendour. At the foot of these mountains stands
-Almorah, the last point of Heber’s journey in this direction; whence,
-after a short stay, he again descended to the plain, and pursued his
-route to Meerut, and thence to Delhi.
-
-The imperial city, the ruins of which extend over a surface as large
-as London, is still the residence of the descendants of the Mogul
-sovereigns of India. The reader who remembers how superb it was when
-visited by Bernier will learn with a melancholy regret that all its
-grandeur and power have departed from it, leaving in their stead want,
-wretchedness, decay, and disease. Heber was presented to the poor old
-man who, as the descendant of Akbar, is still, as it were in mockery,
-denominated “Emperor of Delhi.” Those who delight to triumph over
-fallen greatness may purchase this pleasure by a journey to Delhi; for
-myself, much as I abhor a tyrant, few remote scenes of distress, unless
-such in which whole nations are sufferers, could touch me more sensibly
-than the misfortunes of this Mogul prince, and I exclaim, with the
-prophet, “How are the mighty fallen!” It is true they deserved their
-fate--history in their, as in all other cases, justifies the ways of
-Providence--but we therefore pity them the more; and, before we lift
-up our hand to cast a stone at them, our heart involuntarily forms the
-earnest wish that we may by our justice and equity deserve the diadem
-which we have wrested from their brows. This consideration is the only
-thing which can confer an interest on such a presentation. In every
-other point of view it is, like every thing of the kind, a vulgar show,
-which has no more meaning than a theatrical exhibition.
-
-From Delhi Heber proceeded to the still more ancient capital of Agra,
-where the principal objects of curiosity “are the Motee Musjeed, a
-beautiful mosque of white marble, carved with exquisite simplicity
-and elegance; and the palace built by Akbar, in a great degree of the
-same material, and containing some noble rooms, now sadly disfigured
-and destroyed by neglect, and by being used as warehouses, armories,
-offices, and lodging-rooms for the garrison. The hall, now used as
-the ‘Dewanny Aum,’ or public court of justice, is a splendid edifice,
-supported by pillars and arches of white marble, as large and more
-nobly simple than that of Delhi. The ornaments, carving, and mosaic of
-the smaller apartments, in which was formerly the Zenanah, are equal
-or superior to any thing which is described as found in the Alhambra.
-The view from those rooms is very fine, at the same time that there
-are some, adapted for the hot winds, from which light is carefully
-excluded. This suite is lined with small mirrors in fantastic frames;
-a cascade of water, also surrounded by mirrors, has been made to gush
-from a recess at the upper end, and marble channels, beautifully inlaid
-with cornelians, agates, and jasper, convey the stream to every side
-of the apartment.” Heber likewise visited the Taj-mahal, which I have
-described in the Life of Bernier, and observes, that after hearing its
-praises ever since he had been in India, its beauty rather exceeded
-than fell short of his expectations. After holding a confirmation,
-at which about forty persons were made full members of the Christian
-church, our traveller departed from Agra, and commenced his journey
-across the independent states of Western India. During this portion of
-his travels he obtained, from unexceptionable authority, an account
-of the gorgeous style in which that fortunate adventurer, Sir David
-Ochterlony, lived in Central India. “Dr. Smith,” he observes, “in his
-late march from Mhow to Meerut, passed by Sir David’s camp. The ‘barra
-sahib,’ or great man, was merely travelling with his own family and
-personal followers from Delhi to Jyepoor, but his retinue, including
-servants, escort, European and native aids-de-camp, and the various
-nondescripts of an Asiatic train, together with the apparatus of
-horses, elephants, and camels--the number of his tents, and the size
-of the enclosure, hung round with red cloth, by which his own and his
-daughter’s private tents were fenced in from the eyes of the profane,
-were what a European, or even an old Indian whose experience had been
-confined to Bengal, would scarcely be brought to credit.”
-
-Our traveller’s journey through Rajpootana was attended by
-circumstances flattering to his personal feelings. The petty
-sovereigns through whose dominions his route lay invariably received
-him hospitably when he visited their capitals, and on some occasions,
-when he did not choose to diverge so far from the road, sent messengers
-expressly to meet him on the way with polite invitations to their
-court. He pushed on, however, with considerable expedition, and
-having traversed the territories, and beheld the capitals of Jyepoor,
-Ajmere, Bunaira, and others, proceeded, by way of Neemuch and Baroda,
-to Bombay. His time, during his stay in this city, was principally
-occupied with ecclesiastical business, in promoting the founding
-of schools, and in conversing with that venerable statesman and
-traveller, Mr. Elphinstone, the governor, who, from the most humane and
-enlightened motives, has endeavoured, with success, to diffuse among
-the natives a knowledge of our literature and sciences. Here Heber had
-the satisfaction of being joined by his wife and elder child. With
-these, shortly afterward, he visited the cavern temples of Elephanta
-and Kennery; and subsequently, in company with Archdeacon Barnes,
-made an excursion across the Western Ghants to Poonah, in the Deccan,
-during which he enjoyed an opportunity of examining another celebrated
-cavern temple at Carlee. I cannot refuse myself the pleasure, or
-deprive the reader of the advantage, of inserting in this place the
-character which Heber has drawn of the most extraordinary man whom he
-encountered during his travels. “Mr. Elphinstone,” says he, “is in
-every respect an extraordinary man, possessing great activity of body
-and mind; remarkable talent for and application to public business; a
-love of literature, and a degree of almost universal information, such
-as I have met with in no other person similarly situated, and manners
-and conversation of the most amiable and interesting character. While
-he has seen more of India and the adjoining countries than any man
-now living, and has been engaged in active political and sometimes
-military duties since the age of eighteen, he has found time, not only
-to cultivate the languages of Hindostan and Persia, but to preserve
-and extend his acquaintance with the Greek and Latin classics, with
-the French and Italian, with all the elder and more distinguished
-English writers, and with the current and popular literature of the
-day, both in poetry, history, politics, and political economy. With
-these remarkable accomplishments, and notwithstanding a temperance
-amounting to rigid abstinence, he is fond of society; and it is a
-common subject of surprise with his friends, at what hour of the day or
-night he found time for the acquisition of knowledge. His policy, so
-far as India is concerned, appeared to me peculiarly wise and liberal,
-and he is evidently attached to, and thinks well of, the country and
-its inhabitants. His public measures, in their general tendency, evince
-a steady wish to improve their present condition. No government in
-India pays so much attention to schools and public institutions for
-education. In none are the taxes lighter; and in the administration of
-justice to the natives in their own languages, in the establishment of
-punchacts, in the degree in which he employs the natives in official
-situations, and the countenance and familiarity which he extends to
-all the natives of rank who approach him, he seems to have reduced to
-practice almost all the reforms which had struck me as most required
-in the system of government pursued in those provinces of our eastern
-empire which I had previously visited.”
-
-From Bombay, Heber sailed with his wife and daughter to Ceylon, a large
-portion of which he visited. He then proceeded to Calcutta. On the 30th
-of January, 1826, shortly after his recovery from a fever, he again
-quitted his family for the purpose of visiting Madras and the southern
-provinces of India. At Madras he was received with great kindness by
-Sir Thomas Munro, who was warmly desirous of rendering his position
-as little disagreeable as the season and climate would permit. From
-thence he proceeded through Caddalore and Tanjore to Trichinopoly,
-where, on the 3d of April, 1826, his pious, active, and valuable life
-was closed. “It were a useless,” says Mrs. Heber, “and a deeply painful
-task to enter into any detail of the apparent cause of his death: it is
-sufficient to say that disease had, unsuspected, been existing for some
-time; and that it was the opinion of all the medical men in attendance,
-that under no circumstances could his invaluable life have been very
-long preserved, though the event was undoubtedly hastened by the
-effects of climate, by intense mental application to those duties which
-increased in interest with every step he took, and was finally caused
-by the effects of cold on a frame exhausted by heat and fatigue.” His
-mortal remains were attended to the grave with the highest honours, and
-followed by the tears of the inhabitants of Trichinopoly. They rest on
-the north side of the altar in St. John’s Church.
-
-
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-A number of typographical errors were corrected silently.
-
-Cover image is in the public domain.
-
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Lives of Celebrated Travellers, Vol. III (of 3), by James Augustus St. John</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Lives of Celebrated Travellers, Vol. III (of 3)</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Augustus St. John</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 9, 2022 [eBook #67135]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Turgut Dincer, sf2001, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIVES OF CELEBRATED TRAVELLERS, VOL. III (OF 3) ***</div>
-
- <div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_cover" style="max-width: 20em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover" />
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-<div class="titlepag">
-<p class="center"><i>Harper’s Stereotype Edition.</i></p>
-<hr class="r65" />
-<h1><small>THE</small><br />
-<span class="gesperrt">LIVES</span><br />
-<small>OF</small><br />
-CELEBRATED TRAVELLERS.</h1>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p class="center">BY<br />
-JAMES AUGUSTUS <span class="smcap">St.</span> JOHN.</p>
-
-<hr class="poemt" />
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Wand’ring from clime to clime, observant stray’d,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Their manners noted and their states survey’d.</div>
- <div class="verse right"><span class="smcap">Pope’s Homer.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<hr class="poemb" />
-
-<p class="center">IN THREE VOLUMES.</p>
-
-<p class="center">VOL. III.</p>
-
-<hr class="double" />
-<p class="center">NEW-YORK:</p>
-
-<p class="center">PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY J. &amp; J. HARPER,</p>
-
-<p class="center">NO. 82 CLIFF-STREET,</p>
-
-<p class="center">AND SOLD BY THE PRINCIPAL BOOKSELLERS THROUGHOUT<br />
-THE UNITED STATES.</p>
-<hr class="r15" />
-<p class="center">1832.
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">MUNGO PARK.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1771.&mdash;Died 1806.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#MUNGO_PARK">
-Born at Fowlshiels, near Selkirk&mdash;Receives a respectable education&mdash;Bound
-apprentice to a surgeon&mdash;Finishes his education at Edinburgh&mdash;Removes
-to London&mdash;Becomes known to Sir Joseph Banks&mdash;Appointed
-surgeon to the Worcester, East Indiaman&mdash;Engaged by the
-African Association to ascertain the course of the Niger&mdash;Sails
-from England&mdash;Arrives at Jillifica&mdash;Unknown species of fish&mdash;Alligators&mdash;Hippopotami&mdash;Pisania&mdash;Dr.
-Laidley&mdash;Studies the Mandingo language&mdash;Attacked
-by fever and delirium&mdash;Horrors of the rainy season in
-Africa&mdash;Wild beasts&mdash;Departs from Pisania&mdash;Surrounded by a body
-of the natives&mdash;Visits the King of Woolli&mdash;Obtains a guide&mdash;Elephant-hunters&mdash;Presents
-his coat to the chief of Fatteconda&mdash;Major Houghton&mdash;Limited
-territories of the African kings&mdash;Suggestion by which
-Africa may be effectually explored&mdash;Folly of despatching a solitary
-traveller&mdash;A night journey&mdash;Solitary forest&mdash;Dangers from wild beasts&mdash;Hospitable
-Mohammedan&mdash;Festival in honour of his arrival&mdash;Negro
-dances&mdash;Joag&mdash;Robbed of half his merchandise&mdash;Humanity of a female
-slave&mdash;Kasson&mdash;Robbed a second time&mdash;Affectionate meeting
-between the blacksmith and his relations&mdash;Maternal affection&mdash;Curiosity
-excited by the presence of a white man&mdash;Kooniakary&mdash;Audience
-with the king&mdash;Advised to retrace his footsteps&mdash;Romantic
-scenery&mdash;Cheapness of provisions&mdash;Superstition of his Mohammedan
-guide&mdash;Terrifies two negro horsemen&mdash;Is mistaken for a demon&mdash;Kaarta&mdash;Buglehorns
-formed of elephants’ teeth&mdash;Receives permission
-to depart&mdash;Jarra&mdash;Visits Ali the King of Ludamar&mdash;Despatches his
-journal to the Gambia&mdash;Is robbed&mdash;Barbarous treatment of Park by
-Ali and his Moorish countrymen&mdash;Placed in a hut with a wild boar&mdash;Is
-chosen royal barber&mdash;Pillaged of the remainder of his property&mdash;Superstitious
-curiosity&mdash;Is threatened with death or mutilation&mdash;Tortured
-for Moorish amusement&mdash;Robbed of his slave-boy&mdash;Affecting
-scene&mdash;Attempts to escape&mdash;Departs in the night&mdash;Stopped and
-robbed of his cloak&mdash;Nearly perishes from hunger and thirst&mdash;Storm
-in the desert&mdash;Multitude of frogs&mdash;Compelled to wander through the
-woods&mdash;Subsists on wild berries&mdash;Enters the kingdom of Bambarra&mdash;Mistaken
-for a Moor&mdash;Destitute condition&mdash;Comes within sight of
-the Niger&mdash;Joy at effecting the object of his mission&mdash;Sego&mdash;Refused
-entrance into the city&mdash;Humanity of a woman&mdash;Receives a present
-from the king of Bambarra&mdash;Sansanding&mdash;Hospitable reception&mdash;Is
-requested to write a saphie, or charm&mdash;Camelopard&mdash;Encounters a
-lion&mdash;Moodiboo&mdash;Loses his horse&mdash;Reaches Silla&mdash;Exhausted with
-fatigue and sickness&mdash;Unable to proceed&mdash;Resolves to return&mdash;Song&mdash;Denied
-entrance into the village&mdash;In danger of being devoured by
-lions&mdash;Stripped and robbed by a band of peasants&mdash;Overwhelmed
-with grief and terror&mdash;Derives consolation from religious reflections&mdash;Sibidooloo&mdash;Regains
-his horse and other property&mdash;Unites himself
-to a slave caravan&mdash;Obtains a common prayer-book&mdash;Arrives at Pisania&mdash;Returns
-to England&mdash;Singular interview with his brother-in-law&mdash;Received
-with distinguished honour by the African Association&mdash;Publishes
-his travels&mdash;Returns to Scotland&mdash;Marries&mdash;Practises as a
-surgeon at Peebles&mdash;Becomes disgusted with an obscure life&mdash;Appointed
-chief conductor of a second expedition into the interior of
-Africa, under the sanction of the British government&mdash;Sails from
-Portsmouth&mdash;Arrives at Pisanio&mdash;Sets out with the party for the interior&mdash;Dreadfully
-stung by a swarm of bees&mdash;The journey nearly put
-an end to by this event&mdash;Rainy season&mdash;The whole party sick&mdash;Gold-pits&mdash;Soldiers
-become delirious&mdash;Numbers die, or are left behind&mdash;Attacked
-by wild beasts&mdash;Cut off by the natives&mdash;Guide attacked and
-wounded by a crocodile&mdash;Remarkable presence of mind&mdash;Robbed by
-two African princes&mdash;Encounters three lions&mdash;Arrives on the banks
-of the Niger&mdash;Opens a bazaar&mdash;Death of Mr. Scott&mdash;Mission reduced
-to a very small number&mdash;Death of Mr. Anderson&mdash;Embarks on the
-Niger&mdash;Conclusion of his journal&mdash;Isaaco’s account of his death&mdash;Captain
-Clapperton’s corroboration&mdash;Character&mdash;Sir Walter Scott
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">13</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">PETER SIMON PALLAS.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1741.&mdash;Died 1811.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#PETER_SIMON_PALLAS">
-
-Born at Berlin&mdash;Educated as a surgeon&mdash;Studies natural history&mdash;Visits
-Holland&mdash;England&mdash;Publishes his first great work&mdash;Accepts
-an appointment in the Academy of St. Petersburg&mdash;Catherine II.&mdash;Engages
-in the Russian enterprise for observing the transit of Venus&mdash;Sets
-out from St. Petersburg&mdash;Gadflies&mdash;River Jemlia&mdash;Pearl muscles&mdash;Arrives
-at Moscow&mdash;Marine sponges used for painting the
-cheeks&mdash;Rhubarb&mdash;Vlodimir&mdash;Cherry-orchards&mdash;Tartar princes&mdash;Goitres&mdash;Extreme
-filthiness of the Russians&mdash;Severe cold&mdash;Mules between
-the goat and sheep&mdash;Sulphurous springs&mdash;Environs of Sumara&mdash;Travels
-on sledges&mdash;Skeletons of elephants&mdash;Tizran&mdash;Excessive heat&mdash;Village
-unroofed by a hurricane&mdash;River Volga&mdash;Ancient tombs&mdash;Gigantic
-bones&mdash;Kalmuc camp&mdash;Archery&mdash;Botanical excursions&mdash;Marsh
-flies&mdash;Kirghees&mdash;Orenburg&mdash;Golden eagles&mdash;Falconry&mdash;Value
-of a trained hawk&mdash;Salt-mines&mdash;Chinese caravan&mdash;Jasper mountains&mdash;Jasper
-tombs&mdash;Ruins of Sarai&mdash;Embarks upon the Caspian Sea&mdash;Arranges
-his Journal&mdash;Floods&mdash;Hurricanes&mdash;Bottomless pit&mdash;Furious
-wild dogs&mdash;Beehives&mdash;Method of protecting the hives from the bears&mdash;Volcano&mdash;Burning
-forest&mdash;Cotton produced from the poplar-tree&mdash;Loses
-himself in a forest&mdash;Curious method of passing a river&mdash;Asbestos
-mountain&mdash;The mind abhors an uninterrupted calm&mdash;Insipid
-method of travelling&mdash;Method of preparing Russia leather in Siberia&mdash;Cheliabinsk&mdash;Departs
-for Eastern Siberia&mdash;Extensive conflagration&mdash;Steppe
-of Ischimi&mdash;Aquatic game&mdash;White herons&mdash;Arrives at Omsk&mdash;Refused
-permission to inspect the Siberian maps there&mdash;Banks of
-the Irtish&mdash;Continual storms&mdash;Method of preserving furs from the
-moth&mdash;Encounters an enormous wolf&mdash;Ancient mines&mdash;Attacked by
-dysentery&mdash;Prodigious tomb&mdash;Enormous lump of solid gold&mdash;Visits
-the Altaïc mountains&mdash;Sublime scenery&mdash;Black sparrows&mdash;Crosses
-Lake Baikal in a sledge&mdash;Rugged and sublime scenery&mdash;Tremendous
-storm&mdash;Hunting the sea-dog&mdash;Mongolia&mdash;Borders of China&mdash;His
-health declines&mdash;Blue crow&mdash;Locusts&mdash;Tartar hordes&mdash;Intense cold&mdash;Prepares
-for his return to Petersburg&mdash;Execrable manner of peopling
-Siberia&mdash;Perilous adventure&mdash;Wild horses&mdash;Ancient shores of
-the Caspian&mdash;Repairs to Moscow&mdash;Arrives at Petersburg&mdash;Premature
-old age&mdash;Publishes his travels, &amp;c.&mdash;M. Cuvier&mdash;Theory of the
-earth&mdash;Traverses the southern provinces of Russia&mdash;Dies at Berlin&mdash;Character
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">65</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">CARSTEN NIEBUHR.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1733.&mdash;Died 1815.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#CARSTEN_NIEBUHR">
-
-Born in the province of Friesland&mdash;Studies music&mdash;Intends practising
-as a land-surveyor&mdash;Celebrated Reiske&mdash;Engaged to accompany a
-scientific expedition into Arabia&mdash;Goes to Copenhagen&mdash;Appointed
-lieutenant of engineers&mdash;Liberality of the Danish Minister&mdash;Proceeds
-to Marseilles&mdash;White rainbow&mdash;Transit of Venus&mdash;Malta&mdash;Serpents&mdash;Maltese
-knights&mdash;Efforts to convert Niebuhr to Catholicism&mdash;Great
-Church of St. John&mdash;Prodigious wealth&mdash;Hospital&mdash;Sails to Smyrna&mdash;Tenedos&mdash;Attacked
-by dysentery&mdash;Proceeds to Constantinople&mdash;Assumes
-the oriental costume&mdash;Sails for Egypt&mdash;Rhodes&mdash;Turkish
-eating-house&mdash;Wine-drinkers&mdash;Female slaves&mdash;Amusing story&mdash;Plague&mdash;Egypt&mdash;Pompey’s
-pillar&mdash;Turkish merchant and the telescope&mdash;Laughable
-anecdote&mdash;Mr. Forskaal stripped of his breeches&mdash;Rosetta&mdash;Arrives
-at Cairo&mdash;The river Nile&mdash;Pirates&mdash;Bruce the traveller&mdash;Curious
-anecdote of robbers&mdash;The Virgin on horseback&mdash;Churches
-strewed with crutches&mdash;Arrives at Damietta&mdash;Boats loaded
-with beehives&mdash;Europeans detested at Damietta&mdash;Encountered by a
-young sheïkh&mdash;Visits the Pyramids&mdash;Observations on them&mdash;Sets out
-for Suez&mdash;Advantages of travelling on dromedaries&mdash;Trade of Suez&mdash;Rose
-of Jericho&mdash;Mountain of Inscriptions&mdash;Arab women&mdash;Is refused
-admission into the monastery of St. Catherine&mdash;Deserted by his guides&mdash;Ascends
-a portion of Mount Sinai&mdash;Voyage from Suez to Jidda&mdash;Black
-eunuch&mdash;Elim&mdash;Is protected by some Janizaries&mdash;Emerald
-mountains&mdash;Forskaal taken for a physician&mdash;Laughable story&mdash;Ship
-in danger of being set on fire&mdash;Indiscreet curiosity&mdash;Jidda&mdash;Custom-house
-extortions&mdash;Forbidden to approach the Mecca gate&mdash;Curious
-method of catching wild ducks&mdash;Sails for Loheia&mdash;Yemen&mdash;Bedouins&mdash;Politeness
-of the emir&mdash;Hospitable treatment&mdash;Curiosity of the
-Arabs&mdash;Dr. Cramer requested to prescribe for the emir’s horse&mdash;Amusing
-anecdote of two young Arabs&mdash;Great coffee emporium of
-Beit el-Fakih&mdash;Description of the coffee plantations&mdash;Danger of travelling
-by day&mdash;Niebuhr is mistaken for an Arab&mdash;Is supposed to be
-searching for gold&mdash;Balm of Mecca&mdash;Is seized with illness&mdash;Mokha&mdash;Ludicrous
-anecdote&mdash;Death of Von Haven&mdash;Of Forskaal&mdash;Difficulty
-of obtaining a place of burial&mdash;Polite reception at Sana&mdash;Obtains an
-audience of the imam&mdash;Sails for India&mdash;Arrives at Bombay&mdash;Death
-of Baurenfeind&mdash;Forwards his manuscripts to Copenhagen&mdash;Sails for
-the Persian gulf&mdash;Phosphoric fires&mdash;Troop of dolphins&mdash;History of
-Nadir Shah&mdash;Sir W. Jones&mdash;Visits Shiraz&mdash;Superstition respecting
-manner of killing a fowl&mdash;Visits a Turkoman camp&mdash;Anecdote&mdash;Arrives
-at Shiraz&mdash;Hospitable reception by an Englishman&mdash;Palace&mdash;Persepolis&mdash;Arab
-sheïkh&mdash;Dialogue with the moollah of a mosque respecting
-marriage&mdash;Ruins of Babylon&mdash;Proceeds with a Jewish caravan&mdash;Turkish
-firman&mdash;Devil worshippers&mdash;Cowardice of his companions&mdash;Adventure
-with an Arab sheïkh&mdash;Dr. Patrick Russel&mdash;Oriental
-Christians&mdash;Visits Palestine&mdash;Mount Taurus&mdash;Baber Khan&mdash;Returns
-to Europe&mdash;Arrives at Copenhagen&mdash;Publishes his various
-works&mdash;Marries&mdash;Quits the capital&mdash;Appointed secretary of the district
-at Meldorf&mdash;Anecdotes and character of Niebuhr by his son&mdash;Illiberality
-towards Bruce&mdash;Account of Niebuhr’s latter days&mdash;Illness&mdash;Death
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">99</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">CHOISEUL-GOUFFIER.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1752.&mdash;Died 1817.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#CHOISEUL-GOUFFIER">
-
-Incompleteness of the biography of celebrated men&mdash;Born at Paris of an
-illustrious family&mdash;His passion for the fine arts&mdash;Taste for literature&mdash;Falls
-in love&mdash;Marries&mdash;Adopts the profession of arms&mdash;Obtains
-the rank of colonel&mdash;Sails for Greece&mdash;His enthusiasm for antiquity&mdash;Visits
-the Grecian Isles&mdash;Occupies himself in drawing&mdash;Grotto of Antiparos&mdash;Opinions
-respecting its construction&mdash;Proceeds to Lemnos,
-Rhodes, &amp;c.&mdash;Ruins of Telmissus&mdash;River Mæander, Ephesus, Smyrna,
-and Troy&mdash;Homer&mdash;Trojan territories&mdash;Rivers Simois and Scamander&mdash;Remarkable
-spots in the neighbourhood of Troy&mdash;Tombs of
-Ilus and Patroclus&mdash;Camp of the Greeks&mdash;Returns to France&mdash;Arranges
-the materials of his travels&mdash;Flattering reception&mdash;Patriotism&mdash;Modern
-Greeks&mdash;Elected member of the French Academy&mdash;Celebrated
-discourse on the death of D’Alembert&mdash;Delille’s poem entitled
-“Imagination”&mdash;Extract applied to Choiseul-Gouffier&mdash;Appointed ambassador
-to the Ottoman Porte&mdash;Acquires the confidence of Halil Pasha,
-and of Prince Mauro Cordato&mdash;Attempts to introduce civilization
-among the Turks&mdash;Turkish ship-of-war&mdash;Obtains the release of the
-Russian ambassador&mdash;Prevents the imprisonment of the Austrian
-internuncio&mdash;Protects the Russian and Austrian prisoners&mdash;Revisits
-the Troad&mdash;Despatches artists to Syria and Egypt&mdash;Appointed ambassador
-to the court of London&mdash;Anecdote of the Count de Cobentzel&mdash;Emperor
-Paul of Russia&mdash;Returns to France&mdash;Rose harvest of
-Adrianople&mdash;Personal existence of Homer&mdash;Is seized with an apoplectic
-fit&mdash;Dies
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">154</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">JOHN LEWIS BURCKHARDT.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1784.&mdash;Died 1817.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"> <a href="#JOHN_LEWIS_BURCKHARDT">
-Descended from an eminent family at Basle&mdash;Born at Lausanne&mdash;Aversion
-to republican principles&mdash;Detestation of the French&mdash;Enters as
-a student at Leipzig&mdash;Removes to Göttingen&mdash;Arrives in London&mdash;African
-Association&mdash;His offers are accepted&mdash;Studies Arabic&mdash;Allows
-his beard to grow&mdash;Assumes the oriental dress&mdash;Accustoms himself
-to endure hardships&mdash;Sails from Cowes&mdash;Arrives at Malta&mdash;Dr. Sectzen&mdash;Assumes
-the character of an Indian Mohammedan merchant&mdash;Reaches
-the coast of Syria&mdash;Departs for Aleppo&mdash;Laughable anecdote&mdash;Aga’s
-dislike to beer and potatoes&mdash;Suspected of being a Frank in
-disguise&mdash;Is pulled by the beard and otherwise insulted&mdash;Arrives at
-Aleppo&mdash;Puts off his Mohammedan dress&mdash;Is seized with fever from
-the bites of vermin&mdash;Attempts a translation of Robinson Crusoe into
-Arabic&mdash;Sets out in company with an Arab sheïkh for Palmyra&mdash;Robbed
-on the road&mdash;Damascus&mdash;Arab hospitality&mdash;Beautiful scenery&mdash;Baalbec
-and Libanus&mdash;Cedars&mdash;The Druses&mdash;Haurān the patrimony
-of Abraham&mdash;Vestiges of ancient cities&mdash;Places himself under
-the protection of an Arab sheïkh&mdash;Enters the desert&mdash;Is stripped to
-the skin, and left exposed to the rays of the sun&mdash;Arab lady attempts
-to steal his shirt&mdash;Returns to Damascus&mdash;Dead Sea&mdash;Joins a caravan&mdash;Philadelphia&mdash;Treachery
-of the Sheïkh of Kerek&mdash;Valley of Ghor&mdash;Ruins
-of Petra&mdash;Arrives at Cairo&mdash;Journey into Nubia&mdash;Mameluke
-chiefs&mdash;Deadly feud&mdash;Hospitality of the Nubians&mdash;Romantic scenery&mdash;Curious
-mode of extorting presents&mdash;Admirable custom of placing
-water-jars by the road-side&mdash;Drunken savages&mdash;Palm wine&mdash;Contempt
-for Mohammed Ali&mdash;Descends the Nile&mdash;Colossal statues&mdash;Anecdote
-of an Arab&mdash;Assouan&mdash;Cheapness of provisions&mdash;March of a
-caravan through the desert&mdash;Is treated with great contempt by his
-companions&mdash;Bruce&mdash;Burckhardt’s insolent skepticism respecting
-that eminent traveller&mdash;Extraordinary sufferings&mdash;Wady el Nabeh&mdash;Scarcity
-of water&mdash;Nubian desert&mdash;Lakes of mirage&mdash;Is near perishing
-from thirst&mdash;Camels despatched to the Nile&mdash;Insolence and extortion&mdash;Extraordinary
-method of discovering a stolen lamb&mdash;Arrives at
-Damar&mdash;Adventure with a Faky&mdash;Numerous crocodiles&mdash;Romantic
-scenery&mdash;Tremendous effects of a desert storm&mdash;Taka&mdash;Enormous
-lions&mdash;Effects of the sultan’s firman on his persecutors&mdash;Returns to
-Jidda&mdash;Attacked by fever&mdash;Delicious fruit&mdash;Sells his slave&mdash;Sets out
-for the interior of the Hejah&mdash;Arrives at Mecca&mdash;Picturesque scenery&mdash;Ras
-el Kora&mdash;Tayef&mdash;Observations on Burckhardt’s beard&mdash;Suspected
-of being an English spy&mdash;Affects to be hurt by the pasha’s suspicions&mdash;Animated
-description of the Hadj, or pilgrimage to Mecca&mdash;Sets
-out for Medina&mdash;Is attacked by an intermittent fever&mdash;Melancholy
-condition&mdash;Consoles himself by reading Milton&mdash;Tomb of Mohammed&mdash;Sets
-out for Yembo&mdash;Plague&mdash;Pursues his journey to Cairo&mdash;Composes
-his journal&mdash;Excursion to Mount Sinai&mdash;Furnishes Belzoni
-with money for removing the head of Memnon&mdash;Is attacked with
-dysentery&mdash;Dies at Cairo&mdash;Character
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">168</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">VOLNEY.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1757.&mdash;Died 1820.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#VOLNEY">
-
-Born at Craon in Anjou&mdash;His name first changed by his father, and
-afterward by himself&mdash;Studies the sciences with ardour&mdash;Is bequeathed
-a small sum of money&mdash;Determines to spend it in travelling&mdash;Proceeds
-to Marseilles&mdash;Embarks for Egypt&mdash;Alexandria&mdash;Cairo&mdash;Studies
-the Arabic&mdash;Defends Herodotus&mdash;Proceeds to Syria&mdash;Describes
-Mount Lebanon&mdash;Resides in an Arabian convent&mdash;Studies the
-Arabic&mdash;Visits the tribe of Bedouins&mdash;Is invited to reside among them&mdash;Describes
-the Druzes&mdash;Returns to France&mdash;Publishes his travels&mdash;Acquires
-a great reputation&mdash;Is compared with Herodotus&mdash;Is presented
-with a gold medal by the Empress Catherine&mdash;Publishes his
-considerations on the war between the Turks and Russians&mdash;Meditates
-the improvement of agriculture&mdash;Is elected a member of the Constituent
-Assembly&mdash;Connexion with Cabanis and Mirabeau&mdash;Anecdote&mdash;Returns
-Catherine her medal, and is abused by Grimm&mdash;Visits
-Corsica&mdash;Publishes the “Law of Nature”&mdash;Character of that work&mdash;Is
-imprisoned as a royalist&mdash;Travels in America&mdash;Well received by
-Washington&mdash;Dr. Priestley&mdash;Returns to France&mdash;Refuses to share
-the honours of Napoleon&mdash;Marries&mdash;Dies
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">219</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">EDWARD DANIEL CLARKE.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1769.&mdash;Died 1822.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#EDWARD_DANIEL_CLARKE">
-
-Born in Sussex&mdash;Is an idle student&mdash;Saves the life of his brother&mdash;Studies
-at Cambridge&mdash;Loses his father&mdash;Proceeds slowly with his
-studies&mdash;Fond of miscellaneous reading&mdash;Quits the university&mdash;Becomes
-a private tutor&mdash;Makes the tour of England&mdash;Publishes an
-account of it&mdash;Travels with Lord Berwick&mdash;Passes the Alps&mdash;Italy&mdash;Naples&mdash;Eruption
-of Mount Vesuvius&mdash;Is in danger of perishing
-among the lava&mdash;Engages to travel in Egypt&mdash;Returns to England&mdash;Is
-disappointed&mdash;Publishes a periodical work&mdash;Is again a private
-tutor&mdash;Engages to travel with Mr. Cripps&mdash;Departs from England&mdash;Sweden&mdash;Norway&mdash;Lapland&mdash;Gulf
-of Finland&mdash;St. Petersburg&mdash;Picture
-of the Russians and their emperor&mdash;Moscow&mdash;The Crimea&mdash;Professor
-Pallas&mdash;Constantinople&mdash;The Plain of Troy&mdash;Aboukir&mdash;Palestine&mdash;Egypt&mdash;The
-Pyramids&mdash;Antiquities taken from the French&mdash;Isles
-of Greece&mdash;Athens&mdash;Mount Parnassus&mdash;Returns to England&mdash;Created
-LL.D.&mdash;Takes orders&mdash;Marries&mdash;Sells his MSS. and coins&mdash;Enjoys
-pluralities&mdash;Sells the copyright of his travels&mdash;Lectures on
-mineralogy&mdash;Appointed professor&mdash;Studies with enthusiasm&mdash;Falls ill&mdash;Is
-carried to London&mdash;Dies
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">238</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">FRANCOIS LE VAILLANT.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1753.&mdash;Died 1824.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#FRANCOIS_LE_VAILLANT">
-
-Peculiar excellence of Le Vaillant’s style&mdash;Born in Dutch Guyana&mdash;Early
-pursuits&mdash;Is brought to Europe&mdash;Studies&mdash;Conceives the idea
-of travelling&mdash;Repairs to Holland&mdash;Embarks for the Cape of Good
-Hope&mdash;Arrive&mdash;Dutch hospitality&mdash;Cape Town&mdash;Hurricane&mdash;Character
-of the colonists&mdash;Admiration of the English, and detestation of
-the French&mdash;Saldanha Bay&mdash;Mutton Island&mdash;Gazelle and panther-hunting&mdash;Harpooning
-a whale&mdash;The Dane’s grave&mdash;Prodigious
-clouds of birds&mdash;Blowing-up of a ship-of-war&mdash;Loss of Le Vaillant’s
-papers, collections, and travelling-chest&mdash;Melancholy&mdash;Meets with a
-friend&mdash;Recommences his collections&mdash;Prepares for a journey into the
-interior&mdash;His wagons, merchandise, and arms&mdash;Choice of travelling
-companions&mdash;Hottentot followers&mdash;Departs from Cape Town&mdash;Sweets
-of liberty&mdash;Magnificent scenery&mdash;Vast herds of antelopes&mdash;Curious
-species of tortoise&mdash;Augments his followers&mdash;Arrives on the Dove’s
-River&mdash;Pleasant mode of spending his time&mdash;African story-teller&mdash;Abundance
-of game&mdash;Seashore&mdash;Beautiful district&mdash;Fairy-land&mdash;Spenser&mdash;Gardens
-of Adonis&mdash;Shoots a touraco&mdash;Pursues it through
-the woods&mdash;Falls into an elephant-snare&mdash;Danger and alarm&mdash;Escapes&mdash;Torrents
-of Africa&mdash;Verdant palace&mdash;Proceeds to the Black
-River&mdash;Accident&mdash;Is attacked by illness&mdash;Oppressed by melancholy&mdash;Recovers&mdash;Discovers
-the footmarks of elephants&mdash;Sets out in chase
-of them&mdash;Shoots an elephant&mdash;Pursues the herd&mdash;Is in imminent
-danger&mdash;Escapes&mdash;Exquisite flavour of an elephant’s foot&mdash;Falls in
-with a tribe of wild Hottentots&mdash;Manners and opinions&mdash;Approaches
-the country of the Kaffers&mdash;Terrors of his followers&mdash;Despatches messengers
-into Kaffer-land&mdash;Fury of an African storm&mdash;Wild beasts&mdash;Meets
-with a new tribe of Hottentots&mdash;Exchange of presents&mdash;Enamoured
-of a Hottentot girl&mdash;Return of his messengers, accompanied
-by Kaffers&mdash;Dutch spies in the camp&mdash;Alarm of the Kaffers&mdash;Their
-departure&mdash;Prepares to enter Kaffraria&mdash;His people refuse to
-proceed&mdash;Selects a small number of the bravest of his Hottentots for
-the expedition&mdash;Quits his camp&mdash;Enters Kaffraria&mdash;Solitude and desertion
-of the country&mdash;Returns&mdash;Contemplates his return to the
-Cape&mdash;Enormous herds of antelopes&mdash;Sublime scenery of the Sneuw
-Bergen&mdash;The Bushmen&mdash;Great scarcity of water&mdash;Reaches the Cape&mdash;Reposes&mdash;Unhappy
-opinion&mdash;Projects a second journey&mdash;Preparations&mdash;Departure&mdash;Nests
-of the white ant&mdash;Dreadful scarcity of water&mdash;Discovers
-a well in the desert&mdash;Elephant’s River&mdash;African harpies&mdash;Is
-near perishing in the Elephant’s River&mdash;Abandons his chariots
-in the desert&mdash;Forerunners of a tempest&mdash;Cloud-worshippers&mdash;A
-storm&mdash;Quenches his burning thirst&mdash;Visits a Hottentot horde&mdash;Hospitality&mdash;Is
-overtaken by a Dutchman, who intoxicates his followers&mdash;Terrible
-accident&mdash;Horrors of the savage life&mdash;Proceeds on his journey&mdash;Beholds
-a giraffe, and kills one&mdash;Presence of women in the
-camp&mdash;Arrives on the frontiers of the Hoozwana country&mdash;New terrors
-of his followers&mdash;Solitude of the desert&mdash;Discovers a horde of
-Hoozwanas&mdash;Obtains their friendship&mdash;Character of these wild people&mdash;They
-reconduct him to his camp on the Gariep&mdash;Accident&mdash;Oxen
-stolen by the Bushmen&mdash;Follows them to their kraal&mdash;Battle&mdash;Recovers
-his cattle, and returns to the camp&mdash;Befriends a miserable white
-family&mdash;Is on the point of death&mdash;Recovers&mdash;Returns to the Cape&mdash;And
-then to Europe&mdash;Publishes his travels&mdash;Dies
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">262</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">BELZONI.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#BELZONI">
-
-Born at Padua&mdash;Is designed for the monastic life&mdash;Studies at Rome&mdash;Hydraulics&mdash;Invasion
-of Italy by the French&mdash;Alters his plan of life&mdash;Departs
-from Rome&mdash;Arrives in England&mdash;Marries&mdash;Remains nine
-years in Great Britain&mdash;Travels through the south of Europe&mdash;Malta&mdash;Arrives
-in Egypt&mdash;Enters into the service of the pasha&mdash;Constructs
-an hydraulic machine&mdash;View from the Pyramids&mdash;Is near being murdered
-by a soldier&mdash;Rebellion of the janizaries&mdash;Quits the service
-of the pasha&mdash;Undertakes the removal of the Memnon’s head&mdash;Ascends
-the Nile&mdash;Arrives at Thebes&mdash;Magnificence of the ruins&mdash;Establishes
-himself in the Memnonium&mdash;Removes the head to the
-Nile&mdash;Visits the Necropolis at Gournon&mdash;Loses himself in the sepulchres&mdash;Horrors
-of the tombs&mdash;Proceeds to Assouan&mdash;His boat attacked
-on the Nile&mdash;Reaches Deir&mdash;Temple of Ipsambul&mdash;Ignorance
-of the Nubians&mdash;Use of money&mdash;Returns to Thebes&mdash;Embarks the
-head of Memnon&mdash;Antiquarians&mdash;Is shot at in the ruins of Thebes&mdash;Descends
-the Nile to Rosetta&mdash;Mr. Briggs&mdash;Returns to Cairo, and
-thence again to Thebes&mdash;Mummy-pits&mdash;Decay of the mummies&mdash;Proceeds
-to Ipsambul&mdash;Opens the temple&mdash;Sepulchres of the kings&mdash;Alabaster
-sarcophagus&mdash;Visits the emerald mines on the Red Sea&mdash;Returns
-to Cairo&mdash;Visits the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon&mdash;Returns to
-England&mdash;Publishes his travels&mdash;Proceeds again to Africa&mdash;Dies
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">327</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">DOMINIQUE VIVANT DENON.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
-</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1754.&mdash;Died 1825.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#DOMINIQUE_VIVANT_DENON">
-
-Born at Burgundy&mdash;Becomes a king’s page&mdash;Secretary to the Neapolitan
-Embassy&mdash;His character and physiognomy&mdash;Studies the art of design&mdash;Adopts
-the principles of the revolution&mdash;Embarks with Napoleon
-for Egypt&mdash;Arrives at Alexandria&mdash;Impressions on entering a new
-city&mdash;Rosetta&mdash;Pursued by the Arabs&mdash;Desaix&mdash;Visits the Pyramids&mdash;Population
-of Cairo&mdash;Revolt against the French&mdash;Danger of Denon&mdash;Massacre
-of four <i>savans</i>&mdash;Dissects the mummy of Ibis&mdash;Serpent-charmers&mdash;Departs
-for Upper Egypt&mdash;Murad Bey&mdash;Battle with the
-Mamelukes&mdash;Horrible anecdote&mdash;Anecdote of a youthful robber&mdash;A
-shower of rain&mdash;Ruins of Oxyrinchus&mdash;Gloomy opinions&mdash;Ruins of
-Hermopolis&mdash;Dangerous mode of travelling&mdash;Ruins of Denderah&mdash;Anger
-of General Desaix&mdash;Anecdote of a French officer&mdash;Comes in
-sight of the ruins of Thebes&mdash;The whole army halt and clap their
-hands&mdash;Statues of Ossymandyas&mdash;Island of Phile&mdash;Khamsyn wind&mdash;Journey
-to Cosseir&mdash;Returns to the Nile&mdash;Sails for France&mdash;Is made
-superintendent of museums by Napoleon&mdash;Directs the casting of the
-triumphal column in the Place Vendôme&mdash;Dies
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">345</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2"><h3 class="nobreak">REGINALD HEBER.</h3></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td colspan="2" class="center">Born 1783.&mdash;Died 1826.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="hanging2"><a href="#REGINALD_HEBER">
-
-Born at Malpas, in the county of Chester&mdash;Early piety&mdash;Studies at Oxford&mdash;Poem
-of “Palestine”&mdash;Recites his work in public&mdash;Becomes a
-volunteer&mdash;Loses his father&mdash;Travels in Northern Europe&mdash;Sweden&mdash;Norway&mdash;Russia&mdash;Ladies
-of Moscow&mdash;Traverses the Ukraine&mdash;Romantic
-view at Nakitchivan&mdash;Tcherkask&mdash;Inhabitants of the banks
-of the Kuban&mdash;Traverses the Crimea&mdash;Returns to England&mdash;Obtains
-the living of Hodnet&mdash;Purity and romance of his opinions&mdash;Marries&mdash;Excellence
-as a parish priest&mdash;Contributes to the Quarterly Review&mdash;Publishes
-his poems&mdash;Observance of Sunday&mdash;Delivers the Bampton
-Lectures&mdash;Loses his only child&mdash;Illness&mdash;Appointed Bishop of
-Calcutta&mdash;Friendship of the honourable Watkins Williams Wynn&mdash;Is
-exceedingly esteemed and regretted&mdash;Sails with his family for India&mdash;Pious
-conduct on board&mdash;Arrives in the Ganges&mdash;Colour of the
-Hindoos&mdash;Reaches Calcutta&mdash;Laborious situation&mdash;Departs from Calcutta
-on his visitation to the Upper Provinces&mdash;Scenery of Bengal&mdash;Arrives
-at Dacca&mdash;Visits the Nawâb&mdash;Loses his chaplain&mdash;Continues
-his voyage up the Ganges&mdash;Sultan Sujah’s palace&mdash;Rosefields of Ghazeepoor&mdash;Attar
-of roses&mdash;Reaches Benares&mdash;Lucknow&mdash;First view of
-the Himalaya&mdash;Contrasted with view of Mont Blanc&mdash;Approaches the
-Himalaya&mdash;Almorah&mdash;Returns towards the south&mdash;Delhi&mdash;Is presented
-to the emperor&mdash;Agra&mdash;The Taj-mahal&mdash;Sir David Ochterlony&mdash;Traverses
-Rajpootana&mdash;Bombay&mdash;Mr. Elphinstone&mdash;Ceylon&mdash;Calcutta&mdash;Madras&mdash;Death
-</a></td>
-<td class="toc-pageno">356</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_LIVES">THE LIVES<br />
-OF<br />
-CELEBRATED TRAVELLERS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MUNGO_PARK">MUNGO PARK.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1771.&mdash;Died 1806.</p>
-
-<p>This enterprising and distinguished traveller was
-born on the 10th of September, 1771, at Fowlshiels,
-a farm occupied by his father on the banks of the
-Yarrow, near Selkirk. In common with the greater
-number of the sons of Scottish yeomen, Mungo Park,
-notwithstanding that the number of his brothers and
-sisters amounted to no less than thirteen, received
-a respectable education, and at the age of fifteen
-was bound apprentice to a surgeon at Selkirk. At
-the close of this apprenticeship, in 1789, Park continued
-his medical studies at the university of Edinburgh,
-where, though nothing remarkable is recorded
-of him, he seems to have applied with great
-assiduity to his professional studies. His summer
-vacations, during one of which he made a tour to
-the Highlands, were devoted to botany.</p>
-
-<p>Having completed his education, Park removed
-to London in search of professional employment.
-Here, through the kindness of Mr. Dickson, his
-brother-in-law, he had the good fortune to become
-known to Sir Joseph Banks, to whom so many other
-distinguished travellers have been indebted; and
-through whose recommendation he was appointed
-surgeon to the Worcester East Indiaman. In this
-capacity he made a voyage to Bencoolen, in Sumatra,
-the only fruits of which was a paper containing
-descriptions of eight new fishes from Sumatra,
-published in the third volume of the <i>Linnæan
-Transactions</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after his return from this voyage, Park,
-learning that the African Association, of which his
-friend Sir Joseph Banks was a very active and zealous
-member, were desirous of engaging a person to
-replace Major Houghton, who, it was feared, had
-fallen a sacrifice to the climate, or perished in some
-contest with the natives, eagerly offered his services,
-which after due deliberation were accepted. The
-association, he observes, conducted itself with great
-liberality towards him. He forthwith prepared himself
-for the voyage, and on the 22d of May, 1795,
-sailed from Portsmouth in the brig Endeavour. His
-instructions, he says, were very plain and concise.
-He was directed, on his arrival in Africa, “to pass
-on to the river Niger, either by the way of Bambouk
-or by such other route as should be found most convenient;
-that I should ascertain the course, and, if
-possible, the rise and termination of the river. That
-I should use my utmost exertions to visit the principal
-towns or cities in its neighbourhood, particularly
-Timbuctoo and Houssa; and that I should afterward
-be at liberty to return to Europe, either by the
-way of the Gambia, or by such other route as under
-all the then existing circumstances of my situation
-and prospects should appear to me to be most
-advisable.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 21st of June, after an agreeable voyage of
-thirty days, he arrived at Jillifica, a town on the
-northern bank of the Gambia, in the kingdom of
-Barra. From this place after a stay of two days he
-proceeded up the Gambia, in the waters of which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
-were found prodigious numbers of fish of unknown
-species, together with alligators and hippopotami,
-whose teeth furnish excellent ivory. Park, having
-quitted the Endeavour at Jonkakonda, proceeded
-thence by land; and reaching Pisania, a small British
-factory in the King of Yam’s dominions, on the 5th
-of July took up his residence at the house of Dr.
-Laidley, until he should be able to prosecute his
-journey into the interior.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller’s first care now was to render himself
-master of the Mandingo language, which in this
-part of Africa is in general use; and to collect from
-every source within his power information respecting
-the countries he was about to visit. In the language
-his progress depended on his own application;
-but he soon found that little or no reliance could be
-placed on the accounts of the interior furnished him
-by the natives, who on the most material points
-were frequently in direct contradiction with each
-other. His anxiety to examine and judge for himself
-was therefore increased. However, besides
-that the rainy season, which had now commenced,
-rendered travelling impracticable, another equally
-insuperable bar to the speedy prosecution of his
-journey quickly presented itself. In observing on
-the 31st of July an eclipse of the moon, he imprudently
-exposed himself to the night dew, and next
-day he found himself attacked by fever and delirium,
-which were the commencement of an illness that
-with a very trifling intermission confined him during
-two months within doors. “The care and attention
-of Dr. Laidley contributed greatly,” says Park, “to
-alleviate my sufferings; his company and conversation
-beguiled the tedious hours during that gloomy
-season when the rain falls in torrents; when suffocating
-heats oppress by day, and when the night is
-spent by the terrified traveller in listening to the
-croaking of frogs (of which the numbers are beyond
-imagination), the shrill cry of the jackal, and the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
-deep howling of the hyena; a dismal concert, interrupted
-only by the roar of such tremendous thunder
-as no person can form a conception of but those who
-have heard it.”</p>
-
-<p>Having been disappointed in his expectations of
-proceeding with a slave caravan towards Bambarra,
-Park departed from Pisania on the 2d of December,
-1795. He had been provided with a negro servant,
-named Johnson, who had been many years in Great
-Britain, and understood both the English and Mandingo
-languages; and with a negro boy, named
-Demba, the property of Dr. Laidley, who, as the
-highest inducement of good behaviour, promised him
-his freedom on his return. Besides these Park was
-accompanied by four other persons, who, though independent
-of his control, were made to understand
-that their safe return to the countries on the Gambia
-would depend on our traveller’s preservation.
-His equipment was by no means magnificent: a
-horse for himself, two asses for his servants, provisions
-for two days, a small assortment of beads,
-amber, and tobacco, a few changes of linen and
-other apparel, an umbrella, a pocket sextant, a magnetic
-compass, a thermometer, two fowling-pieces,
-two pair of pistols, and some other small articles.
-His friends at Pisania accompanied him during the
-first two days, and then, dismissing him on his way,
-took their leave, secretly persuaded they should
-never see him more.</p>
-
-<p>He had scarcely lost sight of his European friends,
-and ridden off musing and somewhat melancholy
-into the wood, when a body of black people presented
-themselves in a clamorous manner before
-him, demanding custom-dues, in default of which
-they threatened to carry him before their king. To
-escape from this honour, which might have proved
-a costly one, Park presented them with a little
-tobacco, upon which they were of course contented,
-and he was allowed to proceed. On reaching Medina,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
-the capital of Woolli, he judged it prudent, or
-perhaps absolutely necessary, to present himself at
-the king’s levee, when the venerable benevolent old
-chief not only granted him permission to traverse
-his dominions, but assured him he would offer up
-prayers for his safety, partly to secure which he furnished
-him with a trusty guide.</p>
-
-<p>Having safely reached the frontiers of the Woolli
-dominions, Park dismissed his guide; and being
-about to enter a country interspersed with deserts,
-in which water is frequently not to be procured, he
-hired three negroes, experienced elephant-hunters,
-who were at once to serve as guides and water-bearers.
-While he was preparing to depart, however,
-one of these negroes, who had all received a
-part of their pay in advance, made his escape; and
-lest the remaining two should be disposed to follow
-his example, he immediately gave orders to fill their
-calabashes, or gourds, with water, and struck off into
-the wilderness, just as the sun was appearing above
-the horizon. Through this desert they proceeded
-until they reached Tallika, the frontier town of Bondou
-towards Woolli, where Park engaged a kind of
-custom-house officer to accompany him for a trifling
-present to Fatteconda, the residence of the king.
-In his company our traveller accordingly performed
-the journey to that city. On his arrival at Fatteconda
-he was received by the black chief with much
-apparent kindness, though Major Houghton, he had
-heard, in his passage through the country, had been
-both insulted and plundered by this same man.
-However, he soon discovered that the manifestations
-of a hospitable disposition observable in the
-king’s manner was not deceptive. It is true he was
-so completely captivated by our traveller’s best blue
-coat and gilt buttons, that he could not resist the
-temptation to beg it; but he endeavoured in some
-measure to remunerate him for the loss by a present
-of five drachms of gold, and by altogether abstaining
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
-from examining his baggage, or exacting any other
-present than what was voluntarily bestowed.</p>
-
-<p>The territories of these petty African chiefs, whom
-we complaisantly denominate kings, are exceedingly
-limited in extent. Your road conducts you to-day
-through one kingdom, to-morrow through another,
-and the next day through a third; which, of all those
-circumstances that obstruct the movements of the
-traveller in Africa, is, perhaps, the most vexatious
-and the most difficult to overcome; as the rapacity
-of the first chiefs who lie in his way deprives him
-of the power of satisfying the equal rapacity of the
-remainder. This consideration alone would suffice
-to convince me that if ever Africa is to be properly
-explored, it must be by an armed force sufficiently
-powerful to carry terror through the country, and
-not by a solitary traveller, who, whatever may be
-his perseverance or courage, must either fall in the
-attempt, or return with notions hastily formed,
-picked up at random, or borrowed from the ignorant
-credulous natives. The perpetual state of captivity
-in which Park moved is a strong proof of this. He
-was never, unless when far removed from human
-society by woods or deserts, completely master of
-his own actions, or sufficiently respected to render
-it possible for him to contemplate the superior
-classes, even of these savages, from a proper level.
-To judge with impartiality, a man must neither be
-under the influence of fear nor of contempt, of anger
-nor of gratitude. He must feel himself perfectly on
-a level with those about him.</p>
-
-<p>To proceed, however, with Park:&mdash;“In the afternoon,”
-says he, “my fellow-travellers informed me,
-that as this was the boundary between Bondou and
-Kajaaga, and dangerous for travellers, it would be
-necessary to continue our journey by night, until we
-should reach a more hospitable part of the country.
-I agreed to the proposal, and hired two people for
-guides through the woods, and as soon as the people
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
-of the village were gone to sleep (the moon shining
-bright) we set out. The stillness of the air, the
-howling of the wild beasts, and the deep solitude of
-the forest made the scene solemn and impressive.
-Not a word was uttered by any of us but in a whisper;
-all were attentive, and every one anxious to
-show his sagacity by pointing out to me the wolves
-and hyenas as they glided like shadows from one
-thicket to another. Towards morning we arrived
-at a village called Kimmoo, when our guides awakened
-one of their acquaintance, and we stopped to
-give our asses some corn, and roast a few ground-nuts
-for ourselves. At daylight we resumed our
-journey, and in the afternoon arrived at Joag in the
-kingdom of Kajaaga.”</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at Joag, the frontier town of the kingdom
-of Kajaaga, our traveller (who had taken up his
-residence at the house of the dooty, or chief man
-of the town, a rigid but hospitable Mohammedan)
-was favoured with an opportunity of observing the
-genuine character of the negro. “The same evening,”
-says he, “Madiboo, the bushreen who had accompanied
-me from Pisania, went to pay a visit to
-his father and mother, who dwelt at a neighbouring
-town called Dramanet. He was joined by my other
-attendant the blacksmith; and as soon as it was
-dark, I was invited to see the sports of the inhabitants,
-it being their custom on the arrival of strangers
-to welcome them by diversions of different kinds.
-I found a great crowd surrounding a party who were
-dancing by the light of some large fires to the music
-of four drums, which were beat with great exactness
-and uniformity. The dances, however, consisted
-more in wanton gestures than in muscular exertion
-or graceful attitudes. The ladies vied with each
-other in displaying the most voluptuous movements
-imaginable.”</p>
-
-<p>At Joag, while preparing to advance on his journey,
-he was suddenly honoured with a visit from the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
-king’s son, accompanied by a troop of horse, who,
-pretending that by entering his father’s dominions
-he had forfeited the whole of his property, insisted
-upon examining his merchandise, of which he seized
-upon the moiety. Of the remnant that remained,
-particularly a little amber and a few beads, which
-he had succeeded in concealing, he was now so
-fearful of producing any portion, even for the purchase
-of food, lest he should once more awaken the
-cupidity of the authorities, that both he and his attendants
-determined on combating hunger for the
-day, “and wait some opportunity of purchasing or
-begging provisions.” In this extremity, while he
-was sitting down chewing straws, a female slave,
-who observed him in passing by, was moved with
-compassion, and presented him with a quantity of
-ground-nuts, which was a very seasonable supply.
-Scarcely had the old woman left him, before he received
-information that the nephew of the King of
-Kasson, who had been sent by his uncle on an embassy
-to the King of Kajaaga, and was now returning
-to his own country, was about to pay him a visit.
-He came accordingly, and upon Park’s representing
-to him his situation and distresses, kindly offered to
-be his guide and protector as far as Kasson. With
-him, therefore, our traveller now continued his route
-to the banks of the Senegal, upon crossing which,
-his royal guide, who, like other guides, required a
-present for his services, informed him they were
-in his uncle’s dominions, and in complete safety.</p>
-
-<p>Safe or not safe, however, Park soon found that
-the stranger and the traveller were nowhere beyond
-the reach of extortion. Half of the little property
-which had escaped the fangs of the Kajaaga people,
-was here taken from him. He was then permitted
-to depart. Among the honest negroes with whom
-he had set out from Pisania, on the Gambia, there
-was a blacksmith from the interior, who, having
-amassed some little money upon the coast, was now
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>
-returning to spend the remainder of his days in his
-native land. Shortly after quitting Teesee, the last
-place where our traveller had submitted to legal
-robbery, he and his companions came within sight
-of the blacksmith’s village. The news of his return
-had, it seems, preceded him. His brother, accompanied
-by a singing-man, came forth to welcome
-the wanderer home, and brought along with him a
-horse, that the blacksmith “might enter his native
-town in a dignified manner.” Park and his companions
-were desired to put a good charge of powder
-into their guns. The singing-man led the way;
-the two brothers followed; and the cavalcade was
-quickly joined by a considerable number of the inhabitants,
-who, by extravagant gestures and songs of
-triumph, testified their joy at the return of their
-townsman. “When we arrived at the blacksmith’s
-place of residence, we dismounted, and fired our
-muskets. The meeting between him and his relations
-was very tender; for these rude children of
-nature, freed from restraint, display their emotions
-in the strongest and most expressive manner.&mdash;Amid
-these transports, the blacksmith’s aged mother
-was led forth, leaning upon a staff. Every one
-made way for her; and she stretched out her hand
-to bid her son welcome. Being totally blind, she
-stroked his hands, and arms, and face with great
-care, and seemed highly delighted that her latter
-days were blessed by his return, and that her ears
-once more heard the music of his voice. From this
-interview, I was convinced, that whatever difference
-there is between the Negro and European in the
-conformation of the nose, and the colour of their
-skin, there is none in the genuine sympathies and
-characteristic feelings of our common nature.</p>
-
-<p>“During the tumult of these congratulations, I had
-seated myself apart, by the side of one of the huts,
-being unwilling to interrupt the flow of filial and
-parental tenderness; and the attention of the company
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>
-was so entirely taken up with the blacksmith,
-that I believe none of his friends had observed me.
-When all the people present had seated themselves,
-the blacksmith was desired by his father to give
-some account of his adventures; and silence being
-commanded he began; and after repeatedly thanking
-God for the success that had attended him, related
-every material occurrence that had happened to him
-from his leaving Kasson to his arrival at the Gambia;
-his employment and success in those parts; and the
-dangers he had escaped in returning to his native
-country. In the latter part of his narration, he had
-frequent occasion to mention me; and after many
-strong expressions concerning my kindness to him,
-he pointed to the place where I sat, and exclaimed,
-<i>Affille ibi siring</i> (see him sitting there). In a moment
-all eyes were turned upon me. I appeared
-like a being dropped from the clouds, every one
-was surprised that they had not observed me before;
-and a few women and children expressed great uneasiness
-at being so near a man of such an uncommon
-appearance. By degrees, however, their apprehensions
-subsided, and when the blacksmith
-assured them I was perfectly inoffensive, some of
-them ventured so far as to examine the texture of my
-clothes; but many of them were still very suspicious,
-and when by accident I happened to move myself,
-or look at the young children, their mothers would
-scamper off with them with the greatest precipitation.
-In a few hours, however, they all became reconciled
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>With these honest people Park remained during
-the whole of that day and the next, and then, accompanied
-by the worthy blacksmith, who declared
-he would not quit him during his stay in that part
-of the country, set forward towards Kooniakary.
-On his arrival at this city he obtained an audience
-of the king, a fine old man, who, for his conduct
-both in peace and war, was greatly beloved by his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
-subjects. His behaviour towards the stranger was
-not inconsistent with this character. He informed
-him with apparent regret, that the direct route to
-Bambarra was about to be closed by war, but, after
-vainly advising his guest to retrace his footsteps,
-added, that there yet remained some hopes of peace,
-respecting the validity of which he should be able to
-pronounce an opinion in the course of four or five
-days. In the mean while he invited Park to remain
-in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>On the 1st of February, 1796, the king’s messenger
-returned from the contiguous kingdom of Kaarta,
-bringing intelligence that the Bambarra army had
-not yet entered the country, and that it was possible
-the traveller might be enabled to traverse it before
-the invasion should take place. Accordingly, being
-provided with two guides by the king, Park took
-leave of his friend the blacksmith, and set forward
-on his dangerous journey. The country, at all times
-thickly peopled, now swarmed with fugitives, whom
-the fear of the Bambarrans had terrified from their
-homes. The scenery in many places was romantically
-wild. “On coming within sight of the mountains
-of Foolado, we travelled,” says Park, “with
-great difficulty down a stony and abrupt precipice,
-and continued our way in the bed of a dried river-course,
-where the trees meeting over our heads,
-made the place dark and cool. In a little time we
-reached the bottom of this romantic glen; and about
-ten o’clock emerged from between two rocky hills,
-and found ourselves on the level and sandy plains
-of Kaarta. At noon we arrived at a korree, or
-watering-place, where, for a few strings of beads, I
-purchased as much milk and corn-meal as we could
-eat; and indeed provisions are here so cheap, and
-the shepherds live in such affluence, that they seldom
-ask any return for what refreshment a traveller receives
-from them.”</p>
-
-<p>From this place, having prevailed upon his landlord,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-a Mohammedan negro, to accompany him as a
-guide to Kemmoo, our traveller set forward on the
-11th of February. He observes, “We had no sooner
-got into a dark and lonely part of the first wood,
-than he made a sign for us to stop; and taking hold
-of a hollow piece of bamboo that hung as an amulet
-round his neck, whistled very loud three times. I
-confess I was somewhat startled, thinking it was a
-signal for some of his companions to come and
-attack us; but he assured me it was done merely
-with a view to ascertain what success we were
-likely to meet with on our present journey. He
-then dismounted, laid his spear across the road, and
-having said a number of short prayers, concluded with
-three loud whistles; after which he listened for some
-time, as if in expectation of an answer, and receiving
-none, told us we might proceed without fear, for
-there was no danger.”</p>
-
-<p>Adventures now appeared to crowd upon our traveller.
-The country through which their road lay
-being thickly sprinkled with wild fruit-trees, they
-amused themselves as they rode slowly along with
-picking and eating the fruit. “In this pursuit,”
-says Park, “I had wandered a little from my people,
-and being uncertain whether they were before or
-behind me, I hastened to a rising ground to look about
-me. As I was proceeding towards this eminence,
-two negro horsemen, armed with muskets, came
-galloping from among the bushes. On seeing them
-I made a full stop; the horsemen did the same; and
-all three of us seemed equally surprised and confounded
-at this interview. As I approached them
-their fears increased, and one of them, after casting on
-me a look of horror, rode off at full speed; the other,
-in a panic of fear, put his hand over his eyes, and continued
-muttering prayers until his horse, seemingly
-without his rider’s knowledge, conveyed him slowly
-after his companion. About a mile to the westward
-they fell in with my attendants, to whom they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>
-related a frightful story; it seems their fears had
-dressed me in the flowing robes of a tremendous
-spirit; and one of them affirmed, that when I made
-my appearance, a cold blast of wind came pouring
-down upon him from the sky, like so much cold
-water.”</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after this they arrived at the capital of
-Kaarta, where he was an object of such extraordinary
-curiosity to the populace, the majority of whom
-had never before seen a white man, that they burst
-forcibly into his hut, crowd after crowd. Those
-who had beheld the monster giving way to those
-who had not, until, as he observes, the hut was filled
-and emptied thirteen different times. Here he found
-that the war with Bambarra had actually commenced;
-that all communication between the countries had
-consequently ceased; and that, if it was his determination
-to persevere, it would be necessary to take
-a circuitous route through the Moorish kingdom of
-Ludamar. The people of Kaarta were Mohammedans;
-but there is a variety in church discipline
-even among these inflexible fanatics; for, instead
-of the fine sonorous voice of the muezzin, by which
-the faithful are elsewhere summoned to their devotions,
-the hour of prayer was here announced by
-the beating of drums, and blowing through large
-elephant’s teeth, hollowed out in such a manner as
-to resemble buglehorns. The sound of these horns
-our traveller thought melodious, and approaching
-nearer to the human voice than any other artificial
-sound. Being very desirous to depart from the seat
-of war, Park presented his horse-pistols and holsters
-to the king; and on pressing to be dismissed, received
-in return an escort of eight horsemen to conduct
-him to Jarra. Three of the king’s sons, with
-two hundred horsemen, kindly undertook to accompany
-him a little way on his journey.</p>
-
-<p>On his arrival at Jarra, in the kingdom of Ludamar,
-he despatched a messenger to Ali, who was then
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
-encamped near Benowm, soliciting permission to
-pass unmolested through his territories; and having
-waited fourteen days for his reply, a slave at length
-arrived from the chief, affirming that he had been
-instructed to conduct the traveller in safety as far
-as Goomba. His negro, Johnson, here refused to
-follow him any further, and signified his intention
-of pushing back without delay to Gambia; upon
-which Park, fearful of the success of his enterprise,
-intrusted him with a copy of his journal, reserving
-another for himself, directing him to deliver the
-papers to the English on the coast. A portion of
-his baggage and apparel he committed to the care
-of a slave-merchant at Jarra, who was known to
-Dr. Laidley. He then departed with his slave-boy,
-accompanied by the chief’s messenger. On the road
-our traveller was robbed once more by the Moors,
-who added insult to violence; and when he was
-nearly perishing for thirst, beat away his faithful
-slave from the wells, without permitting him to draw
-water.</p>
-
-<p>However, after much fatigue and extraordinary
-privations, they arrived in Ali’s camp at Benowm,
-where Park was immediately surrounded by crowds
-of fanatical Moors, attracted partly by curiosity,
-partly from a desire to vent their fierce zeal against
-a Christian. “My arrival,” says he, “was no sooner
-observed than the people, who drew water at the wells,
-threw down their buckets; those in the tents mounted
-their horses, and men, women, and children came
-running or galloping towards me. I soon found myself
-surrounded by such a crowd, that I could scarcely
-move; one pulled my clothes, another took off my
-hat; a third stopped me to examine my waistcoat
-buttons, and a fourth called out ‘La illah el allah
-Mahamet rasowl allahi,’ and signified, in a threatening
-manner, that I must repeat those words. We
-reached at length the king’s tent, where we found a
-great number of people, men, women, and children,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
-assembled. Ali was sitting on a black leathern
-cushion, clipping a few hairs from his upper lip&mdash;a
-female attendant holding up a looking-glass before
-him. He appeared to be an old man of the Arab
-cast, with a long white beard, and he had a sullen
-and indignant aspect. He surveyed me with attention,
-and inquired of the Moors if I could speak
-Arabic; being answered in the negative, he appeared
-much surprised, and continued silent. The surrounding
-attendants, and particularly the ladies,
-were abundantly more inquisitive; they asked a
-thousand questions, inspected every part of my
-apparel, searched my pockets, and obliged me to
-unbutton my waistcoat and display the whiteness
-of my skin; they even counted my toes and fingers,
-as if they doubted whether I was in truth a human
-being.”</p>
-
-<p>Ali now, with the base idea of insulting an unprotected
-stranger, ordered a wild boar to be brought
-in, which he signified his desire that Park should
-kill and eat. This, well knowing their religious
-prejudices, he of course refused to do; upon which
-the boys who led in the boar were commanded to
-let it loose upon him, the Moors supposing that there
-exists an inveterate feud between pigs and Christians,
-and that it would immediately run upon and
-gore him. The boar, however, was more magnanimous.
-Scorning to attack a defenceless foreigner,
-he no sooner found himself at liberty than, brandishing
-his tusks at the natives, he rushed at them indiscriminately,
-and then, to complete the consternation,
-took shelter under the very couch upon which
-the tyrant was sitting. This bold proceeding of the
-unclean beast dissolved the assembly, and the traveller
-was led away to the tent of a slave, in front
-of which, not being permitted to enter, he received
-a little food. Here he likewise passed the night
-lying upon the sand, surrounded by the curious multitude.
-Next day, a hut, constructed with corn-stalks,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
-was given him; but the abovementioned boar,
-which had been recaptured, was tied to a stake in
-the corner of it, as his fittest companion.</p>
-
-<p>By degrees, however, the Moors began to conceive
-that the Christian might in one way or another be
-rendered useful, but could think of no better employment
-for him than that of a barber. In this
-capacity he made his first attempt, in the royal presence,
-on the head of the young prince of Ludamar.
-This dignified office he had no great desire to monopolize,
-and his unskilfulness in performing the operation,
-for he almost at the outset made an incision in the
-young prince’s head, quickly reduced him once more
-to the rank of a common mortal. Ali seemed by
-no means desirous, however, of dispensing altogether
-with his services, wishing perhaps to preserve him
-from the same motives which induce us to preserve
-a wild beast; and therefore, to render his escape
-the more impracticable, took possession of the whole
-of his baggage, including his gold, amber, watch,
-and one of his pocket compasses; the other he
-had fortunately buried in the sand composing the
-floor of his hut. The gold and amber were highly
-gratifying to Moorish avarice, but the pocket compass
-soon became an object of superstitious curiosity.
-“Ali was very desirous to be informed, why
-that small piece of iron, the needle, always pointed
-to the Great Desert, and I found myself somewhat
-puzzled to answer the question. To have pleaded
-my ignorance, would have created a suspicion that I
-wished to conceal the real truth from him; I therefore
-told him that my mother resided far beyond
-the sands of Sahara, and that while she was alive,
-the piece of iron would always point that way, and
-serve as a guide to conduct me to her; and that if
-she was dead, it would point to her grave. Ali
-now looked at the compass with redoubled amazement;
-turned it round and round repeatedly, but observing
-that it always pointed the same way, he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>
-took it up with great caution, and returned it to me,
-manifesting that he thought there was something of
-magic in it, and that he was afraid of keeping so
-dangerous an instrument in his possession.”</p>
-
-<p>It now began to be debated between Ali and his
-advisers what should be done with their prisoner.
-Their decisions were very dissimilar. Some were of
-opinion that he should be put to death; others that he
-should merely lose his right hand; while a third party
-thought that his eyes ought to be put out. Ali himself,
-however, determined that matters should remain
-as they were until his queen Fatima, then in the north,
-had seen him. Meanwhile all these reports were
-related to our traveller, and tended not a little to distress
-and agitate his mind. His demand to be permitted
-to depart was formally refused. The accumulated
-horrors of his situation, united with the want of
-food and sleep, at length brought on a fever, by which
-his life was endangered. But his persecution from
-the Moors did not therefore cease. They plucked
-his cloak from him; they overwhelmed him with
-insults; they tortured him like some ferocious
-animal, for their amusement; and when, to escape
-from this detestable thraldom, he crawled away to a
-short distance from the camp, he was forced back by
-menaces and violence.</p>
-
-<p>At length, after more than a month’s detention at
-Benowm, he was commanded to follow Ali to the
-northern encampment of Bubaker, on the skirts of
-the Great Desert, and on the way endured the extremity
-of hunger, thirst, and fatigue. Upon arriving
-at Bubaker, he was shown as a strange animal
-to Fatima; who, though far from being exempt from
-the Moorish prejudices against a Christian, or in any
-remarkable degree disposed to humanity, still treated
-him with somewhat greater lenity than the rest of
-the Moors; and, upon the departure of her husband
-for Jarra, not only obtained him permission to join
-the party, but prevailed upon the tyrant to restore
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
-him his horse, saddle, and bridle, together with a
-part of his apparel. His faithful black boy Demba,
-however, was taken from him, notwithstanding his
-animated remonstrances to Ali, who, upon his
-pressing the point rather warmly, only replied, that
-if he did not instantly mount his horse and depart,
-he should share the fate of his slave. “There is
-something in the frown of a tyrant,” says Park,
-“which rouses the most secret emotions of the
-heart; I could not suppress my feelings; and for
-once entertained an indignant wish to rid the world
-of such a monster. Poor Demba was not less
-affected than myself; he had formed a strong attachment
-towards me, and had a cheerfulness of disposition
-which often beguiled the tedious hours of captivity;
-he was likewise a proficient in the Bambarra
-tongue, and promised, on that account, to be of
-great use to me in future. But it was in vain to
-expect any thing favourable to humanity from a
-people who are strangers to its dictates. So having
-shaken hands with this unfortunate boy, and blended
-my tears with his, assuring him, however, I would
-do the best to redeem him, I saw him led off by
-three of Ali’s slaves towards the camp at Bubaker.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon his arrival at Jarra, where he was shortly
-afterward transferred by Ali to tyrants of a lower
-grade, his condition, far from being improved, was
-only rendered the more intolerable. The city itself,
-moreover, was in a state of the utmost confusion.
-Malcontents from Kaarta having taken refuge here,
-had recently made an incursion into their native
-country, carried off a large quantity of plunder, and
-thus drawn the vengeance of their king against the
-city. All those who had reason to dread his resentment
-were now, therefore, preparing to fly into Bambarra;
-and Park, whose route lay in the same direction,
-became exceedingly desirous of effecting his
-escape from the Moors, that he might seize upon
-this fortunate occasion of fulfilling the object of his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-mission. “Their departure,” says he, speaking of
-the black fugitives, “was very affecting: the women
-and children crying, the men sullen and dejected, and
-all of them looking back with regret on their native
-town; and on the wells and rocks beyond which
-their ambition had never tempted them to stray, and
-where they had laid all their plans of future happiness;
-all of which they were now forced to abandon,
-and to seek shelter among strangers.”</p>
-
-<p>Hoping to escape in this confused throng, he
-mounted his horse; and taking a bag of corn before
-him, rode slowly off along with the townspeople.
-On their arrival at Queira, a village at no great distance
-from the city, Park began to flatter himself
-that he had really eluded the vigilance of his persecutors;
-but before the agreeable idea had got a firm
-footing in his mind, he saw Ali’s chief slave, accompanied
-by four Moors, arrive, and take up their
-lodgings with the dooty. Johnson, our traveller’s
-interpreter, suspecting the design of this visit, sent
-two boys to overhear their conversation, by which
-means he learned that it was their intention to carry
-Park back to Bubaker. Upon this he at once came
-to the desperate resolution to effect his deliverance
-that very night from his pursuers, or to perish in
-the attempt. Johnson, who applauded this determination,
-but wanted the courage to imitate it, was
-nevertheless exceedingly well disposed to aid in
-effecting his master’s escape. He therefore undertook
-to keep watch upon the movements of the
-enemy, while Park was preparing for flight. About
-midnight he got all his apparel in readiness, which
-consisted of two shirts, two pair of trousers, two
-pocket-handkerchiefs, an upper and under waistcoat,
-a hat, a pair of half-boots, and a cloak. Besides
-these things he had not in his possession a single
-bead, or any other article, with which to purchase
-food for himself, or provender for his horse:&mdash;“About
-daybreak, Johnson, who had been listening
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
-to the Moors all night, came,” says he, “and whispered
-to me that they were all asleep. The awful
-crisis was now arrived when I was again either to
-taste the blessings of freedom, or languish out my
-days in captivity. A cold sweat moistened my forehead
-as I thought of the dreadful alternative, and
-reflected that one way or the other, my fate must be
-decided in the course of the ensuing day. But to
-deliberate was to lose the only chance of escaping.
-So taking up my bundle, I stepped gently over the
-negroes who were sleeping in the open air; and,
-having mounted my horse, I bade Johnson farewell,
-desiring him to take particular care of the papers I
-had intrusted him with, and inform my friends in
-Gambia that he had left me in good health on my
-way to Bambarra. I proceeded with great caution,
-surveying each bush, and frequently listening and
-looking behind me for the Moorish horsemen, until
-I was about a mile from the town, when I was surprised
-to find myself in the neighbourhood of a
-korree, belonging to the Moors. The shepherds followed
-me for about a mile, hooting and throwing
-stones after me; and when I was out of their reach,
-and had begun to indulge the pleasing hope of escaping,
-I was again greatly alarmed to hear somebody
-halloo behind me; and looking back I saw three
-Moors on horseback, coming after me at full speed,
-whooping and brandishing their double-barrel guns:
-I knew it was in vain to think of escaping, and therefore
-turned back and met them; when two of them
-caught hold of my bridle, one on each side, and the
-third, presenting his musket, told me I must go back
-to Ali.”</p>
-
-<p>It soon appeared, however, that these gentlemen
-were merely private robbers, who were fearful that
-their master had not sufficiently pillaged the stranger;
-for, after examining his bundle, and plundering him
-of his cloak, they bade him begone, and follow them
-no further. Too happy to be rid of the villains at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
-any rate, he immediately struck into the woods, and
-continued his journey. His joy at thus escaping
-from the Moors was quickly damped by the consideration
-that he must very soon be in want of both
-food and water, neither of which could he procure
-without approaching villages or wells, where he
-would almost inevitably encounter his old enemies.
-He therefore pushed on with all the vigour of which
-he was possessed, in the hope of reaching some
-town or village of the kingdom of Bambarra. But
-he already began to experience the tortures of thirst.
-His mouth was parched and inflamed; a sudden
-dimness, accompanied by symptoms of fainting,
-would frequently come over his eyes; and as his
-horse also was exceedingly fatigued, he began to apprehend
-that he should perish of thirst. Some
-shrubs, the leaves of which he chewed to relieve the
-burning pain in his mouth and throat, were all found
-to be bitter and of no service. “A little before
-sunset, having reached the top of a gentle rising,”
-says Park, “I climbed a high tree, from the topmost
-branches of which I cast a melancholy look over the
-barren wilderness, but without discovering the most
-distant trace of a human dwelling. The same
-dismal uniformity of shrubs and sand everywhere
-presented itself, and the horizon was level and uninterrupted
-as that of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Descending from the tree, I found my horse devouring
-the stubble and brushwood with great
-avidity; and as I was now too faint to attempt
-walking, and my horse too much fatigued to carry
-me, I thought it but an act of humanity, and perhaps
-the last I should ever have it in my power to perform,
-to take off his bridle and let him shift for himself;
-in doing which, I was affected with sickness and
-giddiness; and, falling upon the sand, felt as if the
-hour of death was fast approaching. Here then
-(thought I), after a short but ineffectual struggle,
-terminate all my hopes of being useful in my day
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
-and generation&mdash;here must the short span of my life
-come to an end. I cast, as I believed, a last look on
-the surrounding scene, and while I reflected on the
-awful change that was about to take place, this
-world and its enjoyments seemed to vanish from my
-recollection. Nature, however, at length resumed
-its functions; and on recovering my senses I found
-myself stretched upon the sand, with the bridle still
-in my hand, and the sun just sinking behind the trees.
-I now summoned all my resolution, and determined
-to make another effort to prolong my existence:
-and, as the evening was somewhat cool, I resolved to
-travel as far as my limbs would carry me, in hopes
-of reaching (my only resource) a watering-place.
-With this view I put the bridle upon my horse, and
-driving him before me, went slowly along for about
-an hour, when I perceived some lightning from the
-north-east&mdash;a most delightful sight, for it promised
-rain. The darkness and lightning increased very
-rapidly; and in less than an hour I heard the wind
-roaring behind the bushes. I had already opened
-my mouth to receive the refreshing drops which I
-expected: but I was instantly covered with a cloud
-of sand, driven with such force by the wind as to
-give a very disagreeable sensation to my face and
-arms; and I was obliged to mount my horse and
-stop under a bush to prevent being suffocated. The
-sand continued to fly for near an hour in amazing
-quantities, after which I again set forward, and travelled
-with difficulty until ten o’clock. About this
-time I was agreeably surprised by some very vivid
-flashes of lightning, followed by a few heavy drops
-of rain. In a little time the sand ceased to fly, and
-I alighted and spread out all my clean clothes to
-collect the rain, which at length I saw would certainly
-fall. For more than an hour it rained plentifully,
-and I quenched my thirst by wringing and
-sucking my clothes.</p>
-
-<p>“There being no moon, it was remarkably dark; so
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-that I was obliged to lead my horse, and direct my
-way by the compass, which the lightning enabled me
-to observe. In this manner I travelled with tolerable
-expedition until past midnight; when the lightning
-became more distant, and I was under the necessity
-of groping along, to the no small danger of my
-hands and eyes. About two o’clock my horse started
-at something; and, looking round, I was not a little
-surprised to see a light at a short distance among the
-trees, and supposing it to be a town, I groped along
-the sand in hopes of finding corn-stalks, cotton, or
-other appearances of cultivation, but found none.
-As I approached, I perceived a number of other
-lights in different places, and began to suspect that I
-had fallen upon a party of Moors. However, in my
-present situation, I was resolved to see who they
-were, if I could do it with safety. I accordingly led
-my horse cautiously towards the light, and heard by
-the lowing of the cattle, and the clamorous tongues
-of the herdsmen, that it was a watering-place, and
-most likely belonged to the Moors. Delightful as
-the sound of the human voice was to me, I resolved
-once more to strike into the woods, and rather run
-the risk of perishing with hunger, than trust myself
-again in their hands; but being still thirsty, and
-dreading the approach of the burning day, I thought
-it prudent to search for the wells, which I expected
-to find at no great distance. In this pursuit I inadvertently
-approached so near one of the tents as to
-to be perceived by a woman, who immediately
-screamed out. The people came running to her
-assistance from some of the neighbouring tents, and
-passed so very near me that I thought I was discovered,
-and hastened again into the woods.</p>
-
-<p>“About a mile from this place I heard a loud and
-confused noise, somewhere to the right of my
-course, and in a short time was happy to find it was
-the croaking of frogs, which was heavenly music to
-my ears. I followed the sound, and at daybreak
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
-arrived at some shallow muddy pools, so full of
-frogs that it was difficult to discern the water. The
-noise they made frightened my horse, and I was
-obliged to keep them quiet by beating the water with
-a branch until he had drunk. Having here quenched
-my thirst, I ascended a tree, and the morning being
-clear, I soon perceived the smoke of the watering-place
-which I had passed in the night, and observed
-another pillar of smoke, east-southeast, distant 12
-or 14 miles.”</p>
-
-<p>Towards this column of smoke, which, as he was
-informed, arose from a Foulah village, he now
-directed his course; but on arriving at the place,
-was inhospitably driven from every door, except that
-of an old woman, who kindly received him into her
-dwelling, and furnished him with food for himself
-and with provender for his horse. Even here, however,
-the influence of Ali pursued him like his evil
-genius. The people who had collected round him
-while he was eating, began, as he clearly discovered
-from their expressions, to form the design of carrying
-him back once more to Benowm or Bubaker.
-He therefore hastened his departure, and having
-wandered among the woods all day, passed the night
-under a tree. In this way he continued his journey,
-sometimes meeting with hospitality, but more frequently
-avoiding the dwellings of man, and subsisting
-upon the wild produce of the woods, and the
-water of a few pools, to which the croaking of the
-frogs directed him.</p>
-
-<p>At length he entered the kingdom of Bambarra,
-where he found the people more hospitable in proportion
-as they were more opulent than their neighbours.
-Cultivation was here carried on in a spirited
-manner and on an extensive scale, and “hunger,”
-as the natives expressed it, “was never known.”
-The country itself was beautiful, intersected on all
-sides by rivulets, which, after a rain-storm, were
-swelled into rapid streams. Park’s horse was now
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
-so attenuated by fatigue that it appeared like a mere
-skeleton, which the traveller, fearing to mount,
-drove before him, as if to scare away the crows.
-The Bambarrans, whose hospitable disposition was
-accompanied by but little delicacy, were infinitely
-amused at this droll spectacle. Taking him for a
-Moor, they supposed from his appearance that he
-must be one of those religious mendicants who, having
-performed the pilgrimage to the holy cities,
-thenceforward consider themselves fully entitled to
-subsist upon the labours of their industrious coreligionists.
-“‘He has been at Mecca,’ said one;
-‘you may see that by his clothes.’ Another asked
-if my horse was sick; a third wished to purchase
-it, &amp;c. So that I believe the very slaves were
-ashamed to be seen in my company.”</p>
-
-<p>However, in spite of all this laughter and ridicule,
-he proceeded on his way, and at length had the satisfaction
-to be informed that on the morrow he should
-see the Niger, denominated <i>Joliba</i>, or the “Great
-Water,” by the natives. Next morning, the 21st of
-July, after passing through several large villages, he
-saw the smoke ascend over Sego, the capital of Bambarra,
-and felt elate with joy at the thought of drawing
-near so important an object of his mission. “As
-we approached the town,” says Park, “I was fortunate
-enough to overtake the fugitive Kaartans, to
-whose kindness I had been so much indebted in my
-journey through Bambarra. They readily agreed
-to introduce me to the king, and we rode together
-through some marshy ground, where, as I anxiously
-looked around for the river, one of them called out
-<i>Geo affilli</i> (see the water); and, looking forward, I
-saw with infinite pleasure the great object of my
-mission,&mdash;the long sought for, majestic Niger, glittering
-to the morning sun, as broad as the Thames
-at Westminster, and flowing slowly <i>to the eastward</i>.
-I hastened to the brink, and, having drunk of the
-water, lifted up my fervent thanks in prayer to the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
-Great Ruler of all things for having thus far crowned
-my endeavours with success.”</p>
-
-<p>Sego, the capital of Bambarra, consisted of four
-distinct towns, two on the northern, and two on the
-southern bank of the Niger. The king at this period
-resided on the southern bank, while Park had arrived
-on the opposite side. The communication
-between the different quarters of the city was kept
-up by means of large canoes, which were constantly
-passing and repassing; notwithstanding which, so
-great was the pressure of passengers, that Park was
-compelled to wait upwards of two hours before he
-could obtain even a chance of being ferried over.
-Meanwhile, the prospect before him was novel and
-striking in the highest degree. “The view of this
-extensive city,” he observes, “the numerous canoes
-on the river, the crowded population, and the cultivated
-state of the surrounding country formed altogether
-a prospect of civilization and magnificence
-which I little expected to find in the bosom of Africa.”</p>
-
-<p>While he was thus waiting for a passage, the news
-was conveyed to Mansong that a white man was on
-the banks of the river coming to see him. The king,
-who seems to have been alarmed at this intelligence,
-immediately despatched a messenger, who was directed
-to inform the stranger that he would not be
-admitted into the royal presence until the purport
-of his mission were made known; and that, in the
-mean while, he was prohibited from passing the
-river. He was likewise told that the king desired
-him to seek lodgings in one of the villages in the
-vicinity of the capital. As there was no alternative,
-he at once set out for the village, where, to his great
-mortification, he found that no person would admit
-him into his house. “I was regarded with astonishment
-and fear,” he observes, “and was obliged to
-sit all day without victuals in the shade of a tree;
-and the night threatened to be very uncomfortable,
-for the wind rose, and there was great appearance
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
-of a heavy rain; and the wild beasts were so very
-numerous in the neighbourhood, that I should have
-been under the necessity of climbing up a tree, and
-resting among the branches. About sunset, however,
-as I was preparing to pass the night in this
-manner, and had turned my horse loose that he might
-graze at liberty, a woman returning from the labours
-of the field stopped to observe me, and, perceiving
-that I was weary and dejected, inquired into my
-situation, which I briefly explained to her; whereupon,
-with looks of great compassion, she took up
-my saddle and bridle, and told me to follow her.
-Having conducted me into her hut, she lighted up a
-lamp, spread a mat upon the floor, and told me I might
-remain there for the night. Finding that I was very
-hungry, she said she would procure me something
-to eat; she accordingly went out, and returned in a
-short time with a very fine fish, which, having
-caused to be half-broiled upon some embers, she
-gave me for supper. The rites of hospitality being
-thus performed towards a stranger in distress, my
-worthy benefactress, pointing to the mat, and telling
-me I might sleep there without apprehension, called
-to the female part of her family, who had stood gazing
-on me all the while in fixed astonishment, to resume
-their task of spinning cotton, in which they
-continued to employ themselves great part of the
-night. They lightened their labour by songs, one
-of which was composed extempore, for I was myself
-the subject of it; it was sung by one of the young
-women, the rest joining in a sort of chorus. The
-air was sweet and plaintive, and the words literally
-translated were these:&mdash;‘The winds roared, and the
-rains fell; the poor white man, faint and weary,
-came and sat under our tree; he has no mother to
-bring him milk, no wife to grind his corn.’ Chorus:&mdash;‘Let
-us pity the white man, no mother has he,’
-&amp;c. Trifling as this recital may appear to the
-reader, to a person in my situation the circumstance
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
-was affecting in the highest degree. I was oppressed
-by such unexpected kindness that sleep fled my
-eyes. In the morning I presented my compassionate
-landlady with two of the four brass buttons which
-remained on my waistcoat, the only recompense I
-could make her.”</p>
-
-<p>Although Mansong refused to admit our traveller
-into his presence, and seemed at first to neglect him,
-it soon appeared that this conduct did not arise from
-any churlish or inhospitable feelings; for while he
-persisted in his refusal to see him, and signified his
-pleasure that he should forthwith depart from the
-city, he sent him a present of five thousand cowries
-and a guide to Sansanding. Park immediately
-obeyed the royal command, and learned from the
-conversation of his guide on the way, that the king’s
-motives for thus dismissing him without an audience
-were at once prudent and liberal, since he feared
-that by the least show of favour he should excite the
-jealousy and envy of the Moorish inhabitants, from
-whose inveterate malice he might be unable to protect
-him.</p>
-
-<p>With this guide he proceeded to Sansanding, where
-he was hospitably received by the dooty, and would,
-as the king’s stranger, have enjoyed much quiet and
-consideration, had he not had the misfortune to meet
-with some of his old enemies the Moors, who insisted
-on conducting him to the mosque, and converting
-him into a Mohammedan at once. However,
-the dooty, by exerting his authority, freed him from
-these fanatics, and ordered a sheep to be killed, and
-part of it dressed for his supper. “About midnight,
-when the Moors had left me,” says Park, “he paid
-me a visit, and with much earnestness desired me
-to write him a saphie. ‘If a Moor’s saphie is good,’
-said this hospitable old man, ‘a white man’s must
-needs be better.’ I readily furnished him with one
-possessed of all the virtues I could concentrate, for
-it contained the Lord’s Prayer. The pen with which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-it was written was made of a reed, a little charcoal
-and gum-water made very tolerable ink, and a thin
-board answered the purpose of paper.”</p>
-
-<p>From Sansanding he departed early in the morning,
-before the Moors were stirring. The road now
-lay through the woods, and the guide, who understood
-the dangers of the way, moved forward with
-the greatest circumspection, frequently stopping and
-looking under the bushes. Upon observing this,
-Park inquired the reason, and was told that lions
-were very plentiful in that part of the country, and
-very often attacked travellers in the woods. While
-they were conversing on this subject Park discovered
-a camelopard at a little distance, the fore-legs
-of which, from a hasty glance, appeared much longer
-than the hinder. “Shortly after this,” says he, “as
-we were crossing a large open plain where there
-were a few scattered bushes, my guide, who was a
-little way before me, wheeled his horse round in a
-moment, calling out something in the Foulah language
-which I did not understand. I inquired in
-Mandingo what he meant. ‘<i>Wara billi billi</i>’ (a very
-large lion)! said he, and made signs for me to ride
-away. But my horse was too much fatigued; so
-we rode slowly past the bush from which the animal
-had given us the alarm. Not seeing any thing myself,
-however, I thought my guide had been mistaken,
-when the Foulah suddenly put his hand to his mouth,
-exclaiming, ‘<i>Soubah an alluhi</i>’ (God preserve us)!
-and to my great surprise I then perceived a large
-red lion at a short distance from the bush, with his
-head couched between his fore-paws. I expected
-he would instantly spring upon me, and instinctively
-pulled my feet from my stirrups to throw myself on
-the ground, that my horse might become the victim
-rather than myself. But it is probable the lion was
-not hungry; for he quietly suffered us to pass, though
-we were fairly within his reach.”</p>
-
-<p>About sunset they arrived at Moodiboo, “a delightful
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
-village on the banks of the Niger, commanding
-a view of the river for many miles, both to the
-east and west. The small green islands, the peaceful
-retreat of some industrious Foulahs, whose cattle
-were here secure from the attacks of wild beasts,
-and the majestic breadth of the river, which is here
-much larger than at Sego, render the situation one
-of the most enchanting in the world.” Park was
-now so worn out with fatigue and suffering, that his
-landlord, fearing he might die in his house, hurried
-him away, though he was scarcely able to walk, and
-his horse still less able to carry him. In fact, they
-had not proceeded far before the poor beast fell
-down, and could no more be made to rise; so that,
-taking off his saddle and bridle, our traveller with
-extreme reluctance abandoned him to his fate, and
-began to toil along on foot after his guide. In this
-way they reached Kea, a small fishing-village on the
-Niger, where Park embarked in a fisherman’s canoe
-which was going down the stream, while the guide
-returned to Sego.</p>
-
-<p>In this canoe our traveller reached Moorzan,
-whence he was conveyed across the river to Silla, a
-large town on the opposite shore. It was with great
-difficulty that he here obtained admission into the
-strangers’ room of the dooty’s house, a damp, uncomfortable
-place, where he had a severe paroxysm
-of fever during the night. Here his resolution and
-energy, of which no traveller ever possessed a larger
-share, began at length to fail. No hope of success
-remained. He therefore, with extreme sorrow and
-anguish of mind, determined on returning whence he
-had come; but let me lay before the reader his own
-simple and manly account of the matter, which cannot
-fail to impress even the most insensible with
-veneration for a degree of courage and intrepidity
-amounting to heroism. “Worn down by sickness,
-exhausted by hunger and fatigue, half-naked, and
-without any article of value by which I might procure
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
-provisions, clothes, or lodging, I began,” says
-Park, “to reflect seriously on my situation. I was
-now convinced by painful experience that the obstacles
-to my further progress were insurmountable.
-The tropical rains had already set in with all their
-violence; the rice-grounds and swamps were already
-overflowed; and in a few days more travelling of
-every kind except by water would be completely obstructed.
-The cowries which remained of the King
-of Bambarra’s present were not sufficient to hire a
-canoe for any great distance; and I had but little
-hopes of subsisting by charity in a country where
-the Moors have such influence. But, above all, I
-perceived I was advancing more and more within the
-power of those merciless fanatics; and from my reception
-both at Sego and Sansanding, I was apprehensive
-that, in attempting to reach even Jeuné (unless
-under the protection of some man of consequence
-among them, which I had no means of obtaining), I
-should sacrifice my life to no purpose; for my discoveries
-would perish with me. The prospect either
-way was gloomy. In returning to the Gambia, a
-journey on foot of many hundred miles presented
-itself to my contemplation, through regions and
-countries unknown. Nevertheless, this seemed to
-be the only alternative; for I saw inevitable destruction
-in attempting to proceed to the eastward. With
-this conviction on my mind, I hope my readers will
-acknowledge I did right in going no farther. I had
-made every exertion to execute my mission in its
-fullest extent which prudence could justify. Had
-there been the most distant prospect of a successful
-termination, neither the unavoidable hardships of
-the journey nor the dangers of a second captivity
-should have forced me to desist. This, however,
-necessity compelled me to do.”</p>
-
-<p>When he had come to this resolution, he thought
-it incumbent upon him before he left Silla to collect
-whatever information might be within his reach respecting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
-the further course of the Niger, and the
-situation and extent of the various kingdoms in its
-vicinity. Subsequent travellers have solved the
-problem, the honour of explaining which was denied
-to Park. We now know that this great river, after
-having flowed to a considerable distance eastward
-of Timbuctoo, makes a bend or elbow like the Burrampooter,
-and, after pursuing a south-westerly
-course, falls into the Atlantic Ocean on the coast of
-Benin.</p>
-
-<p>On the 30th of July our traveller commenced his
-return westward, by the same route through which
-he had reached Silla. In a few days he recovered
-his horse, which had in some measure regained its
-strength, though it was still too weak to be ridden.
-The rainy season having now set in, the whole of
-the plain country was quickly inundated; so that
-our traveller was often in danger of losing his way
-while traversing savannahs many miles in extent,
-knee-deep in water. In several places he waded
-breast-deep across the swamps. The huts of the
-villages in which he passed the night, being undermined
-or softened by the rain, often fell in; and the
-noise of their fall sometimes kept him awake, expecting
-that his own might be the next. His situation
-was now even worse than during his progress
-eastward. A report had been widely circulated that
-he was a spy, in consequence of which he was in
-some places civilly refused admittance into the
-towns, in others repulsed from the gates with violence;
-so that he now appeared inevitably doomed
-to perish of hunger. However, when the fatal hour
-seemed at hand, some charitable being always appeared
-with a poor but seasonable supply, such, perhaps,
-as a little raw corn, which prolonged his life,
-and supplied him with strength to achieve his memorable
-journey. “On the evening of the 15th of August
-I arrived,” says Park, “at a small village called
-Song, the surly inhabitants of which would not receive
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
-me, nor so much as permit me to enter the
-gate; but as lions were very numerous in this neighbourhood,
-and I had frequently in the course of the
-day seen the impression of their feet upon the road,
-I resolved to stay in the vicinity of the village.
-Having collected some grass for my horse, I accordingly
-laid down under a tree by the gate. About
-ten o’clock I heard the hollow roar of a lion at no
-great distance, and attempted to open the gate; but
-the people from within told me that no person must
-attempt to enter the gate without the dooty’s permission.
-I begged them to inform the dooty that a
-lion was approaching the village, and I hoped he
-would allow me to come within the gate. I waited
-for an answer to this message with great anxiety;
-for the lion kept prowling round the village, and
-once advanced so very near me that I heard him
-rustling among the grass, and climbed the tree for
-safety. About midnight the dooty with some of his
-people opened the gate, and desired me to come in.
-They were convinced, they said, I was not a Moor;
-for no Moor ever waited any time at the gate of a
-village without cursing the inhabitants.”</p>
-
-<p>The history of this journey now becomes nothing
-more than a repetition of similar sufferings. Hunger,
-fatigue, and depression of spirits attack the traveller
-by turns. Nothing, however, subdues his courage.
-Obstacle after obstacle yields to his persevering intrepidity,
-and he pushes forward with invincible
-ardour towards the coast. In one place, at the request
-of a native who had grown opulent by industrious
-application to commerce, he wrote charms for
-a good supper; and, finding the contrivance productive,
-continued the practice next day for small presents
-of various kinds. On other occasions, where
-superstition did not come to his aid, humanity interposed,
-and snatched him from starvation. At Bammakoo
-he was hospitably treated, even by a Moor,
-who, having travelled to Rio Grande, had conversed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
-with Christians, and conceived a favourable idea of
-their character. The rains had now increased the
-Niger to a vast size, and rendered impassable almost
-every road; but, as our traveller’s finances had long
-been exhausted, he found himself compelled to proceed,
-the charity of the natives not extending so far
-as to the maintaining of a stranger for several
-months. The ordinary roads being obstructed by
-the rains, the only practicable route, wild, dreary,
-and desolate, lay over steril rocky mountains, over
-which, it was feared, a horse could not pass.</p>
-
-<p>Finding that a singing-man was about to proceed
-by this road to Sibidooloo, Park placed himself under
-his guidance, and quitted Bammakoo. He had not
-proceeded far, however, before his companion, finding
-that he had taken the wrong path, escaped among
-the rocks, and left him to find his way how he might.
-He soon arrived at a village, where he was entertained
-with hospitality, and where he passed the
-night. Next day, as he was quietly pursuing his
-course, a troop of peasants presented themselves,
-whom he at first took for elephant-hunters, but who
-very shortly proved themselves to be banditti. Pretending
-to arrest him in the name of the King of the
-Foulahs, they commanded him to follow them, until,
-having reached a dark lonely part of a wood, one of
-them exclaimed in the Mandingo language, “This
-place will do!” and immediately snatched his hat
-from his head. “Though I was by no means free
-from apprehension,” says Park, “yet I was resolved
-to show as few signs of fear as possible; and therefore
-told them, that unless my hat was returned to
-me I should proceed no farther. But before I had
-time to receive an answer another drew a knife, and,
-seizing upon a metal button which remained upon
-my waistcoat, cut it off, and put it into his pocket.
-Their intentions were now obvious; and I thought
-that the easier they were permitted to rob me of
-every thing the less I had to fear. I therefore
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
-allowed them to search my pockets without resistance,
-and examine every part of my apparel, which
-they did with the most scrupulous exactness. But,
-observing that I had one waistcoat under another,
-they insisted that I should cast them both off; and
-at last, to make sure work, stripped me quite naked.
-Even my half-boots, though the sole of one of them
-was tied on to my foot with a broken bridle-rein,
-were minutely inspected. While they were examining
-the plunder, I begged them with great earnestness
-to return my pocket-compass; but when I
-pointed it out to them, as it was lying on the ground,
-one of the banditti, thinking I was about to take it
-up, cocked his musket, and swore he would lay me
-dead upon the spot if I presumed to put my hand
-upon it. After this, some of them went away with
-my horse, and the remainder stood considering
-whether they should leave me quite naked, or allow
-me something to shelter me from the sun. Humanity
-at last prevailed; they returned me the worst of the
-two shirts and a pair of trousers; and, as they went
-away, one of them threw back my hat, in the crown
-of which I kept my memorandums; and this was
-probably the reason why they did not wish to
-keep it.”</p>
-
-<p>This was the most terrible misfortune that had
-hitherto befallen him, and at first, his mind appeared
-to sink under the united influence of grief and terror.
-For a while he sat in sullen dejection, half-persuaded
-that he had no alternative but to lie down and perish.
-Presently, however, thoughts of religion, and a reliance
-upon Providence, succeeding this extreme
-dejection, his mind gradually regained its fervent
-tone:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I was, indeed, a stranger,” he thought, “in a
-strange land; yet I was still under the protecting
-eye of that Providence, who has condescended to
-call himself the stranger’s friend. At this moment,
-painful as my reflections were, the extraordinary
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
-beauty of a small moss in fructification irresistibly
-caught my eye. I mention this to show from what
-trifling circumstances the mind will sometimes derive
-consolation; for though the whole plant was
-not larger than the top of one of my fingers, I could
-not contemplate the delicate conformation of its
-roots, leaves, and capsula without admiration. Can
-that Being (thought I) who planted, watered, and
-brought to perfection, in this obscure part of the
-world, a thing which appears of so small importance,
-look with unconcern upon the situation and sufferings
-of creatures formed after his own image?
-Surely not! Reflections like these would not allow
-me to despair; I started up, and, disregarding both
-danger and fatigue, travelled forwards, assured that
-relief was at hand; and I was not disappointed.”</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at Sibidooloo, Park related to the
-mansa, or chief of the town, the misfortune which
-had befallen him. This humane and excellent man,
-having heard him patiently to an end, took the pipe
-from his mouth, and tossing up the sleeve of his coat
-with an indignant air, “Sit down,” said he, “you
-shall have every thing restored to you; I have sworn
-it.” He then took the necessary measures for the
-recovery of the traveller’s property, and invited him
-to partake of his hospitable fare until this should
-have been effected. After spending a few days at
-this place, without hearing any news of his horse or
-other property, our traveller removed to a distant
-village, where he remained until the whole was discovered
-and restored to him, with the exception of
-his pocket compass, which had been broken to pieces.
-Having nothing else to bestow upon his hospitable
-landlords, he gave his horse to one, and his saddle
-and bridle to the other: and then taking his leave,
-proceeded on foot to Kamalia. At this town, romantically
-situated at the foot of a lofty mountain,
-he found a slave-merchant, who, intending to descend
-to the coast with a small caravan in the beginning
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
-of the dry season, offered our traveller an
-asylum until he should set out. Conceiving that it
-would be impossible to proceed during the rains,
-Park accepted his kind proposal, and promised in
-return to give him the price of a slave upon their
-arrival on the coast. Here a fever, which had for
-some time menaced him, manifested itself with great
-violence, and continued to torment him during the
-whole season of the rains. His landlord, meanwhile,
-exerted himself to keep up his hopes, and having
-by some means or another obtained possession of an
-English Common Prayer Book, he communicated the
-use of it to Park, who was thus enabled to beguile
-the gloomy hours of his solitude and sickness. At
-length the rains became less frequent, and the fever
-abated, so that he could move out to enjoy the fresh
-air in the fields.</p>
-
-<p>On the 19th of April, Karfa, the slave-merchant,
-having collected his slaves, and completed all necessary
-preparations, set out towards the coast, taking
-our traveller, to whom his behaviour had always
-been marked by the greatest kindness, along with
-him. Their road led them across a vast wilderness,
-where the sufferings of every member of the caravan,
-and more particularly of the slaves, were most
-exquisite; but affliction was far from having taught
-them commiseration, for a fine young female slave,
-fainting from fatigue, had no sooner signified her
-inability to go on, than the universal cry of the caravan
-was, “cut her throat, cut her throat.” By the
-interposition of Karfa her life was spared, but she
-was abandoned on the road, where she was no doubt
-soon devoured by wild beasts. At length, after a
-long, toilsome journey, Karfa succeeded in fulfilling
-his promise, and conducted our traveller safe to
-Pisania, where the good old man was overwhelmed
-with the gratitude of his guest. Park now took his
-passage in an American vessel, and on arriving in
-the West Indies, quitted this ship for a packet bound
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
-for Falmouth, where he arrived on the 22d of December,
-1797, after an absence of two years and seven
-months.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately on his landing he hastened to London,
-where he arrived before daylight on the morning
-of Christmas-day. It being too early an hour
-to call on his brother-in-law, Mr. Dickson, he strolled
-about for some time in the neighbouring streets.
-At length, finding one of the entrances into the gardens
-of the British Museum accidentally open, he
-went in and walked about there for some time. It
-happened that Mr. Dickson, who had the care of
-those gardens, went there early that morning on
-some trifling business. What must have been his
-emotions on beholding, at that extraordinary time
-and place, the vision, as it must at first have appeared,
-of his long lost friend, the object of so many
-anxious reflections, and whom he had long numbered
-with the dead.</p>
-
-<p>He was now received with distinguished honour
-by the African Association, and the various literary
-men whom he met with in London. In the mean
-time his travels, which the Association permitted
-him to publish on his own account, were announced;
-and both during his stay in London, and the visit
-which he paid to his friends in Scotland, all his
-leisure hours were devoted to the compiling and
-arranging of the materials for the work. It appeared
-in the spring of 1799, and immediately acquired that
-degree of popularity which it has ever since maintained.
-In the composition of his travels, however,
-he was assisted by Bryan Edwards, author of a “History
-of the West Indies,” an advocate of the slave-trade,
-in deference to whom Park is said to have
-suppressed his own opinions, which had a contrary
-tendency. The apology offered for this mean compliance
-is, that Bryan Edwards, being secretary to
-the African Association, had it in his power greatly
-to influence the future fortunes of our traveller. I
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
-should prefer supposing that his arguments produced
-a temporary conviction upon Park’s mind, unless
-some more convincing proof than has yet been
-brought forward could be adduced to substantiate
-the accusation of so remarkable a deficiency of
-moral courage in a man in whom, on all other occasions,
-courage seemed to be the prevailing virtue.</p>
-
-<p>However this may be, Park again returned to
-Scotland soon after the publication of his travels,
-where, on the 2d of August, 1799, he married one
-of the daughters of Mr. Anderson, of Selkirk, with
-whom he had served his apprenticeship. He now
-seemed to have forgotten his ambitious feelings, and
-for more than two years resided on the farm at
-Fowlshiels, with his mother and one of his brothers.
-He then removed to the town of Peebles, where he
-resumed the practice of his profession, and seems,
-in a short time, to have acquired a good share of the
-business of the place. But it will easily be imagined
-that the quiet obscure life of a country surgeon
-could possess no charms for an ardent ambitious
-mind like Park’s. He longed to be performing upon
-some more stirring scene. In this dreary solitude,
-therefore, where the indulgence of day-dreams
-would appear to have been his principal amusement,
-scheme after scheme seems to have presented itself
-to his mind, each giving way in its turn to another
-equally impracticable. At length he received, through
-the medium of Sir Joseph Banks, intelligence that
-the African Association were once more about to
-send a mission into the interior of Africa, for the
-purpose of penetrating to and navigating the Niger;
-and that, in case government should enter into the
-plan, he himself would certainly be recommended as
-the person proper to be employed for carrying it
-into execution.</p>
-
-<p>Dilatoriness is too frequently the characteristic of
-the proceedings of great public bodies. The first
-idea of this new mission was conceived in 1801, but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-it was not until the beginning of 1805 that the expedition
-was ultimately determined on, when Park received
-from Lord Camden his appointment as its
-chief conductor. “For the better enabling you to
-execute this service,” says his lordship, “his majesty
-has granted you the brevet commission of
-captain in Africa, and has also granted a similar
-commission of lieutenant to Mr. Alexander Anderson,
-whom you have recommended as a proper person
-to accompany you. Mr. Scott has also been
-selected to attend you as draughtsman. You are
-hereby empowered to enlist with you for this expedition
-any number you think proper of the garrison
-at Goree, not exceeding forty-five, which the commandant
-of that island will be ordered to place under
-your command, giving them such bounties or encouragement
-as may be necessary to induce them
-cheerfully to join with you in the expedition.”</p>
-
-<p>Five thousand pounds were at the same time
-placed at Park’s disposal, and further directions
-given him respecting the course and line of conduct
-he was expected to pursue. With these instructions
-Park and his companions proceeded to Portsmouth,
-where they were joined by four or five artificers,
-appointed for the service from the dock-yards. They
-sailed on the 30th of January, and on the 28th of
-April arrived at Pisania. Here they made preparations
-for entering the interior. The party consisted
-of forty men, two lieutenants, a draughtsman, a
-guide, and Park himself. Their provisions and merchandise
-were carried by asses, and they had horses
-for themselves. Thus appointed, they left Pisania
-on the 4th of May. It was very quickly discovered,
-however, that their asses were unequal to the task
-imposed upon them; some lay down, others kicked
-off their burdens, and it became necessary to increase
-the number of these vicious animals.</p>
-
-<p>At Bady, a town in the interior frontier of Woolli,
-they were led into a quarrel with the farauba, or
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
-chief of the town, respecting the amount of duties to
-be paid by their caravan, in which, though the conduct
-of the African was rude and peremptory, the
-travellers were clearly in the wrong. A few days
-after this affair the caravan had an adventure with a
-new species of enemy. On the 24th of May they
-reached a place which they denominated Bee’s
-Creek, where they halted with the intention of encamping
-there. “We had no sooner unloaded the
-asses at the creek,” says Park, “than some of
-Isaaco’s people, being in search of honey, unfortunately
-disturbed a large swarm of bees near where
-the coffle had halted. The bees came out in immense
-numbers, and attacked men and beasts at the
-same time. Luckily, most of the asses were loose,
-and galloped up the valley; but the horses and people
-were very much stung, and obliged to scamper
-in all directions. The fire which had been kindled
-for cooking, having been deserted, spread and set
-fire to the bamboos; and our baggage had like to
-have been burnt. In fact, for half an hour the bees
-seemed to have put an end to our journey.</p>
-
-<p>“In the evening, when the bees became less
-troublesome, and we could venture to collect our
-cattle, we found that many of them were very much
-stung and swelled about the head. Three asses
-were missing; one died in the evening and one next
-morning, and we were compelled to leave one at
-Sibikillin; in all six: besides which, our guide lost
-his horse, and many of the people were very much
-stung about the face and hands.”</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of June the rains began to set in,
-accompanied by violent tornadoes. The earth was
-quickly covered with water. The soldiers were affected
-with vomiting, or with an irresistible inclination
-to sleep. Our traveller himself was affected in
-a similar manner during the storm, and, notwithstanding
-that he used every exertion to keep away
-heaviness, at length fell asleep on the damp ground.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-The soldiers did the same thing. In the morning
-twelve of them were sick. In this vicinity he saw
-many pits, from which gold was obtained in large
-quantities by washing. As the caravan proceeded,
-many of the soldiers growing delirious, or too weak
-to continue the march, were left behind to the care
-of the natives; while others died on the road, or
-were drowned in the rivers. Some, still more unfortunate
-if possible, were lost in the woods, where
-they were no doubt devoured by wild beasts. Meanwhile
-the natives, who imagined that the caravan
-contained prodigious wealth, hung upon their march,
-plundered them at every turn, and as often as they
-appeared too weak to resist, endeavoured to extort
-presents from them.</p>
-
-<p>The condition of the men now became desperate.
-Day after day some poor wretch was abandoned to
-his fate, some in one way, some in another. I give
-one example which may serve for the whole.
-“Three miles east of the village of Koombandi,”
-says Park, “William Alston, one of the seamen
-whom I received from his majesty’s ship Squirrel,
-became so faint that he fell from his ass, and allowed
-the ass to run away. Set him on my horse, but
-found he could not sit without holding him. Replaced
-him on the ass, but he still tumbled off. Put
-him again on the horse, and made one man hold him
-upright while I led the horse; but, as he made no
-exertion to hold himself erect, it was impossible to
-keep him on the horse, and after repeated tumbles
-he begged to be left in the woods till morning. I
-left a loaded pistol with him, and put some cartridges
-into the crown of his hat.”</p>
-
-<p>In crossing the Wondu the caravan was nearly
-deprived of its guide in the following manner:
-“Our guide, Isaaco, was very active in pushing the
-asses into the water, and shoving along the canoe;
-but as he was afraid that we could not have them
-all carried over in the course of the day, he attempted
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
-to drive six of the asses across the river farther
-down, where the water was shallower. When he
-had reached the middle of the river, a crocodile rose
-close to him, and instantly seizing him by the left
-thigh, pulled him under water. With wonderful
-presence of mind he felt the head of the animal, and
-thrust his finger into its eye, on which it quitted its
-hold, and Isaaco attempted to reach the farther shore,
-calling loudly for a knife. But the crocodile returned
-and seized him by the other thigh, and again
-pulled him under water; he had recourse to the
-same expedient, and thrust his fingers into its eyes
-with such violence that it again quitted him; when
-it arose, flounced about on the surface of the water
-as if stupid, and then swam down the middle of the
-river. Isaaco proceeded to the other side, bleeding
-very much.”</p>
-
-<p>This event retarded for several days the march of
-the caravan. Besides, Park himself was attacked
-with fever, and their provisions, moreover, were now
-reduced to so low an ebb, that upon examination it
-was found that no more than rice for two days remained
-in their possession. This deficiency was,
-therefore, to be immediately supplied. Two persons
-were sent away with an ass to a distant village for
-rice, and in the mean time our traveller devoted his
-attentions to the wounds of the guide. The sailor
-who had been abandoned in the woods here rejoined
-the caravan quite naked, having been robbed of his
-clothes by the natives. The audacity of these
-thieves was extraordinary. In ascending an eminence
-two miles from Maniakono, Park himself was
-robbed in a very characteristic manner:&mdash;“As I was
-holding my musket carelessly in my hand, and looking
-round,” says he, “two of Numma’s sons came
-up to me; one of them requested me to give him
-some snuff; at this instant the other (called Woosaba),
-coming up behind me, snatched the musket
-from my hand, and ran off with it. I instantly sprung
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
-from the saddle and followed him with my sword,
-calling to Mr. Anderson to ride back, and tell some
-of the people to look after my horse. Mr. Anderson
-got within musket-shot of him; but, seeing it was
-Numma’s son, had some doubts about shooting him,
-and called to me if he should fire. Luckily I did
-not hear him, or I might possibly have recovered my
-musket at the risk of a long palaver, and perhaps
-the loss of half our baggage. The thief accordingly
-made his escape among the rocks; and when I returned
-to my horse, I found the other of the royal
-descendants had stolen my coat.”</p>
-
-<p>Their condition was now exceedingly distressing.
-Not only the soldiers and sailors, but Scott and Anderson
-began to lag behind, being attacked by fever,
-the first effect of which in those countries is to deprive
-the sufferer of his energies. Having remained
-for some time by the wayside with his dying friend,
-he placed him, when his strength appeared for a moment
-to return, upon his horse, and pushed forward
-towards their proposed halting-place, leading the
-horse by the bridle. “We had not proceeded above
-a mile,” says Park, “before we heard on our left a
-noise very much like the barking of a large mastiff,
-but ending in a hiss like the fuff<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> of a cat. I thought
-it must be some large monkey; and was observing
-to Mr. Anderson, ‘What a bouncing fellow that must
-be,’ when we heard another bark nearer to us, and
-presently a third still nearer, accompanied with a
-growl. I now suspected some wild beast meant to
-attack us, but could not conjecture of what species
-it was likely to be. We had not proceeded a hundred
-yards farther, when, coming to an opening in
-the bushes, I was not a little surprised to see three
-lions coming towards us. They were not so red as
-the lion I had formerly seen in Bambarra, but of a
-dusky colour, like that of an ass. They were very
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
-large, and came bounding over the long grass, not
-one after another, but all abreast of each other. I
-was afraid, if I allowed them to come too near us,
-and my piece should miss fire, that we should all be
-devoured by them. I therefore let go the bridle, and
-walked forwards to meet them. As soon as they
-were within a long shot of me, I fired at the centre
-one. I do not think I hit him; but they all stopped,
-looked at each other, and then bounded away a few
-paces, when one of them stopped and looked back
-at me. I was too busy in loading my piece to observe
-their motions as they went away, and was
-very happy to see the last of them march slowly off
-among the bushes. We had not proceeded above
-half a mile farther when we heard another bark and
-growl close to us among the bushes. This was,
-doubtless, one of the lions before seen; and I was
-afraid they would follow us till dark, when they
-would have too many opportunities of springing
-on us unawares. We however heard no more of
-them.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a>
-<i>Fuff</i> is an expressive Scotch word, applicable in its original sense
-to the explosive noise which a cat makes in flying at a dog.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At length, from the brow of a hill, Park had once
-more the satisfaction of beholding the Niger, rolling
-its immense stream along the plain. But he was in
-no mood of mind to triumph at the sight. The majority
-of his companions had fallen on the way; of
-thirty-four soldiers and four carpenters who left the
-Gambia, only six soldiers and one carpenter reached
-the Niger. With this miserable remnant of his
-original force he descended the hill, and pitched his
-tents near the town of Bambakoo. Here some of
-the party embarked in canoes on the Niger, while
-others proceeded by land to the neighbourhood of
-Sego, which they reached on the 19th of September.
-Mansong was still king of Bambarra; and being
-highly gratified with their presents, not only gave
-them permission to build a boat on the Niger at
-whatever town they pleased, but engaged to protect,
-as far as his power extended, the trade of the whites
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
-in the interior. Park selected Sansanding as the
-place most eligible for building the boat, and removed
-thither as quickly as possible. Here immediately
-on his arrival he opened a shop, exhibiting a choice
-assortment of European goods, which sold so well
-among the natives that his success excited the envy
-of the Jinnic people, the Moors, and the other merchants
-of the place, who offered Mansong merchandise
-to a much greater value than the presents
-made him by Park, if he would either kill the strangers
-or drive them out of the country. Mansong,
-however, rejected the offer. “From the 8th to the
-16th nothing of consequence occurred; I found my
-shop every day more and more crowded with customers;
-and such was my run of business, that I
-was sometimes forced to employ three tellers at
-once to count my cash. I turned one market-day
-twenty-five thousand seven hundred and fifty-six
-pieces of money (cowries).”</p>
-
-<p>Park now received intelligence of the death of
-Mr. Scott, who had been left behind near Bambakoo.
-Mansong very soon convinced the traveller that he
-understood the art of receiving presents much better
-than that of returning them; for upon being requested
-to furnish a canoe in which the mission,
-now reduced to a very small number, might embark
-on the Niger, he sent one after another several half-rotten
-barks; two of which Park, seeing no hope of
-getting better, was at length compelled to accept,
-and with these he constructed what he termed a
-schooner. Shortly after this he lost his friend Anderson,
-upon whose death “I felt myself,” says he,
-“as if left a second time lonely and friendless amid
-the wilds of Africa.” Dreary and perilous as was
-his position, however, he still determined to persevere.
-His companions were now reduced to four,
-Lieutenant Martyn and three soldiers, one of whom
-was deranged in his mind; yet with this wretched
-remnant of a detachment which, it must be confessed,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
-had been thus thinned, or rather annihilated,
-by his own ill management and want of foresight,
-he purposed following the course of the Niger to its
-termination, whether that should prove to be in
-some great lake or inland sea, or, as he rather believed,
-in the Atlantic Ocean. And this voyage,
-says one of his biographers, one of the most formidable
-ever attempted, was to be undertaken in a
-crazy and ill-appointed vessel, manned by a few negroes
-and a few Europeans!</p>
-
-<p>On the 16th of November, having completed all
-the necessary preparations for his voyage, our traveller
-put the finishing hand to his journal; and in
-the interval between that and his embarkation,
-which seems to have taken place on the 19th, wrote
-several letters to England. These letters, together
-with the journal, were then delivered to his guide
-Isaaco, by whom they were conveyed to the Gambia,
-from whence they were transmitted to England;
-after which nothing certain or authentic can be said
-to have been heard either of Park or the expedition.
-In 1806, however, vague accounts of the death of
-Park and his companions were brought to the
-British settlements on the coast by the native
-traders from the interior; but several years elapsed
-without any further intelligence being obtained. At
-length, in 1810, Colonel Maxwell, governor of Senegal,
-despatched Park’s guide, Isaaco, into the interior,
-for the purpose of ascertaining the truth or
-falsehood of the reports which prevailed, and, should
-they prove correct, of collecting information respecting
-the place and manner of the catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p>After an absence of one year and eight months
-Isaaco returned to Senegal, and delivered to the
-governor a journal of his proceedings, including a
-narrative which he had received from Amadi Fatouma,
-the guide who accompanied Park from Sansanding
-down the Niger. The particulars of Isaaco’s
-adventures it is altogether unnecessary to describe.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
-He found Amadi Fatouma at Madina, a village distant
-a few hours from Sansanding. On seeing
-Isaaco, and hearing the name of Park, he began to
-weep; and his first words were, “They are all dead.”
-The recollection of the melancholy transaction appeared
-to affect him in an extraordinary manner,
-and it was with the utmost reluctance that he at
-length consented to recall to memory an event which
-he seemed peculiarly desirous of delivering over to
-oblivion. However, upon the pressing entreaties of
-Isaaco, he narrated circumstantially what had taken
-place. Upon leaving Sansanding, there were, he
-said, nine persons in the canoe; Park, Martyn, three
-other white men, three slaves, and himself as their
-guide and interpreter. They had proceeded but a
-very little way down the river before they were
-pursued and attacked by the Africans in canoes, particularly
-in passing Timbuctoo, where a great number
-of the natives were killed. Shortly after passing
-Goronmo, they lost one white man by sickness.
-They were now, therefore, reduced to eight; but as
-each person had always fifteen muskets loaded and
-ready for action, they were still formidable to their
-enemies.</p>
-
-<p>As Park had laid in a considerable quantity of provisions
-previous to his leaving Sansanding, he was
-enabled to proceed for several days without stopping
-at any place, which is the only circumstance that
-can account for his passing in safety through the
-country of so many hostile nations. At length,
-however, their wants compelled them to have some
-communication with the shore. “We came,” says
-Amadi Fatouma, “near a small island, and saw
-some of the natives; I was sent on shore to buy
-some milk. When I got among them, I saw two
-canoes go on board to sell fresh provisions, such as
-fowls, rice, &amp;c. One of the natives wanted to kill
-me, and at last he took hold of me, and said I was
-his prisoner. Mr. Park, seeing what was passing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
-on shore, suspected the truth. He stopped the two
-canoes and people; telling the latter, that if they
-should kill me, or keep me prisoner on shore, he
-would kill them all, and carry their canoes away
-with him. Those on shore, suspecting Mr. Park’s
-intentions, sent me off in another canoe on board;
-they were then released: after which we bought
-some provisions from them, and made them some
-presents. A short time after our departure twenty
-canoes came after us from the same place; on
-coming near, they hailed, and said, ‘Amadi Fatouma,
-how can you pass through our country without
-giving us any thing?’ I mentioned what they had
-said to Mr. Park, and he gave them a few grains of
-amber and some trinkets, and they went back peaceably.
-On coming to a narrow part of the river, we
-saw on the shore a great many men sitting down;
-coming nearer to them they stood up; we presented
-our muskets to them, which made them run off into
-the interior. A little farther on we came to a very
-difficult passage. The rocks had barred the river,
-but three passages were still open between them.
-On coming near one of them, we discovered the same
-people again, standing on the top of a large rock;
-which caused great uneasiness to us, especially to
-me, and I seriously promised never to pass there
-again without making considerable charitable donations
-to the poor. We returned, and went to a pass
-of less danger, where we passed unmolested.</p>
-
-<p>“We came-to before Carmassee, and gave the
-chief one piece of baft. We went on, and anchored
-before Gourman. Mr. Park sent me on shore with
-forty thousand cowries to buy provisions. I went
-and bought rice, onions, fowls, milk, &amp;c., and departed
-late in the evening. The chief of the village
-sent a canoe after us, to let us know of a large army
-encamped on the top of a very high mountain, waiting
-for us; and that we had better return, or be on
-our guard. We immediately came to an anchor,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
-and spent there the rest of the day and all the night.
-We started in the morning; on passing the abovementioned
-mountain we saw the army, composed
-of Moors with horses and camels, but without any
-firearms. As they said nothing to us we passed on
-quietly, and entered the country of Haoussa, and
-came to an anchor. Mr. Park said to me, ‘Now,
-Amadi, you are at the end of your journey: I engaged
-you to conduct me here; you are going to
-leave me; but before you go you must give me the
-names of the necessaries of life, &amp;c., in the language
-of the countries through which I am going to pass;’
-to which I agreed, and we spent two days together
-about it without landing. During our voyage I was
-the only one who had landed. We departed, and
-arrived at Yaour. I was sent on shore the next
-morning with a musket and a sabre to carry to the
-chief of the village; also with three pieces of white
-baft for distribution. I went and gave the chief his
-present: I also gave one to Alhagi, one to Alhagibiron,
-and the other to a person whose name I forget;
-all Marabons. The chief gave us a bullock, a
-sheep, three jars of honey, and four men’s loads of
-rice. Mr. Park gave me seven thousand cowries,
-and ordered me to buy provisions, which I did; he
-told me to go to the chief, and give him five silver
-rings, some powder and flints, and tell him that these
-presents were given to the king by the white men,
-who were taking leave of him before they went
-away. After the chief had received these things, he
-inquired if the white men intended to come back.
-Mr. Park, being informed of this inquiry, replied that
-he could not return any more.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> Mr. Park had paid
-me for my voyage before we left Sansanding: I said
-to him, ‘I agreed to carry you into the kingdom of
-Haoussa; we are now in Haoussa. I have fulfilled
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
-my engagement with you; I am therefore going to
-leave you here and return.’”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a>
-These words occasioned his death; for the certainty of Mr. Park
-not returning induced the chief to withhold the presents from the
-king.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On the next day Park departed, leaving the guide
-at the village of Yaour, where he was put in irons
-by order of the king, from a supposition that he had
-aided the white men in defrauding him of the customary
-presents, which the chief of Yaour had in
-fact received, but retained for himself. “The next
-morning, early,” continues the guide, “the king sent
-an army to a village called Boussa, near the river-side.
-There is before this village a rock across the
-whole breadth of the river. One part of the rock is
-very high; there is a large opening in that rock in
-the form of a door, which is the only passage for the
-water to pass through; the tide current is here very
-strong. This army went and took possession of the
-top of this opening. Mr. Park came there after the
-army had posted itself; he nevertheless attempted
-to pass. The people began to attack him, throwing
-lances, pikes, arrows, and stones. Mr. Park defended
-himself for a long time; two of his slaves at
-the stern of the canoe were killed; they threw every
-thing they had in the canoe into the river, and kept
-firing; but being overpowered by numbers, and
-fatigued, and unable to keep up the canoe against
-the current, and no probability of escaping, Mr. Park
-took hold of one of the white men and jumped into
-the water; Martyn did the same, and they were
-drowned in the stream in attempting to escape.
-The only slave remaining in the boat, seeing the natives
-persist in throwing weapons at the canoe
-without ceasing, stood up and said to them, ‘Stop
-throwing now, you see nothing in the canoe, and
-nobody but myself; therefore cease. Take me and
-the canoe, but don’t kill me.’ They took possession
-of the canoe and the man, and carried them to the
-king.</p>
-
-<p>“I was kept in irons three months; the king released
-me, and gave me a slave (woman). I immediately
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
-went to the slave taken in the canoe, who
-told me in what manner Mr. Park and all of them
-had died, and what I have related above. I asked
-him if he was sure nothing had been found in the
-canoe after its capture; he said nothing remained in
-the canoe but himself and a sword-belt. I asked
-him where the sword-belt was; he said the king
-took it, and had made a girth for his horse with it.”</p>
-
-<p>Such is the narrative of Amadi Fatouma; and the
-information since obtained in the country by Captain
-Clapperton corroborates almost every important circumstance
-which it describes. It appears, however,
-that certain books (whether printed or manuscript
-does not appear) were found in Park’s canoe, some
-of which were still in the possession of the chief of
-Yaour when Clapperton made his inquiries; but the
-wily African, who no doubt expected a valuable
-present for these relics, refused to deliver them to
-our traveller’s messenger, and Clapperton himself,
-for some reason or another not stated, neglected to
-visit this chief in person. It should be remarked,
-that the Africans who were questioned by Clapperton
-seemed all exceedingly desirous of exculpating
-their countrymen, perhaps their own friends and
-relations, from the charge of having murdered Park
-and his companions: according to one narrator, the
-canoe was caught between two rocks, where the
-river, being obstructed in its course, rushed through
-its narrow channel with prodigious rapidity. Here
-the travellers, in attempting to disembark, were
-drowned in the sight of an immense multitude who
-had assembled to see them pass, and were too timid
-to attack or assist them. On another occasion,
-however, the same person confessed that his countrymen
-did indeed discharge their arrows at the
-travellers, but not until they had been fired upon
-from the canoe. But the sheriff of Bokhary, whose
-letter was found among the MSS. of Clapperton,
-asserts that the inhabitants of Boussa went out
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
-against the white men in great numbers, and attacked
-them during three successive days; after
-which Park and Martyn, who from this account
-would appear to have been the only European survivors,
-threw their papers and baggage into the
-water, and leaping in after them were drowned in
-the stream. It would answer no useful purpose to
-push these inquiries any further at present, as we in
-reality possess no sufficient materials for coming to
-any definite conclusion. There can be no doubt that
-Mungo Park perished on the Niger, near Boussa, or
-that the Africans were the cause, mediate or immediate,
-of his death. His character will be best understood
-by a careful examination of his life; but it
-may be useful to remark, in conclusion, that, although
-his natural prudence seems partly to have forsaken
-him during his second journey, few men have possessed
-in a higher degree the virtues of a traveller&mdash;intrepidity,
-enthusiasm, perseverance, veracity, prudence;
-his manners, likewise, though somewhat too
-stiff and reserved, must upon the whole have been
-agreeable, since he was able both in civilized and
-savage countries to gain and preserve many friends;
-among whom by far the most distinguished was Sir
-Walter Scott, with whom, during the interval between
-his two journeys, he lived on terms of the
-greatest intimacy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PETER_SIMON_PALLAS">PETER SIMON PALLAS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1741.&mdash;Died 1811.</p>
-
-<p>This traveller, whose works are comparatively
-little known in England, was born at Berlin, September
-22, 1741. His father, who was an able surgeon,
-entertained the design of educating him for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
-his own profession; and at the same time caused
-him to learn several languages. At a very early age
-he was able, therefore, to write the Latin, the English,
-the French, and the German. His retentive
-memory rendered these acquirements so easy, that
-his great success in this department of knowledge
-scarcely at all interfered with his progress in others;
-so that he is said to have likewise maintained among
-his schoolfellows the pre-eminence in all their various
-studies. He was, in fact, by no means satisfied
-with what was taught him by his different masters,
-but employed his leisure hours in the study of
-natural history; and at the age of fifteen he had
-already imagined ingenious divisions of several
-classes of animals.</p>
-
-<p>Having attended at Berlin the courses of Gleditsch,
-Mekhel, and Roloff, and those of Vogel and Rœderer
-at Göttingen, he proceeded to Leyden, to finish his
-studies under Albinus, Gaubins, and Musschenbroeck.
-The rarest productions of nature had been
-for two centuries accumulating in Holland by the
-commerce of the whole world; and it was therefore
-impossible that the ardent passion of Pallas for
-natural history should not be still further excited by
-living in the midst of them. But perhaps we attribute
-too much influence to the force of circumstances.
-The soul, with all its tastes and passions,
-is far more independent of external things than is
-generally supposed. Concomitance is not causation.
-The energy of the mind derives sustenance,
-as it were, from circumstances; but the effect of
-this nourishment is determined by its own original
-character, just as it is determined by the innate
-qualities of the scorpion, or the bee, whether the
-vegetable juices which they extract from the plants
-of the field shall be converted into poison or into
-nectar. However this may be, Pallas afterward
-visited England, where a commerce more extensive
-than had ever been carried on by any other nation,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
-ancient or modern, must likewise have collected immense
-treasures in natural history, which afforded
-him a fortunate occasion for improving his knowledge.
-The sight of these scientific riches seems,
-in reality, to have determined him to waive all claim
-to professional emolument or honours, for the purpose
-of devoting himself entirely to natural history;
-and he obtained his father’s permission to settle at
-the Hague, with a view of continuing his studies.</p>
-
-<p>Here, in 1776, he published his “Elenchus Zoophytorum,”
-the first of his “great works,” to adopt the
-expression of M. Eyriès, which, for an author of
-twenty-five, was a remarkable performance. The
-“Miscellanea Zoologica,” which was published the
-same year, still further augmented his reputation.
-This work (I still borrow the language of the French
-geographer) threw a new light upon the least known
-classes of the animal kingdom, those which had
-hitherto been confounded together under the name
-of worms. These two publications carried far and
-wide the name of their author, and several governments
-sought to monopolize his talents. He would
-probably have given the preference to that of his
-own country, had he received from it the least encouragement;
-but, as too often happens, says M.
-Cuvier, it was at home that he was least respected.
-He therefore resolved to desert his country, and accepted
-a place in the Academy of St. Petersburg,
-which was offered him by Catherine II. Pallas’s
-private circumstances are nowhere, so far as I have
-been able to discover, properly explained. I know
-not, therefore, whether extreme poverty or vulgar
-cupidity determined him to take this step; but I
-cannot, without pain, contemplate men of abilities
-running about the world in search of wealth, ready
-to snatch at it from any hand, and no less ready, however
-base may be the donor, to repay the dishonourable
-obligation by despicable flattery and adulation.
-For this reason, in spite of the profound veneration
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
-with which I regard every thing like genius, which
-appears to be a spark of the Divine nature fallen
-from heaven, I cannot help considering Pallas as a
-learned and ingenious slave, cringing at the foot of
-power, and willing to perform all things at its
-bidding.</p>
-
-<p>Catherine, it is well known, was desirous that
-some of her own barbarians should observe in Siberia
-the transit of Venus over the sun’s disk in 1769,
-and not, as in 1763, leave the honour to foreigners.
-She therefore selected a number of astronomers
-from the Academy of St. Petersburg, and joined
-with them several naturalists, whose business it was
-to examine the nature of the productions and soil
-in this remote province of the empire. They were,
-in fact, instructed to make the most exact researches
-on the nature of the soil; on that of the waters;
-on the means of cultivating the deserts; on the
-actual state of agriculture; the diseases which
-chiefly prevailed among men and beasts; the means
-of curing or preventing them; the manner of rearing
-bees, silkworms, and cattle; minerals, and mineral
-waters; the arts, trades, and other industrious
-processes of each province; the plants, animals,
-the interior and the form of mountains; and, in
-short, on all the objects of natural history. The
-geography of the country, the manners of its inhabitants,
-and the traditions and monuments of antiquity
-were likewise included.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the enterprise to engage in which Pallas
-was invited into Russia. In the midst of the numerous
-preparations required for so long and arduous
-a journey, he found leisure to compose several new
-works (for he possessed, and was vain of, a great
-facility in writing), which, in the opinion of naturalists,
-were full of interesting views; among others
-he presented to the academy his famous memoir on
-the bones of large quadrupeds discovered in Siberia,
-in which he proves that the remains of elephants,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
-rhinoceroses, buffaloes, and many other kinds of
-animals now peculiar to the south, were found in
-those northern regions.</p>
-
-<p>The expedition was composed of seven astronomers
-and geometricians, five naturalists, and several
-pupils, who were to direct their course in various
-directions over the immense country which they
-were about to explore. Pallas left Petersburg on
-the 21st of June, 1768. The great road to Moscow,
-which traverses a part of Ingria, affords nothing
-interesting either to the traveller or the naturalist.
-Having passed Tosna, they entered a forest of pines
-and birch-trees, where, owing to the marshy nature
-of the soil, every spot which had been cleared of
-wood swarmed with gadflies. He passed through,
-but made no stay at Novogorod, and then pushed on
-to Bronitzkoi. The river which passes through this
-town abounds in salmon-trout, which descend from
-the lake of Ilman, visible from the neighbouring
-hill. The road here affords a view of several
-ancient tombs, which our traveller did not pause to
-examine.</p>
-
-<p>At a short distance beyond Saisovo, he crossed
-the Jemlin, in which pearl-muscles are found; and,
-hurrying along impatiently, arrived at Moscow on
-the 4th of July. This city, which had so often been
-visited and described by others, possessed so few
-attractions for him that he would willingly have
-quitted it immediately; but his vehicles, shattered
-by the badness of the roads, paved in some instances
-with trees, and cracked by the heat of the sun, required
-reparation; other causes of delay occurred,
-and he was therefore detained here many days. To
-amuse himself a little, and blunt the point of his
-impatience, he made several short excursions in the
-environs, where he was greatly struck at finding on
-all sides numerous petrifactions of marine substances.
-The river Moskwa produces an abundance
-of marine sponges, with which the Russian women
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
-rub their cheeks, instead of paint. Attempts were
-even then making to raise the genuine rhubarb in
-the environs of Moscow.</p>
-
-<p>From this city he set out for Vlodimir. But little
-care was then taken in Russia to provide travellers
-with good horses, since even the members of this
-expedition were sometimes scarcely able to proceed
-on account of the badness of their beasts. Vlodimir,
-formerly an extensive city, according to the traditions
-of the country, is picturesquely situated upon
-several small hills, and surrounded by cherry-orchards,
-the produce of which is the chief means of
-subsistence possessed by the inhabitants. At Kassinof
-Pallas found the descendants of several Tartar
-princes, who were now engaged in the fur trade, and
-possessed of considerable riches. They were of
-the Mohammedan religion, and were at that time
-rebuilding a fallen mosque, by permission of the
-government.</p>
-
-<p>At a small village on the banks of the Oka he
-saw a great number of goitres, whose deformity he
-supposed to arise from the quality of the water.
-On the banks of the Piana he found, in a small scattered
-village, several descendants of the Mordwans,
-who, having been converted to Christianity, had lost
-almost all traces of their ancient manners. These,
-according to Pallas, were at that time the filthiest
-people in the Russian empire, which was a bold
-thing to say; but they were good husbandmen, and
-their women, though ugly, were exceedingly laborious,
-which our traveller, no doubt, regarded as a
-superior quality to beauty.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of September the cold was
-already considerable, rain and snow were frequent,
-and the severe frosts commenced. Having passed
-the Soura, they entered into an immense forest,
-where he observed wild cabbages on the banks of
-the river. Here they saw the beehives of the Mordwans,
-which were left all the winter in the forests
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-with a very slender covering; and, among their
-flocks, several mules produced between the goat and
-the sheep. The peasants of these woody districts
-were principally employed in making tar. On the
-22d of September they reached Simbirsk, on the
-Volga, where they were detained within doors for
-some days by a tremendous storm. They then
-issued forth upon their various pursuits; and, among
-other places, Pallas visited the sulphurous springs
-which are found near the Sargout. One of those
-springs was formerly of considerable extent, and
-furnished large quantities of sulphur, but it had then
-disappeared. The other formed a little marsh on
-the left bank of the stream. Even in the depth of
-winter, the water of the spring never froze, and at
-all times a thin sulphury vapour hung like a light
-cloud over its surface.</p>
-
-<p>The season being now too far advanced to allow
-them to proceed on their journey, they determined
-to pass the winter at Simbirsk, from whence they
-departed on the following March towards Siberia.
-In fact, they were weary of their residence at Simbirsk
-long before the winter was over; and Pallas,
-having been given a charming picture of the environs
-of Samara, removed thither with his companions on
-sledges. Near this town, in the bed of a small
-stream which falls into the Sviaga, were found numerous
-remains of the skeletons of elephants, among
-which were several tusks very slightly injured by
-time, from the ivory of which various beautiful articles
-were wrought. Here our traveller continued
-during the whole month of April, in which time
-he examined whatever was remarkable in the environs;
-and then, on the 2d of May, proceeded towards
-the south, to Sizran on the Volga.</p>
-
-<p>The heat at this place during almost the whole of
-May was nearly insupportable; the clouds gathered
-together, and, extending themselves in a thick canopy
-over the sky, appeared to promise rain, while
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
-the thermometer continued rising from 105 to 110
-degrees in the shade; so that, in a place situated in
-the same latitude as Caernarvon in North Wales, a
-heat equal to that of Calcutta in July was experienced
-in the spring. So high a temperature of the
-atmosphere was probably unusual, as it alarmed the
-peasantry for their crops; and processions, offering
-up solemn prayers for rain, were beheld throughout
-the country.</p>
-
-<p>Proceeding thence towards Perevoloka, our traveller
-beheld on the way a village which on the evening
-before his arrival had been nearly unroofed by a
-hurricane. The vast chalky plains on the banks of
-the Volga had now been almost entirely stripped of
-vegetation by the sun, and the heat in those places
-which were bare of trees was tremendous. At the
-foot of a small range of hills which traverse these
-stepps Pallas conjectured that the vine would succeed
-admirably. On drawing near the Volga they
-found numerous lofty hills, some of which were exceedingly
-well wooded, while barrenness dwelt upon
-the others; and the narrow defiles which divided
-them were filled with tarantula-holes, and the burrows
-of the marmot, which was seen sitting at the
-mouth of its retreat uttering piercing cries.</p>
-
-<p>On a solitary spot at a short distance from the
-Volga Pallas visited a large tomb, which he found
-had formerly been opened by avaricious treasure-seekers;
-but their excavations, like the tomb itself,
-were now covered with a thick underwood, and were
-therefore of ancient date. The excursions of our
-traveller in various directions from Samara, which
-was his head-quarters, were numerous, and his discoveries
-in natural history would seem to have been
-no less so; but he passed from place to place with
-the utmost safety and despatch, as we travel from
-London to Bath; and therefore, however valuable
-may have been his scientific labours, the events of
-one day too nearly resembled those of the preceding
-not to cause the utmost monotony in his history.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span></p>
-
-<p>Near Bouzoulouk, on the river Samara, were found
-numerous ancient tombs resembling those of the
-Grecian heroes on the shores of the Hellespont.
-Copper or golden-headed arrows were sometimes
-found on opening these burrows; and on one occasion
-the treasure-seekers were rewarded by the discovery
-of a chain of gold round the neck of a skeleton.
-The bones of the dead indicated a gigantic
-stature. On arriving at one of the principal fortresses
-on the line of the Jaik, Pallas visited the
-Bashkir and Kalmuc camps, where he was amused
-with a concert in the old national style. The songs
-of the Kalmucs, like those of more refined nations,
-were chiefly of love. Their instruments, though
-rude, were not unpleasing. They likewise exhibited
-their strength in the wrestling-ring, and their dexterity
-in the use of the bow. The Bashkirs also
-displayed their skill in archery, and danced several
-Tartar dances. Here Pallas observed the largest
-marsh-flies he had ever seen,&mdash;six inches in length
-by three and a half in breadth. In travelling along
-the Jaik it was found necessary to move under the
-protection of an escort of Cossacks, as the Kirghees,
-a hostile nation, were encamped in groups along the
-banks of the river. On the 1st of July, 1769, he
-arrived at Orenburg.</p>
-
-<p>In this city our traveller enjoyed an opportunity
-of observing the manners of the Kirghees. These
-people purchased annually from the Russians a number
-of golden eagles, used by their hunters in the
-chase of the wolf, the fox, and the gazelle, and would
-sometimes give a horse in exchange for one of these
-birds, while others were hardly valued at a sheep,
-or even a small piece of money. During his stay at
-Orenburg he visited the great salt-mines of Hetzkain,
-and learned the laborious and ingenious methods
-by which the fossil salt is extracted from the
-bowels of the earth. The mines are chiefly worked
-in summer, and the salt, being left to accumulate
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
-until the winter months, is then transported to distant
-places by the peasantry. In these solitary
-regions he saw a caravan of thirty camels returning
-from China, having crossed the vast deserts of Central
-Asia, where both men and animals had nearly
-perished for want, in consequence of the excessive
-heat of the summer. From thence he proceeded to
-the Jasper Mountains, where many stones were found
-beautifully variegated; some representing, when
-split, the figures of trees upon their surfaces, while
-others were dotted with spots of different colours.
-On the summits of these mountains he beheld numerous
-Kirgheesian tombs constructed with prodigious
-blocks of jasper, with more than imperial magnificence.</p>
-
-<p>From Orenburg he descended along the course of
-the Jaik, through a mountainous country, intersected
-by numerous ravines, and of a wild, desolate aspect.
-Near Kalmikova, on the eastern shore of the Jaik,
-he saw a Kirghees camp. When the party drew
-near, about the close of the day, the Kirghees
-seemed terrified at their approach; but were soon
-reassured upon observing their pacific disposition.
-They then crowded round them with joyful faces,
-and, bringing forth their koumiss, or prepared mare’s
-milk, enabled several of Pallas’s attendants to steep
-their senses in forgetfulness. Still, our honest travellers,
-conscious, perhaps, that the Kirghees had
-some injuries to revenge against the Russians, were
-fearful of passing the night in the camp, and therefore
-hastened to return before dark to the city.
-Thence he continued proceeding in a southern direction
-to the ruins of Sarai, of which the ditch and the
-rampart are nearly all that now remain. It sunk
-gradually with the decay of the Tartar power, until
-the inhabitants at length emigrated to Chiva, and
-allowed it to fall entirely. The road from thence to
-Gourief, on the Caspian, lies over a dry marsh,
-where nothing but a few red wild-flowers meet the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
-eye. Here Pallas embarked in a boat with a Mons.
-Euler, in order to visit a small island in the Caspian,
-the waters of which were of a grayish green, though
-the sailors assured them that the colour farther out
-at sea was a greenish black. It was said, that during
-summer phosphoric fires were occasionally beheld
-upon its waves.</p>
-
-<p>Having examined the embouchure of the Jaik, and
-the neighbouring coast of the Caspian Sea, Pallas
-returned northward, and set up his quarters for the
-winter of 1769 at Oufa, situated on the river Belaia.
-Here he employed the time not spent in travelling
-in working up his journal. The winter unfortunately
-happened to be peculiarly bad; and this, united with
-the melancholy situation of the city, and the bad air
-which prevails there, prevented him from deriving
-all the advantages which might have been expected
-from so long a residence. To increase the dulness
-and insipidity of his stay, he was kept almost a prisoner
-in the city until the month of May by continual
-inundations. In all other respects, likewise, the
-winter was unfavourable. It commenced with September,
-and continued increasing in rigour until the
-end of November, when they were visited by terrible
-tempests, in which several travellers perished
-on the downs of Orenburg. These continued during
-the whole of December. January was less severe,
-and February mild. The winter ended in March,
-the thaw commenced with April, and then the country
-was overflowed.</p>
-
-<p>Pallas had passed so unpleasant a winter at Oufa,
-that he saw the time of departure approach with the
-greatest satisfaction; and, as soon as the overflowing
-of the rivers had ceased, despatched a soldier
-before him across the Ural Mountains into the province
-of Isetsk, with orders to cause the roads and
-bridges to be repaired. He himself followed on the
-16th of May. The weather, notwithstanding the
-advanced season of the year, was overcast and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-stormy, with a north-west wind; it hailed, snowed,
-and rained at intervals; but this did not continue
-long. In the course of the day he passed by a vast
-chasm, formed by the sliding of strata from their
-basis, and by the inhabitants denominated “the bottomless
-pit.” Here the people had three years before
-cast the carcasses of all those animals which
-had died of the murrain, which brought thither a
-prodigious number of famished and furious wild dogs,
-and thus rendered the road so dangerous that it was
-found necessary to send out an armed detachment
-against them.</p>
-
-<p>The road now entered an immense forest, in
-which the Russians, in imitation of the Bashkirs,
-kept great numbers of beehives, which were hollowed
-out in the trunks of large trees, about five or
-six fathoms from the ground. This is intended as
-one of the means of protecting the hives against the
-bears; for which purpose they likewise carefully cut
-off all the lower branches of the tree, and smooth
-every knot. However, as the bear is too able a
-climber to be thus discouraged, they, in addition to
-these common precautions, fix a kind of circle of
-sharp knives or scythes round the tree, a little below
-the hive, which either prevents the animal from
-ascending, or impales him when he would return.
-But there are some old bears too experienced to be
-thus caught, who strike out the spikes with their
-paws. Against these other means are resorted to.
-In the first place, they fix a kind of catapult aloft on
-the tree, with a cord suspended, which, when the
-animal touches, an arrow is darted down with great
-vehemence, which transfixes him in the breast. Another
-method is, to suspend a plank horizontally on
-some of the long branches by cords, in such a manner
-that it can be drawn at will before the mouth of
-the hive, to which it is fastened by a knot of pliable
-bark. Upon this plank the bear seats himself in
-order to work at the hive. He then commences by
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
-loosening the knot, upon which the plank becomes
-what boys call a “see-saw;” and the bear is either
-precipitated in a moment to the ground, where he is
-impaled upon sharp stakes fixed there for the purpose,
-or, if he does not fall, he is compelled to leap,
-or wait trembling on the plank until the owner of
-the hive arrives and shoots him at his ease.</p>
-
-<p>Having traversed the country of the Moursalarki
-Bashkirs, our traveller visited a small volcano,
-around which every thing was in full flower and further
-advanced than elsewhere, on account of the
-internal heat. This volcano was not of ancient date.
-Many persons then living remembered the storm
-during which a thunderbolt fell upon a great pine-tree,
-which, taking fire and burning rapidly to the
-very roots, kindled the mountain, which had thenceforward
-continued on fire. The neighbouring forests
-were wholly consumed by the conflagration. At this
-time the fire seemed to have retired into the centre
-of the mountain, where it raged with prodigious violence,
-occasionally bursting forth through the wide
-fissures of the superincumbent crust, which it was
-gradually calcining to powder. The view of the volcano
-during a stormy night was sublime. Broad
-openings or cracks, commencing at the summit of
-the cone, spread themselves like the veins of a leaf
-down the side, branching forth in many directions,
-as from a trunk; and these, contrasted with the dark
-mass of the mountain, and emitting light-red flames
-through all their extent, appeared like so many perpetual
-streams of lightning in a thunder-cloud.</p>
-
-<p>In traversing a forest in this district after a terrible
-hurricane, Pallas found the ground strewed with
-small branches of poplar, the extremities of which
-furnish a finer and more silky cotton than that of
-Egypt or Bengal. Whether the Russian government
-has ever attended to the suggestion of this
-naturalist, in substituting this cotton for the ordinary
-species, I have not been able to learn. The route
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
-through the forests and mountains which border the
-Aural in this direction was by no means very pleasing.
-Pallas loved smooth roads, good inns, and good
-dinners. He was therefore particularly annoyed
-when, in making towards a mountain said to abound
-in aluminous slate, he found his guide at fault in the
-woods, where, after wandering about for some time,
-they were overtaken by a tempest. The sky suddenly
-grew dark, and their way lying among rugged
-rocks of enormous magnitude, the passage between
-which was frequently blocked up by trees which the
-hurricane had overthrown, their horses refused to
-proceed. Besides, the darkness was now so great
-that they could not see before them, and it was
-therefore necessary to pass the night where they
-were. To make their lodgings as comfortable as
-they could, they selected the tops of the highest
-rocks, which were somewhat drier than the rest of
-the forest. Had they possessed a tinder-box, it
-would have been easy to kindle a fire, by which they
-might have dried and warmed themselves; but our
-traveller, like Sir Abel Handy in “Speed the Plough,”
-whose inventions were never completed by the hour
-of need, had left his tinder-box behind him. He endeavoured
-to remedy this evil by rubbing together
-two small pieces of wood; but the rain had damped
-the seeds of fire which they contained, and he rubbed
-in vain. Relinquishing at length all attempts to inveigle
-Vulcan into their company, they erected a
-small tent with the branches of trees and their
-cloaks, and throwing themselves, wet as they were,
-upon the felt of their saddles, in this manner quietly
-passed the night, though the rain fell in torrents on
-all sides. Next morning, after drinking a little water,
-which served them for breakfast, they pushed
-on through the woods; but as the rain still continued,
-they were for a considerable time unable,
-with all their exertions, to restore warmth to their
-limbs. In the afternoon, however, they discovered
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
-an iron-foundry, where they dried their garments,
-and then set forward on their return to their quarters.
-This was destined to be a day of adventures
-for Pallas. The river Aï, which they had crossed
-without difficulty the day before, was now swelled
-to a furious torrent by the rains; so that a ferry-boat
-was indispensable. A horde of Chouvashes, who
-inhabited the banks of the stream, undertook to construct
-a boat; but when it was launched, and the
-traveller embarked in it, the mariners discovered
-that the cords by which it was to be pulled along
-were so awkwardly arranged that they were every
-moment in danger of being capsized and hurled into
-the water. Fortunately, the rapidity of the current
-was so great, that they darted along like an arrow,
-clinging to their carriage, which they had had the
-prudence to fasten with strong cords to the boat;
-and in a moment they were on the opposite shore,
-where the sharp angles of their raft, for it was little
-better, struck in the earth, and prevented all possibility
-of a refluence into the river. They then
-dragged their vehicle on shore, and continued their
-journey.</p>
-
-<p>Proceeding eastward from this place, they arrived
-on the 20th of June at the Asbestos Mountain, which
-traverses a marshy region covered with moss. The
-asbestos is found on the summit of the loftiest hill
-in the whole chain, in a kind of coarse slate. It is
-brittle, like decayed wood, while in the stone, but upon
-being exposed to the air becomes soft and pliable as
-flax, and is easily spun and woven into cloth. Pallas
-himself, who carefully examined its nature and qualities,
-as well as the mine, if it may be so termed,
-from which it is drawn, saw it manufactured into
-paper. From this place he proceeded to the iron-forges
-of Sisertskoï, in the neighbourhood of which
-gold is found in a matrix of quartz and ochre; and,
-indeed, all the country immediately north of this
-point abounds in an auriferous ochre, from which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
-much pure metal might be extracted. He then visited
-various other forges, mines, and quarries, and
-arrived at Ekaterinburg on the 23d of June.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller’s life, like the peaceful periods of
-history complained of by Plutarch, was too uniform
-to furnish many interesting events to his biographer.
-He travelled, he examined many things, he wrote;
-but dangers, difficulties, and all the fierce play of the
-passions, which render the life of a bold adventurer
-who relies on his own resources a series of romantic
-achievements, have no existence in his travels’
-history, and both the reader’s patience and mine are,
-therefore, somewhat irritated. This, no doubt, may
-appear unphilosophical to many. It may be said,
-that when we behold the picture of a life, whether
-individual or national, which flowed along in a calm
-tide, unruffled by misfortune or vicissitude, our feelings
-should be lulled into the same tranquil motion,
-and be productive of a happiness similar to that, the
-representation of which we contemplate. I have
-faith in the wisdom of nature, which has ordered
-things otherwise. The mind, when in a healthy and
-vigorous state, abhors an uninterrupted calm; and
-storms, hurricanes, and thunders are not more conducive
-to the general good of the physical world
-than vicissitudes, transitions, dangers, escapes, which
-are the storms and sunshine of life, are conducive to
-happiness in the individual who undergoes them,
-and to sympathy and pleasure in those who contemplate
-his career. For this reason, persons who
-travel with authority never inspire us with the same
-respect as those whose movements are spontaneous
-and independent; nor can such travellers ever penetrate
-like the latter into the core of manners and
-national character, since most of those who approach
-them put on, in deference to their very authority,
-an artificial, deceptive appearance. In the same
-manner, a nation which should begin and end in
-peace would have no history; none, at least, which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
-could interest any one beyond its borders. Human
-virtues are plants which never strike a deep root
-unless shaken by misfortune. Virtue consists in
-the directing of our intellectual and physical energies
-to a praiseworthy end; but if our energies be
-naturally feeble, or dwindle and wither away through
-lack of exercise, our virtue, by a necessary consequence,
-must become dwarfish and insignificant, and
-utterly incapable of exciting enthusiastic sympathy
-in those who behold its meek and timid bearing.</p>
-
-<p>These reflections have been extorted from me by
-the insipid mode of travelling adopted by Pallas.
-Nothing can be further from my intention than to
-recommend or require foolhardiness in a traveller;
-but it seems not irrational to expect, that when a
-man undertakes the task of examining a remote
-country, he should be willing to incur some risk and
-fatigue in the execution of his plan. Of fatigue Pallas,
-perhaps, endured his share; but he seems to
-have shrunk rather too timidly from coming in contact
-with barbarous nations; and I therefore greatly
-distrust the completeness of his moral pictures. On
-the other hand, his descriptions of plants, minerals,
-and the processes of Russian industry are exceedingly
-minute, and enjoy, I believe, among scientific
-men the reputation of being exact; but these, unfortunately,
-the very nature of biography compels me
-to reject, or introduce into the narrative but sparingly.
-Among the curious things observed in the
-western districts of Siberia was the method of preparing
-Russia leather, which, though tanned in the
-ordinary manner, acquired the fine scent which renders
-it so valuable from the oil extracted from the
-bark of the birch-tree. In traversing the forests
-which surround the marble quarries on the banks
-of the Toura, with Vogoul guides, they were overtaken
-by the night. Excepting the small spot on
-which they halted, all around was a marshy swamp
-encumbered with wood, and affording neither road
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-nor pathway. They therefore considered themselves
-fortunate in having found a dry resting-place;
-and the Vogouls, to whom such accidents were familiar,
-immediately occupied themselves in kindling
-a fire at once, in order to procure warmth and keep
-off the bears. Next morning his guides undertook
-to conduct him, by a short path across the forest, to
-the banks of the Liala, and accordingly struck off
-boldly into the wilderness. The sombre pine-trees,
-intermingling their branches above, rendered the
-way exceedingly obscure; a bog or a fallen tree
-every moment intercepted their route; the branches
-of prickly shrubs tore their hands and faces; and
-not a step could be taken without carefully observing
-whether it might not precipitate them into some
-impassable morass. Not a plant met the eye but the
-<i>mœringia</i> and the <i>linnea</i>, two plants which our traveller,
-in general a patient forbearing man, often saluted
-with Tristram Shandy’s whole chapter of
-curses, as they were in those northern regions the
-never-failing forerunners of a swamp or an impervious
-pine-forest. After much toil they reached an
-open space, from which the trees had been cleared
-away by a conflagration, which Pallas attributed to
-lightning, and his guides to the frolics of the devil,
-who, they imagined, during some long winter night
-had kindled a whole forest to light up his gambols.
-Shortly afterward, his guides, who had probably bestowed
-too many of their thoughts upon the devil,
-entirely lost their way, and, after floundering about
-in bogs and woods for several hours, were compelled
-to confess their utter ignorance of the way; upon
-which, at the command of our traveller, they turned
-back, and regained the point from which he had
-started. The Vogouls, with whom he performed
-this unsuccessful journey, are a people of primitive
-and peculiar manners, living in separate families
-scattered through the woods, with each its domain
-and enclosure of several miles, containing elks and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
-other large game. Though surrounded by marshes,
-they are said to enjoy excellent health. Their lives,
-however, are not of long duration. Short in stature,
-and effeminate in form, they in some measure resemble
-the Kalmucs, but their complexion is fairer.
-Their women are handsome, and of exceedingly
-amorous temperament. They profess Christianity,
-but merely for peace’ sake; for in secret they continue
-the worship of idols, which are daily invoked
-with prayer and sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>About the end of August Pallas arrived at Cheliabinsk,
-where he was for a considerable time confined
-to his chamber by an affection of the eyes. Here,
-therefore, he resolved to remain during the winter;
-but, in order that no time might be lost, he despatched
-a number of his attendants in various directions,
-with orders to collect information. Growing tired
-of this town about the middle of December, however,
-he set out for Tobolsk, where he remained but
-a few days, and then returned by Ekaterinburg to
-Cheliabinsk, where he continued during the remainder
-of the winter.</p>
-
-<p>Pallas remained at Cheliabinsk until the 16th of
-April, 1771, when, having commissioned a number
-of the young men who accompanied the expedition
-to examine the more northern portions of Siberia,
-he departed towards the east. The day before he
-set out, the long grass on the extensive downs to
-the north of the city were set on fire; the flames
-swept rapidly along the plains, and the wind blowing
-towards the town, there was some danger that this
-irresistible conflagration, which already embraced
-the whole extent of the horizon, might reach the
-place, and consume it to ashes. A timely shower
-of rain, however, put an end to their apprehensions.</p>
-
-<p>In proceeding towards the Tobol, our traveller was
-alarmed by a report that the Kirghees were making
-an incursion into the interjacent territory, and prudently
-turned out of his way to avoid an encounter
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
-with these rude barbarians. At Kaminskaia several
-of his companions fell sick, some with fever, some
-with scorbutic rheumatism, while others became a
-prey to melancholy. His movements, for these
-reasons, were slow. The weather, meanwhile, was
-exceedingly severe; the snow falling heavily, accompanied
-by cold wind. The last days of April
-were marked by a terrible hurricane, and May was
-commenced with hard frost; notwithstanding which,
-neither the young flowers nor the buds suffered any
-particular injury. On the 2d of May one of his attendants
-died of scurvy, which had afflicted him for
-five months, and was accompanied by symptoms no
-less violent than those which attend the same disorder
-at sea. This event, which would have cost
-some men a tear, seems to have given no particular
-uneasiness to Pallas, who, leaving some of his people
-to inter the dead, coolly continued his journey.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the stepp of Ischimi, he found an immense
-plain watered by extensive lakes, and abounding
-in aquatic game, among which the most remarkable
-was a large species of white heron. To study
-the manners of this bird he remained here a few
-days. But his mode of procuring game was somewhat
-different from that of Le Vaillant, who pursued
-the birds into the woods, observed them in
-their native haunts, and shot them himself. Pallas
-despatched a number of subaltern naturalists, who
-shot the game for him, and furnished him with an
-account of their manners; and this was what he
-termed studying natural history.</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at Omsk, he applied to the temporary
-governor of the town for permission to examine the
-collection of maps of Siberia, as divided into provinces
-and districts, which had been made by the
-late Governor Springer; but the new functionary,
-“dressed in a little brief authority,” had the ambition
-to play the politician and statesman, and, notwithstanding
-that he knew Pallas to be travelling for the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
-government upon a public mission, refused him the
-favour he demanded without an express order from
-court. Nay, when he desired to depart, this new
-great man, with the prudence of an owl, denied him
-a proper passport, though without this it would be
-difficult for him to obtain horses on the way. Pallas,
-however, with the caution of a courtier, rather
-than with the honest indignation of a man of letters,
-instead of stigmatizing this gross misconduct as it
-deserved, merely observes, that he attributed it to
-the military spirit naturally inimical to the sciences.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller at length departed from Omsk, and
-commenced his examination of the productions found
-on the banks of the Irtish, where, on digging in the
-sandy downs, the bones of elephants and of many large
-fishes were discovered. Though it was now drawing
-near the end of May, he experienced continual
-storms, sometimes accompanied by black clouds, at
-others by a clear sky. From the inhabitants, however,
-he learned that tempests succeed each other
-almost unceasingly in those regions, where a week
-of fine weather is seldom or never known. He here
-learned from the fur-merchants a secret which deserves
-to be generally known: in order to preserve
-their furs from the worms, they tied up in each bale
-several calamus roots, which, they asserted, were
-an unfailing defence of their merchandise. A few
-shreds of Russia leather, which preserves books
-and papers from the moth even in Hindostan,
-would no doubt have answered the same purpose.</p>
-
-<p>On the 11th of June, while travelling through a
-country thickly intersected with salt-lakes and birch
-forests, and peopled by myriads of wild bees, he encountered
-an enormous wolf, which was chasing a
-duck upon the heath. This animal, he says, is generally
-remarkable for its timidity in summer; but
-on the present occasion seemed disposed, like one
-of La Fontaine’s wolves; to enter into a debate with
-the strangers; for, instead of flying, he coolly stood
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-still to look at them, without being in the least disturbed
-by their shouting. At length, however,
-despairing of entering into any thing like rational
-conversation with persons who seemed resolved to
-monopolize all the privilege of good company for
-themselves, he turned round upon his heel, and with
-a disdainful and careless bound, continued his journey.</p>
-
-<p>At the foot of the small mountains which branch
-northward of the Altaïc chain, Pallas discovered a
-prodigious number of excavations and pits, made at
-some remote period by a people now unknown, who
-understood the art of smelting metals, but who have
-left no trace of their existence save these mines, and
-the ornaments of copper and gold which are found
-in their tombs. Here, at the small town of Shoulba,
-our traveller was attacked with dysentery; but it
-was necessary to push forward, though his weakness
-was such that he could scarcely step into his carriage.
-While in this state he passed by, but could
-not visit, a tomb of prodigious magnitude, situated
-on the summit of a lofty mountain, which, according
-to tradition, had formerly been opened by a band of
-one hundred and fifty armed peasantry, who had
-been rewarded for their labour by the discovery of
-fifty pounds weight of solid gold. A few days afterward
-his dysentery became so violent that he was
-compelled to discontinue his journey, and confine
-himself, during several weeks, to his bed.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as his health was a little improved, he set
-out with M. Sokoloff, in order to visit the Altaïc
-mountains. The whole of the neighbouring districts
-are diversified with hill and dale, and watered by numerous
-streams, which come down from the mountains,
-foaming and thundering over their rocky beds.
-On some of these eminences were found extensive
-copses of raspberry-bushes, around which Pallas observed
-the fresh tracks of bears, which are very fond
-of this fruit, and not unfrequently carry off women
-and children who resort thither to gather it. Apparently
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
-this is done merely as a frolic, or by way of
-terrifying interlopers from meddling with their property;
-for our traveller gravely observes that they
-do them no manner of injury.</p>
-
-<p>At length they discovered the summits of the
-Altaï, covered with snow, and towering far above
-everything around them. Pallas had no eye for the
-picturesque. What in the eyes of another man
-would have been sublime was to him merely fearful
-and horrible; but he was struck with these cones,
-and pyramids, and precipices, and prodigious pinnacles
-of rock, which, when he beheld them, appeared
-to support a black roof of clouds, which stretched
-over the whole hemisphere, and menaced the country
-with a second deluge. No marine petrifactions, or
-any sign of their ever having been submerged in the
-ocean, were here discoverable; but it is probable
-that more careful researches would have been productive
-of a different result.</p>
-
-<p>From the Altaïc mountains Pallas directed his
-course towards the north, crossed the Obi, traversed
-the governments of Kolyran, visited Tomsk, and on
-the 10th of October arrived at Krasnoiarsk, a city
-situated on the Yeniseï, in the 66th degree of north
-latitude. Here he set up his quarters for the winter.
-The autumn, he observes, is generally mild in the
-southern parts of Siberia; but with the winter storms
-and hurricanes come on, and sometimes blow during
-a whole month without intermission. The cold is
-intense. Nevertheless, about the middle of February
-the sun begins to exert considerable power, and
-sensibly diminishes the snow on the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>On the 7th of March, 1772, Pallas departed from
-Krasnoiarsk for the eastern part of Siberia, accompanied
-by a painter, and three naturalists. Their
-route, as far as the Angora, lay through a country
-partly covered with forests, where there falls, during
-winter, large quantities of snow. From time to time
-they observed the encampments of the idolatrous
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-tribes who inhabit those regions, and roam about
-like wild animals in the woods. They reached
-Irkutsk on the 14th, and having remained a week in
-that capital, continued their journey along the shores
-of Lake Baikal. The weather had now grown warm,
-and they saw the last flocks of alpine larks and
-black sparrows, flying round the city, and then departing
-for the north; these were followed by a species
-of striped crow, which had passed the winter in the
-warm regions of Mongolia, or China, and was now
-pursuing the same route towards the arctic circle.</p>
-
-<p>As our traveller was desirous of crossing Lake
-Baikal on sledges, he hurried his departure from
-Irkutsk, lest the warm weather should melt the ice,
-and obstruct his passage. The scenery on the shores
-of this immense lake is exceedingly rugged and
-sublime. Rocks of vast elevation form the shores
-of the Angara, by which you descend from Irkutsk to
-the sea; and on arriving at the mouth of the river
-you discover, as through an arcade, the vast basin
-of the Baikal, and the lofty mountains which confine
-its waters on the east. They directed their course
-in a straight line from a small post on the bank of
-the frozen stream, towards the borders of the lake,
-pursuing their way in sledges on the ice. When
-they had proceeded about half-way, they were overtaken
-by a tremendous storm from the north-west,
-which entirely cooled the atmosphere. The wind
-swept along the ice with such prodigious violence,
-that the sledge-drivers, who ran along by the side
-of the vehicles, were sometimes blown away to the
-distance of many fathoms from the road, and were
-compelled to stick their knives in the ice, to prevent
-their being carried away, and hurled into some chasm.
-To avoid the risk of such accidents, the party halted
-until the tempest was over.</p>
-
-<p>At Zimovia on the Baikal, they found several persons
-setting out to hunt the sea-dog on the lake.
-This kind of chase takes place principally in April.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
-The sea-dogs, assembling on those parts of the shore
-where rapid streams or warm springs keep up an
-opening in the ice, then ascend from the water, in
-order to lie down upon the ice, and sleep in the sun.
-The hunters fix up in their little sledges a small
-white flag, which the dogs take for ice, and accordingly
-are not frightened until they draw near and
-fire upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Pallas now descended in his sledge upon the
-Baikal, and commenced this singular portion of his
-journey. The ice had this winter been as smooth
-as a mirror, on the whole surface of the lake; but
-when they had advanced to a certain distance from
-the shore, they found a fissure of several feet in
-breadth, which intercepted their passage, and forced
-them to make a circuit of considerable length.
-However, this obstacle having been surmounted,
-they encountered no other, and quickly found themselves
-on the opposite shore. The road now assumed
-a different character, running over rugged mountains,
-or sandy flats, where the snow was entirely
-melted, until, cutting the Selinga, as it were, into two
-parts, it led them into a milder climate, where the
-spring, with all its gay accompaniments, was already
-far advanced. They arrived, much fatigued, at Selinginsk,
-on the 25th of March.</p>
-
-<p>From Selinginsk he proceeded through Mongolia
-towards the borders of China, moving among an
-idolatrous people, the partisans of the Lamaic hierarchy,
-until, arriving at Kiakter, he touched the extreme
-limits of the empire, where his journey in that
-direction was to terminate. Here Pallas made many
-inquiries respecting the commerce, opinions, and manners
-of the Chinese; and having satisfied his curiosity,
-returned to Selinginsk. From this point he now
-directed his course northward, towards the great
-tributary streams which fall into the Selinga. His
-excursions in this direction, which were carried into
-execution without enthusiasm or curiosity, merely
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-as a task imposed on him by authority, are still more
-destitute of incidents, if possible, than the former
-portion of his travels. He examined the iron-mines,
-the grain and fur trade, and the objects of natural
-history furnished by the district.</p>
-
-<p>Pallas now turned his face towards the east, traversed
-the desert regions which lie between the
-Selinga and the Onon, the principal branch of the
-Amoor, and having pushed his researches to within
-a very short distance of the Chinese frontier, returned
-by a different route to Selinginsk, leaving to
-M. Sokolof and others the honour of exploring the
-frontiers of Mongolia, along the banks of the Argoon
-and Amoor. His health, indeed, now began to suffer
-from constant fatigue, and he was therefore fully
-justified in relinquishing this portion of his task;
-but I cannot easily pardon him for pretending to have
-been actuated by the desire of botanizing on the banks
-of the Selinga, since, if botanizing was his object,
-it was to be presumed that the wild shores of the
-Amoor would have afforded a still more ample and
-extraordinary field for his researches. During his
-stay at Selinginsk, he observed, among other curious
-animals and birds, the blue crow, which was easily
-taken, as its young were hitherto unfledged; and a
-species of small white hare, which was found in great
-numbers in the little islands in the Selinga. Besides
-these there was the leaping hare, which, mingling at
-night among the sheep, frightened them by its bounding
-motions. The Mongols, who are fond of its
-flesh when roasted, imagine that it sucks the ewes;
-as the vulgar in England report of the hedgehog and
-the cow.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to his finally quitting the country, he
-made another excursion to the frontiers of China,
-principally, it would seem, for the purpose of studying
-the botany of those districts, when the flowers
-were clothed in all the beauty of summer. The road
-to Kiakta traverses a large sandy plain, and afterward
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-a succession of rocky mountains, entirely
-destitute of wood. In this latter district our traveller
-observed a species of locust, by whose flight
-the natives could foretel with certainty whether the
-weather would be fair or otherwise. They mounted
-aloft on the wing previous to rainy weather, and the
-noise of their motions resembled that of castanets.
-After remaining some short time in the vicinity of
-Kiakta, he once more returned to Selinginsk, and
-began to make the necessary preparations for retracing
-their footsteps to Krasnoiarsk, where they again
-intended to pass the winter. Accordingly, on the 3d
-of July, Pallas and a part of his companions departed
-from Selinginsk, and proceeded towards the Baikal.</p>
-
-<p>Upon reaching the eastern shore of the lake, they
-saw a thick cold mist, which appeared to fill the
-whole extent of its vast basin, and hung close upon
-the surface of the water. This fog exactly resembled
-those fogs which are sometimes collected in
-the hollows of the mountains, or on the shores of
-the sea. It was kept in continual motion, and tossed
-hither and thither, like the waves of the ocean, by
-the wind. This mist was accompanied by strong
-westerly winds, which prevented our traveller from
-proceeding on his way; and he amused himself
-during his detention in studying the fishes of the
-lake, together with the birds and animals which frequent
-its shores.</p>
-
-<p>On the 10th of July, he embarked, and set sail
-with boisterous and contrary winds. The passage
-of the lake was long, but, arriving at length at Zimovia,
-Pallas proceeded with all possible expedition
-to Krasnoiarsk, by way of Irkutsk. He arrived on
-the 1st of August at the point of destination, where,
-to his great satisfaction, he found that a magnificent
-collection of the flowers which adorn the banks of
-the Yeniseï had been made during the spring and
-summer, by one of his pupils, whom he had left
-behind for that purpose. From Krasnoiarsk, our
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
-traveller made another long excursion, visited several
-Tartar hordes, various mines, mountains, and
-tombs, and returned about the middle of September,
-the approach of winter being already visible in those
-high latitudes. By December, the cold had reached
-an intensity which had never been felt even in Siberia.
-The air was still, and at the same time condensed,
-as it were; so that, although the sky was
-exceedingly clear, the sun appeared as if beheld
-through a cloud. In the morning of the 6th of December,
-Pallas found the mercury of his thermometer
-frozen, “a thing,” says he, “which had never
-before happened during the whole eight years in
-which I had made use of this instrument. I then
-conveyed it from the gallery where it was kept
-into an apartment moderately warmed with a
-stove. Here the column of mercury, which had
-been condensed in the tube, immediately sunk into
-the bulb, while that in the bulb resumed its activity
-in the course of half a minute. I repeated this experiment
-several times with the same result, so that
-sometimes there remained but a very few particles
-in the tube, sometimes not above one. In order to
-follow the progress of the experiment, I gently
-warmed the bulb with my fingers, after it had been
-exposed to the air, and watching the mounting of
-the mercury, distinctly observed that the condensed
-and frozen columns offered considerable resistance
-before they gave way. At the same time I exposed
-about a quarter of a pound of mercury to the air, in
-a saucer. This mercury had been previously well
-washed in vinegar, and cleansed from impurities.
-The saucer was placed in a gallery on the north
-side of my house. In an hour the edges of the surface
-were frozen, and a few minutes afterward, the
-whole superficies was condensed into a soft mass,
-exactly resembling pewter. As the interior, however,
-still continued fluid, a small portion of the surface
-presented numerous wrinkles branching out
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
-from each other, but the greater part was sufficiently
-smooth. The same thing took place with a
-still larger quantity which I placed in the open air.
-This mass of frozen mercury was as pliable as lead
-but if bent suddenly, would break more easily than
-pewter; and when flattened into sheets, appeared
-somewhat knotty. I tried to beat it out with the
-hammer, but being quite cold, the mercury fell from
-it in drops. The same thing took place when you
-touched this mass with the finger, the top of which
-was instantly benumbed with cold by the simple contact.
-I then placed it in a moderately warm room,
-and it melted like wax placed over the fire. The
-drops separated from the surface, which melted
-gradually. The intensity of the cold diminished
-towards the evening.”</p>
-
-<p>In the month of January, 1773, Pallas began to
-make preparations for returning to Petersburg, and
-departing on the 22d, pushed on with the utmost rapidity
-to Tomsk. During this journey, he discovered
-the execrable principles upon which it was
-attempted to people Siberia. The refuse of the
-people, the lame, the sick, the infirm, and the old,
-had been collected together, and sent thither to die.
-Men had been torn, for this purpose, from their
-wives and families. Women, for some reason or
-another, had not been allowed to emigrate from the
-west in sufficient numbers, and vice and misery
-flourished in their absence. Man, deprived of the
-society of women, necessarily degenerates into a
-ferocious beast, contemning all laws, and every
-regulation of morality. “It is not good that man
-should be alone.” Whenever new colonies are established,
-women should be numerous. It is they
-who are the grand instruments of civilization.&mdash;The
-cavern, the desert hut, when inhabited by a
-woman, already contains the germs of humanity,
-of hospitality, of improvement; but without her
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
-is a den, a haunt of ungovernable passions,&mdash;a refuge
-from the storm, but not a home.</p>
-
-<p>In crossing a bridge over the Dooroosh, in the
-country of the Votiaks, our traveller was placed in
-a more perilous condition than he had experienced
-during any former period of his travels. His horses
-had already reached the shore, when the bridge,
-which must have been a very frail structure, gave
-way under his carriage, and he must infallibly have
-been precipitated into the stream, had not the spirited
-horses dashed on at the moment, and dragged up the
-carriage from amid the falling ruins.</p>
-
-<p>The country between the Jaik and the Volga was
-at that period a vast desert, which abounded with
-wild horses. Pallas, however, was of opinion that
-these animals had once been tame, but, during the
-emigrations and nomadic movements of the Kalmucs
-and Kirghees, had escaped into the wilderness,
-where they had multiplied exceedingly. To fly from
-the heat and the hornets, these horses wandered far
-into the north during the summer months, and there,
-besides a refuge from their persecutors, found better
-pasturage, and an abundance of water. The surface
-of this great Mesopotamia was sprinkled at intervals
-with ruins of Tartar edifices, which swarmed in an
-extraordinary manner with serpents.</p>
-
-<p>On the 25th of June our traveller arrived at the
-Moravian colony of Sarepta, which in eight years
-had increased, by immigration, from five persons to
-two thousand five hundred; and was at this period
-in a highly flourishing state. He here entered into
-some curious researches respecting the ancient
-shores of the Caspian, whose waters, in his opinion,
-once covered the greater portion of the Kalmuc
-country, just as those of the Black Sea did all the
-low lands upon its banks, before the deluge of Deucalion,
-when they first burst the huge natural mound
-which separated them from the Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p>Pallas passed the autumn at Zarizyn, where he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
-observed the Kalmucs moving westward in hordes
-towards the country lying between the Volga and
-the Don. From this place he made an excursion
-through the stepps which lie up the stream of the
-Volga; on his return from which he chiefly employed
-himself in botanical researches, until the
-spring of 1774. He then undertook another journey
-along the banks of the Aktooba, through a country
-infested with bands of vagabond Kirghees, and other
-wandering nations, and returned to his head-quarters
-on the 25th of May.</p>
-
-<p>It was now six years since the expedition had set
-out from Petersburg, and all its members began to
-desire repose. Each person, therefore, hastened to
-return by the shortest road to the capital. Pallas
-was directed to repair to Moscow, and punctually
-obeyed his orders, without making the slightest
-deviation to the right-hand or to the left. He arrived
-at this ancient city on the 3d of July, 1774.
-“Here,” says he, “I found the orders of the court,
-by which I was commanded to hasten without the
-least delay to Petersburg; and, notwithstanding that
-I felt exceedingly desirous of making a short stay
-at Moscow, for the purpose of improving my knowledge,
-by conversing with the learned M. Müller, one
-of the most excellent men in Russia, as well as one
-of the most celebrated of its historians, <i>it was necessary
-to yield and obey</i>.” Such is the condition of
-those who travel by command. He arrived at Petersburg
-on the 30th of July, exhausted by fatigue,
-and with a head sprinkled with premature gray
-hairs; for he was then no more than thirty-three
-years old.</p>
-
-<p>The companions of Pallas had suffered still more
-severely; scarcely one of them lived long enough
-to draw up an account of his travels; and it was
-therefore left to him to render this piece of justice
-to their memory. For himself, the splendid objects
-which he had beheld had made too profound an impression
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
-on his mind to allow of his being satisfied
-with the accounts of them which he had hastily
-traced in his journal. He therefore determined
-upon the publication of several separate works,
-which should contain the natural history of the
-most celebrated quadrupeds of Siberia; and these
-he actually laid before the public, together with descriptions
-of a great number of birds, reptiles, and
-fishes. In addition to all these, he even projected
-a natural history of all the animals and plants in the
-Russian empire; in which design, though it was
-never completed, he made a very considerable progress.
-The empress herself, worthless and profligate
-as she was, was possessed by the ambition of
-being regarded as the patron of the sciences, and in
-order to facilitate the execution of our traveller’s
-project, communicated to him the herbariums of
-several other botanists, who had studied the flora
-of the empire. To secure the completion of the
-undertaking, Catherine moreover engaged to furnish
-the expense of the engraving and printing of the
-work; but the end was not answerable to this magnificent
-beginning; projects of more vulgar ambition,
-or vile and despicable amours, too fully occupied
-the imperial mind to allow so unimportant a thing
-as the science of botany to command a thought, and
-Pallas was constrained to rely upon his own resources
-for making known his botanical discoveries
-to the world. The same fate attended his works on
-the natural history of the animals and insects of the
-empire.</p>
-
-<p>M. Cuvier, whose capacity to appreciate the labours
-of a scientific man can scarcely be called in question,
-observes, that it is seldom that very laborious men
-possess sufficient tranquillity of mind to conceive
-those root-ideas which produce a revolution in the
-sciences; but Pallas formed an exception to this
-rule. He nearly succeeded in changing the whole
-aspect of the science of zoology; and most certainly
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-did operate a complete change in that of the
-theory of the earth. An attentive consideration of
-the two great chains of mountains of Siberia enabled
-him to discover this general rule, which has
-been everywhere found to hold good, that there
-exist three primitive orders of mountains, the granitic
-in the centre, the schistous next in succession,
-and the calcareous on the outside. It may be said
-that this great discovery, distinctly announced in a
-memoir read before the academy in 1777, gave birth
-to the modern science of geology: from this point
-the Saussures, the Delues, and the Werners proceeded
-to the discovery of the real structure of the
-earth, which is so exceedingly at variance with the
-fantastic ideas of preceding writers.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to his scientific labours, Pallas was engaged
-by Catherine in drawing up comparative vocabularies
-of the languages spoken by all the various
-nations in the Russian empire; but was restrained,
-in the execution of this plan, to follow exactly in
-the track pointed out by his mistress. He was
-likewise chosen member of the committee employed,
-in 1777, in compiling a new topography of
-the empire; and had the honour of instructing
-Alexander, the late despot of Russia, and his brother
-Constantine, in natural history. But, notwithstanding
-all these marks of distinction, and many others
-of equal importance, our traveller experienced the
-truth, that happiness is incompatible with dependence
-of every kind. His travelling habits, too, rendered
-a sedentary life irksome to him; but what
-still further disgusted him with Petersburg, was the
-crowd of fashionable but absurd people who thronged
-his house, imagining, perhaps, they were doing him
-an honour by consuming his time. To escape from
-this species of persecution, he took advantage of
-the invasion of the Crimea, to visit new countries;
-and during the years 1793 and 1794, traversed the
-southern provinces of the empire at his own expense.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
-He even skirted the frontiers of Circassia,
-but, with his usual prudence, avoided the dangers
-which would have attended a journey into that
-country. He then proceeded into the Crimea,
-through which Potemkin was leading the empress
-as a spectacle of contempt and scorn to all mankind;
-and was so captivated by a passing glance at
-its splendid scenery, that, on his return to Petersburg,
-he solicited and obtained permission to retire
-thither.</p>
-
-<p>Solitude, however, which appeared so desirable at
-a distance, Pallas soon found to be an intolerable
-curse; the climate, also, fell infinitely short of his
-expectations, was inconstant and humid, and liable
-to be altered by every passing wind. It united, in
-fact, the inconveniences of the north and of the south;
-yet our traveller endured these evils for fifteen years;
-but at length, feeling the approaches of old age, he
-determined at once to escape from the climate of
-the Crimea and from Russian despotism, and selling
-his estates at an exceedingly low rate, returned to
-his native city, after an absence of forty-two years.
-His health, however, had been so completely undermined
-by the diseases he had contracted during his
-travels, and, more than all, by his long residence in
-the Crimea, that he might be said merely to have
-looked upon his native place, and on the face of
-those friends or admirers which his knowledge and
-fame had gathered around him, before death removed
-him from the enjoyment of all these things. This
-event took place on the 8th of September, 1811.
-Pallas appears to have been an able, learned, and
-upright man, deeply intent on promoting the interests
-of science, but indifferent about those great
-political rights without the enjoyment of which
-even the sciences themselves are of no more dignity
-or value than the tricks of a juggler.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CARSTEN_NIEBUHR">CARSTEN NIEBUHR.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1733.&mdash;Died 1815.</p>
-
-<p>This traveller was born on the 17th of March,
-1733, in the province of Friesland, in the kingdom
-of Hanover. It would be to mislead the reader to
-represent him, as some of his biographers have
-done, as the son of a peasant, in the sense in which
-that term is applied in England. His father and his
-ancestors, for several generations, had been small
-landed proprietors; he himself received an education,
-and inherited a property, which, however small,
-served as an incentive to ambition; and though, like
-many others, he found the entrance of the road to
-fame rugged and hard to tread, it must not be dissembled
-that his prudence and perseverance were
-singularly aided by good fortune.</p>
-
-<p>Having lost his mother before he was six weeks
-old, the care of his infancy was intrusted to a step-mother;
-and he was still a lad when his father likewise
-died. The guardians upon whom the superintendence
-of his youth at first devolved, entertaining,
-apparently, but little respect for intellectual pursuits,
-interrupted his studies; and his maternal uncle, who
-succeeded them in this important trust, would seem
-to have wanted the means, if he possessed the will,
-to direct the course of a young man. Niebuhr was
-therefore left very much to his own guidance, which,
-to a man of vigorous intellect, I am far from regarding
-as a misfortune. The beginnings of life, however,
-like the beginnings of day, are generally
-accompanied by mists which obscure the view, and
-render it absolutely impossible to determine with
-precision the character of the various paths which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
-present themselves before us; and thus it was that
-our traveller, who, knowing not that Providence
-was about to conduct him to a brilliant destiny in
-the East, at one time studied music, with the intention
-of becoming an organist, and was afterward led,
-through accidental circumstances, to apply himself
-to geometry, for the purpose of practising as a land-surveyor.</p>
-
-<p>With this design he repaired, in his twenty-third
-year, to Bremen, where he discovered a person from
-whom he might have derived the necessary instruction;
-but finding that this individual’s domestic
-economy was under the superintendence of two
-youthful sisters, whose behaviour towards himself
-Niebuhr seems to have regarded as forward and
-indecorous, he immediately quitted this city and
-proceeded to Hamburgh. It will easily be conceived
-that the studies of a young man who voluntarily
-cultivated his intellect as the only means by which
-he could arrive at distinction, were pursued with
-ardent enthusiasm. Niebuhr, in fact, considered
-labour and toil as the only guides to genuine glory,
-and was content to tolerate on the way the rude
-fierceness of their manners.</p>
-
-<p>When he had studied the mathematics, during two
-years, under Büsch, he removed to Göttingen, where
-he continued another year. At this period the
-Danish ministry, at the suggestion of Michaelis, had
-projected a scientific expedition into Arabia, which
-was at first designed, at least by its originator,
-merely to throw some light upon certain passages of
-the Old Testament, but which afterward embraced
-a much wider field. Michaelis, to whom the choice
-of the individuals who were to form this mission
-had been intrusted, betrayed the narrowness or
-malignity of his mind, by neglecting the celebrated
-Reiske, who was then well known to be struggling
-with starvation, in order to thrust forward Von
-Haven, a pupil of his own, who, but for this partial
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
-choice, would probably have lived and died in obscurity.
-Niebuhr himself was recommended to
-Michaelis by Kästner, whose pupil he had for some
-time been. The proposal was abruptly made, and
-as suddenly accepted. “Have you a mind,” said
-Kästner, “to go into Arabia?”&mdash;“Why not?” replied
-Niebuhr, “if anybody will pay my expenses.”&mdash;“The
-King of Denmark,” said Kästner, “will pay
-your expenses.” He then entered into the history
-of the Danish ministry’s project, and Niebuhr, whose
-genuine ambition was most ardent, and who, though
-in manners modest and unassuming, could not but
-entertain a favourable opinion of his own capacity,
-at once engaged to form a member of the mission.
-It was agreed, on the part of his Danish majesty,
-that he should be allowed a year and a half for
-preparation, with a salary sufficient for his maintenance.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr had now a definite object. The East,
-with all its barbaric pomp and historical glory, which
-in preceding and succeeding days have kindled enthusiasm
-in so many bosoms, appeared to court his
-examination; and, like a lover who appreciates at
-their highest value the accomplishments of his mistress,
-and is bent on rendering himself worthy of
-her, he thenceforward studied, with vehement earnestness,
-all those branches of knowledge which he
-regarded as necessary to a traveller in the East;
-and Latin, Arabic, the mathematics, drawing, practical
-mechanics, together with the history of the
-countries he was about to visit, amply occupied his
-hours. An additional half-year being granted him,
-it was not until the Michaelmas of 1760 that he
-quitted Göttingen for Copenhagen.</p>
-
-<p>Here he was received in the most flattering manner
-by Count Bernstorf, the Danish minister, by
-whom he was appointed lieutenant of engineers.
-The rank of captain he modestly refused. Niebuhr
-was never possessed by an immoderate desire for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
-wealth, and a trait of unpresuming disinterestedness
-which escaped him during his preparatory
-studies is at once illustrative of this fact, and of
-another equally important,&mdash;that wealth no less than
-fame is frequently best won by carefully abstaining
-from grasping at it too eagerly. The salary granted
-him by the King of Denmark was probably small,
-but our traveller, with that repugnance to solicit
-which is characteristic of superior minds, not only
-contrived to reduce his wants within the limits of
-his means, but by rigid economy enabled himself,
-moreover, to purchase at his own expense whatever
-instruments he needed. The knowledge of this fact
-coming to the ears of the minister, he not only
-reimbursed the young traveller the sum he had expended,
-but, as a mark of the high satisfaction he
-derived from so striking an evidence of honest independence,
-committed to his charge the travelling-chest
-of the mission.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr’s companions were four in number: Von
-Haven, the linguist, a person of mean capacity;
-Forskaal, the naturalist, distinguished for his numerous
-and profound acquirements; Cramer, a physician,
-devoid even of professional knowledge; and
-Baurenfeind, an artist, not destitute of talent, but
-ignorant, full of prejudices, and addicted to the vulgar
-habit of drinking. Von Haven, to whom a long
-sea-voyage was disagreeable, obtained permission
-to proceed to Marseilles by land; and the ship in
-which the other members of the expedition embarked
-was directed to take him on board at that
-port. They left the Sound on the 7th of January,
-1761, but were three times driven back by contrary
-winds; so that it was not until the 10th of March
-that they were enabled fairly to put to sea, and continue
-their voyage.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr describes, among the singular things observed
-during this voyage, a white rainbow, which
-only differed from the common rainbow in being
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-destitute of colours. This, I believe, is a phenomenon
-not often witnessed; but on the 21st of May,
-1830, which succeeded a day and night of tremendous
-thunder, lightning, and rain, I remember to
-have myself seen a similar rainbow in Normandy.
-It was much thicker, but greatly inferior in span,
-and less sharply defined at the edges than the ordinary
-bow; and, as the morning mist upon which it
-was painted grew thinner, the arch decreased in
-span, until it at length vanished entirely.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller amused himself while on board in
-observing the manners of the crew, which he considered
-manly though unpolished. He likewise exercised
-himself daily in nautical and astronomical
-observations; and by his affability and the extent
-of his knowledge, acquired and preserved the respect
-of both officers and men. They discovered
-Cape St. Vincent on the 21st of April, and a few
-days afterward entered the Mediterranean, where
-their course was considerably retarded by calms and
-contrary winds. Meanwhile the weather was beautiful,
-and their eyes were refreshed with the most
-lovely prospects, now on the African shores, and
-now on those of Europe. On the 14th of May they
-cast anchor in the port of Marseilles, which was at
-that time crowded by Swedish, Danish, Dutch, Spanish,
-and French ships, the greater number of which
-were prevented from putting to sea by fear of the
-English fleets, which scoured the Mediterranean,
-diffusing consternation and terror on all sides.</p>
-
-<p>From the agreeable society of Marseilles, rendered
-doubly charming in their estimation by their previous
-privation, they were soon compelled to snatch themselves
-away. On the 6th of June Niebuhr observed
-at sea the transit of Venus, and on the 14th reached
-Malta. This little island enjoys, like Ireland, the
-privilege of being free from serpents, which it is
-supposed to owe to the interference of St. Paul;
-though Niebuhr imagines that the dry and rocky
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-nature of the soil is sufficient, without a miracle, to
-account for the circumstance. The knights observing,
-perhaps, a peculiar absence of bigotry in our
-traveller, imagined that this indicated a leaning towards
-Catholicism, and appear to have been desirous
-of tempting him by magnificent promises to desert
-the creed of his forefathers. Though his stay in
-Malta was very short, Niebuhr was careful to observe
-whatever curiosities the island afforded: the
-great church of St. John, enriched, it is said, by
-sharing the plunder of the knights, with innumerable
-ornaments, and a prodigious candelabrum of gold;
-the hospital, where the sick, whatever might be
-their medical treatment, were served with vessels
-of silver; the immense corn-magazines, hewn out
-in the rock; the salt-mines; and the catacombs.
-For some reason, however, which is not stated, he
-did not see the Phenician inscription, which was
-still preserved in the island.</p>
-
-<p>In sailing from Malta to Smyrna he was attacked
-with dysentery, and began to fear that his travels
-were to terminate there; but the disorder was less
-serious than he imagined, and having reached Tenedos,
-he embarked in a Turkish boat, and proceeded
-up the Dardanelles to Constantinople. Here, though
-slowly, he recovered his health, and having remained
-quiet two months, and provided oriental dresses, not
-choosing to expose himself in the paltry costume of
-Europe to the laughter of the populace, he set sail
-with his companions for Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>On the way they landed at Rhodes, where, for the
-first time they visited a Turkish eating-house. The
-dinner, though dear, was good, but was served up in
-common earthen platters, in the open street. They
-next visited a Jew, who kept wine for the accommodation
-of Europeans; and had in his house two
-young women, whom he called his daughters, who
-were probably designed for the same purpose. Their
-reception here cost them still dearer than their
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
-Turkish dinner; and as Jews, wine, and the drinkers
-of wine are held in contempt by all sincere and respectable
-Mohammedans, this must be considered a
-highly injudicious step in Niebuhr. The ship in
-which they sailed had on board a number of female
-slaves, the principal of whom were lodged in a large
-chamber directly over their cabin, from which we
-may infer that the Turks do not, like the Burmese,
-consider it a disgrace to have women walking over
-their heads. As there were tolerably wide cracks
-in the ceiling, our travellers frequently enjoyed the
-pleasure of viewing these ladies, who, though a little
-terrified at first, soon became accustomed to their
-faces, and notwithstanding that neither party at all
-understood the language of the other, many little
-presents of fruit and other trifles were given and
-returned. The mode in which this affair was conducted
-was ingenious. As soon as the Mohammedans
-collected together for prayer, the girls gently
-tapped at their windows, and Niebuhr and Forskaal,
-looking out of the cabin, beheld the handkerchiefs
-of the fair held out for fruit. When filled, they were
-drawn up, and the presents they chose to make in
-return were then lowered down in the same way.
-During the voyage, six or eight persons having died
-suddenly, it was suspected that they had the plague
-on board; but Niebuhr imagined that other causes
-might have hastened the end of those who died; at
-all events, none of the members of the expedition
-were infected, though their physician had often
-visited the sick.</p>
-
-<p>The land of Egypt at length appeared on the 26th
-of September, and on the same day, late in the evening,
-they cast anchor in the port of Alexandria.
-Norden, a scientific, but an uninteresting traveller,
-having recently constructed a plan of the city, Niebuhr
-judged that he might spare himself the pains
-of repeating the process, more especially as the
-Arabs, hovering in troops in the vicinity, rendered
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
-him apprehensive that he might be robbed. However,
-as the eminence on which Pompey’s pillar
-stands overlooks a large portion of the city, he
-amused himself with taking several angles from
-thence, intending to follow this up by taking others
-from some other positions. While he was thus engaged,
-one of the Turkish merchants, who happened
-to be present, observing his telescope pointed towards
-the city, had the curiosity to look through it,
-and was not a little alarmed at perceiving a tower
-upside down. “This,” says he, “gave occasion to
-a rumour, that I was come to Alexandria to turn the
-whole city topsyturvy. The report reached the
-governor’s house. My janizary refused to accompany
-me when I took out my instrument; and as I
-then supposed that a European could not venture to
-appear in an eastern city without a janizary, I relinquished
-the idea of making any further geometrical
-measurements there.”&mdash;“On another occasion,” he
-continues, “when I was making an astronomical
-observation on the southern point of the Delta, a
-very civil and sensible peasant, from the village of
-Daraúe, happened to be present. As I wished to
-show him something he had never seen before, I
-pointed the telescope of the quadrant towards his
-village, on which he was extremely terrified at seeing
-all the houses upside down. He asked my servant
-what could be the cause of this. The man
-replied, that the government, being extremely dissatisfied
-with the inhabitants of that village, had sent
-me to overthrow it entirely. The poor peasant
-was greatly afflicted, and entreated me to wait long
-enough for him to take his wife, his children, and
-his cow to some place of safety. My servant
-assured him he had two hours good. He immediately
-ran home, and as soon as the sun had
-passed the meridian, I took my quadrant on board
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr found a number of Mohammedans at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
-Alexandria who understood French, Swedish, and
-Danish as completely as if they had been born in
-the countries where those languages are spoken.
-As most European travellers proceed up the Nile
-from this city to Cairo, the members of the expedition
-were desirous of performing the journey by
-land, but were restrained by fear of the Arabs; and
-M. Forskaal, who afterward ventured upon this
-hardy enterprise, was actually stripped to the skin,
-and with great difficulty obtained back his breeches.
-Niebuhr now hired a small ship, and embarked on
-the 31st of October, but was detained in the Gulf
-of Aboukir by contrary winds. Impatient of delay,
-his companions proceeded thence to Rosetta by
-land, with a company of Turks; but our traveller
-continued his voyage, and reached the city very
-shortly after them. Though the inhabitants of Rosetta
-enjoyed the reputation of being peculiarly
-polite towards strangers, Niebuhr was too impatient
-to behold the capital of modern Egypt to linger long
-in any provincial city; he therefore hastened to ascend
-the Nile, and enjoyed the romantic prospect
-of fertility, villages peeping through groves of date-trees,
-and here and there vast wrecks of ancient
-cities, which all travellers in that extraordinary
-country have admired. They arrived at Cairo on
-the 10th of November.</p>
-
-<p>The Nile, like the Ganges, has long been renowned
-for the daring race of pirates who infest it.
-Bruce, and many other travellers, have celebrated
-their ingenuity; but the following anecdote, related
-by Niebuhr, exhibits their exquisite skill in a still
-more favourable point of view: A pasha, recently
-arrived in Egypt, happening to be encamped on the
-banks of the river, his servants, aware of the dexterity
-of their countrymen, kept so strict a watch
-during the night, that they detected one of the
-pirates, and brought him before the pasha, who
-threatened to put him to death on the spot. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
-prisoner, however, entreated permission to show
-the pasha one of the extraordinary tricks of his art,
-in the hope of thereby inducing him to spare his
-life. The permission was granted. The man then
-took up the pasha’s garments, and whatever else he
-found in the tent, and having tied them up into a
-packet, as the Egyptians do when they are about to
-swim across a river, made several turns before the
-company to amuse them. He then insensibly approached
-the Nile, and darting into the water like
-lightning, had already reached the opposite shore,
-with the pasha’s garments upon his head, before
-the Turks could get ready their muskets to fire
-at him.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr was exceedingly desirous, soon after his
-arrival at Cairo, of descending the eastern branch
-of the Nile to Damietta; but the sky during the
-whole winter and spring was so overcast with
-clouds, and the rain fell so frequently, that it was
-impossible to take astronomical observations. On
-the 1st of May, however, the weather having cleared
-up, he left Cairo. The wind blowing from the north,
-their progress was slow, and he had therefore
-considerable leisure for observation. The Coptic
-churches amused him much. In one of these he
-saw pictures representing Christ, the Virgin, and
-several saints, on horseback; intended, perhaps, to
-insinuate to their Mohammedan masters, that the
-founder of their religion and his followers had not
-been compelled, as Christians then were in Egypt,
-to ride upon asses. These churches, moreover,
-were strewed with so many crutches, that a stranger
-might conclude, upon observing them, that the whole
-Coptic community had lost the use of their limbs;
-however, upon inquiry, our traveller discovered that
-it was the custom among them to stand in church,
-which many persons found so wearisome that they
-resolved to aid their piety with crutches. The
-floors were covered with mats, which, not being
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
-changed very frequently, swarmed with fleas, numbers
-of which did our traveller the honour to prefer
-him before any of their ancient patrons. In approaching
-Damietta he saw about twenty large
-boats loaded with bees: each of these boats carried
-two hundred hives; the number, therefore, of the
-hives here assembled in one spot, was four thousand;
-and when the inhabitants of this floating city issued
-forth to visit the flowers of the neighbourhood, they
-must have appeared like a locust cloud.</p>
-
-<p>His stay at Damietta, which is about four miles
-above the mouth of the Nile, was short. Europeans
-are nowhere in the East so much detested, on account,
-chiefly, of the profligate character of the
-French formerly settled there, who, having debauched
-several Mohammedan women, were nearly
-all massacred by the infuriated populace. Niebuhr’s
-fancy that they still remember the crusades, and
-hate the Franks for the evils those insane expeditions
-inflicted on their ancestors, is just as rational
-as if the English people were to be supposed to
-nourish resentment against all the northern nations,
-because their barbarous ancestors made piratical
-descents upon our coasts.</p>
-
-<p>While at Cairo he could not, of course, resist the
-desire of visiting the Pyramids. He therefore hired
-two Bedouin guides, and proceeded with his friend
-Forskaal towards the desert, where they were encountered
-by a young sheïkh, who, by dint of bravado
-and insolence, succeeded in extorting from
-them a small sum of money; but had they, when
-he first offered his services, bestowed upon him half
-a crown, he would not only have given them no
-further molestation, but would have constituted himself
-their protector against all other importunates.
-Niebuhr afterward returned under more favourable
-auspices, and completed the measurement of the two
-great pyramids, the loftier of which he found to be
-443 feet, and the second to be 403 feet high. I shall
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
-hereafter, perhaps, have occasion to remark upon
-the strange discrepancies which are found between
-the measurements of various travellers, which are,
-in fact, so great, that we must suspect some of them,
-at least, of having wanted the knowledge required
-by such an undertaking. From considering the
-petrifactions and the nature of the rocks in this
-neighbourhood, Niebuhr was led to infer the prodigious
-antiquity of Egypt: “Supposing the whole
-of the rocks in the northern portions of the country
-to be composed of petrifactions of a certain kind
-of shell, how many years,” says he, “must have
-elapsed before a sufficient number of little snails to
-raise mountains to their present height could have
-been born and died! How many other years before
-Egypt could have been drained and become solid,
-supposing that, in those remote ages, the waters retired
-from the shore as slowly as they have during
-the last ten centuries! How many years still, before
-the country was sufficiently peopled to think of
-erecting the first pyramid! How many more years,
-before that vast multitude of pyramids which are
-still found in the country could have been constructed!
-Considering that at the present day we
-are ignorant of when, and by whom, even the most
-modern of them was built.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 26th of August, 1762, Niebuhr and his
-companions set out with the caravan going from
-Cairo to Suez: the rest of the party, in spite of the
-Mohammedans, mounted on horseback, and Niebuhr
-himself on a dromedary. By this means he avoided
-several evils to which the others were liable. Seated
-on his mattress he could turn his face now on one
-side, now on another, to avoid the heat of the sun; and,
-after having travelled all day, was no more fatigued
-in the evening than if he had been all the while reposing
-in a chair; while the horsemen, compelled
-to remain perpetually in the same posture, were well-nigh
-exhausted. On the 30th they encamped near
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
-a well of good water, mentioned by Belin, Pietro
-Della Valle, and Pococke, close to which the Turks
-formerly erected a castle, which was now in ruins,
-and in three hours more arrived at the wells of Suez,
-which were surrounded by a strong wall, to keep
-out the Arabs, and entered by a door fastened with
-enormous clumps of iron. The water here was
-drawn up with buckets or sacks of leather.</p>
-
-<p>Suez, from its fortunate position on the Red Sea,
-carried on a considerable trade. Numbers of ships
-were built there annually, the materials of which
-were transported thither on the backs of camels
-from Cairo. The environs consist of naked rocks,
-or beds of loose sand, in which nothing but brambles
-and a few dry stunted plants, among others the rose
-of Jericho, are found to grow. This rose is employed
-by the women of the East in various superstitious
-practices, and is therefore to be found for
-sale in all cities. When pregnant, they gather one
-of the buds, and putting its stem in water, foretel
-whether their pains will be severe or slight from the
-greater or smaller development of the flower.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr’s first inquiry on arriving at Suez was
-concerning the “Mountain of Inscriptions,” about
-which so much had been said in Europe. The individuals
-to whom his first questions were put had
-never even heard of it; others, who were exactly in
-the same predicament, but desired to possess themselves
-of a little of their European gold, professed a
-most accurate knowledge of the spot, but upon inquiry
-were detected. At length, however, an Arab
-was discovered, from whose replies it was clear, that
-whether he had seen the real <i>Gebel el Mokatteb</i> or
-not, some mountain or another he had beheld, upon
-which inscriptions in an unknown language were
-to be found. Under this man’s guidance, therefore,
-they placed themselves,&mdash;that is, Niebuhr and Von
-Haven, for the rest were, from various causes,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>
-detained at Suez; and leaving the Red Sea on their
-right-hand, they struck off into the desert.</p>
-
-<p>As I have given a description of this part of Arabia
-in the life of Dr. Shaw, it will not be necessary here
-to repeat what I then said. Niebuhr found that the
-Arabs, whose profession it is to serve as guides,
-were distinguished, like all other persons of that
-class, for their extravagant cupidity. So long as
-they could live at the expense of strangers their own
-provisions and means were assiduously spared; but
-on other occasions they exhibited various symptoms
-that the old national virtue of hospitality was not
-wholly banished from their minds. The women in
-this part of Arabia are not in the habit of concealing
-their faces from strangers, as is the fashion in Egypt.
-Niebuhr, in his solitary rambles through the country,
-discovered the wife and sister of a sheïkh grinding
-corn beside their tent; who, instead of flying and
-concealing themselves at his approach, as he seems
-to have expected, came forward, according to the
-good old custom of the East, with a present in their
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at what his guides called the “Mountain
-of Inscriptions,” a lofty rugged eminence, which
-it cost them much time and toil to climb, he found&mdash;not
-what he had expected&mdash;but a vast Egyptian cemetery,
-in which were a great number of sepulchral
-monuments, covered with hieroglyphics. These inscriptions
-he was not permitted to copy at the time,
-because the sheïkh of the mountain apprehended
-he might thereby gain possession of the immense
-treasures concealed beneath; but one of his guides,
-who probably had little faith in that point of the
-sheïkh’s creed, afterward, on his return from Mount
-Sinai, enabled him to copy whatever he pleased.
-On his arrival at the convent of St. Catherine the
-monks politely refused to admit him, alleging, as
-their excuse, that he had not brought along with him
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
-a letter from their bishop. The patriarch’s letter,
-which he presented to them, they returned unopened.
-He was, in fact, destined to meet with nothing but
-disappointment in these celebrated regions; for his
-Arabs, having conducted him up to a certain height
-on Mount Sinai, refused to proceed any farther, and
-he was not possessed of sufficient resolution to
-ascend the remainder alone.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr now hastened back to Suez, and on his
-return forded the Red Sea on his dromedary, a thing
-which no European had done before, though the
-guides, who were on foot, did not find the water
-above knee deep. Being desirous of surveying the
-extremity of the Arabian Gulf, he procured a guide
-soon after his return from Mount Sinai, with whom
-he set out upon this expedition. They travelled,
-however, in constant fear; and the sight of a
-stranger in the distance increased the terrors of the
-guide to so extraordinary a pitch, that I suspect he
-had blood upon his hands, and dreaded the hour of
-retribution.</p>
-
-<p>The constant arrival of pilgrims from Egypt had
-now rendered Suez, in proportion to its extent, more
-populous than Cairo. These holy men, being on
-their way to the city of their prophet, regarded
-Christians with an evil eye, just as a bigoted Franciscan
-travelling to Jerusalem would regard a
-heretic or an unbeliever; and on this account
-Niebuhr greatly dreaded the voyage he was about
-to perform in their company from Suez to Jidda.
-To avoid, as far as possible, all causes of dispute
-with their fellow-passengers, they embarked several
-days before the rest, paid their passage, stowed
-away their luggage, and then amused themselves
-with observing the strange characters by which they
-were surrounded, not the least extraordinary of
-which was a rich black eunuch, who, in imitation
-of the great Turkish lords, travelled with his
-harem.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span></p>
-
-<p>All the passengers having at length repaired on
-board, they set sail on the 9th of October, and sailing
-along coral reefs, which in bad weather are highly
-dangerous, they arrived next day at Tor. Near
-this town is a small village inhabited by Christians,
-to which Forskaal went alone, for the purpose of
-visiting what is supposed to be the site of ancient
-Elim. While he was absent it was rumoured on
-board that the Arabs had formed the intention
-of pursuing and arresting the Frank, who had landed
-with the design of sketching their mountains; upon
-which a number of janizaries from Cairo, who happened
-to be on board, immediately set out for the
-village, and having met with M. Forskaal, conducted
-him back in safety to the vessel. “Are there many
-Christians,” inquires Niebuhr, “who, under similar
-circumstances, would do as much for a Jew?”</p>
-
-<p>On the evening of the 16th of October they discovered,
-about sunset, the Emerald Mountains on
-the coast of Egypt, called <i>Gebel Zumrud</i> by the
-Arabs. Next day there happened an eclipse of the
-sun. In Mohammedan countries persons who are
-able to calculate an eclipse are regarded as consummate
-physicians. Forskaal had informed the reis,
-or captain, that an eclipse was about to take place;
-and to amuse him and keep him from interrupting
-his astronomical observations, Niebuhr had smoked
-several glasses, through which he, as well as the
-principal merchants, might contemplate the phenomenon.
-They were all greatly amused, and from
-that moment Forskaal enjoyed the reputation of
-being a second Avicenna. From a spirit of humane
-complaisance, which induces us to allow every one
-an opportunity of exhibiting his peculiar talents,
-men are exceedingly apt to fall ill when they come
-in contact with a physician. Our traveller’s Mohammedan
-companions were particularly polite in this
-way; for no sooner had they persuaded themselves
-that there was a physician on board than they all
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
-discovered that they were attacked by diseases
-which had previously lain dormant, and confidingly
-demanded medicines and advice. Forskaal prescribed
-for all. To the majority he recommended
-more or less sleep, and a careful attention to their
-diet. A pilgrim at length presented himself who
-complained that he was unable to see during the
-night. The physician advised him to light a candle.
-This was excellent. The Arabs, who are naturally
-lively, burst into a loud laugh, and all their diseases
-were forgotten in a moment.</p>
-
-<p>Between Ras Mohammed and Hassâni the ship
-was twice in danger of being set on fire by the negligence
-of the women; but at length they reached
-this small island in safety, and the Mohammedans,
-believing the principal danger to be now over, exhibited
-various tokens of joy, firing muskets and
-pistols, illuminating the ship with lamps and lanterns,
-and uttering the triumphant cry of <i>Be, be, be!</i> so
-commonly used by the orientals. The sailors and
-the pilot petitioned for a present, the former coming
-round to each passenger with a little boat in their
-hands, which, when the collection was over, was
-thrown into the sea. During this passage Niebuhr,
-who, up to his arrival at Suez, had scarcely seen the
-face of a Mohammedan woman, had an opportunity
-of viewing three or four of them naked in a bath;
-and his indiscreet curiosity very fortunately entailed
-upon him no evil consequences.</p>
-
-<p>On the 29th of October they arrived at Jidda,
-where the usual attempts were made to defraud the
-custom-house. In this praiseworthy design some
-succeeded to the extent of their desires; but others,
-less adroit, or more unfortunate, were detected and
-compelled to pay the duties, no such atrocity as the
-confiscation of the whole property being ever practised.
-A duty of two or two and a half <i>per cent.</i>
-being levied upon all specie, people were most
-anxious to conceal their wealth: but by endeavouring
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
-to effect this, one of Niebuhr’s companions suffered
-severely; for in stepping from the ship into
-the boat, his purse, which he had tied round his body,
-opened accidentally, and about a hundred crowns
-fell into the sea. The common cash of the expedition
-was conveyed on shore in the bottoms of their
-boxes of drugs, which were not searched, it being in
-Arabia a general opinion that physicians, having no
-need of money, seldom carry any about with them.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr had observed in Egypt that the populace
-looked with inexpressible contempt upon Christians,
-and thence inferred that in proportion as they
-approached the Holy City they should find this
-inhospitable bigotry on the increase; but his apprehensions
-were unfounded, for the people of Jidda,
-long accustomed to the sight of Europeans, and
-constantly experiencing the humanizing influence
-of commerce, were peculiarly refined, allowing
-strangers to do almost what they pleased. It was
-merely forbidden them to approach the Mecca gate;
-which, like the city to which it leads, is reputed
-holy. Our traveller, during his residence at Cairo,
-had formed an acquaintance with a poor sheïkh,
-who, for a Mohammedan, might be said to be as
-highly favoured by science as he was neglected by
-fortune; and this man, in gratitude for the knowledge
-he had derived from him, besides furnishing him
-with letters of recommendation to the Kihaya and
-Pasha of Jidda, had privately written to those important
-personages, who had honoured him for his
-knowledge, earnestly requesting them to show every
-possible mark of kindness and attention to his
-European friends. These were the letters from
-which they had least expectations, and presented
-last; nevertheless, when the recommendations of
-all their other friends had failed even to procure
-them a lodging, those of the poor sheïkh introduced
-them to powerful protectors. Niebuhr was here
-witness of the curious mode of catching wild ducks
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>
-noticed by Pococke in Upper Egypt, and by another
-English traveller in China. When a number of these
-birds were observed in the water, the sportsman undressed,
-covered his head with seaweed, and then
-crept quietly into the water. By this means the
-ducks were deceived, so that they allowed the man
-to come near and catch them by the legs.</p>
-
-<p>They remained at Jidda until the 14th of December,
-when they embarked in one of the country vessels for
-Loheia. Niebuhr was not possessed of the art of
-painting what he saw with the fine colours of language.
-His narrative is frequently dry even to insipidity.
-He was observant, he was calm, he was
-judicious, but he was destitute of eloquence, and this
-deficiency is nowhere in his works more strongly
-felt than in his account of his various voyages
-through the Red Sea. On the 22d they landed on
-the coast of Yemen, near Fej el Jelbe, inhabited by
-Bedouins, who are suspected of being pagans. A
-few tents were discovered on the shore, and as soon
-as the travellers had landed, which they did unarmed
-lest they should be taken for enemies, several of the
-wild natives came down to meet them. Their appearance
-and dress were extraordinary. Their
-dark hair descended in profusion to their shoulders;
-and instead of a turban, several of them had merely
-a cord tied round the head, intended, I imagine, to
-keep their tresses in order. Others, more careful
-and industrious, had woven themselves a kind
-of bonnet with green palm-leaves. A miserable
-waist-cloth constituted the whole of their dress.
-From the eagerness of the sailors to get their lances
-out of their hands they immediately discovered that
-they were suspected; upon which they cast the
-weapons on the ground, assuring the strangers that
-they had nothing to fear. Notwithstanding that
-they had landed in search of provisions the Bedouins
-conducted them to their tents, where two women
-came out to meet them. Their salutation was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
-curious. The women, who were unveiled, kissed
-the arm of the sheïkh, who, in return, pressed their
-heads with his lips. The ladies then advanced
-towards the strangers. Their complexion was
-sallow brown, they had blackened their eyelids with
-surme, and died their nails with henne; and, like
-the lower ranks of women in Egypt, exhibited marks
-of tattooing on the chin, cheeks, and forehead.
-Cosmetics being rare in those countries, they requested our
-travellers to favour them with a small
-quantity of kohol and al henne; but they had injudiciously
-neglected to provide themselves with any
-thing of the kind, and consequently saw themselves
-in the disagreeable predicament of being compelled
-to refuse.</p>
-
-<p>On their arrival at Loheia they were received with
-remarkable politeness by the emir and the chief merchants
-of the city. They had taken the small vessel
-in which they performed the voyage for a longer
-passage as far as Hodeida; and the captain, understanding
-that they had some intention of remaining
-at Loheia, secretly applied to the emir with a request
-that he would compel them to complete their engagement,
-either by proceeding all the way to Hodeida,
-or by paying the whole sum agreed upon.
-With a generosity not often displayed towards utter
-strangers by men in office, the emir replied, that
-should the travellers refuse payment of the sum in
-question, he himself would satisfy his demands; and
-the principal merchant to whom the suspicious navigator
-also applied entered into the same engagement.
-Of course they were not allowed to suffer
-by their grateful and astonished guests.</p>
-
-<p>The above merchant, in his eastern style of hospitality,
-gave them a house to live in during their
-stay. In return the travellers amused him and the
-emir with the effects of their microscopes, telescopes,
-&amp;c. These things filled them with wonder;
-crowds of people, curious but well-behaved, thronged
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
-their court from morning till night, examining with
-attention whatever they saw, and expressing their
-astonishment at every thing. This was too much
-for Danish politeness. They hired a porter, and
-stationing him at their door, gave strict orders that
-none but professional men should be admitted. But
-the curiosity of the Arabs was not to be subdued so
-easily; for, when all other excuses failed, they
-feigned illness, and gained admittance under pretence
-of coming to consult the physician. Sometimes
-Dr. Cramer, who appears to have been an uncouth
-creature, was requested to favour sick persons
-with a visit at their own houses, and one day received
-a pressing entreaty to repair without delay
-to the <i>emir el bahr</i>, or captain of the port, who had
-need of consulting him. Cramer, not attending to
-this summons immediately, was shortly afterward
-informed that the <i>emir el bahr’s</i> saddle-horse was at
-the door waiting for him. This piece of attention
-was too flattering to be resisted; he therefore descended
-immediately, and was about to put his foot
-into the stirrup, when he was interrupted with the
-information that the horse was unwell, and had been
-brought there as a patient! Physicians in Arabia
-prescribe for horses as well as men; this, therefore,
-was not meant as an insult; but Cramer, who felt all
-his Danish blood curdle in his veins at the bare idea
-of prescribing for a Mohammedan horse, and was,
-moreover, mortified at not being allowed to mount
-his patient, indignantly refused to exercise the functions
-of a horse-doctor. Luckily, however, their
-European servant, who had served in a dragoon
-regiment, understood something of the veterinary
-art, and undertook the cure of the emir’s horse;
-which succeeding happily, he also was regarded as
-an eminent physician, and was allowed to elevate his
-ambition to the treatment of men.</p>
-
-<p>As our travellers continued, as far as possible, to
-live after the European fashion, their manners were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
-necessarily as much an object of curiosity to the
-Arabs as those of the Arabs were to them. One
-day two young men came to see them eat. Of these,
-the one was a young nobleman from Sana, whose
-gentle manners announced a superior education; the
-other a young chief from the mountains, whose
-country was seldom visited by strangers. This the
-<i>naïveté</i> and simplicity of his manners soon rendered
-manifest. Upon being invited to eat, he replied,
-“God preserve me from eating with infidels, who
-have no belief in God!” Niebuhr then demanded
-the name of his country; “What,” said he, “can
-my country concern thee? Hast thou formed the
-design of going thither to subdue it?” He afterward
-made several remarks upon their manners, the simplicity
-of which excited their laughter; at which
-the Arab felt ashamed, and ran away in confusion.
-His companion fetched him back, however, and he
-returned, wondering at the amazing quantity of food
-which they devoured. Fowl after fowl disappeared
-before these mighty eaters; the poor Arab, who
-began to entertain awful ideas of the capacity of a
-German stomach, and apprehending that they might
-bring about a famine in the land, for a while looked
-on in silent amazement; but when they had already
-eaten as much as would, perhaps, have satisfied a
-whole tribe of Bedouins, he started up, upon seeing
-Von Haven preparing to carve yet another fowl, and
-seizing him by the arm, exclaimed, “How much,
-then, dost thou intend to eat?” This sally produced
-still louder peals of laughter than ever, and the poor
-Arab, who probably apprehended that they might
-finish by eating him, rushed out of the house and
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Having sufficiently observed whatever was interesting
-or new at Loheia, they departed thence on
-the 20th of February, 1763, their servants and baggage
-mounted on camels, and themselves on asses.
-Not that Europeans were here, as at Cairo, prohibited
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
-from riding on horseback, but that horses
-were dear and not easily to be hired, while the asses,
-though comparatively cheap, were large fine animals,
-of easy gait. Arabia, it is well known, is surrounded
-by a belt of burning sand, which has in all ages
-aided in protecting it from invasion. This our travellers
-had now to traverse, but they suffered no
-particular inconvenience from the heat, and in four
-days arrived at <i>Beit el Fakih</i>, the greatest coffee emporium
-in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr, being now in a country where travelling
-was attended with no risk, and desiring, apparently,
-to escape from the society of his companions, hired
-an ass, and set out alone on an excursion to several
-neighbouring towns. This was succeeded by several
-other excursions, and at length he proceeded to the
-Coffee Mountains, a district which offers, perhaps,
-as many curious particulars to the observation of a
-traveller as any spot in Asia. These mountains
-could be ascended only on foot. The road, though
-rugged and broken, lay through coffee plantations and
-gardens, and to Niebuhr, who had just quitted the
-burning plains of the Tehama, afforded the most
-exquisite gratification. The prospects, moreover,
-which here meet the eye on all sides are rich and
-beautiful. They are precisely what the hills of Judea
-must have been before Sion had been profaned
-by the heathen, when every man, confident in the
-protection of the Lord, sat down tranquilly under
-his vine or under his fig-tree. The small chain of
-hills, called the Côte d’Or, which traverses nearly
-the whole of Burgundy from north to south, and is
-covered with vineyards to the summit, may probably
-represent to a European eye the ridge of the Coffee
-Mountains, except that the latter have necessarily
-a more woody appearance, and are beautified by
-numerous mountain streams, which frequently leap
-in long cascades from the rocks. The coffee-tree,
-which was at this time in full flower in many places,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
-diffuses around an agreeable odour, and somewhat
-resembles the Spanish jasmin. The Arabs plant
-these trees so close that the rays of the sun can
-scarcely find their way between them, which prevents
-the necessity of frequent watering; but they
-have reservoirs on the heights from which they can,
-when necessary, turn numerous streamlets into the
-plantations.</p>
-
-<p>From the Coffee Mountains they returned to Beit
-el Fakih, whence they shortly afterward departed
-on another short excursion. The natives, who
-carefully abstained from exposing themselves to the
-sun during the heat of the day, expressed their
-well-grounded astonishment that Europeans should
-be imprudent enough to hazard so dangerous a step;
-and our travellers were, in reality, at this very time
-laying the foundation of those fatal diseases which
-shortly afterward swept them away, Niebuhr only
-excepted; for I am persuaded that they might have
-returned, even in spite of their execrable diet and
-destructive habits of drinking, to brave the climate
-of Yemen, had they timed their journeys more judiciously.</p>
-
-<p>By this time their appearance was tolerably oriental;
-the sun had bronzed their countenances, their
-beards had acquired a respectable length, their dress
-was exactly that of the country, and they had,
-moreover, adopted Arabic names. Even their guides
-no longer took them for Europeans, but supposed
-them to be members of the eastern church, who by
-forbidden studies had succeeded in discovering the
-art of making gold, and were searching among the
-lonely recesses of their mountains for some rare
-plant whose juices were requisite in their alchymical
-processes. Niebuhr’s assiduous observation of the
-stars considerably aided in strengthening this delusion,
-which upon the whole, perhaps, was rather
-beneficial to them than otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>In the hilly districts of Yemen our traveller observed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
-among the Arabs a peculiar mode of passing
-the night. Instead of making use of a bed, each
-individual crept entirely naked into a sack, where,
-without closing the mouth of it, the breath and transpiration
-kept him sufficiently warm. Niebuhr himself
-never tried the sack, but very soon acquired the
-habit, which is universal among the Arabs of Yemen,
-of sleeping with the face covered, to guard against the
-malignant effects of the dews and poisonous winds.
-Here M. Forskaal discovered the small tree that
-produces the balm of Mecca, which happening to be
-in flower at the time enabled him to write a complete
-description of it, which he did seated under its
-branches. The inhabitants, who knew nothing of
-its value, merely made use of it as firewood, on
-account of its agreeable odour.</p>
-
-<p>Upon descending from these mountainous countries,
-where the climate is as cool and salubrious as
-in most parts of Europe, Niebuhr found the heat of
-the Tehama almost insupportable, and entering a
-little coffee-house, overwhelmed with fatigue, threw
-himself on his mat in a current of air, and fell asleep.
-This heedless action nearly cost him his life. He
-awoke in a violent fever, which hung about him for
-a considerable time, and reduced his frame to such
-an extreme state of weakness that the slightest
-exertion became painful. Von Haven, too, whose
-supreme delight consisted in brandy, wine, and good
-eating, and who seldom quitted his sofa, except for
-the purpose of placing himself before his gods at the
-dinner-table, now began to experience the impolicy
-of feeding like an ogre in the deserts of the Tehama,
-and very quickly fell a victim to his imprudence.</p>
-
-<p>From Beit el Fakih they proceeded to Mokha,
-where, as at Cairo, Europeans were compelled to
-enter the city by a particular gate, on foot, as a mark
-of humiliation. Niebuhr found that he and his
-companions were here taken for Turks, and they
-were accordingly directed to the khan, or inn, where
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
-the Osmanlis usually took up their abode. Though
-they understood that there was an English merchant
-at Mokha, they judged it unnecessary, in the first
-instance, to make application to him, as they had
-everywhere else in Yemen been received with
-politeness and hospitality; and besides, they were
-somewhat apprehensive that, from their dress and
-appearance, he might be led to regard them as vagabonds
-or renegades. They therefore addressed
-themselves to an Arab merchant, by whom they
-were well received.</p>
-
-<p>The people of Mokha made some pretensions to
-civilization, which is unfortunate, as the term, at
-least in the East, means custom-house officers, and
-insolence towards strangers. Our travellers, though
-no merchants, had large quantities of baggage, which,
-of course, was taken to the custom-house, before
-they could be allowed to enjoy the use of it. I have
-already observed, that although Niebuhr himself was
-a temperate, perhaps even an abstemious man, his
-companions set a high value on the gratification of
-their senses. Von Haven himself, who, as I have
-already observed, shortly afterward fell a victim to
-his indiscretion, was still among them, and it may
-therefore be easily imagined that the first articles they
-were desirous of obtaining from the custom-house
-were their cooking utensils and their beds. The
-Arabs, however, were differently minded. They
-allowed their curiosity to fasten upon the cases in
-which the natural history specimens were packed, and
-resolved to begin with them. Among these, unfortunately,
-there was a small barrel containing various
-fish of the Red Sea, preserved in spirits of wine.
-This M. Forskaal, who had collected these fishes
-himself, injudiciously requested the officers to allow
-to pass unopened. The request immediately roused
-all their suspicions. He might, for aught they knew,
-be a magician, who had confined the Red Sea itself
-in that barrel, for the purpose of carrying it off, with
-all its fishes, into Europe. It behooved them, therefore,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span>
-to bestir themselves. Accordingly the barrel
-was the first thing opened; but when the operation
-had been performed, the result anticipated by the
-naturalist was produced, for so pungent, so atrocious
-a stink was emitted from the half-putrefied fish, that
-the authorities very probably apprehended them to
-be a troop of assassins, commissioned by the devil
-to administer perdition through the nostrils to all
-true believers. The custom-house officer, however,
-confiding in the protection of the Prophet, determined
-to brave the infernal odour, and in order to
-explore the abomination to the bottom, took out the
-horrid remains of the fish, and stirred up the liquor
-with a piece of iron. The entreaties of the travellers
-to have it put on one side probably caused them
-to be regarded as ghouls, who made their odious
-repasts upon such foul preparations. The Arab still
-stirred and stirred, and at length in an inauspicious
-moment upset the cask, and deluged the whole
-custom-house with its contents. Had Mohammed
-himself been boiled in this liquid, it could not have
-smelt more execrably; we may therefore easily
-imagine the disgust with which the grave assembly
-beheld it flowing under their beards, infecting them
-with a scent which it would take several dirrhems’
-worth of perfume to remove. Their ill-humour was
-increased when, on opening another cask, containing
-insects, their nostrils were again saluted with a fresh
-variety of stink, which they inferred must possess
-peculiar charms for the nose of a Frank, since he
-would travel so far to procure himself the enjoyment
-of its savour. An idea now began to suggest itself
-to the Arabs, which still further irritated them, which
-was, that the insolent Franks had packed up these
-odious things in order to insult the governor of the
-city, at the expense of whose beard, it was not
-doubted, they intended to amuse themselves. This
-persuasion was fatal to many a cockleshell. They
-mercilessly thrust down a pointed iron bar through
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
-the collections, crushing shells, and beetles, and
-spiders. The worst stroke of all, however, was yet
-to come. This was the opening of a small cask,
-in which several kinds of serpents were preserved
-in spirits. Everybody was now terrified. It was
-suggested that the Franks had no doubt come to the
-city for the purpose of poisoning the inhabitants, and
-had represented themselves as physicians in order
-to commit their horrid crimes the more effectually.
-Even the governor was now moved. In fact, his
-anger was roused to such a pitch, that, though a
-grave and pious man, he exclaimed, “By God, these
-people shall not pass the night in our city!” The
-custom-house was then closed.</p>
-
-<p>While they were in this perplexity, one of their
-servants arrived in great hurry and confusion, with
-the news that their books and clothes had been
-thrown out through the window at their lodgings,
-and the door shut against them. They moreover
-found, upon inquiry, that it would be difficult to
-discover any person who would receive into his
-house individuals suspected of meditating the poisoning
-of the city; but at length a man bold enough
-to undertake this was found. Such was their position
-when they received from the English merchant
-above alluded to an invitation to dinner. “Never,”
-says Niebuhr, “was an invitation more gladly accepted;
-for we not only found at his house a dinner
-such as we had never seen since our departure from
-Cairo, but had at the same time the good fortune to
-meet with a man who became our sincere and faithful
-friend. The affair of the custom-house was long
-and tedious; but at length, by dint of bribery and
-perseverance, their baggage, snakes and all, was
-delivered to them, and they even rose, in consequence
-of a cure attempted by M. Cramer on the governor’s
-leg, into high consideration and favour.”</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr was here again attacked by dysentery,
-and Von Haven died. This event inspired the whole
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>
-party with terror, and having with much difficulty
-obtained the governor’s permission, they shortly
-afterward departed for the interior. They travelled
-by night, to escape the extreme heat of the sun, but
-soon found the roads so bad as to render this mode
-of journeying impracticable. The country during
-the early part of their route was barren, and but
-thinly inhabited; but in proportion as they departed
-from the shore the landscape improved in beauty
-and fertility. At the small city of Jerim, on the
-road to Sana, Niebuhr had the misfortune to lose
-his friend Forskaal, the best Arabic scholar of the
-whole party, and a man who looked forward with
-enthusiasm to the glory to be derived from the successful
-termination of their travels. The bigotry
-of the Mohammedans rendered it difficult to obtain
-a place of burial for the dead, who was interred in
-the European fashion; which, immediately after their
-departure, caused the Arabs, who imagine that Europeans
-bury treasures with their dead, to exhume
-the body. Finding nothing to reward their pains,
-they compelled the Jews to reinter him; and as
-these honest people complained that they were
-likely to have no remuneration for their labour,
-the governor allowed them to take the coffin in payment,
-and restore the body naked to the earth.</p>
-
-<p>On the 17th of July, 1763, they arrived in the
-environs of Sana, and sent forward a servant with
-a letter, announcing their arrival to the chief minister
-of the imam. This statesman, however, who
-had previously received tidings of their approach,
-and was desirous of receiving them with true Arab
-politeness, had already despatched one of his secretaries
-to meet them at the distance of half a league
-from the city. This gentleman informed them that
-they had been long expected at Sana, and that, in
-order to render their stay agreeable, the imam had
-assigned them a country-house at <i>Bir el Assab</i>.
-While they were conversing with the secretary, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
-secretly congratulating themselves on their good
-fortune, they arrived at the entrance into their garden,
-where the Arab desired them to alight. They
-of course obeyed, but soon discovered that their
-guide had played them a trick in the manner of the
-people of Cairo, for he remained on his ass during
-the rest of the way, which was considerable, enjoying
-the pleasure of beholding a number of Franks
-toiling along on foot beside his beast. This put
-them out of humour, and their spleen was increased
-when, on arriving at their villa, they found that,
-however elegant or agreeable it might be, it did not
-contain a single article of furniture, or a person who
-would provide them even with bread and water.</p>
-
-<p>Next day, however, they received from the imam
-a present of five sheep, three camel-loads of wood, a
-large quantity of wax-tapers, rice, and spices. At
-the same time they were informed that two days at
-least would elapse before they could obtain an audience,
-a matter about which they were indifferent;
-but that they could not in the mean time quit their
-house. Though considerably chagrined at the latter
-circumstance, they hoped in some measure to neutralize
-its effects, by receiving the visits of such natives
-as curiosity, or any other motive, might allure
-to the house; and accordingly were very much gratified
-at the appearance of a Jew, who had performed
-in their company the journey from Cairo to Loheia.
-This young Israelite, delighted to spend a few moments
-in the company of persons who received him
-without any demonstrations of contempt, appeared
-to experience a gratification in obliging them; and
-came on the second day accompanied by one of the
-most celebrated astrologers of his sect, from whom
-Niebuhr learned the Hebrew appellations of several
-stars. While he was yet conversing with this
-learned descendant of Abraham, the secretary of the
-imam arrived. They were ignorant of the etiquette
-of the court of Sana, according to which they should
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>
-have abstained from receiving as well as from paying
-visits; but the secretary, whose business it was
-to have instructed them on these points, doubly
-enraged by their infraction of the rules of decorum,
-and by a sense of his own negligence, directed all
-the violence of his fury against the unfortunate
-Jews, whose society he imagined must have been
-equally disagreeable to the travellers as it would
-have been to him. He therefore not only expelled
-them from the house, but, in order to protect the
-imam’s guests from a repetition of the same intrusion,
-gave peremptory orders to their Mohammedan
-attendant to admit no person whatever until they
-should have obtained their audience.</p>
-
-<p>Two days after their arrival they were admitted
-into the presence of the imam. It is probable that,
-having previously formed an exalted idea of the
-splendour of oriental princes, the reader will be
-liable to disappointment on the present occasion.
-The riches and magnificence of the califs, however,
-of which we find so many glowing descriptions in
-the Thousand and One Nights, in D’Herbelot, and
-many other writers, have long passed away, leaving
-to the successors of those religious monarchs nothing
-but remembrance of ancient glory, which
-gleams like a meteoric light about their throne and
-diadem. Niebuhr, arriving at Sana from the sandy
-deserts of the Tehama, where poverty reigns paramount
-over every thing, enjoyed the advantage of
-possessing an imagination sobered by stern realities.
-His fancy depicted the court of the imam in the
-livery of the desert. He expected little. If he
-was disappointed, therefore, it was not disagreeably.</p>
-
-<p>The imam, with a vanity pardonable enough in a
-prince who learns from his cradle to estimate his
-own greatness by the pomp and glitter which surround
-him, had in fact employed the two days elapsed
-since the arrival of his guests in active preparations
-for their reception; and the rules of etiquette forbidding
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>
-strangers to pay or receive visits during the
-interval, were originally intended to conceal this
-circumstance, and create the belief that the holyday
-appearance of the court was its ordinary costume.
-Our travellers were conducted to the palace by the
-minister’s secretary, who here performed what is
-called the mehmandar’s office in Persia. They
-found the great court of the edifice thronged with
-horses, officers, and other Arabs of various grades;
-so that it required the ministry of the imam’s grand
-equerry to open them a way through the crowd. The
-hall of audience was a spacious square apartment,
-vaulted above, and having on its centre several fountains
-of water, which, gushing aloft to a considerable
-height, and falling again incessantly, maintained a
-refreshing coolness in the air. A broad divan,
-adorned with fine Persian carpets, occupied the
-extremity of the hall, and flanked the throne, which
-was merely covered with silken stuffs, and rich
-cushions. Here the imam sat cross-legged, according
-to the custom of the East. He received the
-travellers graciously, allowed them to kiss the hem
-of his garment, and the back and palm of his hand&mdash;an
-honour which is but sparingly granted to strangers.
-At the conclusion of this ceremony a herald
-cried aloud, “God save the imam!” and all the people
-repeated the same words. As their knowledge
-of Arabic was still very limited, they conversed
-with the imam by means of an interpreter, a contrivance
-admirably adapted for shortening public conferences,
-since there are few persons who, under
-such circumstances, would be disposed to indulge in
-useless circumlocution.</p>
-
-<p>The result of this audience was, that they obtained
-the prince’s permission to remain in the country
-as long as they desired; and on their retiring, a
-small present in money was sent them, which they
-judiciously determined to accept. In the afternoon
-of the same day they were invited to the minister’s
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>
-villa, where Niebuhr exhibited his mathematical instruments,
-his microscopes, books, engravings, &amp;c.;
-at the sight of which Fakih Achmed expressed the
-highest satisfaction. From the various questions
-which he put to them, they discovered, moreover,
-that he himself was a man of very considerable
-knowledge, particularly in geography; while from
-his constant intercourse with foreigners his manners
-had acquired an ease and gracefulness which rendered
-his company highly pleasing. Nevertheless,
-Niebuhr, who feared that the cupidity of this minister,
-or of some other courtier, might be excited by
-the sight of his instruments, regretted to perceive
-these tokens of curiosity, and the necessity he was
-under of satisfying it; but his suspicions, which appear
-to have been as unfounded as they were illiberal,
-were not of long duration, for no man demanded of
-him any part of his property, or seemed to regard it
-with covetousness. He, in fact, learned shortly
-afterward that even the presents which it was
-judged necessary to make both to the imam and his
-minister were altogether unexpected, since they
-were not merchants, and demanded no favours of
-prince or courtiers.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr confesses that the reception which he
-and his companions met with at Sana was marked
-by a degree of civility and friendship that far surpassed
-their expectations. The Arabs would seem,
-indeed, to have derived so much gratification from
-their society, that it is more than probable they would
-willingly have made some sacrifice to retain them;
-but the death of Von Haven and Forskaal had cast a
-damp over their imaginations; they apprehended
-that disease might even then be undermining their
-constitutions, and were therefore more desirous of
-flying from the country than of studying its productions
-or its inhabitants. When they departed from
-Mokha several English ships were lying there,
-taking in cargoes of coffee for India; and this circumstance,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
-by promising to facilitate their progress
-farther towards the east, operated strongly upon
-their determination to quit Arabia, the original object
-of their mission, for other regions which appeared
-more agreeable. One of Niebuhr’s biographers appears
-to think that it was mere solicitude to transmit
-to Europe an account of what had been performed
-by the expedition, and not any apprehension of danger,
-which rendered him so exceedingly desirous
-of quitting Yemen, for that he never clung to life
-with any great eagerness. I have by no means an
-unfavourable opinion of Niebuhr’s courage, which,
-on the contrary, I consider to have been in general
-equal to the dangers to which he was exposed; but
-I nowhere find any traces of that stoical indifference
-about life and death which his biographer seems to
-attribute to him; and am persuaded, that on the occasion
-of his departure from Sana, it was the apprehension
-of death, united, perhaps, with a longing for
-European society, which actuated his movements.
-At the same time I acknowledge that his fears
-were natural, and that most travellers under similar
-circumstances would have acted much the same
-way. We miss, however, in Niebuhr, both on this
-and on all other occasions, the chivalrous spirit of
-Marco Polo, Pietro della Valle, Chardin, and Bruce,
-as we miss in his writings the enthusiasm which
-casts so powerful a charm over the records of their
-adventures.</p>
-
-<p>The same reasons which induce me to acknowledge
-the rational nature of Niebuhr’s apology for
-suddenly quitting Yemen long before he had completed
-his examination and description of it, incline
-me likewise to accept his reasons for avoiding the
-road by Jerim and Táäs, which would have led him
-by Haddâfa and Dhâfar, where Hamyaric inscriptions
-were said to exist. He had already been frequently
-deceived by the misrepresentations of Arabic
-ignorance, and therefore doubted the accuracy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
-of his informants. The three remaining members
-of the mission set out from Sana on the 26th of
-July, and, arriving at Mokha on the 5th of August,
-found that their apprehensions of danger at Sana,
-which, though excusable, were not well founded, had
-precipitated them into real peril; for the English
-ship in which they intended to embark was by no
-means ready to sail, so that they had to remain in
-that burning climate nearly a whole month, during
-which almost every individual in the party, servants
-and all, fell sick.</p>
-
-<p>The ship in which Niebuhr at length set sail for
-India belonged to Mr. Francis Scott, a younger son
-of the Scotts of Harden, a jacobite family of Roxburghshire.
-With this gentleman Niebuhr ever after
-lived on terms of intimate friendship; and “five-and-thirty
-years afterward,” says our traveller’s
-son, the historian of the Roman republic, “when I
-studied in Edinburgh, I was received in all respects
-as one of the family in the house of this venerable
-man, who then lived at his ease in the Scottish
-capital on the fortune he had acquired by honourable
-industry.”</p>
-
-<p>On his arrival at Bombay he met with the most
-cordial reception from the English, in whose society
-he had first learned to delight while in Egypt.
-Here he spent a considerable time in studying the
-manners and customs of the Hindoos, and his observations,
-though now destitute of value, must at
-that time have possessed considerable interest, above
-all on the Continent. He here lost Cramer, the last
-of his companions; Baurenfeind, the artist, having
-died on the voyage. During his stay at Bombay he
-made a voyage to Surat, famous in the history of
-oriental commerce and in the Arabian Nights; but
-his stay was short, and he returned to Bombay
-without pushing his researches any farther into the
-interior. The passion for travelling was certainly
-never very powerful in Niebuhr; but he was posessed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>
-by considerable curiosity, and this passion
-induced him to form the design of proceeding in an
-English ship to China; but being unwell at the time
-of the ship’s departure, he relinquished the design,
-which he never afterward resumed.</p>
-
-<p>His residence at Bombay, a much less healthy
-place than Sana, was continued so long, that I am
-strongly inclined to suspect the want of European
-society may, after all, have numbered among his most
-powerful reasons for hurrying from Yemen. From
-this city he forwarded the manuscripts of his deceased
-companions as well as his own papers, by
-way of London, to Copenhagen; and at length, on
-the 8th of December, 1764, set sail in one of the
-company’s ships of war, bound for Muskat and the
-Persian Gulf. During this voyage he beheld the
-surface of the sea for half a German mile in extent
-covered at night with that luminous appearance
-which we denominate “phosphoric fires;” and which,
-according to his opinion, arises entirely from shoals
-of medusas, which by the English sailors are called
-“blubbers.” A few days afterward, as they approached
-the shore of Oman, they were accompanied
-for a considerable distance by a troop of dolphins,
-which, by the persevering manner in which they followed
-the ship, seemed, as Lucian jocularly observes,
-to be animated by a kind of philanthropy, as when
-they bore Melicerta and Arion to the shore on their
-backs.</p>
-
-<p>They arrived at Muskat on the 3d of January,
-1765; and here Niebuhr, had the interior of Arabia
-possessed any attractions for him, had once more
-an opportunity of indulging his curiosity, and fulfilling
-the original design of the expedition; for, from
-the humane and polished manners of the people of
-Oman, travelling was here, he says, attended with
-no more danger than in Yemen. He preferred,
-however, ascending the Persian Gulf in an English
-ship; and therefore, after a stay of a few days, set
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
-sail for Abusheher, where he arrived on the 4th of
-February.</p>
-
-<p>Here Niebuhr, who had learned the English language
-at Bombay, found himself still in the company
-of one of our countrymen, from whom he obtained
-a plan of the city, together with much curious and
-valuable information respecting the country and its
-inhabitants. This Englishman, whose name was
-Jervis, spoke, read, and wrote the Persian with fluency,
-and amused himself with making a collection
-of manuscripts in that language; among which was
-the “Life of Nadir Shah,” by his own private secretary
-Mohammed Mahadi Khan. The authenticity
-of this work was so highly spoken of in Persia, that
-Niebuhr was at some pains to procure a copy of it for
-the King of Denmark’s library; and it was from this
-copy that Sir William Jones afterward compiled his
-“History of Nadir Shah,” once celebrated, but now
-sunk into oblivion. At Abusheher our traveller saw
-several of that species of cat numbers of which are
-now brought into Europe from Angola. They were
-procured from Kermân, and it was said that they
-would nowhere breed except in those countries in
-which the shawl goat was found&mdash;an opinion which
-has long been proved to have been erroneous.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after Niebuhr’s arrival at Abusheher, Mr.
-Jervis determined upon sending a quantity of merchandise
-to Shiraz; and his intention was no sooner
-made public, than a number of petty merchants,
-together with several families from the interior, who
-had been expelled from their homes by the troubles
-consequent upon the death of Nadir Shah, desired
-to unite themselves to his party; and thus a small
-kafilah was at once formed. So excellent an opportunity
-of visiting the most beautiful city of Persia,
-as well as the famous ruins of Persepolis, was not
-to be overlooked. Our traveller therefore joined the
-trading caravan, and on the 15th of February set out
-for the interior.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
-
-<p>For this journey, however, he was but badly prepared.
-He was wholly ignorant of the Persian language,
-and therefore, had he not by great good fortune
-found some persons among the party who spoke
-Arabic, as well as an Armenian who was a tolerable
-master of the Italian, he must have been reduced to
-depend upon the universal but scanty language of
-signs. Strange to say, likewise, he had abandoned
-the oriental costume, though fully aware, by his own
-account, of the advantages to be derived from it by
-a traveller. In other respects he conducted himself
-judiciously; for, understanding that the English, notwithstanding
-the troubled state of Persia, had nowhere
-any thing to fear, he represented himself as
-an Englishman; and thus, without passport or formal
-permission, he travelled with perfect freedom
-and safety. He observed during this journey a curious
-superstition among the Armenians, of which
-he had nowhere else discovered any traces: having
-despatched his servant upon some business at a distance
-from the encampment, he was one day compelled
-to act as his own cook, and was about to cut
-off the head of a fowl. His face at that moment
-happening to be turned towards the west, an Armenian
-who was present informed him that a Christian
-should turn his face to the east when he killed a
-fowl, no less than when he prayed. Others (as the
-affair was a serious business) conjectured that he
-turned towards Mecca, either that his servant, who
-was a Mohammedan, might conscientiously partake
-of the food, or because that in reality was his <i>kebleh</i>.
-Seeing, however, that people endeavoured to decide
-respecting his religion by the mode in which he
-slaughtered a hen, he for the future relinquished to
-his servant the art and mystery of cookery.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller had an opportunity, near Firashbend,
-of visiting a Turkoman camp. He found them rich
-in camels, horses, asses, cows, and sheep. Their
-women, like those of the Bedouins, enjoyed the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
-most perfect liberty, and wore no veils. These Turkoman
-women were said to be exceedingly laborious,
-and the small carpets so universal in Persia
-were of their workmanship. He likewise beheld a
-Kurdish family. Farther on, he had a very laughable
-adventure with a troop of Armenian women, which,
-as characteristic at once of the Armenians and of
-himself, merits some attention. Having travelled
-for some time through rain and hail, the kafilah at
-length halted, near the village of <i>Romshun</i>, in which
-Niebuhr hired a horse for a day, and purchased a
-quantity of wood, in the hope of enjoying a good
-fire until bedtime. Not desiring, however, to taste
-of these blessings alone, he invited several Armenians
-to share the advantage of his apartments,
-which they most readily accepted. Presently, however,
-a number of women and children presented
-themselves for admission, and appeared extremely
-well satisfied when he granted them permission to
-place themselves inside of the door. He had shortly
-afterward occasion to leave the house for a moment.
-Upon his return, he found the husbands of
-the women seated near the entrance of the house,
-while the whole harem had established itself round
-the fire! and conceiving that it might be imprudent
-to sit down by the fire among the women, or to
-drive them away from it, he allowed them, though
-certainly not from politeness, to dry themselves
-first. Here he was detained for twenty-four hours
-by bad weather. The apartments which he occupied
-were on the second story, and his horse, which
-had its quarters in the adjoining chamber, being
-somewhat restless in the night, broke through the
-floor, and fell down into the landlord’s apartment
-below!</p>
-
-<p>The kafilah reached Shiraz on the 4th of March.
-Here he was hospitably received and entertained by
-the only European in the city, a young English merchant,
-whose name he should have been at the pains
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
-to learn, for assuredly it was not, as he imagined,
-<i>Mr. Hercules</i>. His stay at Shiraz was rendered
-agreeable by the politeness of the governor, who,
-at his first audience, informed him that he would
-decapitate the first person who should offer him any
-injury in his territories. The audience being over,
-one of the governor’s friends undertook to show
-them the palace. Several of the apartments were
-coated with beautiful Tabriz marble, and covered
-with magnificent carpets; and among the ornaments
-of the palace were numerous European mirrors,
-and pictures of Persian workmanship, among
-which was one representing a woman bathing, almost
-wholly naked. Niebuhr was greatly surprised
-to find pictures of this kind in the house of a Mohammedan;
-but, in fact, the <i>Shiahs</i> are far less rigid
-on this point than the <i>Soonnees</i>; and we learn from
-the Arabian Nights, that even so early as the time
-of Haroon al Rashid painting was encouraged in
-Persia and Mesopotamia, since that celebrated prince
-is said to have adorned his palace with the performances
-of the principal Persian artists.</p>
-
-<p>From Shiraz he proceeded to the ruins of Persepolis,
-the site and nature of which I have already
-had occasion to describe in the lives of Chardin and
-Kæmpfer. His head-quarters during his stay was
-at the small village of Merdast. From thence, as
-well as from the other villages, the peasants frequently
-came to observe him during his examination
-of the ruins, in which he constantly employed the
-whole day, from eight o’clock in the morning until
-five in the afternoon. The majority of these visiters
-were women and young girls, who were curious
-to see a European; and the whole of the population
-were so entirely harmless, that the traveller felt
-himself as safe in their company as he could have
-been in any village in Europe. He here received a
-visit from an Arab sheïkh, a learned, polished, and
-agreeable man, who had passed thirty years in Persia,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>
-during which time he had amassed considerable
-wealth, and now lived in independence and ease.</p>
-
-<p>From Persepolis he returned by the way of Shiraz
-to Abusheher, where he embarked in one of the
-country vessels for the island of Karak, where he
-was hospitably received and entertained by the
-Dutch merchants settled there; and after a short
-stay, proceeded to Bassorah. Here he embarked in
-a small vessel which was about to sail up the Euphrates
-to Hillah. His companion, during this voyage,
-was an officer of the janizary corps, who lay
-in a small chamber close to Niebuhr’s cabin, and appeared
-to be at the point of death. In other respects
-this little voyage, which occupied twenty-one
-days, was sufficiently agreeable. The passengers
-were remarkable for their good-humour and
-obliging disposition; and often, when our traveller
-set up his quadrant on the banks of the stream, they
-stood round him in a circle, while he was making
-his observations, to screen him from the wind with
-their long flowing dresses.</p>
-
-<p>At Rumahia, a small village on the Euphrates, he
-lodged with two of his Mohammedan companions
-at the house of a Soonnee, who happened to be the
-<i>moollah</i> of a mosque. Soon after their arrival, our
-traveller entered into conversation with his host,
-and their discourse turning on the subject of marriage,
-he observed, among other things, that in Europe
-a man, when he gives his daughter to any one
-in wedlock, is generally accustomed to add a considerable
-sum of money. This custom greatly delighted
-the moollah. “Do you hear,” says he to
-his mother-in-law, who was sitting near him, while
-the daughter was preparing their <i>pilau</i>,&mdash;“do you
-hear what the stranger is saying? It was not thus
-that you acted towards me, my mother; I was compelled
-to pay you a sum of money before you would
-give me your daughter!” The mother-in-law, after
-patiently hearing him to the end, replied, “Ah! my
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
-son, upon what should I and my daughter have
-subsisted, had I given thee my field and my date-trees?”
-This slight interruption in the conversation
-having ceased, Niebuhr, resuming the thread of
-the discourse, remarked, that in Europe no man
-could possess more than one wife, under pain of
-death; that married persons enjoyed every thing in
-common; and that their property descended to their
-children. It was now the old lady’s turn to be eloquent.
-“Well, my son,” says she, “have you
-marked what the gentleman has just related? Ah!
-what justice prevails in those countries! Ah! had
-you no other wife than my daughter, and could I be
-sure you would never divorce her, how willingly
-would I relinquish to you my house, and all I possess!”
-The young woman, who had hitherto seemed
-to pay no attention to what was said, now likewise
-joined in the discussion. “Alas! my husband!”
-said she, “how can you desire that my mother
-should give you her house? You would soon bestow
-it upon your other wives. You love them better
-than me. I see you so seldom!”</p>
-
-<p>The mother and daughter proceeded in this style
-for some time, and at length Niebuhr, turning to the
-moollah, demanded how many wives he had.&mdash;“Four,”
-replied the man. This was the highest
-number permitted by the law. He had, therefore,
-indulged his affections to the utmost; and as each
-of his spouses had a separate house and garden, he
-flitted at pleasure from wife to wife, and was everywhere
-received as a man returning home from a long
-journey. Our traveller inquired of this zealous polygamist
-whether his private happiness had been increased
-or diminished by his having availed himself
-of the privilege of a Mohammedan; but, because
-his reply was contrary to his own European views,
-as that of every other Mussulman, whom he had
-questioned on the subject, had been, he absurdly accused
-him of insincerity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span></p>
-
-<p>From this place he proceeded to <i>Meshed Ali</i>,
-where he was deterred from entering the mosque,
-by the fear that he might, as a punishment for his
-presumption, be compelled to profess Mohammedanism;
-but he admired the exterior of its gilded
-dome, which glittered like a globe of flame in the
-sun. The riches of this mosque, allowing much for
-the exaggeration of the <i>Shiahs</i>, must still be immense.
-The interior of the dome is no less superbly
-gilt than the exterior, and is adorned with
-Arabic inscriptions in rich enamel; other inscriptions,
-in letters of gold, glitter along the walls;
-while enormous candelabra, in silver and fine gold,
-set with jewels, support the tapers which afford
-light to the pious during the darkness of the night.
-This accumulation of gorgeous ornaments, though
-supplied from a commendable motive, affects the
-worshippers injuriously, and once occasioned a
-pious Arab to exclaim, “Verily, the treasures lavished
-upon this tomb have made me forget God!”</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr next visited the ruins of Kufa, and Meshed
-Hussein, and then returned to Hillah, near
-which are found the misshapen ruins of Babylon.
-We must not, as he justly observes, expect to find
-among the remains of this city any thing resembling
-the sublime magnificence which cast a halo over the
-ruins of Persian and Egyptian cities. Babylon, like
-modern London, was a city of bricks, prodigious in
-extent, mighty in appearance, but calculated, from
-the nature of its materials, to give way, when war
-or time laid its giant hands upon its towers. Its
-very site is now become an enigma, “a place for the
-bittern, and pools of water.” Modern travellers,
-however, have since visited this celebrated spot, and
-described it so frequently, that it is unnecessary to
-pause and repeat what they have written, particularly
-as no two agree upon any one point.</p>
-
-<p>His stay at Babylon was brief, and on the 5th of
-January, 1766, he left it to proceed towards Bagdad,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
-where he remained until the 3d of March, awaiting
-the departure of a caravan for Syria. At length,
-finding no better companions, he departed with a
-kafilah composed wholly of Jews, from one of
-whom, who had travelled much in the country, he
-expected to derive considerable information. He
-still possessed the sultan’s firman, which he had
-procured at Constantinople, and had likewise provided
-himself with a passport from the Pasha of
-Bagdad. He therefore anticipated no interruption
-on the way. In proceeding from Bagdad to Mousul,
-he traversed the plain on which the great battle
-of Arbela, which reduced Persia to a Macedonian
-province, was gained by Alexander. Ruin and desolation
-have since that day been busily at work in
-these countries. Among the vagabonds who now
-roam over or vegetate upon these renowned scenes,
-are a strange people, accused by many writers of
-worshipping the devil; I mean the <i>Yezeedis</i>, who,
-though suspected by Niebuhr of being an offshoot
-from the Beyazi sect of Oman, appear to be rather
-the descendants of the ancient Manichæans, or a
-remnant of the Hindoo population, worshippers of
-<i>Siva</i>, hurled into this obscure haunt by the storms
-of war.</p>
-
-<p>At Mousul, where he found numerous Catholic
-and Nestorian Christians, he was received with
-extreme scorn, because his worthy coreligionists
-learned that he did not fast during Lent. However,
-by allowing himself to be defrauded a little by a
-Dominican father, a dealer in coins and physic, he
-quickly regained his character, and, during the remainder
-of his stay, was reputed a very good Christian.
-From this city he departed with a numerous
-caravan, bound partly for Aleppo, partly for Mardin,
-Orfah, or Armenia. The whole number of the
-travellers, including a guard of fifty soldiers, and
-about three or four hundred Arabs, amounted to
-little less than a thousand men. Yet, notwithstanding
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
-their numbers, the slightest report of there being
-a horde of Kurds in their neighbourhood threw
-these gallant warriors into consternation, and, upon
-one particular occasion, their confusion was so extreme
-that, like the honest knight of La Mancha,
-they mistook a flock of sheep for an army. The
-robbers on this road are exceedingly expert in their
-vocation; and one of the merchants of the caravan,
-who had often travelled by this route, amused Niebuhr
-with an anecdote illustrative of their skill,
-which deserves to be repeated:&mdash;He was one night
-encamped, he said, on the summit of a steep hill,
-and for the greater security had pitched his tent on
-the edge of the precipice. He himself kept watch
-until midnight, at which time he was relieved by his
-servant, who, as it would appear, soon fell asleep.
-On awaking about daybreak he observed a robber in
-the tent. He had already fastened the hook, with
-which he meant to perform his feat, in a bale of
-merchandise; but sprang out of the tent, upon perceiving
-he was discovered, still holding fast the
-cord of his hook. The merchant, however, immediately
-detached the hook from the bale, and fastened
-it in the clothes of his slumbering domestic,
-who, as the robber continued tugging violently at
-the cord, was soon roused. The robber pulled, the
-servant rolled along like a woolsack, and the master
-had the satisfaction of seeing him tumble down to
-the bottom of the hill, that he might in future be
-somewhat more careful of his master’s property.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr himself, whose cautious temper generally
-defended him from danger, had on this journey
-a trifling adventure with an Arab sheïkh. It entered
-into the head of this fiery young Islamite that
-it would be amusing to have a frolic with a Giaour,
-and for this purpose he deprived our traveller of his
-bed and counterpanes. Niebuhr complained to the
-caravan bashi, but could only get a portion of his
-property restored. Next day, therefore, he applied
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
-to the sheïkh himself, who, instead of returning
-the articles, only jested with him upon his uncharitable
-disposition, which would not allow him
-to share his luxuries, even for a few days, with a
-true believer, who was willing to be condescending
-enough to sleep on the bed of an infidel. Our traveller,
-hoping to terrify the Arab, now produced the
-sultan’s firman, and the Pasha of Bagdad’s passport;
-but this only rendered matters worse. “Here
-in the desert,” said the sheïkh, “<i>I</i> am thy sultan
-and thy pasha. Thy papers have no authority with
-me!” Some days afterward, however, the Arab
-returned him his effects, from fear, according to
-Niebuhr, of the Governor of Mardin; but more
-probably because he had never intended to retain
-them.</p>
-
-<p>From this point of his travels he proceeded by
-way of Mardin, Diarbekr, and Orfah, to Aleppo,
-where he arrived on the 6th of June. Here he remained
-some time, during which he acquired the
-friendship of the celebrated Dr. Patrick Russel,
-from whom he received much information respecting
-the Kurds and Turkomans, whose principal
-chiefs frequently visited our distinguished countryman
-at his house. His inquiries likewise extended
-to the Nassaireah and Ismaeleah, who, from the accounts
-of the Mohammedans and oriental Christians,
-would appear to have preserved among them
-the rites and ceremonies of the ancient worshippers
-of Venus. Nocturnal orgies, in which every
-man chose his mistress in the dark, and the adoration
-of the Yoni, in a young woman who exposed
-herself naked for the purpose of receiving this extravagant
-reverence, were likewise attributed to
-them; but, as Niebuhr observes, there is nothing
-too absurd or abominable to be related by the orthodox
-and dominant party of a persecuted heretical
-sect. He, in fact, found that the Roman Catholics
-everywhere in the East represented their Protestant
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
-brethren as persons who lived without hope and
-without God in the world; while we, on the other
-hand, look upon them as idolaters, as far removed
-as the pagans of old from the pure religion of Christ.</p>
-
-<p>After the death of his companions, Niebuhr had
-applied to the Danish government for permission to
-extend his journey in the East, and, through the benevolence
-of Count Bernstorf, his wishes had been
-readily complied with. He therefore passed from
-Syria into Cyprus, for the purpose of copying certain
-Phenician inscriptions at Cittium, the birth-place
-of Zeno, which had, it was suspected, been
-incorrectly copied by Pococke. Finding no inscriptions
-of the kind on the spot to which he had been
-directed, he, with an illiberality which was not
-common with him, imputed to Pococke the gross absurdity
-of having confounded Armenian with Phenician
-characters; but, as his recent biographer remarks,
-it is more probable that the stones had, in
-the interval, been removed.</p>
-
-<p>From Cyprus he passed over into Palestine,
-visited Jerusalem, Sidon, Mount Lebanon, and Damascus,
-and then returned to Aleppo. Here he continued
-until the 20th of November, 1766, when he
-set out with a caravan for Brusa, in Asia Minor;
-and in traversing the table-land of Mount Taurus,
-suffered, says one of his biographers, as much from
-frosts, piercing winds, and snow-drifts, as he could
-have done in a winter journey in northern regions.
-Lofty mountains are everywhere cold. Chardin
-nearly perished among the snows of Mount Caucasus;
-Don Ulloa suffered severely from the same
-cause in the Andes, almost directly under the equator;
-and the lofty range of the Himalaya, which
-divides Hindostan from Tibet, is so excessively
-cold, that Baber Khan, though a soldier and a Tartar,
-beheld with terror the obstacle which these mountains
-presented to his ambition; and their summits
-have hitherto been protected by cold from human
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>
-intrusion. Upon reaching Brusa, however, he reposed
-himself for some time, and then set out for
-Constantinople, where he arrived on the 20th of
-February, 1767.</p>
-
-<p>Here he remained three or four months, studying
-the institutions of the empire, civil and military. He
-then directed his course through Roumelia, Bulgaria,
-Wallachia, and Moldavia, towards Poland, and on
-arriving at Warsaw was received with extraordinary
-politeness by King Stanislaus Poniatowsky, with
-whom he afterward corresponded for many years.
-From Warsaw he continued his journey towards
-Copenhagen, and visited on the way Göttingen and
-his beloved native place, when the death of his
-mother’s brother, during his absence, had left him in
-possession of a considerable marsh-farm. He arrived
-at Copenhagen in November, and was received in
-the most flattering manner by the court, the ministers,
-and men of science.</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr now employed himself in preparing his
-various works for publication. The “Description
-of Arabia” was published in 1772, and although it
-must unquestionably be regarded as one of the most
-exact and copious works of the kind ever composed
-on any Asiatic country, it met with but a cold reception
-from the public. This, however, is not at
-all surprising. Written in the old style of books of
-travels, which appear to have aimed at imparting
-instruction without at all interesting the imagination,
-it can never be relished by the generality of readers,
-who at all times, and especially in these latter ages,
-have required to be cheated into knowledge by the
-secret but irresistible charms of composition. Niebuhr,
-unfortunately, possessed in a very limited degree
-the art of an author. His style has nothing of
-that life and vivacity which compensates, in many
-writers, for the want of method. But those who
-neglect his works on these accounts are to be pitied;
-for they abound with information, and everywhere
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>
-exhibit marks of a remarkable power of penetrating
-into the character and motives of men, and a noble,
-manly benevolence, which generally inclines to a
-favourable, but just interpretation. He understood
-the Arabs better than almost any other traveller, and
-his opinion of them upon the whole was remarkably
-favourable. It is to him, therefore, that in an attempt
-to appreciate the character of this extraordinary
-people, I would resort, in preference even to
-Volney, who, whatever might be the perspicuity of
-his mind, had far fewer data whereon to found his
-conclusions.</p>
-
-<p>In 1773 he married, and his wife bore him two
-children, a daughter and B. G. Niebuhr, the author
-of the “Roman History.” Next year the first volume
-of his “Travels” appeared, and was received by the
-public no less coldly than the “Description of Arabia;”
-which was, perhaps, the cause why the second
-volume was not published until 1778; and why the
-third, which would have completed his “Travels’”
-history, was never laid before the world, or even
-prepared for publication. This is exceedingly to be
-regretted, as, whatever may be the defects of Niebuhr
-as an author, which it appeared to be my duty
-to explain, he was, as an observer, highly distinguished
-for sagacity; and his account of Asia Minor
-would have been still valuable, notwithstanding all
-that has since been written on that country.</p>
-
-<p>He continued to live at Copenhagen for ten years;
-but at length the retirement of Count Bernstorf from
-the ministry, and a report that General Huth designed
-to despatch him into Norway for the purpose
-of making a geographical survey of that country,
-disgusted him with the capital. He therefore demanded
-of the government permission to exchange
-his military for a civil appointment, and accordingly
-obtained the situation of secretary of the district of
-Meldorf, whither he removed his family in the year
-1778. This town afforded Niebuhr few opportunities
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>
-of entering into society. He consequently
-endeavoured to extract from solitude and from study
-the pleasures which he could not take in the company
-of mankind, and addicted himself to gardening
-and books. When his children had reached an age
-to require instruction, he undertook to conduct their
-education himself. “He instructed us,” says his son,
-“in geography, and related to us many passages of
-history. He taught me English and French&mdash;better,
-at any rate, than they would have been taught by
-anybody else in such a place; and something of
-mathematics, in which he would have proceeded
-much further, had not want of zeal and desire in me
-unfortunately destroyed all his pleasure in the occupation.
-One thing, indeed, was characteristic of his
-whole system of teaching: as he had no idea how
-anybody could have knowledge of any kind placed
-before him, and not seize it with the greatest avidity,
-and hold to it with the steadiest perseverance, he
-became disinclined to teach whenever we appeared
-inattentive or reluctant to learn. As the first instruction
-I received in Latin, before I had the good
-fortune to become a scholar of the learned and excellent
-Jäger, was very defective, he helped me, and
-read with me “Cæsar’s Commentaries.” Here
-again, the peculiar bent of his mind showed itself:
-he always called my attention much more strongly
-to the geography than the history. The map of
-Ancient Gaul by D’Anville, for whom he had the
-greatest reverence, always lay before us. I was
-obliged to look out every place as it occurred, and to
-tell its exact situation. His instruction had no pretensions
-to be grammatical; his knowledge of the
-language, so far as it went, was gained entirely by
-reading, and by looking at it as a whole. He was
-of opinion that a man did not deserve to learn what
-he had not principally worked out for himself; and
-that a teacher should be only a helper to assist the
-pupil out of otherwise inexplicable difficulties. From
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
-these causes his attempts to teach me Arabic, when
-he had already lost that facility in speaking it without
-which it is impossible to dispense with grammatical
-instruction, to his disappointment and my
-shame, did not succeed. When I afterward taught
-it myself, and sent him translations from it, he was
-greatly delighted.</p>
-
-<p>“I have the most lively recollection of many descriptions
-of the structure of the universe, and accounts
-of eastern countries, which he used to tell me
-instead of fairy tales, when he took me on his knee
-before I went to bed. The history of Mohammed;
-of the first califs, particularly of Omar and Ali, for
-whom he had the deepest veneration; of the conquests
-and spread of Islamism; of the virtues of the
-heroes of the new faith, and of the Turkish converts,
-were imprinted on my childish imagination in the
-liveliest colours. Historical works on these same
-subjects were nearly the first books that fell into my
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>“I recollect, too, that on the Christmas-eve of my
-tenth year, by way of making the day one of peculiar
-solemnity and rejoicing to me, he went to a beautiful
-chest containing his manuscripts, which was regarded
-by us children, and indeed by the whole
-household, as a kind of ark of the covenant; took
-out the papers relating to Africa, and read to me
-from them. He had taught me to draw maps, and
-with his encouragement and assistance I soon produced
-maps of Habbesh and Soudan.</p>
-
-<p>“I could not make him a more welcome birthday
-present than a sketch of the geography of eastern
-countries, or translations from voyages and travels,
-executed as might be expected from a child. He
-had originally no stronger desire than that I might
-be his successor as a traveller in the East. But the
-influence of a very tender and anxious mother upon
-my physical training and constitution, thwarted his
-plan, almost as soon as it was formed. In consequence
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
-of her opposition, my father afterward gave
-up all thoughts of it.</p>
-
-<p>“The distinguished kindness he had experienced
-from the English, and the services which he had
-been able to render to the East India Company, by
-throwing light upon the higher part of the Red Sea,
-led him to entertain the idea of sending me, as soon
-as I was old enough, to India. With this scheme,
-which, plausible as it was, he was afterward as glad
-to see frustrated as I was myself, many things, in
-the education he gave me, was intimately connected.
-He taught me, by preference, out of English books,
-and put English works, of all sorts, into my hands.
-At a very early age he gave me a regular supply of
-English newspapers: circumstances which I record
-here, not on account of the powerful influence they
-have had on my maturer life, but as indications of
-his character.”</p>
-
-<p>In the winter of 1788 he received from Herder a
-copy of his “Persepolis,” which afforded him one
-proof that he was not forgotten by his countrymen.
-He took a deep interest in the war which was then
-raging against Turkey; for, in proportion to his love
-for the Arabs, was his hatred of the Turks, whom he
-cordially desired to see expelled from Europe. The
-French expedition to Egypt, however, was no object
-of gratification to him; for his dislike of the French
-was as strong as his dislike of the Turks, convinced
-that their absurd vanity and want of faith would
-infallibly neutralize the good effects even of the
-revolution itself. I am sorry to discover that, among
-other prejudices, he was led, partly, perhaps, from
-vanity, to accuse Bruce of having copied his astronomical
-observations; of having fabricated his conversation
-with Ali Bey; as well as, to borrow the
-strange language of his recent English biographer,
-“the pretended <i>journey over the Red Sea</i>, in <i>the country
-of Bab el Mandeb</i>, as well as that on the coast
-south from Cosseir.” The same writer informs us that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>
-“Niebuhr read Bruce’s work <i>without prejudice</i>, and
-the conclusion he arrived at was the same which is,
-since the second Edinburgh edition, and the publication
-of Salt’s two journeys, <i>the universal and ultimate
-one</i>.” During the composition of these Lives, I have
-almost constantly avoided every temptation to engage
-in controversy with any man; I hope, likewise,
-that I have escaped from another, and still
-stronger temptation, to exalt my own countrymen
-at the expense of foreigners; but I cannot regard it
-as my duty, on the present occasion, to permit to
-pass unnoticed what appears to me a mere ebullition
-of envy in Niebuhr, and of weakness and want of
-reflection in his biographer. What is meant by a
-“<i>journey over the Red Sea?</i>” And where does
-Bruce pretend to have travelled in the “<i>country</i> of
-<i>Bab el Mandeb?</i>” These Arabic words are, I believe,
-by oriental scholars acknowledged to signify the
-“Gate of Tears,” and were anciently applied to what
-is commonly called the “Strait of Bab el Mandel,”
-from the belief that those who issued through that
-strait into the ocean could never return. The biographer
-seems to misunderstand the state of the question.
-Bruce has often been charged with never having
-sailed down the Red Sea so far as the strait,
-notwithstanding his assertions in the affirmative.
-But who are his accusers? Lord Valentia, Salt, and
-others of that stamp; men who never dared to venture
-their beards amid the dangers which Bruce
-encountered intrepidly. With respect to the coast
-from Cosseir southward, what, I will venture to
-inquire, could Niebuhr have known about the matter?
-Had he ever set his foot upon it? Had he even
-beheld it from a distance? If he relied, as in fact he
-did, upon the testimony of others, who were they?
-what were their opportunities? and what their claims
-to be believed? I am far from insinuating that
-Lord Valentia and Mr. Salt have entered into a conspiracy
-to wound the memory of Bruce; but, to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
-adopt the language of an old orator, I would ask
-these gentlemen if they themselves could have been
-guilty of the impudent mendacity which they impute
-to Bruce? If, as there can be no doubt on the subject,
-Lord Valentia and Mr. Salt would spurn the
-imputation, is it to be for a moment believed that
-the discoverer of the sources of the Nile, the honourable,
-the fearless, the brave Bruce, could have
-condescended to do what these individuals, who,
-compared with him, are insignificant and obscure,
-would, by their own confession, have shrunk from
-perpetrating? But my unwillingness to speak harshly
-of Niebuhr, whose name ranks with me among
-those of the most honest and useful of travellers,
-forbids me to carry this discussion any further. I
-honour him for his knowledge, for his integrity, for
-his high sense of honour; but, for this very reason, I
-vehemently condemn his unjust attack upon the
-memory of our illustrious traveller. The opinion of
-his recent biographer, an able and, I make no doubt,
-a conscientious man, appears evidently to have
-arisen from an imperfect knowledge of the subject,
-and is therefore the less entitled to consideration.</p>
-
-<p>The account given by his distinguished son of the
-latter days of this meritorious traveller is worthy
-of finding a place here. “His appearance,” says
-he, “was calculated to leave a delightful picture in
-the mind. All his features, as well as his extinguished
-eyes, wore the expression of the extreme
-and exhausted old age of an extraordinarily robust
-nature. It was impossible to behold a more venerable
-sight. So venerable was it, that a Cossack
-who entered an unbidden guest into the chamber
-where he sat with his silver locks uncovered, was
-so struck with it, that he manifested the greatest
-reverence for him, and a sincere and cordial interest
-for the whole household. His sweetness of temper
-was unalterable, though he often expressed his desire
-to go to his final home, since all which he had
-desired to live for had been accomplished.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A numerous, and as yet unbroken, family circle
-was assembled around him; and every day in which
-he was not assailed by some peculiar indisposition
-he conversed with cheerfulness and cordial enjoyment
-on the happy change which had taken place in
-public affairs. We found it very delightful to engage
-in continued recitals of his travels, which he
-now related with peculiar fulness and vivacity. In
-this manner he once spoke much and in great detail
-of Persepolis, and described the walls on which he
-had found the inscriptions and bas-reliefs, exactly
-as one would describe those of a building visited
-within a few days and familiarly known. We could
-not conceal our astonishment. He replied, that as
-he lay in bed, all visible objects shut out, the pictures
-of what he had beheld in the East continually
-floated before his mind’s eye, so that it was no wonder
-he could speak of them as if he had seen them
-yesterday. With like vividness was the deep intense
-sky of Asia, with its brilliant and twinkling
-host of stars, which he had so often gazed at by
-night, or its lofty vault of blue by day, reflected in
-the hours of stillness and darkness on his inmost
-soul; and this was his greatest enjoyment. In the
-beginning of winter he had another bleeding at the
-nose, so violent that the bystanders expected his
-death; but this also he withstood.</p>
-
-<p>“About the end of April, 1815, the long obstruction
-in his chest grew much worse; but his friendly
-physician alleviated the symptoms, which to those
-around him appeared rather painful than dangerous.
-Towards evening on the 26th of April, 1815, he was
-read to as usual, and asked questions which showed
-perfect apprehension and intelligence; he then sunk
-into a slumber, and departed without a struggle.”</p>
-
-<p>Niebuhr had attained his eighty-second year. He
-was a man rather below than above the middle size,
-but robust in make, and exceedingly oriental in air
-and gestures. As might be clearly enough inferred
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>
-from his works, he was no lover of poetry; for,
-though he is said to have admired Homer in the
-German translation of Voss, together with the Herman
-and Dorothea of Goëthe, this might be accounted
-for upon a different principle. His imagination, however,
-was liable to be sometimes excited in a very
-peculiar way. “It is extraordinary,” says his son,
-“that this man, so remarkably devoid of imagination,
-so exempt from illusion, waked us on the night
-in which his brother died, though he was at such a
-distance that he knew not even of his illness, and
-told us that his brother was dead. What had appeared
-to him, waking or dreaming, he never told
-us.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHOISEUL-GOUFFIER">MARIE GABRIEL AUGUSTE FLORENT, LE
-COMTE DE CHOISEUL-GOUFFIER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1752.&mdash;Died 1817.</p>
-
-<p>I have frequently regretted, during the composition
-of these Lives, that the materials for the early
-biography of many celebrated men should be so
-scanty and incomplete as I have found them. It
-seems to be considered sufficient if we can obtain
-some general notion respecting their literary career,
-and, in consequence, criticism too frequently usurps
-the place of anecdote and narrative. The Comte de
-Choiseul-Gouffier occupied, however, too prominent
-a place among his contemporaries, both from his
-rank and talents, to allow any portion of his life to
-pass unnoticed; though it were to be wished that
-those who have spoken of him had been less eloquent
-and more circumstantial. The style of mortuary
-panegyric seems less designed, indeed, to make
-known the qualities or adventures of the deceased
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>
-than to afford the orator an apology for casting over
-his memory a veil of fine language, which as effectually
-conceals from the observer the real nature of
-the subject as his stiff sombre pall conceals his
-hearse and coffin. Such, notwithstanding, are the
-only sources, besides his own works, from which a
-knowledge of this celebrated and able traveller is to
-be derived.</p>
-
-<p>Choiseul-Gouffier was born at Paris in 1752. His
-family was scarcely less ancient or illustrious than
-that of the kings of France, in every page of whose
-history, says M. Dacier, we find traces of its importance
-and splendour. He pursued his youthful studies
-at the College D’Harcourt. Like Swift, and many
-other literary men who have acquired a high reputation
-in after-life, Choiseul did not render himself
-remarkable for a rapid progress or precocious abilities
-at school. He was attentive to his studies,
-however; and while he exhibited a decided taste for
-literature, his passion for the fine arts was no less
-powerful. At this period, says M. Dacier, a great
-name and a large fortune had frequently no other
-effect than to inspire their owners with the love of
-dissipation and frivolous amusement, which they
-were aware could in no degree obstruct their career
-in the road to honour and office, which, however
-worthless might be their characters, was opened to
-them by their birth. From this general contagion
-Choiseul was happily protected by his studious
-habits. Every moment which he could with propriety
-snatch from the duties of his station was devoted
-to literature and the arts of design. Above all
-things, he admired with enthusiasm whatever had
-any relation to ancient Greece,&mdash;a country which,
-from his earliest boyhood, he passionately desired
-to behold, as the cradle of poetry, of the arts, and
-of freedom, rich in historical glory, and rendered
-illustrious by every form of genius which can ennoble
-human nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span></p>
-
-<p>Being in possession of a fortune which placed
-within his reach the gratification of these ardent
-wishes, he nevertheless did not immediately commence
-his travels. In defiance of the fashion of the
-times, which proscribed as unphilosophical the honest
-feelings of the heart, Choiseul seems to have
-fallen early in love, and at the age of nineteen was
-married to the heiress of the Gouffier family, whose
-name he ever afterward associated with his own.
-Like all other persons of noble birth, he as a matter
-of course adopted the profession of arms, and was
-at once complimented with the rank of colonel,
-which it was customary to bestow upon such persons
-on their entrance into the service.</p>
-
-<p>At length, after a protracted delay, which considering
-his years is not to be regretted, Choiseul-Gouffier
-departed for Greece in the month of March,
-1776. Having enjoyed the advantages of the conversation
-and instruction of Barthélemy, who had
-himself profoundly studied Greece in her literary
-monuments, Choiseul-Gouffier was, perhaps, as well
-prepared to exercise the duties of a classical traveller
-as any young man of twenty-five could be expected
-to be. In aid of his own exertions he took
-along with him several artists and literary men, of
-whom some were distinguished for their taste or
-natural abilities. He was transported to Greece on
-board the <i>Atalante</i> ship of war, commanded by the
-Marquis de Chabert, himself a member of the Academy
-of Sciences, and appointed by the government
-to construct a reduced chart of the Mediterranean.
-This gentleman, who seems in some measure to
-have possessed a congenial taste, engaged to transport
-Choiseul-Gouffier to whatever part of Greece
-he might be desirous of visiting, and to lie off the
-land during such time as he should choose to employ
-in his excursions and researches.</p>
-
-<p>On his arrival in Greece, Choiseul-Gouffier commenced
-at once his researches and his drawings.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
-He was not a mere classical traveller; his principal
-object, it is true, was, as his French biographers
-assert, to study the noble remains of antiquity, the
-wrecks of that splendid and imperfect civilization
-which had once covered the soil on which he was
-now treading, with all the glory of the creative arts;
-but, besides this, he had an eye for whatever was
-interesting in the existing population, which, with
-every thinking and feeling man, he must have regarded
-as by far the most august and touching ruin
-which the traveller can behold in Greece. The mere
-undertaking of such an enterprise presupposes an
-intense enthusiasm for antiquity. Poetry, history,
-freedom, beauty, animate and inanimate, had separately
-and collectively produced on his mind an impassioned
-veneration for the Hellenic soil; and he
-saw with equal delight the scene of a fable and the
-site of a city.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuance of the plan which he had traced out
-for himself previous to leaving France, he examined
-with scrupulous care all the fragments and ruins
-within the scope of his researches. After touching
-on the southern coast of the Morea, and sketching
-the castle of Coron, with various Albanian soldiers
-whom he met with on the shore, he proceeded to
-the isles,&mdash;Milo, Siphanto, Naxia, Delos, where the
-wrecks of antiquity and the grotesque costume and
-manners of modern times exercised his elegant pencil
-and pen. Those persons who have visited countries
-where the ruins of former ages eclipse, as it
-were, the stunted heirs of the soil, will comprehend
-the difficulty of attending, amid monuments rendered
-doubly sublime by decay, to the rude attempts at
-architecture and the undignified circumstances which
-mark the existence of a population relapsed into ignorance.
-To these, however, Choiseul-Gouffier was
-by no means inattentive. He sketched, and it would
-seem with equal complacency, the ruins of some
-venerable temple and the beautiful dark-eyed girl of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>
-the Ionian Islands, plaiting her tresses, or sporting
-with her fat, long-haired Angola.</p>
-
-<p>In sketching the life of this traveller, I must beware
-that I am not carried away by classical recollections.
-Here, where</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Not a mountain rears its head unsung,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>it might, perhaps, be pleasing to a certain variety
-of minds to expatiate at leisure over the immortal
-fields of fable, and the scenes of actions which man
-is still proud to have performed; and if I abstain
-from entering upon the subject, it is not from any
-indifference to its charms, or that I want faith in its
-powers to produce, if properly handled, the same
-effect upon others which it has long exercised over
-me. But this is not the place to indulge in themes
-of this kind. Biography rejects all pictures of such
-a description, and requires narrative; and accordingly
-I proceed with the history of our traveller’s
-labours.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of his visits to the Grecian islands
-he beheld the famous Grotto of Antiparos, so eloquently
-described by Tournefort. Their opinions
-respecting its wonderful construction did not, as
-might very well be expected, agree; but if the botanist
-exaggerated, I think the young antiquarian underrated
-its richness and grandeur, probably from a
-desire to check his ardent imagination, or by an ill-timed
-application of his philosophy. From thence,
-touching at Skyros in his way, he proceeded to Lemnos,
-Mitelin, Scio, Samos, Patmos, and Rhodes, and
-thence into Asia Minor. Here he commenced operations
-with the ruins of Telmissus, in ancient Lycia.
-He sketched the sarcophagi, the Necropolis, the
-tombs, theatre, and other antiquities; and having
-also drawn up an account of his researches, and a
-description of the existing ruins, set off through
-Caria towards the river Mæander, and Ephesus, and
-Smyrna, and Troy. Throughout the whole of this
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
-incomparably interesting route, the same lavish researches
-were undertaken and conducted with vast
-expense and perseverance. But on arriving upon
-the plains of Troy, his exertions, everywhere enthusiastic,
-appeared to be redoubled. Choiseul-Gouffier
-was an impassioned admirer of Homer. No other
-poet, in fact, ever possesses so firm a hold upon the
-youthful mind as this ancient bard, because no one
-paints so truly those boiling passions which prevail
-in youth, and with which all men sympathize, until
-age or some other cause damps their energy, and
-makes them, as Shakspeare expresses it, “babble
-of green fields,” and tranquillity, and security, and
-civilization.</p>
-
-<p>For the admirers of Homer, our traveller’s researches
-in the ancient empire of Priam must possess
-more than ordinary charms. Having to the
-best of his ability determined the extent and limits
-of the Trojan territories, he fixes the site of the city,
-and traces to their sources the rivers Simois and
-Scamander. He then presents the reader with views
-of the most remarkable spots in the neighbourhood
-of the city, which are either mentioned by Homer,
-or referred to by celebrated writers of later date;
-Mount Gargarus, the camp of the Greeks, the tombs
-of Ilus, Achilles, and Patroclus.</p>
-
-<p>On his return to France he laboured assiduously
-at the arranging of the rich and various materials
-which he had collected during his travels. An author,
-and, above all, a traveller of distinguished rank,
-is always secure beforehand of a flattering reception.
-Choiseul-Gouffier experienced this truth. Fearful
-lest their compliments should come too late, and be
-paid, not to his rank, but to his merit, the members
-of the Académie des Belles-Lettres, in obedience,
-says M. Dacier, to the public voice, elected our traveller
-a member of their body in the room of Mons.
-Foncemagne in 1779, before the publication of the
-“Voyage Pittoresque de la Grèce.” This splendid
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-work, which was at least equal to any thing which
-had been published of the kind, and in many respects
-superior, was expected with impatience, and read
-on its appearance with avidity. Praise, which in
-France is but too lavishly bestowed upon noble authors,
-was now showered down in profusion upon
-our traveller. He, however, deserved high commendation.
-The design of the work was in itself exceedingly
-praiseworthy, and its execution, whether
-we consider the literary portion or the embellishments,
-highly honourable to the taste and talents of
-the author. Barthélemy, in such matters a judge
-inferior to none, conceived so favourable an opinion
-of his accuracy, that he in many instances appealed
-to his authority in his “Travels of Anacharsis.”</p>
-
-<p>What tended still more powerfully to promote the
-success of the “Voyage Pittoresque de la Grèce”
-than all these praises was, the lively, elegant style
-in which it is composed. Although the polished simplicity
-of the preceding age had already begun to
-give way before laborious struggles after strength
-and originality, Choiseul-Gouffier belonged rather to
-the old than the new school. His learning a profession,
-which young men are rather apt to display
-than to hide, was not very profound, I suspect, in
-1782, when the first volume of his travels appeared;
-and therefore the more credit is due to him for his
-moderation in the use of it. But I am far from
-thinking, with M. Dacier, that he purposely masked
-his acquirements, from the fear of frightening away
-the men of the world. He was not, as I have already
-observed, unmindful of the modern Greeks. Convinced
-that, next to the love of God, patriotism, expressed
-in Scripture by the love of our neighbour, is
-the best foundation of national and individual happiness,
-our traveller was vehement in his exhortations
-to the Greeks to recover their liberty. He even
-pointed out to them the means by which this was to
-be effected. He appealed to the priests, as to those
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>
-who exercised the most powerful influence over the
-popular mind, to sanctify the enterprise; and, by
-associating the spirit of religion with that of liberty,
-to inspire their flocks with the zeal of martyrs by
-spiritual incitements or menaces.</p>
-
-<p>In 1784 the success of the first volume of his
-travels threw open to him the doors of the French
-Academy, where he was elected to fill up the vacancy
-occasioned by the death of D’Alembert. The circumstances
-attending his reception into this celebrated
-literary body were particularly flattering.
-Never, according to the records of the times, had
-there been collected together a more numerous or
-more brilliant assembly. The discourse of the traveller
-was finely conceived, and executed with ability.
-The subject was, of course, determined by usage; it
-was the eulogium of his predecessor. Having, according
-to custom, by which all such things are regulated,
-occasion to allude to the birth of D’Alembert, he executed
-this delicate part of his task in a manner so
-judicious and manly, that from a circumstance, in
-itself unfortunate and dishonourable, he contrived to
-attach additional interest to the memory of his predecessor.
-“And yet,” said he, “what was this celebrated
-man, whom Providence had destined to extend
-the boundaries of human knowledge? You
-understand me, gentlemen; and why should I hesitate
-to express what I consider it honourable to
-feel? Why should I, by a pusillanimous silence,
-defraud his memory of that tribute which all noble
-minds are fond to pay to unfortunate virtue and genius
-in obscurity? What was he?&mdash;An unhappy,
-parentless child, cast forth from his cradle to perish,
-who owed to symptoms of approaching death and
-the humanity of a public officer the advantage of
-being snatched from amid that unfortunate multitude
-of foundlings, who are kept alive only to remain in
-eternal ignorance of their name and race!”</p>
-
-<p>It was on this occasion that he received one of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>
-those compliments which men of genius sometimes
-pay to each other, and which, when deserved, are
-among the most cherished rewards that can be
-granted to distinguished abilities. Delille, whom he
-had long numbered among his friends, eagerly seized
-upon the opportunity which was now offered him
-of expressing his admiration of his enthusiasm and
-taste. He accordingly drew forth from his pocket
-a splendid fragment of his poem entitled “Imagination,”
-which was not published until twenty years
-afterward, and read it to the academy. It related to
-Greece, which Choiseul-Gouffier had visited and depicted.
-He represents the forlorn genius of that
-ancient country singling out from among the crowd
-of ordinary travellers one young lover of the arts,
-recommending to his notice the glory of her ancient
-monuments and brilliant recollections, and promising
-him as his reward the academic palm in a <i>New
-Athens</i>. The verses, in spite of the national vanity
-of comparing Paris with Athens, and some other
-defects which I need not pause to point out, are
-highly poetical and beautiful; and the reader will
-not, I think, regret to find them here subjoined.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Hâte toi, rends la vie à leur gloire éclipsée</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Pour prix de tes travaux, dans un nouveau Lycée</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Un jour je te promets la couronne des arts.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Il dit et dans le fond de leurs tombeau épars,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Des Platon, des Solon les ombres l’entendirent:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Du jeune voyageur tous les sens tressaillirent:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Aussitôt dans ces lieux, berceau des arts naissans,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Accourent à sa voix les arts reconnaissans;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Le Dessin le premier prend son crayon fidèle,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Et, tel qu’un tendre fils, lorsque la mort cruelle</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">D’une mère adorée a terminé le sort</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A ses restes sacrés s’attache avec transport,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Demande à l’air, au temps d’épargner sa poussière</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Et se plaît à tracer une image si chère;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ainsi par l’amour même instruit dans ces beaux lieux</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Le Dessin, de la Grèce enfant ingénieux,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Va chercher, va saisir, va tracer son image;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Et belle encor, malgré les injures de l’âge</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Avec ses monumens, ses héros, et ses dieux,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">La Grèce reparaît tout entière à nos yeux.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Shortly after this Choiseul-Gouffier was appointed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
-ambassador of France to the Ottoman Porte, and, in
-selecting the companions of his mission, was not
-unmindful of Delille. The poet, therefore, accompanied
-him to Constantinople; and according to the
-testimony of both, many years after their return,
-nothing could exceed the delight of their residence
-in the East, and their visits to the spots celebrated
-in Grecian story. Choiseul-Gouffier would, from all
-accounts, appear to have been a man of enlarged
-views, friendly towards all nations, as well as towards
-every art, and anxious to promote the general
-interests of civilization. His agreeable manners
-enabled him quickly to acquire the confidence of
-Halil Pasha, the Turkish grand vizier, and of Prince
-Mauro Cordato, first dragoman of the Porte; and he
-succeeded in inspiring both with a desire to introduce
-among the Turks the arts and civilization of
-Europe. By his advice, engineer, artillery, and staff
-officers were invited from France to Constantinople,
-to instruct the Ottomans in the theory and practice
-of war. The impulse once given, the grand vizier,
-seconded by the dragoman, who would appear to
-have possessed unusual influence, repaired the fortifications
-in the various strong cities of the empire,
-improved the system of casting cannon, and considerably
-ameliorated the discipline of the Turkish
-army. Shortly the public saw with surprise a fine
-seventy-four, constructed by Leroy, after the most
-approved European method, launched from the docks
-of Constantinople; and the system thus introduced
-has ever since been followed in all the docks of the
-empire. To crown all these efforts, our traveller
-prevailed on the vizier to send thirty Turkish youths
-to receive their education in Paris; and had not this
-part of the scheme been defeated by religious fanaticism,
-there is no foreseeing to how great an extent
-this measure might have influenced the destinies of
-Turkey.</p>
-
-<p>When war had broken out between the Porte and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
-Russia, in spite of the efforts of the French ambassador
-to prevent the rupture, he continued to perform
-the part of a conciliator. It was by his intercession
-that the Russian ambassador, imprisoned
-contrary to the law of nations in the Seven Towers,
-was liberated, and placed on board a French frigate,
-commanded by the Prince de Rohan, which conveyed
-him to Trieste. And afterward, when Austria
-had determined to unite its forces with those of
-Russia to attack the common enemy of Christendom,
-Choiseul-Gouffier succeeded in preventing the
-imprisonment of its internuncio, whom he caused
-to embark with all his family and suite on board two
-French ships, which conveyed them to Leghorn.
-At the same time he effectually protected the Russian
-and Austrian prisoners detained in chains at
-Constantinople, and carefully caused to be distributed
-among them the provisions which their
-governments or families conveyed to them through
-his means. Several of these miserable beings he
-ransomed from captivity with his own money, particularly
-a young Austrian officer who had fallen
-into the hands of a cruel master, and who, resigned
-to his unhappy condition, appeared only to grieve
-for the affliction which the sad lot of their only son
-would cause his aged parents. His zeal for the interests
-of Turkey was not less remarkable. For
-not only did he in like manner protect the Turkish
-prisoners in Russia, but he caused French ships to
-transport provisions to Constantinople and the Black
-Sea, whose losses, when they incurred any, he made
-up out of his own private fortune.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of those assiduous and important
-cares which the policy and critical position of the
-Ottoman empire required of him, he at no time lost
-sight of the commerce and other interests of his
-country. He moreover found leisure for the indulgence
-of his old classical tastes, and once more
-ran over, with the Iliad in his hand, the whole of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>
-Troad and the other places celebrated by Homer.
-In addition to this, he despatched several artists to
-Syria and Egypt at his own expense, for the purpose
-of exploring and sketching ancient monuments,
-ruins, picturesque sites, and in general whatever
-was worthy of occupying the attention of the learned
-world. In 1791 he was appointed by the new government
-ambassador to the court of London; but as
-his political principles would not allow him to acknowledge
-the authority from which this nomination
-proceeded, he still continued at Constantinople,
-from whence he addressed all his despatches to the
-brothers of Louis XVI., then in Germany. This correspondence
-was seized during the following year
-by the French army in Champagne, and on the 22d
-of November, 1792, a decree of arrest was passed
-against him.</p>
-
-<p>Not long after this event he departed from Constantinople,
-honoured with distinguished marks of
-respect both by the sultan and the grand vizier, and
-sincerely regretted by his brother ambassadors, and
-all the French established in the Levant. Being unable
-to return to France, he retired to Russia, where
-Catherine, who, as I have already had frequent occasion
-to observe, was an excellent judge of men,
-received him in the most flattering manner, and afforded
-him the most honourable protection. Paul I.,
-on his accession to the throne, distinguished him by
-new favours, nominated him privy counsellor, director
-of the academy of arts and of all the imperial
-libraries, and also gave him many other solid proofs
-of his esteem. The favour of a madman, however,
-was necessarily liable to change. The Comte de
-Cobentzel, with whom Choiseul-Gouffier had lived
-on very intimate terms, falling into disgrace, he was
-uncourtly enough to continue the connexion; which
-so displeased Paul, that our traveller considered it
-unsafe to remain at court, and retired. No longer
-seeing his old favourite about him, the imperial
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
-lunatic commanded him to return, and upon his approach
-remarked, in a friendly tone, “M. le Count,
-there are stormy cloudy days in which it rains misunderstandings;
-we have experienced one of these;
-but as we are men of understanding, we have shaken
-it off, and are only upon the better footing.”</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller, who no doubt saw clearly enough
-the state of the emperor’s head, and dreaded his relapse
-into ill-humour, very quickly determined to
-return to France; where he at length arrived in 1802,
-stripped of his titles and fortune, and reduced to rely
-upon his literary rank for distinction. He, however,
-sought for no office or employment. All his thoughts
-were now directed towards the completion of his
-work on his beloved Greece, and during seven years
-he laboured assiduously at this agreeable undertaking.
-Other travellers had in the mean while
-visited and described the same countries; his ideas
-and views were regarded as antiquated; the interest
-inspired by his first volume, published twenty-seven
-years before, had in a great measure ceased; and,
-more than all this, he himself, worn down by misfortunes,
-sobered by long adversity, and somewhat
-unaccustomed to the art of composition, was no
-longer the same <i>naïve</i>, lively author that he had
-been. He now gave himself up to geographical disquisitions,
-learned dissertations, and geological remarks.
-Homer himself, though still his favourite,
-had undergone a transformation in his eyes. Losing
-sight of the poet, the matchless painter of human
-nature, he was satisfied with admiring him as an
-historian and geographer.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless there still remained a mixture of the
-old leaven in his composition. The sight of the
-rose harvest near Adrianople in Thrace reawakened
-all his enthusiasm, and his description of the festival
-with which it closes, in which the beautiful Grecian
-girls perform so elegant and classical a part, would
-certainly not disgrace the pages of Theocritus or
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
-Virgil. The completion of the third volume (or
-rather the 2d part of the second) seems to have been
-retarded, among other causes, by the composition
-of several memoirs for the Academy of Inscriptions
-and Belles-Lettres, on the Olympian Hippodrome,
-on the origin of the Thracian Bosphorus, and on the
-personal existence of Homer, which has been called
-in question by several critics more learned than wise.</p>
-
-<p>Before the completion of his work, however, he
-was seized with an apoplectic fit, which made his
-friends despair of his life. He was advised to make
-trial of the waters of Aix-la-Chapelle, whither he
-removed, accompanied by the Princess de Bauffremont,
-his second wife. Here he died on the 22d of
-June, 1817. It was now feared by all those who had
-properly appreciated his labours, that the concluding
-portion of his work, without which the former parts
-would be comparatively valueless, might never appear;
-but a publisher was at length found to undertake
-the expensive and hazardous enterprise. He
-purchased from the Princess de Bauffremont all the
-papers, charts, drawings, engravings, and copper-plates
-of her deceased husband, and with a taste,
-zeal, and industry for which the arts are indebted
-to him, completed the “Voyage Pittoresque de la
-Grèce” in a style worthy of the commencement.
-The portrait of the Comte de Choiseul, which M.
-Blaise, the publisher, caused to be engraved by a
-distinguished French artist, is a masterpiece of its
-kind; but there still remain many splendid drawings,
-and several valuable maps and charts of various parts
-of Greece, which may some day, perhaps, be published
-as a supplement, or in a second edition, should
-it be called for by the public.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="JOHN_LEWIS_BURCKHARDT">JOHN LEWIS BURCKHARDT.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1784.&mdash;Died 1817.</p>
-
-<p>This traveller, descended from an eminent family
-of Basle, in Switzerland, was born at Lausanne, in
-1784. He was the eighth child of John Rodolph
-Burckhardt, whose prospects in life were early
-blighted by his adherence to the Austrian faction
-during the troubles in Switzerland, consequent upon
-the French revolution. Our traveller, led by hereditary
-prejudices to nourish an aversion for republican
-principles, or too young and hot-headed not to
-confound the agents with the cause, imbibed at a
-very early age a detestation for the French, at that
-period regarded as the representatives of republicanism;
-and, with the same spirit which induced Pietro
-della Valle to engage in a crusade against the Turks,
-he wished to serve in the armies of some nation at
-war with France. These wishes, however, were
-the mere hallucinations of a boy, or an echo of the
-sentiments which he heard uttered by others. His
-education had not been completed: his notions were
-necessarily crude, and he had neither discovered nor
-learned from others the paramount importance of
-freedom, without which even national independence
-is a vain possession.</p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt’s studies were, from various causes,
-conducted in the manner best calculated to create
-and nourish restless and adventurous habits. Having
-received the first rudiments of his education in his
-father’s house, he was removed to a school at Neufchatel,
-where he remained two years. At the age of
-sixteen he was entered a student at the university of
-Leipzig; from whence, after four years’ residence, he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>
-proceeded to Göttingen, where he continued another
-year. He then returned to his parents. The natural
-firmness and consistency of his character, of which
-his countenance was strikingly expressive, still
-taught him to keep alive his hatred of the French;
-but no continental nation had preserved itself wholly
-free from the influence of this people; and therefore,
-rejecting an offer which was made him by one
-of the petty courts of Germany, desirous of numbering
-him among its diplomatic body, he turned his
-thoughts towards England, which, like a separate
-world, had remained inviolate from the tread of the
-enemy. Accordingly, having provided himself with
-letters of introduction to several persons of distinction,
-among which was one from Professor Blumenbach
-to Sir Joseph Banks, he set out for London,
-where he arrived in the month of July, 1806.</p>
-
-<p>This step was the pivot upon which the whole
-circle of his short life was destined to turn. His introduction
-to Sir Joseph Banks, who had long been
-an active member of the African Association, almost
-necessarily brought him into contact with several
-other individuals connected with that celebrated society;
-and conversations with these persons, whose
-motives were at least respectable, and whose enthusiasm
-was unbounded, naturally begot in Burckhardt
-a corresponding warmth, and transformed him, from
-a Quixotic crusader against the French, into an ardent,
-ambitious traveller.</p>
-
-<p>It should not be dissembled that, upon Burckhardt’s
-desire to travel for the African Association
-being communicated to Sir Joseph Banks and Dr.
-Hamilton (then acting secretary to that body), strong
-representations of the dangers to be encountered in
-the execution of the plan were made to the youthful
-aspirant after fame; but such representations, which
-are a delusive kind of peace-offering placed for form’s
-sake on the altar of conscience, are seldom sincerely
-designed to effect their apparent purpose;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
-and the actors in the farce would, for the most part,
-experience extreme chagrin should they find their
-eloquence prove successful. At all events, few men
-are so ignorant as not to know that the aspect of
-danger wears a certain charm for youth, which naturally
-associates therewith an idea of honour; and,
-provided success be probable, or even possible,
-reckons obstacles of every kind among the incentives
-to exertion. These dissuasive speeches, therefore,
-from persons whose sole object in constituting
-themselves into a public body was to produce a directly
-opposite result, were altogether hypocritical;
-and Burckhardt, if he possessed half the sagacity
-which seems to have entered into his character, must
-have distinctly perceived this, and have despised
-them accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>However this may be, his offer, which was laid
-before the association at the general meeting of May,
-1808, was “willingly accepted;” and he immediately
-commenced all those preparations which were necessary
-to the proper accomplishment of his undertaking.
-He employed himself diligently in the study
-of the Arabic language both in London and Cambridge,
-as well as in the acquiring of a knowledge
-of several branches of science, such as chymistry,
-astronomy, mineralogy, medicine, and surgery; he
-likewise allowed his beard to grow, assumed the
-oriental dress, “and in the intervals of his studies
-he exercised himself by long journeys on foot, bare-headed,
-in the heat of the sun, sleeping upon the
-ground, and living upon vegetables and water.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 25th of January, 1809, he received his instructions,
-by which he was directed to proceed in
-the first instance to Syria, where, it was supposed,
-he might complete his knowledge of the Arabic, and
-acquire oriental habits and manners at a distance
-from the scene of his researches, and where he was
-not likely to meet with any individuals who might
-afterward recognise him at an inconvenient moment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span></p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt sailed from Cowes on the 2d of March,
-1809, in a merchant-ship, proceeding to the Mediterranean,
-and arrived at Malta in the middle of April.
-From thence, in a letter to Sir Joseph Banks, he
-transmitted an account of the attempt to explore the
-interior of Africa which was at that time meditated
-by Dr. Seetzen, a German physician, who shortly
-afterward perished, not without suspicions of poison,
-in Yemen; and of a recent eruption of Mount Etna,
-the description of which he obtained from the letter
-of an English gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>During his stay at Malta he completed his equipment
-in the oriental manner, and assumed the character
-of an Indian Mohammedan merchant, bearing
-despatches from the East India Company to Mr.
-Barker, British consul, and the company’s agent at
-Aleppo. Meanwhile he carefully avoided all intercourse
-with such persons from Barbary as happened
-to be in the island; and when he met parties of them
-in the street, as he often did, the <i>salaam alaikum</i>,
-given and returned, was all that passed between
-them. There was at this time a Swiss regiment in
-the English service at Malta, to many of the officers
-of which Burckhardt was personally known. To
-be recognised by these gentlemen would at once
-have proved fatal to his assumed character; he
-therefore appeared in public cautiously, and but seldom;
-but had at length the satisfaction of finding
-that his disguise was so complete as to enable him
-to pass unknown and unnoticed.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller here entered into arrangements with
-a Greek, respecting his passage from this island to
-Cyprus; but on the very morning of his expected
-departure he received information that the owner
-of the ship had directed the captain to proceed to
-Tripoly. His baggage was in consequence transferred
-to another ship, said to be bound for the same
-island; “but the very moment I was embarking,”
-says Burckhardt, “the new captain told me that he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
-was not quite sure whether he should touch at Cyprus,
-his ship being properly bound for Acre. I had
-now the option to wait at Malta, perhaps another
-month or two, for an opportunity for Cyprus or the
-coast of Syria, or to run the chance of disembarking
-at a place where there was no person whatever
-to whom I could apply for advice or protection.
-Luckily an Arab of Acre, then at Malta, happened
-to be known to Mr. Barker, jun.; in half an hour’s
-time a letter for a merchant at Acre, with another
-in case of need for the pasha, were procured, and I
-embarked and sailed the same morning, in the hope
-of finding, when arrived at Acre, a passage for Tripoly
-(Syria), or for Latakia. However, we were no
-sooner out of sight of the island, than it was made
-known to me that the real destination of the ship
-was the coast of Caramania, that the captain had
-orders to touch first at the port of Satalia, then at
-that of Tarsus; and that if grain could not be purchased
-at an advantageous price at either of these
-places, in that case only he was to proceed to Acre.
-My remonstrances with the captain would have been
-vain: nothing was left to me but to cultivate his
-good graces and those of my fellow-travellers, as
-the progress of my journey must depend greatly
-upon their good offices. The passengers consisted,
-to my astonishment, of a rich Tripoline merchant,
-who owned part of the ship, two other Tripolines,
-and two negro slaves. I introduced myself among
-them as an Indian Mohammedan merchant, who had
-been from early years in England, and was now on
-his way home; and I had the good fortune to make
-my story credible enough to the passengers as well
-as to the ship’s company. During the course of our
-voyage numerous questions were put to me relative
-to India, its inhabitants, and its language, which I
-answered as well as I could: whenever I was asked
-for a specimen of the Hindoo language, I answered
-in the worst dialect of the Swiss German, almost
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>
-unintelligible even to a German, and which in its
-guttural sounds may fairly rival the harshest utterance
-of Arabic. Every evening we assembled upon
-deck to enjoy the cooling sea-breeze and to smoke
-our pipes. While one of the sailors was amusing
-his companions with story-telling, I was called upon
-to relate to my companions the wonders of the
-farthest east; of the grand mogul, and the riches of
-his court; of the widows in Hindostan burning
-themselves; of the Chinese, their wall, and great
-porcelain tower,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>They sailed along the southern coast of Candia,
-saw Rhodes at a great distance, and arrived in a few
-days at Satalia in Caramania. Here the plague, it
-was found, was raging in the town; but this circumstance
-did not prevent the Tripoline merchant from
-landing and disposing of his merchandise, nor the
-captain from receiving him again on board. When
-their business with this town was completed, they
-again set sail, and after coasting for three days along
-the shore of Caramania, arrived in the roads of
-Mersin, from whence Burckhardt and several of his
-companions proceeded by land on an excursion to
-Tarsus. Finding here a ship bound for the coast
-of Syria, our traveller left the Maltese vessel in order
-to proceed by this new conveyance: “In taking
-leave of the Tripoline,” says he, “I took off my
-sash, a sort of red cambric shawl, of Glasgow manufacture,
-which he had always much admired, thinking
-it to be Indian stuff, and presented it to him as
-a keepsake or reward for his good services. He immediately
-unloosened his turban, and twisted the
-shawl in its stead round his head: making me many
-professions of friendship, and assuring me of his
-hospitality, if ever the chance of mercantile pursuits
-should again engage me to visit the Mediterranean,
-and perhaps Tripoly in Barbary.”</p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt reached the coast of Syria at that
-point where the Aasi, the ancient Orontis, falls into
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>
-the sea; and immediately prepared to depart for
-Aleppo with a caravan. Having been intrusted with
-several chests for the British consul at Aleppo, his
-baggage appeared considerable; and he was consequently
-sent for by the aga, who expected a handsome
-present for permitting them to pass. When
-questioned by this officer respecting the contents of
-the chests, he replied that he was entirely ignorant
-of the matter, but suspected that among other things
-there was a sort of French drink, called <i>beer</i>, with
-various kinds of eatables. The aga now sent an
-officer to examine them. A bottle of beer having
-been broken in loading, “the man tasted it by putting
-his finger into the liquor, and found it abominably
-bitter: such was his report to the aga. As a
-sample of the eatables, he produced a potato which
-he had taken out of one of the barrels, and that
-noble root excited general laughter in the room: ‘It
-is well worth while,’ they said, ‘to send such stuff
-to such a distance.’ The aga tasted of the raw potato,
-and spitting it out again, swore at the Frank’s
-stomach which could bear such food.” The mean
-opinion which these specimens inspired them with
-for such merchandise inclined the aga to be content
-with the trifling sum of ten piastres, which he probably
-thought more than the value of a whole ship’s
-cargo of potatoes and beer.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the arrival of the caravan at Antakia, our
-traveller, desirous of studying the manners of all
-ranks of men, took up his quarters in the khan of
-the muleteers, where, from a suspicion that he was
-a Frank in disguise, he was subjected to numerous
-indignities. The aga’s dragoman, some wretched
-Frenchman or Piedmontese, being sent by his master
-to discover the truth, and failing to effect his purpose
-by any other means, determined, as a last resource,
-on pulling him by the beard, and at the same
-time asked him familiarly why he had suffered such
-a thing to grow? To this Burckhardt replied by
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>
-striking him on the face, which turned the laugh
-against the poor dragoman, and was an argument so
-peculiarly Mohammedan that it seems to have convinced
-the bystanders of the truth of his assertions.</p>
-
-<p>After a delay of four days he continued his journey
-with the caravan, with the motley members of
-which he was compelled to maintain an unceasing
-struggle in defence of his assumed character; a circumstance
-which proves one of two things, either
-that the Saonees of the west have by intercourse
-with Europeans been rendered more acute in discovering
-impostors, than the Shiahs of Afghanistan
-and Northern Persia, or that Burckhardt was hitherto
-somewhat unskilful in his movements; for the
-reader will no doubt remember that Forster, when
-he professed Mohammedanism, had much fewer
-suspicions to combat on his way through Central
-Asia.</p>
-
-<p>On his arrival at Aleppo, he determined, in pursuance
-of the advice of Mr. Barker, to put off his Mohammedan
-disguise, though he still retained the
-Turkish dress; and with the aid of an able master,
-recommenced the study of the Arabic, both literal
-and vulgar. He was attacked, however, shortly
-after his arrival, by a strong inflammatory fever,
-which lasted a fortnight; and was occasioned, as he
-conjectured, by the want of sleep, of which blessing
-he had been deprived by the prodigious colonies
-of that “friendly beast to man” which, according
-to Sir Hugh Evans, “signifies love,” which had established
-themselves in his garments during his stay
-at the khan of Antakia. When this seasoning was
-over, his health appeared to be improved, and he
-found the climate finer and more salubrious than he
-had expected.</p>
-
-<p>During his stay in this city, which was a very
-protracted one, Burckhardt laboured assiduously in
-fitting himself for the honourable performance of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>
-the task he had undertaken. His Arabic studies
-were uninterrupted. Besides seizing eagerly on
-every opportunity of improving himself by conversation
-with the natives, he laboured at an attempt
-to transform “Robinson Crusoe” into an Arabian
-tale. He moreover succeeded in making the acquaintance
-of several sheïkhs, and other literary
-men, who honoured him occasionally with a visit;
-a favour, he says, which he owed principally to Mr.
-Wilkins’s “Arabic and Persian Dictionary.” The
-ordinary lexicons of the country being very defective,
-the learned Turks were often obliged to have
-recourse to Wilkins, whose learning and exactness
-sometimes compelled them to exclaim, “How wonderful
-that a Frank should know more of our language
-than our first ulmas!”</p>
-
-<p>In the month of July, 1810, Burckhardt departed
-from Aleppo under the protection of an Arab sheïkh,
-of the Aenezy tribe, who undertook to escort him
-to Palmyra, and thence through the Haurān to Damascus.
-On the way they were attacked, while the
-sheïkh was absent at a watering-place, by the hostile
-Marváli Arabs, by whom our traveller was
-robbed of his watch and compass; after which he
-pushed on into the desert to rejoin the chief. Contrary
-to the well-known faith of the Arabs, this man
-transferred to another the protection of his guest,
-thereby exposing him to be robbed a second time, at
-Palmyra, where the bandit in authority, finding that
-he had no money, contented himself with seizing
-upon his saddle. Returning from these ruins, he
-found at Yerud a letter from the sheïkh, forbidding
-him to proceed towards the Haurān, because, as
-the writer asserted, the invasion of the Wahabis had
-rendered that portion of the country unsafe, even
-to himself and his Arabs. In consequence of this
-fraudulent conduct of the sheïkh, for the excuse was
-a fiction, he found himself necessitated to take the
-road to Damascus; disappointed in part, but upon
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span>
-the whole well satisfied with having beheld those
-magnificent ruins in the desert which have charmed
-so many strangers, and with having at the same
-time enjoyed so many occasions of observing the
-Bedouins under their own tents, where he was everywhere
-received with hospitality and kindness.</p>
-
-<p>The rich and well-cultivated environs of Damascus,
-which all travellers, from Mohammed to the
-present day, have admired, appeared to great advantage
-to the eye of Burckhardt, accustomed to be
-sickened by the signs of misery which surround
-Aleppo. “The unsettled state of the government
-of Damascus,” says he, “obliged me to prolong my
-stay there for upwards of six weeks. I again left
-it in the middle of September, to visit Baalbec and
-Libanus. My route lay through Zahle, a small but
-prosperous town on the western side of the valley
-Bekan, the ancient Cœlosyria, and from thence to
-Baalbec, where I remained three days; then to the
-top of the Libanus, the Cedars, and Kannobin, from
-whence, following the highest summits of the mountain,
-I returned to Zahle by the villages called
-Akoura and Afki.”</p>
-
-<p>After proceeding southward to the territory of the
-Druses, and Mount Hermon, he returned to Damascus;
-whence, after a short stay, he made an excursion
-into the Haurān, the patrimony of Abraham,
-which four years before had been in part visited by
-Dr. Seetzen, previous to his tour round the Dead
-Sea. “During a fatiguing journey of twenty-six
-days,” says Burckhardt, “I explored this country as
-far as five days’ journey to the south and south-east
-of Damascus; I went over the whole of the Jebel
-Haurān, or mountain of the Druses, who have in
-these parts a settlement of about twenty villages;
-I passed Bozra, a place mentioned in the books of
-Moses, and not to be confounded with Boostra; I
-then entered the desert to the south-east of it, and
-returned afterward to Damascus through the rocky
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>
-district on the foot of the Jebel Haurān, called El
-Leja. At every step I found vestiges of ancient
-cities; saw the remains of many temples, public
-edifices, and Greek churches; met at Shohbe with
-a well-preserved amphitheatre, at other places with
-numbers of still standing columns, and had opportunities
-of copying many Greek inscriptions, which
-may serve to throw some light upon the history of
-this almost forgotten corner. The inscriptions are
-for the greater part of the lower empire, but some
-of the most elegant ruins have their inscriptions
-dated from the reigns of Trajan and M. Aurelius.
-The Haurān, with its adjacent districts, is the spring
-and summer rendezvous of most of the Arab tribes,
-who inhabit in winter time the great Syrian desert,
-called by them El Hammad. They approach the
-cultivated lands in search of grass, water, and corn,
-of which last they buy up in the Haurān their
-yearly provision.”</p>
-
-<p>Having to a certain extent satisfied his curiosity
-respecting this obscure country, he returned by way
-of Homs and Hamah towards Aleppo, where he arrived
-on the New-year’s day of 1811. He now
-meditated an excursion into the desert towards the
-Euphrates, but was for some time prevented from
-putting his design in execution by the troubled state
-of the country, two powerful Arab tribes, the one
-inimical, the other friendly to the Aleppines, having
-been for many months at war with each other.
-Burckhardt at length succeeded, however, in placing
-himself under the protection of the Sheïkh of Sukhne,
-and set out towards the desert: but his own account
-of this journey was lost, and all that can now be
-known of it is to be gathered from a letter from
-Mr. Barker, the celebrated British consul at Aleppo,
-to whose princely hospitality so many travellers of
-all nations have been indebted. “One hundred and
-twenty, or one hundred and fifty miles below the
-ruins of Membigeh, in the Zor,” says this gentleman,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
-“there is a tract on the banks of the Euphrates
-possessed by a tribe of very savage Arabs.
-Not far from them is the village of Sukhne, at the
-distance of five days from Aleppo, and of twelve
-hours from Palmyra, in the road which Zenobia in
-her flight took to gain the Euphrates. The people
-of Sukhne are sedentary Arabs, of a breed half
-Fellah and half Bedouin. They bring to Aleppo
-alkali and ostrich feathers. It was upon one of
-these visits of the Sheïkh of Sukhne to Aleppo, that
-Burckhardt, after some negotiation, resolved to accept
-the protection of the sheïkh, who undertook,
-upon their arrival at his village, to place him under
-the protection of a Bedouin of sufficient influence
-to procure him a safe passage through the tribes of
-the country which he wished to explore. Burckhardt
-had reason to be satisfied both with the Sheïkh
-of Sukhne, and with the Arab whom he procured as
-an escort, except that, in the end, the protection of
-the latter proved insufficient. The consequence
-was, that poor Burckhardt was stripped to the skin,
-and he returned to Sukhne, his body blistered with
-the rays of the sun, and without having accomplished
-any of the objects of his journey. It was in this
-excursion to the desert that Burckhardt had so hard
-a struggle with an Arab lady, who took a fancy to
-the only garment which the delicacy or compassion
-of the men had left him.”</p>
-
-<p>After his return from this unfortunate journey,
-Burckhardt was delayed for a considerable time at
-Aleppo by incessant rains; but at length, on the
-14th of February, he bade this city a final adieu,
-and hastened once more to Damascus. He was desirous,
-before quitting Syria, of performing another
-journey in the Haurān. This he completed, and
-having transmitted to England an account of his
-discoveries in this extraordinary region, he departed
-on the 18th of June for the Dead Sea. The
-reader will not, I imagine, be displeased to find the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
-description of this journey given in the author’s own
-words: having reached Nazareth, “I met here,”
-says he, “a couple of petty merchants from Szalt,
-a castle in the mountains of Balka, which I had not
-been able to see during my late tour, and which lies
-on the road I had pointed out to myself for passing
-into the Egyptian deserts. I joined their caravan;
-after eight hours’ march, we descended into the valley
-of the Jordan, called El Gor, near Bysan;
-crossed the river, and continued along its verdant
-banks for about ten hours, until we reached the river
-Zerka, near the place where it empties itself into
-the Jordan. Turning then to our left, we ascended
-the eastern chain, formerly part of the district of
-Balka, and arrived at Szalt, two long days’ journey
-from Nazareth. The inhabitants of Szalt are entirely
-independent of the Turkish government; they
-cultivate the ground for a considerable distance
-round their habitations, and part of them live the
-whole year round in tents, to watch their harvests
-and to pasture their cattle. Many ruined places and
-mountains in the district of Balka preserve the
-names of the Old Testament, and elucidate the topography
-of the province that fell to the share of the
-tribes of Gad and Reuben. Szalt is at present the
-only inhabited place in the Balka, but numerous
-Arab tribes pasture there their camels and sheep.
-I visited from thence the ruins of Amān, or Philadelphia,
-five hours and a half distant from Szalt.
-They are situated in a valley on both sides of a
-rivulet, which empties itself into the Zerka. A
-large amphitheatre is the most remarkable of these
-ruins, which are much decayed, and in every respect
-inferior to those of Jerash. At four or five
-hours south-east of Amān are the ruins of Om
-Erresas and El Kotif, which I could not see, but
-which, according to report, are more considerable
-than those of Philadelphia. The want of communication
-between Szalt and the southern countries
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
-delayed my departure for upwards of a week; I
-found at last a guide, and we reached Kerek in two
-days and a half, after having passed the deep beds
-of the torrents El Wale and El Mojeb, which I suppose
-to be the Nahaliel and Arnon. The Mojeb divides
-the district of Balka from that of Kerek, as it
-formerly divided the Moabites from the Amorites.
-The ruins of Eleale, Hesebon, Meon, Medaba, Dibon,
-Arver, all situated on the north side of the Arnon,
-still subsist to illustrate the history of the Beni
-Israel. To the south of the wild torrent Mojeb I
-found the considerable ruins of Rabbab Moab: and,
-three hours’ distance from them, the town of Kerek,
-situated at about twelve hours’ distance to the east
-of the southern extremity of the Dead Sea....</p>
-
-<p>“The treachery of the Sheïkh of Kerek, to whom
-I had been particularly recommended by a grandee
-of Damascus, obliged me to stay at Kerek above
-twenty days. After having annoyed me in different
-ways, he permitted me to accompany him southward,
-as he had himself business in the mountains
-of Djebal, a district which is divided from that of
-Kerek by the deep bed of the torrent El Ahhsa, or
-El Kahary, eight hours’ distance from Kerek. We
-remained for ten days in the villages to the north
-and south of El Ansa, which are inhabited by Arabs,
-who have become cultivators, and who sell the produce
-of their fields to the Bedouins. The sheïkh,
-having finished his business, left me at Beszeyra, a
-village about sixteen hours south of Kerek, to shift
-for myself, after having maliciously recommended
-me to the care of a Bedouin, with whose character
-he must have been acquainted, and who nearly
-stripped me of the remainder of my money. I encountered
-here many difficulties, was obliged to walk
-from one encampment to another, until I found at
-last a Bedouin who engaged to carry me to Egypt.
-In his company I continued southward, in the mountains of
-Shera, which are divided to the north from
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-Djebal by the broad valley called Ghoseyr, at about
-five hours’ distance from Beszeyra. The chief place
-in Djebal is Tafyle, and in Shera the castle of Shobak.
-This chain of mountains is a continuation of the
-eastern Syrian chain, which begins with the Antilibanus,
-joins the Jebel el Sheïkh, forms the valley
-of Ghor, and borders the Dead Sea. The valley of
-Ghor is continued to the south of the Dead Sea;
-at about sixteen hours’ distance from the extremity
-of the Dead Sea its name is changed into that of
-Araba, and it runs in almost a straight line, declining
-somewhat to the west as far as Akaba, at the
-extremity of the eastern branch of the Red Sea.
-The existence of this valley appears to have been
-unknown to ancient as well as modern geographers,
-although it is a very remarkable feature in the geography
-of Syria and Arabia Petræa, and is still more
-interesting for its productions. In this valley the
-manna is still found; it drops from the sprigs of
-several trees, but principally from the Gharrab. It
-is collected by the Arabs, who make cakes of it,
-and who eat it with butter; they call it Assal Beyrook,
-or the honey of Beyrook. Indigo, gum-arabic,
-and the silk-tree, called Asheyr, whose fruit encloses
-a white silky substance, of which the Arabs twist
-their matches, grow in this valley.”</p>
-
-<p>In this valley, about two long days’ journey north-east
-of Akaba, is a small rivulet, near the banks of
-which Burckhardt discovered the ruins of a city,
-which he conjectured to be those of Petra, the
-capital of Arabia Petræa. No other European traveller
-had ever visited the spot, though few places in
-Western Asia seem more curious or deserving of
-examination. The red rocks composing the flanks
-of the valley contained upwards of two hundred
-and fifty sepulchral chambers, adorned with Grecian
-ornaments. Besides these there were numerous
-mausolea, some in the Egyptian style, with obelisks,
-others in the chaste manner of the Greeks; and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
-among the latter there was one in perfect preservation,
-and of vast dimensions, with all its apartments,
-its vestibule, its peristyle, &amp;c. cut out in the solid
-rock. On the summit of the mountain which forms
-the western boundary of the valley is the tomb of
-Aaron, which the Arabs, who are great Scriptural
-antiquarians, hold in extraordinary veneration. Our
-traveller, however, to his great regret, was necessitated
-to abandon to some more fortunate visiter the
-thorough examination of this interesting region, at
-which circumstances allowed him merely to cast a
-glance as he was hurrying along with his Bedouin
-conductor towards the Red Sea. In proceeding
-from this place towards Akaba he encountered a
-small party of Arabs who were conducting a few
-camels for sale to Cairo, and uniting himself to this
-little caravan, performed the remainder of the journey
-in their company. “We crossed the valley of
-Araba,” says he, “ascended on the other side of it
-the barren mountains of Beyane, and entered the
-desert called El Tih, which is the most barren and
-horrid tract of country I have ever seen; black
-flints cover the chalky or sandy ground, which in
-most places is without any vegetation. The tree
-which produces the gum-arabic grows in some spots;
-and the tamarisk is met with here and there; but
-the scarcity of water forbids much extent of vegetation,
-and the hungry camels are obliged to go in the
-evening for whole hours out of the road in order to
-find some withered shrubs upon which to feed.
-During ten days’ forced marches we passed only four
-springs or wells, of which one only, at about eight
-hours east of Suez, was of sweet water. The others
-were brackish and sulphureous. We passed at a
-short distance to the north of Suez, and arrived at
-Cairo by the pilgrim road.”</p>
-
-<p>On his arrival at Cairo, Burckhardt’s first employment
-was to draw up a detailed account of his journey
-through Arabia Petræa: he then turned his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>
-attention to the means of fulfilling the great design
-of his mission; but no opportunity of penetrating
-into the interior of Africa occurring, he undertook,
-in order to fill up the interval thus created, a journey
-into Nubia. During his residence at Cairo, and on
-his journey up the Nile to Assouan, he beheld the
-principal ruins of Egypt. His preparations for the
-Nubian excursion were soon made. He purchased
-two dromedaries, one for himself and the other for
-his guide, for about twenty-two pounds; provided
-himself with letters of recommendation, and a firman
-from the pasha; and leaving his servant and baggage
-at Assouan, set out with his guide on the 14th of
-February, 1813, carrying along with him nothing but
-a gun, a sabre, a pistol, a provision-bag, and a
-woollen mantle, which served by day for a carpet,
-and for a covering during the night.</p>
-
-<p>Their road lay along the eastern bank of the Nile;
-they passed Philæ (where, a few days before, a pregnant
-woman had been killed in a fray, as the softer
-sex always mix in the battles in which their husbands
-are engaged, which had created a deadly feud
-between the hostile villages); and then pushed on
-with rapidity towards Derr. The Mameluke chiefs,
-with their desperate followers, were at this period
-roaming about Nubia, amusing their imaginations
-with vain projects for the recovery of Egypt.&mdash;Every
-person coming from the north was of course
-an object of curiosity, if not of suspicion, to these
-baffled soldiers, as it was possible he might be the
-bearer of tidings of events upon the results of which
-their fate depended. Such was the state of things
-when Burckhardt entered Nubia. Everywhere reports
-calculated to create alarm were circulated.
-To-day it was said that the Mamelukes had descended,
-like famished tigers, from the mountains,
-and were about to deliver up the whole country to
-plunder and devastation; to-morrow they appeared
-to have passed away, like a thunder-cloud, towards
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>
-Dongola and the desert, leaving behind them that
-sort of uneasy satisfaction with which we behold
-the quelling of unruly elements.</p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt arrived at Derr on the 1st of March,
-and, to his surprise, found two Mameluke beys at
-the palace of the governor. He had reckoned upon
-their utter disappearance, and had intended, under
-these circumstances, to represent himself as the
-secret agent of the Pasha of Egypt; but learning,
-upon inquiry, that the pasha and his enemies were
-regarded with nearly equal dread by the Nubian
-princes, he changed his resolution, and professed to
-be guided in his motions by no other motive than
-pleasure. Ignorant persons find it hard to conceive
-that men can expose themselves to difficulties and
-dangers from an enthusiasm for knowledge, or can
-find pleasure in encountering hardships and fatigue;
-however, a concurrence of fortunate circumstances
-extorted from the governor a permission to proceed,
-and accordingly, having provided himself with provisions
-for the road, our traveller departed for
-Sukkot.</p>
-
-<p>His guide on the present occasion was an old
-Arab of the Ababde tribe. The branch of the Ababde
-to which this man, whose name was Mohammed,
-belonged, feed their flocks on the uninhabited banks
-of the river, and on its numerous islands, as far
-south as Dongola. Though poor, they refuse to
-bestow their daughters, who are famed for their
-beauty, in marriage on the rich Nubians, and have
-thus preserved the purity of their race. They are,
-moreover, an honest and hospitable race, and during
-his journeys in Nubia, Burckhardt was constantly
-received and treated with kindness by these simple
-people.</p>
-
-<p>In pursuing his course up the Nile, our traveller
-passed a day at Ibrim, a town inhabited by Turks,
-where, though quarrels and bloodshed were frequent,
-property was more secure than in any other town
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
-he had visited in the eastern world; the corn was
-left all night in the field, and the cattle on the banks
-of the river, unwatched, and even the greater part
-of the household furniture remained all night under
-the palm-trees around their dwellings. Indeed, theft
-was here quite unknown. Proceeding a short distance
-to the south of this town, he dismounted from
-his dromedary, and directing his guide to continue his
-road to the next village, struck off into a narrow
-footpath along the lofty, precipitous shores of the
-river. Pursuing this mountain-track he arrived at
-an ancient temple hewn out of the rock, in as perfect
-a state of preservation as when first finished. Sepulchral
-chambers and mystic sculptures, the usual
-accompaniments of Egyptian temples, were found
-here.</p>
-
-<p>The reception which our traveller and his guide
-met with at the Nubian villages was generally hospitable;
-as soon as they alighted a mat was spread
-for them upon the ground, just before the door of
-the house, which none but intimate friends are permitted
-to enter; dhourra bread, milk, and sometimes
-dates were placed before the strangers, and
-their host, if earnestly pressed, sat down with them.
-Straw, when plentiful, was likewise given to their
-camels; and when the host desired to be particularly
-hospitable, a breakfast of hot milk and bread was
-served up before their departure in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>At length, on the 6th of March, they arrived on a
-sandy plain, sprinkled with rocky points, which
-thrust up their heads through the sand that concealed
-their bases. Here they encamped in the evening
-near one of the islands which are formed by the
-river. The noise of the cataract was heard in the
-night, at about half an hour’s distance. The place
-is very romantic: when the inundation subsides,
-many small lakes are left among the rocks; and the
-banks of these, overgrown with large tamarisks,
-have a picturesque appearance amid the black and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>
-green rocks; the lakes and pools thus formed cover
-a space of upwards of two miles in breadth.</p>
-
-<p>The Arabs who serve as guides through these
-wild districts “have devised,” says Burckhardt, “a
-singular mode of extorting small presents from the
-traveller: they alight at certain spots, and beg a
-present; if it is refused, they collect a heap of sand,
-and mould it into the form of a diminutive tomb, and
-then placing a stone at each of its extremities, they
-apprize the traveller that his tomb is made; meaning
-that henceforward there will be no security for him
-in this rocky wilderness. Most persons pay a trifling
-contribution rather than have their graves made
-before their eyes; there were, however, several
-tombs of this description dispersed over the plain.
-Being satisfied with my guide, I gave him one piastre,
-with which he was content.”</p>
-
-<p>On his arriving in the territory of Sukkot, he presented
-the letter to the governor of which he was
-the bearer; and received from this old savage a scrap
-of paper, containing an introduction to his son, who
-was the chief of the southern part of the district.
-Here the guide, who had been granted him at Derr,
-reached the extremity of his commission, and announced
-his intention of returning from thence;
-four piastres, however, overcame his determination,
-and he agreed to proceed to Mahass: “If Hassan
-Kashif,” said he, “upbraids me, I shall tell him that
-you rode on, notwithstanding my exhortations, and
-that I did not think it honourable to leave you alone.”
-An admirable custom prevails in this and every other
-part of Nubia: water-jars are placed under a low
-roof at short distances by the roadside, where the
-traveller may always quench his thirst; and every
-village pays a small monthly sum to some person to
-fill those jars morning and evening. The same
-thing is practised upon a much larger scale in Upper
-Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>Upon Burckhardt’s reaching the Mahass territory,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>
-he suddenly found himself in the midst of the worst
-description of savages. The governor, a ferocious
-black, received him in a hut, furiously intoxicated,
-and surrounded by numerous followers in the same
-condition. In the midst of their drunken mirth they
-called for their muskets, and amused themselves
-with firing in the hut. Burckhardt every moment
-expected that a random ball would put an end to his
-travels; but the palm wine at length extended the
-whole of this atrocious rabble upon the ground, and
-next morning, when sleep had somewhat restored
-the tone of the governor’s senses, he found time to
-question our traveller respecting the motives of his
-visit. The story which he related to them was not
-believed: “You are an agent of Mohammed,” said
-they; “but at Mahass we spit at Mohammed Ali’s
-beard, and cut off the heads of those who are
-enemies to the Mamelukes.” These suspicions,
-although they produced no immediate injury to his
-personal safety, entirely put a stop to his progress
-farther south; for he was now within two days and
-a half of the limits of Dongola, where the Mamelukes
-were lords paramount, and to enter their territories
-with the character of an agent of Mohammed
-Ali would be to court certain death. He therefore
-turned his face towards the north, and travelled with
-all possible celerity along the eastern bank of the
-Nile, until he arrived at Kolbe, where he swam across
-the river, holding by his camel’s tail with one hand,
-and urging on the beast with the other.</p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt now descended the Nile to Ipsambol,
-the vast rocky temple of which he supposed to be
-of extremely ancient date. He here found four
-colossal statues of enormous magnitude, which had
-been hewn out of the rock, on the face of an elevated
-cliff, with their backs adhering to the precipice.
-The fine sand of the desert had been blown
-up into mounds against the rock, and covered two
-of these statues almost entirely; the rest rose
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
-somewhat above the surface. The faces of these
-colossal statues are turned towards the north.
-“The head, which is above the surface,” says he,
-“has a most expressive youthful countenance, approaching
-nearer to the Grecian model of beauty
-than that of any ancient Egyptian figure I have seen;
-indeed, were it not for a thin, oblong beard, it might
-well pass for a head of Pallas.”</p>
-
-<p>From Ipsambol he continued his journey to Mosmos
-and Derr, where he parted with his guide, who,
-on taking his leave, begged as a present the mellaye,
-or cloak, which our traveller usually wore. To this
-request Burckhardt replied, “May God smooth your
-path!”&mdash;a phrase usually addressed to beggars, when
-they are civilly told to be gone. “No,” said the
-Arab, who had often employed this phrase when he
-desired to elude the questions of the traveller, “for
-once I will beg you to smooth it.” “So,” says
-Burckhardt, “I gave him the mellaye, and a small
-present in money; and am confident that Abou Saad
-will never forget me.”</p>
-
-<p>On his return to Assouan, Burckhardt’s first care
-was to repair, by repose, the inroads which fatigue
-had made upon his constitution. He then repaired
-to Esne, where he established his head-quarters. It
-being his policy to excite but little attention, he
-very seldom went into company, dressed meanly,
-and reduced his expenditure to the lowest possible
-sum. The cheapness of provisions was incredible.
-His whole expenditure for himself, his servant, his
-dromedary, and his ass not exceeding one shilling
-and sixpence per day, while his horse cost him no
-more than sixteen pence per month.</p>
-
-<p>Here he remained until the 2d of March, 1814,
-when he joined himself, as a petty trader, to another
-caravan, which was proceeding from Deraou to Berber.
-The caravan, consisting of about fifty merchants,
-with their slaves and beasts, moved under
-the protection of about thirty Ababde Arabs, who,
-though no heroes or philosophers, were not remarkably
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>
-deficient either in courage or humanity.
-Burckhardt was a man more apt to blame than
-praise. If an individual performed a generous action,
-he generally evinced a disposition to attribute
-it to some selfish or mean motive, probably from the
-opinion that it might be considered vulgar and unphilosophical
-to betray a belief in disinterested
-virtue. It is to be regretted, however, that he
-should have indulged in this unamiable habit of thinking,
-as nothing more surely tends to awaken the resentment
-or suspicion of the reader, who will be led
-to imagine that he who constantly misrepresents the
-motives of men may sometimes, from unknown
-causes, be tempted to misrepresent their manners
-and actions also. If we do not entertain this opinion
-of Burckhardt, it is that we exercise towards him a
-higher degree of charity than he was accustomed to
-exercise towards others.</p>
-
-<p>The march of a caravan through the desert is a
-magnificent spectacle. There is a kind of sublime
-daring in thus venturing upon what seem to be the
-secret places of nature; the places whence the simoom,
-the hurricane, and the locust-cloud issue forth
-upon their fatal errands, and where many tremendous
-phenomena, peculiar to those dreary regions, present
-themselves, at intervals, to the astonished but
-delighted eye of the traveller.</p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt, on this occasion, possessed no command
-over his own movements. He travelled,
-halted, ate, slept, in obedience to the fantasy of the
-caravan-leaders; who were ignorant, however, that
-the humble trader, whom they regarded, at most,
-with compassion, was at that moment forming reflections,
-and bringing observations to maturity,
-which were, perhaps for ages, to affect the opinion
-entertained by the civilized world of their character
-and pursuits. Meanwhile the merchants, who were
-chiefly engaged in the debasing traffic of slaves, and,
-as may be supposed, cherished no respect for any
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-thing but riches, and the power which commands
-riches, looked upon their humble companion with
-undisguised contempt; for imbecility and ignorance
-are of themselves incapable of appreciating intellectual
-superiority, and reverence it only when it is
-exerted for their defence or destruction. The scorn
-which our traveller entertained for those miscreants
-was, therefore, just. They constantly treated him
-with contumely, though he professed a belief in the
-same law and the same prophets; plundered his
-water-skins, or obstructed his filling them at the
-wells, thus exposing him to the danger of perishing
-of thirst; circulated, in the towns where they
-stopped, the report that he was a spy; and, in short,
-put in practice every art which their dastardly malice
-and shallow brains could conceive, in order to disgust
-him with the trade, and thus free themselves
-from a new competitor. But they were slave-dealers:
-an epithet which comprises every thing
-most loathsome and abominable; and their manners
-entirely corresponded with their occupation, being
-marked by a degree of depravity which language
-blushes to describe.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of a week’s journey, the caravan arrived
-at the celebrated wells of El Haimar, in the vicinity
-of which they found the tomb of a Mameluke chief,
-who died on this spot. “His companions, having
-enclosed the naked corpse within low walls of loose
-stones, had covered it over with a large block. The
-dryness of the air had preserved the corpse in the
-most perfect state. Looking at it through the interstices
-of the stones which enveloped it, it appeared
-to me a more perfect mummy than any I had seen in
-Egypt. The mouth was wide open, and our guide
-related that the man had died for want of water,
-although so near the wells.” Next day they passed
-Wady Ollaky, a fine valley, extending east and west
-from the Nile to the Red Sea. Here were numerous
-trees and excellent pasture; advantages which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
-caused it to be regarded with peculiar veneration by
-the Bedouins; and every man, as he traversed it on
-his ass or camel, took a handful of dhourra, and
-threw it on the ground, as a kind of pious offering to
-the good genius of the Wady.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day, in crossing Wady El Towashy,
-or the Valley of the Eunuch, Burckhardt saw the
-tomb of that Mahomet Towash whose body was
-found on the sands by Bruce, three days after he had
-been murdered by his guides. The principal facts
-in Bruce’s narrative of this transaction Burckhardt
-found to be true, but he imagined that the details of
-the story must have been “made up.” Nothing
-can be conceived more insolent or absurd than this
-skepticism. Why should it be supposed that we
-were to accept the testimony of this young man,
-coming from a country where assuredly truth is not
-more respected than it is in Britain, and who, compared
-with Bruce, was an unknown and an inferior
-person, before that of an English gentleman, whose
-education was conducted with the utmost care, and
-who, except as a traveller, was never regarded, I
-believe, other than as a person of probity and honour?
-The principle which teaches the despots of
-the East to respect each other’s harems, when, by
-the chances of war, they fall into their hands, as
-Darius’s fell into those of Alexander, should, we
-think, be acted upon by travellers, who, unless upon
-the amplest and most satisfactory information, should
-beware of tampering with the integrity of each other’s
-characters. The contrary proceeding must, in the
-end, be productive of a degree of skepticism which
-would extinguish all enthusiasm and enterprise in
-travellers, who, at this rate, could expect no better
-fate than to be denounced as liars by every timid
-knave, who, skulking by his own fireside, might be
-impelled by envy to rail at those who boldly measure
-sea and land, and undergo the extremity of hardships
-to obtain an honourable reputation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span></p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt, however, had acquired the habit of
-suspecting every thing, not because he himself could
-have been guilty of an untruth, for he was a high-spirited
-and honourable man, but because he generalized
-too hastily. I readily pardon his error, therefore,
-and trust that his involuntary injustice may be
-injurious neither to Bruce’s character, nor to his
-own. His picture of what he endured in the course
-of this journey is sufficient to account for any little
-asperity of manner observable in his travels.
-“For myself,” says he, in describing what daily
-occurred at their halting-places, “I was often driven
-from the coolest and most comfortable birth into
-the burning sun, and generally passed the midday
-hours in great distress; for besides the exposure to
-heat, I had to cook my dinner, a service which I
-could never prevail upon any of my companions,
-even the poorest servants, to perform for me, though
-I offered to let them share my homely fare. In the
-evening the same labour occurred again, when
-fatigued by the day’s journey, during which I always
-walked for four or five hours, in order to spare my
-ass, and when I was in the utmost need of repose.
-Hunger, however, always prevailed over fatigue, and
-I was obliged to fetch and cut wood, to light a fire,
-to cook, to feed the ass, and finally to make coffee,
-a cup of which, presented to my Daraou companions,
-who were extremely eager to obtain it, was the
-only means I possessed of keeping them in tolerable
-good-humour. A good night’s rest, however, always
-repaired my strength, and I was never in better
-health and spirits than during this journey, although
-its fatigues were certainly very great, and much
-beyond my expectation. The common dish of all
-the travellers at noon was fetyre, which is flour
-mixed up with water into a liquid paste, and then
-baked upon the sadj, or iron plate; butter is then
-poured over it, or honey, or sometimes a sauce is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
-made of butter and dried bamyé. In the evening
-some lentils are boiled, or some bread is baked
-with salt, either upon the sadj or in ashes, and a
-sauce of bamyé, or onion, poured over lentils, or
-upon the bread, after it has been crumbled into
-small pieces. Early in the morning every one
-eats a piece of dry biscuit, with some raw onions or
-dates.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 14th of March, on arriving at the Wady el
-Nabeh, they found the celebrated wells of that valley
-insufficient to supply the caravan until they should
-reach the rocks of Shigre, and as no water was anywhere
-to be found in the intervening space they
-were reduced to the greatest perplexity. “Upon
-such occasions as these,” says Burckhardt, “every
-man gives his opinion: and mine was, that we
-should kill our thirty-five asses, which required a
-daily supply of at least fifteen water-skins, that we
-should load the camels to the utmost of their strength
-with water, and strike out a straight way through
-the desert towards Berber, without touching at Shigre;
-in this manner we might perform the journey
-in five forced marches.” This plan the Arabs refused
-to follow. They repaired their water-skins and their
-sandals, refreshed themselves with bathing in the
-cool wells, and then set out. But “it was not without
-great apprehension,” says our traveller, “that I
-departed from this place. Our camels and asses
-carried water for three or four days only, and I saw
-no possibility of escaping from the dreadful effects
-of a want of water. In order to keep my ass in
-good spirits, I took off the two small water-skins
-with which I had hitherto loaded him, and paid one
-of the Ababdes four dollars to carry four small
-water-skins as far as Berber; for I thought that if
-the ass could carry me, I might bear thirst for two
-days at least, but that if he should break down, I
-should certainly not be able to walk one whole day
-without water in this hot season of the year.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span></p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding all these difficulties and sufferings,
-our traveller considered the Nubian desert, at
-least as far south as Shigre, far less terrible than that
-of Syria or Tyh. Trees and water are much more frequent,
-and though it be intersected in various directions
-by shaggy barren rocks, the more desolate and
-awful appearance which it acquires from this circumstance
-is, in a great measure, compensated for by its
-consequent grandeur and variety. “Here,” says the
-traveller, “during the whole day’s march, we were
-surrounded on all sides by lakes of mirage, called by
-the Arabs Serab. Its colour was of the purest
-azure, and so clear that the shadows of the mountains
-that bordered the horizon were reflected on it
-with the greatest precision, and the delusion of its
-being a sheet of water was thus rendered still more
-perfect.” This mockwater, however, only served
-to heighten the terrors which the scarcity of real
-water excited. Every man now began to attach the
-greatest importance to the small stock he possessed.
-Burckhardt, who possessed but two draughts of
-water in the world, drank the moiety of it at once,
-reserving the remainder for the next day; but,
-observing the general scarcity, shared the dejection
-of his companions. At length, their condition having
-become nearly desperate, they adopted the course
-recommended by the Ababde chief, and despatched
-ten or twelve of their companions, mounted on as
-many camels, to the nearest part of the Nile, which
-was not more than five or six hours distant; but its
-banks being inhabited in this part by fierce hostile
-tribes, nothing but the fear of instant death could
-have forced them upon this step. They timed their
-march in such a manner that they would reach the
-banks of the river by night; when they were directed
-to select some uninhabited spot, and having there
-loaded their camels, to return with all speed. “We
-passed the evening,” says Burckhardt, “in the
-greatest anxiety, for if the camels should not return,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
-we had little hopes of escape either from thirst or
-from the sword of our enemies, who, if they had
-once got sight of our camels, would have followed
-their footsteps through the desert, and would certainly
-have discovered us. Many of my companions
-came in the course of the evening to beg some water
-of me, but I had well hidden my treasure, and
-answered them by showing my empty skins. We
-remained the greater part of the night in silent and
-sullen expectation of the result of our desperate
-mission. At length, about three o’clock in the
-morning, we heard the distant hallooings of our
-companions; and soon after refreshed ourselves
-with copious draughts of the delicious water of the
-Nile.”</p>
-
-<p>This was the last of their sufferings on this route;
-on the 23d of March they entered on a plain with a
-slight slope towards the river, which was felt at
-more than two hours’ distance by the greater moisture
-of the air. The Arabs exclaimed, “God be
-praised, we again smell the Nile!” and about ten
-o’clock at night, the caravan entered the village of
-Ankhecreh, the principal place in the district of
-Berber. Burckhardt’s residence at this place was
-nothing but one continued series of annoyance. The
-principal delight of the whole population, among
-whom drunkenness and debauchery were scarcely
-accounted vices, seemed to consist in deluding and
-plundering travellers, who on all the envenomed soil
-of Africa could scarcely be exposed to more irritating
-insults or extortion than on this spot.</p>
-
-<p>The caravan, now reduced to about two-thirds of
-its original number, several of the merchants having
-returned to Egypt, while others remained at Berber
-to dispose of their goods, again put itself in motion
-on the 7th of April. Our traveller, who had hitherto
-attached himself to the merchant portion of the
-party, several of whom, previous to their leaving
-Egypt, had received benefits at his hands, was here
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
-driven by abuse and contumely to take refuge among
-the Ababde, who not only willingly received him as
-their companion, but exercised their influence, on
-more than one occasion, to protect him from violence.
-Pursuing a southerly direction for three
-days, they arrived at the town of Damer, which,
-under the government of a number of religious men,
-had attained a very high pitch of prosperity. Their
-sanctity, indeed, was considerably aided by their
-skill in magic, which, as Burckhardt was credibly
-informed, was so great that, on one occasion, the
-Faky el Kebir, or Great Fakir, caused a lamb
-to bleat in the stomach of the thief who had stolen,
-and afterward eaten it. There was no daily market
-at Damer, nor was there any thing whatever sold
-publicly, except on the weekly market-day. However,
-as our traveller needed a few measures of dhourra
-for his ass, and found it impracticable to purchase
-less than a dollar’s worth, which would have been
-more than he could carry, he was under the necessity
-of imitating his companions, and went from
-house to house with some strings of beads in his
-hands, offering them for sale at about four handfuls
-of dhourra for each bead. “I gained at this rate,”
-says he, “about sixty per cent. above the prime
-cost, and had at the same time an opportunity of
-entering many private houses. I repeated these
-walks every day during our stay. One afternoon,
-while crying my beads for sale, I was accosted by a
-faky, who asked me if I could read. On my
-answering in the affirmative, he desired me to follow
-him to a place where, he said, I might expect to get
-a good dinner. He then led me to a house where I
-found a great number of people, collected to celebrate
-the memory of some relative lately deceased.
-Several fakies were reading the Koran in a low tone
-of voice. A great faky afterward came in, whose
-arrival was the signal for reciting the Koran in loud
-songs, in the manner customary in the East, in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>
-which I joined them. This was continued for about
-half an hour, until dinner was brought in, which was
-very plentiful, as a cow had been killed upon the
-occasion. After a hearty meal, we recommenced
-our reading. One of the sheïkhs produced a basketful
-of white pebbles, over which several prayers
-were read. These pebbles were destined to be
-strewed over the tomb of the deceased in the manner
-which I had often observed upon tombs freshly
-made. Upon my inquiries respecting this custom,
-which I confessed to have never before seen practised
-in any Mohammedan country, the faky answered
-that it was a mere meritorious action: that there
-was no absolute necessity for it; but that it was
-thought that the soul of the deceased, when hereafter
-visiting the tomb, might be glad to find these
-pebbles, in order to use them as beads in addressing
-its prayers to the Creator. When the reading was
-over, the women began to sing and howl. I then
-left the room, and on taking my departure my kind
-host put some bones of roasted meat in my hand to
-serve for my supper.”</p>
-
-<p>In proceeding from this place to Shendy the caravan
-was accompanied by several fakies, whose presence
-was found to be a sufficient protection against
-the Nubian Bedouins. They reached Shendy on the
-17th of April, and this being, next to Sennaar and
-Kobbe, the largest town in eastern Soudan, they remained
-here a whole month, during which time
-Burckhardt enjoyed an ample opportunity of collecting
-materials for an account of this and the neighbouring
-countries. Crocodiles are numerous in this
-part of the Nile. They are much dreaded by the
-inhabitants, who, when repairing to its banks for
-water or to wash their linen, are in constant fear of
-these creatures. Burckhardt ate of the crocodile’s
-flesh, which he found of a dirty white colour, not
-unlike young veal, with a slight fishy smell. To
-bring its flesh into fashion as an article of food
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
-would be the most certain way of rendering it
-rare.</p>
-
-<p>At this place Burckhardt abandoned all idea of
-proceeding farther south, and, in order to procure
-himself some little civility from his former companions,
-circulated the report that he intended to
-return directly to Egypt, where, by describing to the
-pasha their conduct towards him during the journey,
-he might do them considerable injury. This stratagem
-succeeded. Their civility and affected friendship
-now surpassed their former insolence. In the mean
-while, understanding that a caravan was about to
-set out for Suakin on the Red Sea, our traveller prevailed
-on the Ababde chief to introduce and recommend
-him as his own friend to its leader. Here he
-disposed of his merchandise, and purchased a slave-boy
-to attend upon him on the road; and having
-laid in the necessary quantity of provisions, joined the
-Suakin caravan, and departed from Shendy on the
-17th of May. “After all my accounts were settled,”
-says he, “I had four dollars left; but the smallness
-of the sum occasioned me no uneasiness, for I calculated
-on selling my camel on the coast for as much
-as would defray the expenses of my voyage to Jidda,
-and I had a letter of credit on that place for a considerable
-sum, which I had procured at Cairo.”</p>
-
-<p>The road now traversed by the caravan crossed
-the Atbara, the Astaboras of the ancients, on the
-banks of which they found numerous groves of trees,
-and the most luxuriant vegetation. At the sight of
-this, the imagination even of the slave-dealers was
-touched with enthusiasm; and in alluding to the
-dreary track over which they had travelled, one of
-them exclaimed, “After death comes paradise!”
-“There was a greater variety of natural vegetation
-here than I had seen anywhere on the banks of the
-Nile in Egypt. I observed different species of the
-mimosa, doom-trees of the largest size, whose luxuriant
-clusters of fruit excited the wishes of the
-slaves, the nebek-tree, with its fruit ripe; the allobé,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>
-of the size of the nebek, besides a great number of
-others unknown to me; to these may be added an
-abundance of wild herbage, growing on a rich fat
-soil, similar to that of Egypt. The trees were inhabited
-by great numbers of the feathered tribe, whose
-song travellers in Egypt very rarely hear. I saw no
-birds with rich plumage, but observed small ones of
-several different kinds. Some sweet notes struck
-my ears, which I had never before heard, and the
-amorous cooings of the turtle-dove were unceasing.
-We hastened to the river, and eagerly descended
-its low banks to allay our thirst. Several camels,
-at the sight of the water, broke the halters by which
-they were led, and in rushing or stumbling down the
-banks threw off their loads, and occasioned great
-clamour and disorder.”</p>
-
-<p>In the vicinity of Goz Rajeb, Burckhardt saw on
-the summit of a hill the ruins of a huge fabric of ancient
-times, but was deterred from visiting it by the
-assertion of his companions that it was the haunt
-of banditti. On the 5th of June, while the caravan
-halted at an encampment of Hadendoa Bedouins,
-Burckhardt beheld the effects of a desert storm:
-“Towards evening we were visited by another hurricane,
-the most tremendous I ever remember to
-have witnessed. A dark blue cloud first appeared,
-extending to about 25° above the horizon; as it approached
-nearer, and increased in height, it assumed
-an ash-gray colour, with a tinge of yellow, striking
-every person in the caravan who had not been accustomed
-to such phenomena with amazement at
-its magnificent and terrific appearance; as the cloud
-approached still nearer, the yellow tinge became
-more general, while the horizon presented the
-brightest azure. At last, it burst upon us in its rapid
-course, and involved us in darkness and confusion;
-nothing could be distinguished at the distance of
-five or six feet; our eyes were filled with dust; our
-temporary sheds were blown down at the first gust,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>
-and many of the more firmly fixed tents of the Hadendoa
-followed; the largest withstood for a time
-the effects of the blast, but were at last obliged to
-yield, and the whole camp was levelled with the
-ground. In the mean time the terrified camels arose,
-broke the cords by which they were fastened, and
-endeavoured to escape from the destruction which
-appeared to threaten them; thus adding not a little
-to our embarrassment. After blowing about half an
-hour with incessant violence, the wind suddenly
-abated, and when the atmosphere became clear, the
-tremendous cloud was seen continuing its havoc to
-the north-west.”</p>
-
-<p>Next day they reached Taka, a district famous for
-its fertility, where hares, gazelles, wolves, giraffes,
-and limes as large, it was said, as cows, were found
-in the woods. Hence, after a stay of several days,
-they departed for Suakin, and after a not unpleasant
-journey through a wild, picturesque country, approached
-the termination of their toils. On the
-morning of the last day they started before sunrise.
-“The eastern hills,” says Burckhardt, “terminate
-in this latitude; and the sun was just rising beyond
-them, when we descried its reflection at an immense
-distance in the sea, affording a pleasing sight to
-every individual in the caravan, but most of all to
-me.” At length, on the 26th of June, they reached
-Suakin, and pitched their little sheds at about twenty
-minutes’ walk from the town. Next day they were
-visited by the emir, who, understanding that our
-traveller’s camel was an excellent animal, determined
-on taking it as a part of the caravan dues; upon
-which Burckhardt insisted upon referring their difference
-to the Turkish custom-house officer. His
-wishes were quickly complied with, but the aga, instead
-of interfering to protect the stranger, immediately
-conceived the idea of uniting with the emir in
-seizing upon the whole of his property; and therefore,
-pretending to regard him as a Mameluke spy,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>
-began at once to overwhelm him with abuse. To
-all this Burckhardt returned no reply, but requested
-the aga to inform him whether the emir was entitled
-to his camel. “Not only thy camel,” replied the
-Turk, “but thy whole baggage must be taken and
-searched. We shall render a good account of them
-to the pasha, depend upon it. You shall not impose
-upon us, you rascal; and you may be thankful if
-we do not cut off your head!” Our traveller protested
-that he was nothing but an unfortunate merchant,
-and endeavoured, by a submissive deportment,
-to pacify his anger; but “he began cursing and
-swearing in Turkish,” says Burckhardt, “and then
-calling an old cripple, to whom he had given the title
-of waly, or police-officer, he ordered him to tie my
-hands, to put me in prison, and to bring my slave
-and baggage into his presence. I now thought it
-high time to produce my firmans, which I drew from
-a secret pocket in my thaboot; one of them was
-written in Turkish, upon a piece of paper two feet
-and a half in length, and one foot in breadth, and
-was sealed with the great seal of Mohammed Aly;
-the other, a smaller one, was written in Arabic, and
-bore the seal of Ibrahim Pasha, his son, in which
-Ibrahim termed me ‘Our man, Ibrahim, the Syrian.’
-When Yemak saw the firmans unfolded, he became
-completely stupified, and the persons present looked
-at me with amazement. The aga could read the
-Arabic only; but he kissed them both, put them to
-his forehead, and then protested to me, in the most
-submissive terms, that it was the good of the public
-service alone that had led him to treat me as he had
-done, and for which he begged me a thousand pardons.
-Nothing more was said about the emir’s right
-to my camel, and he declared that I should pay no
-duty for my slave, though he was entitled to it.”</p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt now disposed of his camel, and took
-his passage to Jidda in one of the country vessels.
-After tossing about the Red Sea for nearly a fortnight,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
-visiting Macouar, and several points of the
-African coast, he arrived at Jidda on the 18th of
-July, 1814. His first care now was to present his
-letter of credit, which being of an old date, however,
-he was refused payment, though the merchant offered
-him a lodging at his house. This he accepted,
-but removed, two days afterward, to a public khan,
-where he was attacked by a fever, in which he lay
-delirious for several days. His recovery from this
-violent disorder, which he attributed to his indulging
-in the fine fruits of the Jidda market, seems to have
-been chiefly owing to the kindness of a Greek captain,
-who, having been his fellow-passenger from
-Suakin, attended him during one of his lucid intervals,
-and, at his own request, procured a barber,
-who bled him copiously.</p>
-
-<p>Here our traveller was reduced to the hard necessity
-of parting with his slave, for whom he obtained
-forty-eight dollars, of which thirty-two were profit.
-With this he dressed himself in the guise of a reduced
-Egyptian gentleman, and determined to remain
-in the Hejaz until the time of the pilgrimage
-in the following November. However, as his funds
-were far too low to enable him to live independently
-until that period, he began to turn his thoughts towards
-manual labour; but first determined upon
-trying the effect of a direct application to Mohammed Aly,
-then at Tayef. He accordingly wrote to
-his highness’s Armenian physician, who was likewise
-at Tayef with his master, requesting him to
-learn from the pasha whether he would accept a bill
-upon Burckhardt’s correspondent at Cairo, and
-order his treasurer at Jidda to pay the amount of it.
-Before the result of this application could be known,
-he received an invitation to the house of Tousoun
-Pasha’s physician, who, upon being made acquainted
-with the state of his finances, kindly offered him the
-sum of three thousand piasters (about 100<i>l.</i>) for a
-bill upon Cairo payable at sight. Mohammed Aly,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
-to whom his condition was accidentally made known,
-immediately despatched a messenger with two dromedaries,
-an order for five hundred piasters, and a request
-that he would repair immediately with the
-same messenger to Tayef. With this invitation,
-which was, in fact, equivalent to a command, he
-thought it necessary to comply, and accordingly
-set off on the same afternoon (24th of August) for
-the interior of the Hejaz.</p>
-
-<p>They were accompanied during the first portion
-of the way by about twenty camel-drivers of the tribe
-of Harb, who were carrying money to Mecca for
-the pasha’s treasury. The road at first lay over a
-barren sandy plain, ascending slightly as it receded
-from the sea; it then entered the narrow gorges of a
-mountainous country, where they overtook a caravan
-of pilgrims, who were accompanying a quantity
-of goods and provisions destined for the army. The
-pasha, who, no doubt, suspected the sincerity of our
-traveller’s creed, had given orders to the guide to
-conduct him by a by-road to Tayef, which lay to
-the north of Mecca: “Just before we left Hadda,”
-says Burckhardt, “my guide, who knew nothing
-further respecting me than that I had business with
-the pasha at Tayef, that I performed all the outward
-observances of a Moslem pilgrim, and that I had
-been liberal to him before our departure, asked me
-the reason of his having been ordered to take me
-by the northern road. I replied that it was probably
-thought shorter than the other. ‘That is a mistake,’
-he replied; ‘the Mecca road is quite as short, and much
-safer; and if you have no objection we will proceed
-by it.’ This was just what I wished, though I had
-taken care not to betray any anxiety on the subject;
-and we accordingly followed the great road, in company
-with the other travellers.”</p>
-
-<p>On this occasion, however, Burckhardt saw but
-little of the sacred city, as the guide, who had no
-curiosity to gratify, hurried through the streets
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
-without allowing him time for observation. Continuing
-their journey, therefore, towards the east,
-they arrived, on the 27th of August, at Ras el Kora,
-where they passed the night. “This,” says our
-traveller, “is the most beautiful spot in the Hejaz,
-and more picturesque and delightful than any spot
-I had seen since my departure from Lebanon, in
-Syria. The top of Jebel Kora is flat, but large
-masses of granite lie scattered over it, the surface
-of which, like that of the granite rocks near the
-sacred cataract of the Nile, is blackened by the sun.
-Several small rivulets descend from this peak, and
-irrigate the plain, which is covered with verdant
-fields, and large shady trees, on the side of the granite
-rocks. To those who have only known the dreary
-and scorching sands of the lower country of the
-Hejaz, this scene is as surprising as the keen air
-which blows here is refreshing. Many of the fruit-trees
-of Europe are found here; figs, apricots,
-peaches, apples, the Egyptian sycamore, almonds,
-pomegranates; but particularly vines, the produce of
-which is of the best quality.” “After having passed
-through this delightful district for about half an hour,
-just as the sun was rising, when every leaf and blade
-of grass was covered with a balmy dew, and every
-tree and shrub diffused a fragrance as delicious to
-the smell as was the landscape to the eye, I halted
-near the largest of the rivulets, which, although
-not more than two paces across, nourishes upon its
-banks a green alpine turf, such as the mighty Nile,
-with all its luxuriance, can never produce in Egypt.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon his reaching Tayef, he caused his arrival to
-be made known to the pasha, who, upon learning his
-desire to visit the Holy Cities, expressed a desire
-to see him late in the evening at his public residence,
-and observed jocosely to the Kadhy of Mecca, who
-happened to be present, “It is not the beard alone
-which proves a man to be a true Moslem; but you
-are a better judge in such matters than I am.” Our
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-traveller, on learning these particulars, affected to
-be much hurt by the pasha’s suspicions, and let the
-physician, who was the bearer of the message, know
-that he should not go to the pasha’s public audience
-unless he was received as a Turk. When the physician
-delivered this message, Mohammed Aly smiled,
-and said that he was welcome, whether Turk or not.
-The audience passed off well. But Burckhardt clearly
-discovered that he was regarded as a spy of the
-English government; that his conduct was narrowly
-watched; and that, in being made the guest of the
-physician, he was a kind of prisoner, all whose
-words and actions were reported to the pasha. This
-was by no means an agreeable position. He therefore
-determined to be delivered from it; and, in
-order to effect his purpose, adopted the most prudent
-plan that could have been imagined: he rendered
-himself so troublesome and expensive to his host,
-that the latter, in order to be freed from him, represented
-him in the most favourable light to his master,
-and contrived to obtain him permission to spend the
-last days of the Ramadhan at Mecca.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, on the 7th of September, Burckhardt
-departed in company with the kadhy for the Holy
-City. On passing Wady Mohram, he assumed the
-<i>ihram</i>, the dress worn by all pilgrims during the
-Hadj, and consisting of two pieces of linen, woollen,
-or cotton cloth, one of which is wrapped round the
-loins, while the other is thrown over the neck and
-shoulders, so as to leave part of the right arm bare.
-In this dress he arrived at Mecca, on the 9th of September;
-and, as the law enjoins, proceeded immediately
-to visit the temple, before he had attended
-to any worldly concern whatever. The ceremonies
-practised on this occasion are long and tedious,
-the Mohammedans apparently believing, like our
-monkish madmen in Europe, that whatever is painful
-or disgusting to man must therefore be pleasing
-to God. Having completed these absurdities, he
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
-hired a ready-furnished lodging in the house of a
-metowaf, or guide to the holy places; who, while
-the poor hajjî was occupied with his devotions, employed
-his spare moments industriously in stealing
-whatever he could from his travelling-sack.</p>
-
-<p>Being desirous of completing his travelling equipments
-before the commencement of the Hadj,
-Burckhardt now proceeded to Jidda, where such
-things are more easily procured than at Mecca, and
-again returned about the middle of October, with a
-slave-boy whom he purchased. He hired apartments
-in an unfrequented part of the city, where he enjoyed
-the advantage of several large trees growing
-before his windows, “the verdure of which,” says
-he, “among the barren and sunburnt rocks of
-Mecca, was to me more exhilarating than the finest
-landscape could have been under different circumstances.”
-The principal curiosity of Mecca is the
-Beitullah, or House of God, a species of quadrangle,
-in the centre of which stands the Kaaba, “an
-oblong massive structure, eighteen paces in length,
-fourteen in breadth, and from thirty-five to forty feet
-in height. It is constructed of the gray Mecca
-stone, in large blocks of different sizes, joined together
-in a very rough manner, and with bad cement.”
-“At the north-east corner of the Kaaba,
-near the door, is the famous ‘Black Stone;’ it forms
-a part of the sharp angle of the building at four or
-five feet above the ground. It is an irregular oval
-of about seven inches in diameter, with an undulating
-surface, composed of about a dozen smaller
-stones of different sizes and shapes, well joined together
-with a small quantity of cement, and perfectly
-smoothed. It looks as if the whole had been
-broken into many pieces by a violent blow, and then
-united again. It is very difficult to determine accurately
-the quality of this stone, which has been
-worn to its present surface by the millions of
-touches and kisses it has received. It appeared to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
-me like a laver, containing several small extraneous
-particles, of a whitish and of a yellowish substance.
-Its colour is now a deep reddish brown, approaching
-to black: it is surrounded on all sides by a border,
-composed of a substance which I took to be a close
-cement of pitch and gravel, of a similar, but not
-quite the same, brownish colour. This border serves
-to support its detached pieces; it is two or three
-inches in breadth, and rises a little above the surface
-of the stone. Both the border and the stone
-itself are encircled by a silver band, broader below
-than above, and on the two sides, with a considerable
-swelling below, as if a part of the stone were
-hidden under it. The lower part of the border is
-studded with silver nails.”</p>
-
-<p>I have purposely made use of Burckhardt’s own
-words in describing the Black Stone, and several
-other objects of curiosity, that the reader may see
-the exact impressions which they made on the mind
-of the traveller; though, as his style is very diffuse,
-it would frequently not have been difficult to compress
-his meaning into a much smaller compass. I
-cannot, however, pursue the same course with his
-description of the Hadj; which, notwithstanding its
-interest, is far too voluminous for the space which
-I can bestow upon it. On the 21st of November,
-1814, the approach of the Syrian caravan was announced
-by a messenger, whose horse dropped down
-dead the moment he dismounted. Several other
-persons followed in about two hours after; and during
-the night, the main body, with the Pasha of Damascus
-at its head, came up, and encamped in the
-plain of Sheïkh Mahmoud. Next morning the
-Egyptian caravan likewise arrived; and at the same
-time Mohammed Aly, who desired to be present at
-the Hadj, appeared unexpectedly at Mecca, dressed
-in an ihram composed of two magnificent shawls of
-Kashmeer. All the hajjîs residing in the city now
-assumed the ihram, with the usual ceremonies, at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
-their own lodgings, preparatory to their setting out
-for Arafat, and at noon heard a short sermon in the
-mosque.</p>
-
-<p>The city was now full of movement and activity:
-all the pilgrims were preparing to set out for Arafat,
-some running hither and thither in search of lodgings,
-others visiting the markets, or the Kaaba. Many Meccawys,
-engaged in petty traffic, were hastening to
-establish themselves on the mountain, for the accommodation
-of the pilgrims. Camel-drivers led
-their beasts through the streets, offering them to the
-pilgrims for hire. On the 24th of November, the
-Syrian caravan, with the Mahmal, or sacred camel,
-in front, passed in procession through the city. The
-majority of the pilgrims rode in a species of palanquin,
-placed upon their camels; but the Pasha of
-Damascus, and other grandees, were mounted in
-tackhtravans, or splendid litters, which were borne
-by two camels. The heads of these picturesque
-animals were decorated with feathers, tassels, and
-bells. Crowds of people of all classes lined the
-streets, and greeted the pilgrims as they passed with
-loud acclamations and praise. The martial music
-of the pasha, twelve finely-caparisoned horses led
-in front of his tackhtravan, and the rich litters in
-which his women rode, particularly attracted attention.
-The Egyptian caravan followed soon after,
-and, consisting entirely of military pilgrims in the
-splendid Turkish costume, was no less admired than
-its predecessor. Both continued, without stopping,
-their march to Arafat, and were almost immediately
-followed by the other pilgrims in the city, and by far
-the greater proportion of the population of Mecca and
-Jidda, among whom our traveller likewise proceeded
-to the sacred hill.</p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt reached the camp about three hours
-after sunset. The pilgrims were still wandering
-about the plain, and among the tents, in search of
-their companions, or of their resting-place, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>
-many did not arrive until midnight. Numberless
-fires glimmered upon the dark plain to the extent of
-several miles; and high and brilliant clusters of
-lamps marked the different places of encampment
-of Mohammed Aly, Soleyman Pasha, and the Emir
-el Hadj of the Egyptian caravan. Few slept: “the
-devotees set up praying, and their loud chants were
-particularly distinguished on the side of the Syrian
-encampment. The merry Meccawys formed themselves
-into parties, singing jovial songs, accompanied
-by clapping of hands; and the coffee-houses
-scattered over the plain were crowded all night with
-customers. The night was dark and cold. I had
-formed a resting-place for myself by means of a
-large carpet tied to the back of a Meccawy’s tent;
-and having walked about for the greater part of the
-night, I had just disposed myself to sleep, when two
-guns, fired by the Syrian and Egyptian Hadj, announced
-the approaching dawn of the day of pilgrimage,
-and summoned the faithful to prepare for
-their morning prayers.”</p>
-
-<p>The scene which, on the unfolding of the dawn,
-presented itself to the eye of the traveller, was one
-of the most extraordinary upon earth. “Every pilgrim
-issued from his tent to walk over the plains,
-and take a view of the busy crowds assembled there.
-Long streets of tents, fitted up as bazaars, furnished
-all kinds of provisions. The Syrian and Egyptian
-cavalry were exercised by their chiefs early in the
-morning, while thousands of camels were seen feeding
-upon the dry shrubs of the plain all round the
-camp.” Burckhardt now ascended the summit of
-Arafat, whence he could enjoy a distant view of the
-whole, the mountain being an isolated mass of
-granite, and reaching the height of two hundred
-feet above the level of the plain. From this point
-he counted about three thousand tents, but the far
-greater number were, like himself, without tents.
-Twenty or twenty-five thousand camels were dispersed,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>
-in separate groups, over the plain; and the
-number of pilgrims of both sexes, and of all classes,
-could not amount to less than seventy thousand.
-“The Syrian Hadj was encamped on the south and
-south-west side of the mountain; the Egyptian on
-the south-east. Around the house of the Sherif,
-Yahya himself was encamped with his Bedouin
-troops, and in its neighbourhood were all the Hejaz
-people. Mohammed Aly, and Soleyman, Pasha of
-Damascus, as well as several of their officers, had
-very handsome tents; but the most magnificent of
-all was that of the wife of Mohammed Aly, the
-mother of Tousoun Pasha and Ibrahim Pasha, who
-had lately arrived at Cairo for the Hadj, with a truly
-royal equipage, five hundred camels being necessary
-to transport her baggage from Jidda to Mecca. Her
-tent was in fact an encampment, consisting of a
-dozen tents of different sizes, inhabited by her women;
-the whole enclosed by a wall of linen cloth,
-eight hundred paces in circuit, the single entrance to
-which was guarded by eunuchs in splendid dresses.
-Around this enclosure were pitched the tents of the
-men who formed her numerous suite. The beautiful
-embroidery on the exterior of this linen palace,
-with the various colours displayed in every part of
-it, constituted an object which reminded me of some
-descriptions in the Arabian Tales of the Thousand
-and One Nights.”</p>
-
-<p>Among the prodigious crowd were persons from
-every corner of the Mohammedan world. Burckhardt
-counted forty different languages, and did not
-doubt that there were many more. About three
-o’clock in the afternoon, the pilgrims, quitting their
-tents, which were immediately struck, and mounting
-their camels, pressed forward towards Mount Arafat,
-and covered its sides from top to bottom. The
-preacher now took his stand upon the platform on
-the mountain, and began to address the multitude.
-The hearing of the sermon, which lasts till sunset,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>
-constitutes the holy ceremony of the Hadj, and
-without being present at it, and at least appearing
-to hear, no pilgrim is entitled to the name of hajjî.
-“The two pashas, with their whole cavalry drawn
-up in two squadrons behind them, took their post in
-the rear of the deep line of camels of the hajjîs,
-to which those of the people of the Hejaz were also
-joined: and here they waited in solemn and respectful
-silence the conclusion of the sermon. Farther
-removed from the preacher was the Sherif Yahya,
-with his small body of soldiers, distinguished by
-several green standards carried before him. The
-two Mahmals, or holy camels, which carry on their
-backs the high structure that serves as the banner
-of their respective caravans, made way with difficulty
-through the ranks of camels that encircled the
-southern and eastern sides of the hill, opposite to
-the preacher, and took their station, surrounded by
-their guards, directly under the platform in front of
-him. The preacher, or khatyb, who is usually the
-Kadhy of Mecca, was mounted upon a finely-caparisoned
-camel, which had been led up the steps; it
-being traditionally said that Mohammed was always
-seated when he addressed his followers, a practice
-in which he was imitated by all the califs who came
-to the Hadj, and who from hence addressed their
-subjects in person. The Turkish gentleman of
-Constantinople, however, unused to camel-riding,
-could not keep his seat so well as the hardy Bedouin
-prophet; and the camel becoming unruly, he was
-soon obliged to alight from it. He read his sermon
-from a book in Arabic, which he held in his hands.
-At intervals of every four or five minutes he paused,
-and stretched forth his arms to implore blessings
-from above; while the assembled multitudes around
-and before him waved the skirts of their ihrams
-over their heads, and rent the air with shouts of
-<i>Lebeyk, Allah, huma Lebeyk!</i>&mdash;“Here we are at thy
-bidding, O God!” During the wavings of the ihrams,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
-the side of the mountain, thickly crowded as it was
-by the people in their white garments, had the appearance
-of a cataract of water; while the green
-umbrellas, with which several thousand hajjîs, sitting
-on their camels below, were provided, bore
-some resemblance to a verdant plain.”</p>
-
-<p>Burckhardt was present at all the remaining ceremonies
-of the Hadj, which I shall not now pause to
-describe; and after observing whatever was worthy
-of examination both at Mecca and Jidda, he joined a
-small caravan of pilgrims who were going to visit the
-tomb of the prophet, and set out for Medina on the
-15th of January, 1815. During this journey he imprudently
-advanced before the caravan, and was
-attacked by five Bedouins, from whom he was
-quickly delivered, however, by the approach of his
-companions. They reached Medina on the 28th of
-January. The ceremonies practised in this city
-were much less tedious than at Mecca, and did not
-occupy our traveller more than a quarter of an hour.
-Here, shortly after his arrival, he was attacked by
-an intermittent fever, accompanied by extraordinary
-despondency. His condition, indeed, was well calculated
-to inspire gloomy thoughts; for he had no
-society, and but one book, which was, however, as
-he observes, worth a whole shelf full of others.
-This was a pocket edition of Milton, which he had
-borrowed from an English ship at Jidda.</p>
-
-<p>Medina, it is well known, is chiefly indebted to the
-tomb of Mohammed for its celebrity. This mausoleum,
-which stands on the south-eastern corner of
-the principal mosque, is protected from the too near
-approach of visiters by an iron railing, painted green,
-about two-thirds the height of the pillars of the
-colonnade which runs round the interior of the
-mosque. “The railing is of good workmanship, in
-imitation of filligree, and is interwoven with open-worked
-inscriptions of yellow bronze, supposed by
-the vulgar to be of gold, and of so close a texture,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
-that no view can be obtained of the interior except
-by several small windows about six inches square,
-which are placed in the four sides of the railing,
-about five feet above the ground.” On the south
-side, where are the two principal windows, before
-which the devout stand when praying, the railing is
-plated with silver, and the common inscription&mdash;“There
-is no God but God, the Evident Truth”&mdash;is
-wrought in silver letters round the windows. The
-tomb itself, as well as that of Abu Bekr and Omar,
-which stand close to it, is concealed from the public
-gaze by a curtain of rich silk brocade of various colours,
-interwoven with silver flowers and arabesques,
-with inscriptions in characters of gold running across
-the midst of it, like that of the covering of the
-Kaaba. Behind this curtain, which, according to
-the historian of the city, was formerly changed every
-six years, and is now renewed by the Porte whenever
-the old one is decayed, or when a new sultan
-ascends the throne, none but the chief eunuchs, the
-attendants of the mosque, are permitted to enter.
-This holy sanctuary once served, as the temple of
-Delphi did among the Greeks, as the public treasury
-of the nation. Here the money, jewels, and other
-precious articles of the people of the Hejaz were
-kept in chests, or suspended on silken ropes. Among
-these was a copy of the Koran in Kufic characters;
-a brilliant star set in diamonds and pearls, which
-was suspended directly over the prophet’s tomb;
-with all sorts of vessels set with jewels, earrings,
-bracelets, necklaces, and other ornaments, sent as
-presents from all parts of the empire. Most of these
-articles were carried away by the Wahabees when
-they sacked and plundered the sacred cities.</p>
-
-<p>On the 21st of April, 1815, Burckhardt quitted Medina
-with a small caravan bound for Yembo, on the
-seacoast. His mind was still exceedingly depressed
-by the weak state of his body; and his gayety and
-animal spirits, with the energy which accompanies
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
-them in ardent minds, having deserted him, the
-world assumed in his eyes a sombre aspect, which
-rendered travelling and every other pleasure insipid.
-All he now sighed for was rest. This mental condition seems
-strongly to have affected even his opinions.
-His views both of men and things became
-cynical. Vice seemed to have spread like a deluge
-over the eastern world, leaving no single spot whereon
-Virtue might rest the sole of her foot. “For my
-own part,” says he, “<i>a long residence</i> among Turks,
-Syrians, and Egyptians <i>justifies me in declaring that
-they are wholly deficient in virtue, honour, and justice</i>;
-that they have <i>little true piety</i>, and <i>still less charity or
-forbearance</i>; and that <i>honesty</i> is only to be found in
-their <i>paupers or idiots</i>.” His mind was certainly labouring
-under the effects of his Medina fever when
-he wrote this passage, and it would therefore be lost
-labour to analyze or confute it minutely. That
-people who are “wholly deficient in virtue, honour,
-and justice” should be destitute of honesty, is no
-more to be wondered at than that a black camel
-should not be half-white; but if “true piety” be, as
-most moralists will admit, to be numbered among
-the virtues, then the orientals are not, as Mr. Burckhardt
-asserts, “<i>wholly</i> deficient in virtue,” &amp;c., since
-he allows that they have some, though but little,
-“true piety.” Again, either the majority of the orientals
-are rich, or the majority of them are honest;
-for if the majority of them are poor, or paupers, then
-the majority of them are honest; for honesty, we
-are told, is only to be found among paupers and
-idiots. It would be easy to expose and refute our
-traveller’s assertion by the direct testimony of persons
-still more competent than he to decide on such
-points; but his opinion is palpably absurd, like most
-others formed by sick or gloomy individuals, since
-no society could subsist if formed entirely of vicious
-members. Had Burckhardt himself lived to see his
-works through the press, such passages as the above
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
-would, I am persuaded, have been expunged or modified;
-for he was much too judicious deliberately to
-have hazarded so monstrous an assertion.</p>
-
-<p>Upon his arrival at Yembo, dejected and melancholy,
-to add to his despondency, he found the plague
-raging in the city. The air, night and day, was filled
-with the piercing cries of those who had been bereaved
-of the objects of their affection; yet, as no
-vessel was ready to sail for Egypt, he was constrained
-to remain during eighteen days in the midst
-of the dying and the dead, continually exposed to
-infection through the heedlessness and the imprudence
-of his slave. At length, however, he procured
-a passage in an open boat bound for Cosseir, many
-of the passengers in which were sick of a disease
-which appeared to be the plague, though only two
-of them died. After remaining twenty days on
-board, he was, at his own request, put on shore in
-the harbour of Sherin, at the entrance of the Gulf
-of Akaba, where he agreed with some Bedouins to
-transport him and his slave to Tor and Suez. Learning
-on the way, however, that the plague was at
-Suez, he remained at a village in the vicinity of the
-former place, where the enjoyment of tranquillity
-and a bracing mountain air soon restored his strength,
-and enabled him, though still convalescent, to pursue
-his journey to Cairo, where he arrived on the
-24th of June, after an absence of nearly two years
-and a half. As his health was not yet completely
-recovered, he undertook a journey into Lower Egypt
-during the following winter, which, as he seems to
-have believed, restored his constitution to its former
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>His time was now entirely occupied in writing the
-journal of his Nubian and Arabian travels, and in
-the necessary care of his health, which, notwithstanding
-his sanguine expectation to the contrary,
-was still in a somewhat equivocal state. In the
-spring of 1816 the plague again broke out at Cairo,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>
-and our traveller, to avoid the infection, undertook a
-journey to Mount Sinai, intending to remain, until
-the pestilence should be over, among the Bedouins,
-who are never visited by this scourge. During this
-excursion he traced the course of the eastern branch
-of the Red Sea to within sight of Akaba, the ancient
-Ælanas, which he was prevented by circumstances
-from visiting. On his return to Cairo, he united with
-Mr. Salt in furnishing Belzoni with money for transporting
-the head of Memnon from Gournou to Alexandria.
-The scheme, it would seem, originated with
-Burckhardt and Salt, to whom, therefore, we are
-chiefly indebted for the possession of that extraordinary
-specimen of ancient art.</p>
-
-<p>On the 4th of October, 1817, Burckhardt, who had
-so long waited in vain for an opportunity of penetrating
-with a Moggrebin caravan into Africa, was
-attacked with violent dysentery. The best medical
-advice which an eminent English physician (Doctor
-Richardson), then at Cairo, could afford was found
-unavailing. The disease prevailed, and on the 15th
-of the same month our able, adventurous, and lamented
-traveller breathed his last. As he had lived
-while in the East as a Mussulman, the Turks, he
-foresaw, would claim his body, “and perhaps,” said
-he to Mr. Salt, who was present at his death-bed,
-“you had better let them.”&mdash;“The funeral, as he desired,”
-says this gentleman, “was Mohammedan,
-conducted with all proper regard to the respectable
-rank which he had held in the eyes of the natives.”
-This was honourable to his Cairo friends; and to
-those who are interested in the history of his manly
-career it is gratifying to discover how highly he was
-valued. I have closed the lives of few travellers
-with more regret. It would have given me extreme
-pleasure to have followed him through those undiscovered
-regions whither his ardent imagination so
-anxiously tended; and, instead of thus recording his
-untimely death, to have beheld him enjoying in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>
-first capital of the world the reward of his courage
-and enterprise. That I cannot enter into all Mr.
-Burckhardt’s views, either of men or things, is no
-reason why I should not be sensible of his extraordinary
-merit. His character, upon the whole, admirably
-fitted him to be a great traveller. He was
-bold, patient, persevering, judicious. He penetrated
-with admirable tact into the designs of his enemies,
-and not only knew how to prevent them, but, what
-was more difficult, to turn them to the confusion of
-their inventors. Upon this very excellence, however,
-was based one of his principal defects; he interpreted
-men in too refined and systematical a
-manner, and often saw in their actions more contrivance
-than ever existed. He was too hasty,
-moreover, in believing evil of mankind, which, with
-too many other able speculators, he supposed to be
-the necessary consequence of a philosophical spirit.
-But he was a young man. His mind, had he lived,
-would unquestionably have purified itself from this
-stain, as truth, which he possessed the courage and
-the ability to search for with success, was his only
-object. The works which he has left behind him,
-exceedingly numerous considering his brief career,
-are an imperishable monument of his genius and enterprise,
-and, when the fate of the writer is reflected
-on, can never be read without a feeling of deep interest
-almost amounting to emotion. Fortunately
-for his fame, their publication has been superintended
-by editors every way qualified for the task, who,
-without in the least dissipating their originality,
-must in very many instances have infinitely improved
-their style and arrangement. A popular edition of
-the whole would at once be a benefit to the public
-and an additional honour to the memory of Burckhardt.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VOLNEY">CONSTANTIN FRANCOIS CHASSEBŒUF
-DE VOLNEY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1757.&mdash;Died 1820.</p>
-
-<p>This traveller, who is very justly enumerated
-among the most distinguished which France has produced,
-was born on the 3d of February, 1757, at
-Craon, in Anjou. His father, an able provincial barrister,
-was unwilling that he should bear the name
-of <i>Chassebœuf</i> (ox or bull hunter), which in his own
-case had been, though we are not told how, a source
-of a thousand uneasinesses, and therefore gave his
-son the name of Boisgirais, under which appellation
-our traveller studied at the colleges of Ancenis and
-Angers, and was at first known in the world. At a
-later period, just as he was about to depart for the
-East, he quitted the name of Boisgirais, and assumed
-that of Volney, which he was shortly after to render
-so celebrated.</p>
-
-<p>Becoming his own master at the age of seventeen,
-with a small independence bequeathed him by his
-mother, he quitted the country for Paris, where he
-applied himself to the study of the severer sciences.
-Volney felt no inclination for the profession of a barrister,
-which it was his father’s desire he should follow;
-physic appeared to have greater charms for
-him, and he at first seemed disposed to adopt this as
-his profession; but his speculative turn of mind soon
-led him to look with disdain on its practical part.
-Scarcely had he reached his twentieth year when he
-entered with enthusiasm into the study of the science
-of nature, delighting to discover the relations
-which subsist between the moral and the physical
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
-world. He moreover devoted a portion of his time
-to the study of the history and languages of antiquity.</p>
-
-<p>When he had made these preparations, apparently
-without foreseeing to what use he should apply them,
-a small inheritance which fell to him put him in possession
-of two hundred and forty pounds. “The
-difficulty was,” he observes, “how to employ it.
-Some of my friends advised me to enjoy the capital,
-others to purchase an annuity; but, on reflection, I
-thought the sum too inconsiderable to make any
-sensible addition to my income, and too great to be
-dissipated in frivolous expenses. Some fortunate
-circumstances had habituated me to study; I had
-acquired a taste, and even a passion, for knowledge;
-and this accession of fortune appeared to me a fresh
-means of gratifying my inclination, and opening a
-new way to improvement. I had read, and frequently
-heard repeated, that of all the methods of
-adorning the mind and forming the judgment, travelling
-is the most efficacious. I determined, therefore,
-on a plan of travelling; but to what part of the
-world I should direct my course remained still to be
-chosen. I wished the scene of my observations to
-be new, or at least brilliant. My own country and
-the neighbouring nations seemed to me either too
-well known or too easy of access; the rising States
-of America and the savages were not without their
-temptations; but other considerations determined
-me in favour of Asia. Syria especially, and Egypt,
-both with a view of what they once have been, and
-what they now are, appeared to me a field equally
-adapted to those political and moral observations
-with which I wished to occupy my mind.”</p>
-
-<p>Foreseeing the fatigues and dangers of such a
-journey, he occupied a whole year in preparing himself
-to undertake it, by accustoming his body to the
-most violent exercises and the most painful privations.
-At length, all his preparatory arrangements
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>
-being completed, he commenced his journey on foot,
-with a knapsack on his back, a musket on his shoulder,
-and two hundred and forty pounds in gold concealed
-in his girdle. “When I set out from Marseilles
-in 1783,” says he, “it was with all my heart;
-with that alacrity, that confidence in others and in
-myself which youth inspires. I gayly quitted a
-country of peace and abundance to live in a country
-of barbarism and misery, from no other motive than
-to employ the active and restless moments of youth,
-to acquire a new kind of knowledge, which might
-procure for the remainder of my days a certain portion
-of reputation and honour.”</p>
-
-<p>On arriving in Egypt he proceeded to Cairo, where
-he remained during seven months; after which, finding
-that there existed too many obstacles to a proper
-examination of the interior parts of the country, and
-that too little assistance in learning Arabic was to
-be obtained, he determined on travelling into Syria.
-M. Durozoir, the author of the Life of Volney, in the
-“Biographie Universelle,” to which I am greatly indebted,
-falls into a most unaccountable error in narrating
-this part of our traveller’s career. According
-to him, Volney had no sooner arrived in Egypt than
-he shut himself up in a Coptic convent, where he
-remained <i>eight months</i>, for the purpose of acquiring
-the Arabic; after which he traversed the country
-with more advantages than any other traveller had
-hitherto enjoyed. Volney himself asserts, on the
-contrary, that he resided but <i>seven months</i> in the
-country; that he was prevented by obstacles which
-appeared to him insurmountable from traversing
-more than a very small portion of Egypt; that he
-did not acquire a competent knowledge of Arabic
-until he arrived in Syria, where (and not in Egypt)
-he shut himself up during eight months in an Arabian
-convent, in order to render himself master of the
-language. M. Durozoir must have forgotten Pococke,
-and Shaw, and Hasselquist, and Niebuhr and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>
-Bruce, every one of whom were superior in external
-<i>advantages</i> to Volney, and probably understood
-the language of the country better than he did previous
-to his residence in Syria. It is surprising,
-therefore, to find a writer of respectable name speaking
-of the advantages which Volney possessed over
-all preceding travellers in Egypt, arising from his
-long residence and knowledge, while most of his predecessors
-saw ten times more of the country, enjoyed
-greater privileges, and possessed a more intimate
-knowledge of Arabic. The real advantage
-which Volney actually did possess over the majority
-of Egyptian travellers consisted in his superior genius,
-which enabled him to turn his short experience
-to good account, and to comprehend the meanings
-of things which thousands had seen without comprehending
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>The mode in which Volney has given the results
-of his travels to the public precludes the possibility
-of our following his track. He sedulously avoids,
-as Daru has justly remarked, placing himself upon
-the stage, and neither tells you by what route he
-travelled through the country, nor what were the
-impressions which the sight of certain objects produced
-upon his mind. The fact must be admitted,
-whether it make for or against the author; but when
-the count proceeds to inform us, in his inflated rhetorical
-style, that the traveller is suddenly transformed
-into a native of the country, who, after mature
-observation, describes its physical, political,
-and moral condition, we smile at his boyish enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot help regretting, however, that our traveller
-should have omitted to trace his route through
-Egypt, not only because his having done so would
-have been advantageous to me, but from a persuasion
-that the omission has been seriously injurious
-to his popularity. It is, moreover, a very great
-error, and one in which I myself formerly participated,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-to imagine that a traveller is more likely to
-impart just notions of the scene of his researches by
-giving the results only of his experience, suppressing
-the manner in which that experience was obtained.
-An attentive examination of the works of
-travellers of all ages and countries has at length created
-a contrary conviction in my mind. In a judicious
-personal narrative the traveller is but one
-interlocutor in a drama exhibiting innumerable characters
-and a perpetually changing scene. You in
-some sort behold him surrounded by strangers in a
-strange land; you observe them not, and hear them,
-as it were, converse together; and if the traveller
-himself sometimes feigns or walks in masquerade, it
-is rarely that the natives can be supposed to have
-sufficiently powerful motives for so doing. They
-exhibit themselves exactly as they are. It would
-seem to follow from this view of the case, that whatever
-its advantages in other respects may be, the
-method adopted by Volney is liable, on the grounds
-above stated, to very serious objections. It not only
-shuts out the traveller from our view, but, in lieu of
-an animated picture, presents us with reasoning and
-discussion, able, I admit, and frequently original, but
-wanting that irresistible charm which is possessed
-in so eminent a degree by beautiful narrative.</p>
-
-<p>Having examined such objects of curiosity in
-Lower Egypt as could easily be viewed, and collected
-ample materials for the defence of Herodotus,
-the greatest traveller of all antiquity, from the attacks
-of conceited and ignorant persons, Volney
-passed into Syria. “Here,” he observes, “eight
-months’ residence among the Druses, in an Arabian
-convent, rendered the Arabic familiar to me, and
-enabled me to travel through all Syria during a
-whole year.” His long residence in the mountains
-of Syria, during which he no doubt undertook numerous
-little excursions in various directions, furnished
-him with materials for a correct picture of the scene.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>
-This he has drawn with equal vigour and beauty.
-“Lebanon,” says he, “which gives its name to the
-whole extensive chain of the Kesraouan, and the
-country of the Druses, presents us everywhere
-with majestic mountains. At every step we meet
-with scenes in which nature displays either beauty
-or grandeur; sometimes singularity, but always
-variety. When we land on the coast, the loftiness
-and steep ascent of this mountainous ridge, which
-seems to enclose the country, those gigantic masses
-which shoot into the clouds, inspire astonishment
-and awe. Should the curious traveller then climb
-these summits which bound his view, the wide extended
-place which he discovers becomes a fresh
-subject of admiration; but completely to enjoy this
-majestic scene, he must ascend the very point of
-Lebanon, or the Sannia. There on every side he
-will view a horizon without bounds; while in clear
-weather the sight is lost over the desert, which extends
-to the Persian Gulf, and over the sea, which
-bathes the coasts of Europe. He seems to command
-the whole world, while the wandering eye,
-now surveying the successive chains of mountains,
-transports the imagination in an instant from Antioch
-to Jerusalem, and now approaching the surrounding
-objects, observes the distant profundity of the coast,
-till the attention, at length, fixed by distinctive objects,
-more minutely examines the rocks, woods,
-torrents, hillsides, villages, and towns; and the mind
-secretly exults at the diminution of things which before
-appeared so great. He contemplates the valley
-obscured by stormy clouds with a novel delight; and
-smiles at hearing the thunder, which had so often
-burst over his head, growling under his feet, while
-the threatening summits of the mountains are diminished
-till they appear only like the furrows of a
-ploughed field, or the steps of an amphitheatre; and
-he feels himself flattered by an elevation above so
-many great objects on which pride makes him look
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
-down with a secret satisfaction. When the traveller
-visits the interior parts of these mountains, the ruggedness
-of the roads, the steepness of the descents,
-the height of the precipices, strike him at first with
-terror, but the sagacity of his mule soon relieves
-him, and he examines at his ease those picturesque
-scenes which succeed each other to entertain him.
-There, as in the Alps, he travels whole days to reach
-a place that was in sight at his departure: he winds,
-he descends, he skirts the hills, he climbs; and in
-this perpetual change of position it seems as if some
-magic power varied for him at every step the decorations
-of the scenery. Sometimes he sees villages
-ready to glide from the steep declivities on which
-they are built, and so disposed, that the terraces of
-one row of houses serve as a street to the row
-above them. Sometimes he sees a convent standing
-on a solitary eminence, like Mar-shaya in the
-valley of the Tigris. Here is a rock perforated by
-a torrent, and become a natural arch, like that of
-Nahr-el-Leben. There another rock, worn perpendicular,
-resembles a lofty wall.”</p>
-
-<p>The same difficulty of tracing the footsteps of our
-traveller of which I complained when speaking of
-his Egyptian journey occurs again in Syria. It is,
-in fact, impossible to discover from his works any
-particulars, excepting a few dates, which are perfectly
-unimportant. After a protracted residence at
-the convent of Mar-hanna, or “St. John,” where, as
-already observed, he matured his knowledge of
-Arabic, he descended into the lower districts, and
-visited a Bedouin camp, near Gaza, where he remained
-several days. I know not whether it was
-upon this or on some other occasion that he so far
-recommended himself to the chief of a tribe by his
-agreeable manners, as to inspire in the Arabs a desire
-to retain him among them. Having remarked
-that the Bedouins enjoy an extraordinary freedom
-from religious prejudices, and are consequently disposed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
-to be tolerant, he adds, “Nothing can better
-describe, or be a more satisfactory proof of this,
-than a dialogue which one day passed between myself
-and one of their sheïkhs, named Ahmed, son of
-Bahir, chief of the tribe of Wahidia. ‘Why,’ said
-this sheïkh to me, ‘do you wish to return among the
-Franks? Since you have no aversion to our manners,
-since you know how to use the lance and
-manage a horse like a Bedouin, stay among us. We
-will give you pelisses, a tent, a virtuous and young
-Bedouin girl, and a good blood mare. You shall
-live in our house.’&mdash;‘But do you not know,’ said I,
-‘that, born among the Franks, I have been educated
-in their religion? In what light will the Arabs view
-an infidel, or what will they think of an apostate?’&mdash;‘And
-do you not yourself perceive,’ said he, ‘that
-the Arabs live without troubling themselves either
-about the prophet, or the <i>Book</i> (the Koran)? Every
-man with us follows the dictates of his conscience.
-Men have a right to judge of actions, but religion
-must be left to God alone.’ Another sheïkh, conversing
-with me one day, addressed me, by mistake,
-in the customary formulary, ‘Listen, and pray for
-the prophet.’ Instead of the usual answer, <i>I have
-prayed</i>, I replied with a smile, ‘<i>I listen</i>.’ He recollected
-his error, and smiled in his turn. A Turk of
-Jerusalem who was present took the matter up more
-seriously: ‘O sheïkh,’ said he, ‘how canst thou address
-the words of the true believers to an infidel?’&mdash;‘The
-tongue is <i>light</i>;’ replied the sheïkh, ‘let but
-the heart be <i>white</i> (pure); but you who know the
-customs of the Arabs, how can you offend a stranger,
-with whom we have eaten bread and salt?’ Then,
-turning to me, ‘All those tribes of Frankestan, of
-whom you told me that they follow not the law of
-the prophet, are they more numerous than the Mussulmans?’&mdash;‘It
-is thought,’ answered I, ‘that they are
-five or six times more numerous, even including the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
-Arabs.’&mdash;‘God is just,’ returned he; ‘he will weigh
-them in his balance.’”</p>
-
-<p>The most singular people, however, who came
-under the observation of Volney during his eastern
-travels, were unquestionably the Druses. Extraordinary
-stories respecting their origin and manners
-had from time to time prevailed in Europe. By
-some they were supposed to be the descendants of
-the crusaders, particularly of the English; others
-attributed to them a different origin; but all agreed
-in accusing them of believing in strange absurd
-dogmas, and of practising monstrous rites. At
-length he obtained from oriental writers the following
-account of the rise of this remarkable sect. In
-the year of the Hegira 386 (A. D. 996) the third
-calif of the race of the Fatimites, called Hakem-b’amr-ellah,
-succeeded to the throne of Egypt, at
-the age of eleven years. He was one of the most
-extraordinary princes of whom history has preserved
-the memory. He caused the first calif, the
-companion of Mahomet, to be cursed in the mosques,
-and afterward revoked the anathema. He compelled
-the Jews and Christians to abjure their religion,
-and then permitted them to resume it. He
-prohibited the making slippers for women, to prevent
-their coming out of their houses. He burnt one-half
-of the city of Cairo for his diversion, while his
-soldiers pillaged the other. Not content with these
-extravagant actions, he forbade the pilgrimage to
-Mecca, fasting, and the five prayers; and at length
-carried his madness so far, as to desire to pass for
-God himself. He ordered a register of those who
-acknowledged him to be so; and the number
-amounted to sixteen thousand. This impious pretension
-was supported by a false prophet, who came
-from Persia into Egypt; which impostor, named
-Mohammed-ben-Ismael, taught that it was not necessary
-to fast or pray, to practise circumcision, to
-make the pilgrimage to Mecca, or observe festivals;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>
-that the prohibition of pork and wine was absurd;
-and that marriage between brothers and sisters,
-fathers and children, was lawful. To ingratiate
-himself with Hakem, he maintained that this calif
-was God himself incarnate, and instead of his name
-being <i>Hakem-b’amr-ellah</i>, which signifies governing
-by the order of God, he called him <i>Hakem-b’amr-eh</i>,
-governing by his own order. Unluckily for the
-prophet, his god had not the power to protect him
-from the fury of his enemies, who slew him in a
-tumult, almost in the arms of the calif, who was
-himself massacred soon after on Mount Mokattam,
-where he, as he said, had held conversation with
-angels. The death of these two chiefs did not prevent
-the progress of their opinions: a disciple of
-Mohammed-ben-Ismael, named Hamzaben-Ahmud,
-propagated them with indefatigable zeal, in Egypt,
-in Palestine, and along the coast of Syria, as far as
-Sidon and Berytus. His proselytes, it seems, underwent
-the same fate as the Maronites; for being persecuted
-by the sect in power, they took refuge in
-the mountains of Lebanon, where they were better
-able to defend themselves; at least it is certain, that
-shortly after this era we find them established
-there, and forming an independent society like their
-neighbours.</p>
-
-<p>In the opinion of Volney the great body of the
-Druses are wholly destitute of religion; “yet,”
-says he, “one class of them must be excepted,
-whose religious customs are very peculiar. Those
-who compose it are to the rest of the nation what
-the <i>initiated</i> are to the <i>profane</i>; they assume the
-name of Okkals, which means spiritualists; and bestow
-on the vulgar the epithet Djahel, or ignorant;
-they have various degrees of initiation, the highest
-orders of which require celibacy. These are distinguishable
-by the white turban they affect to wear,
-as a symbol of their purity; and so proud are they
-of this supposed purity, that they think themselves
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>
-sullied by even touching a profane person. If you
-eat out of their plate, or drink out of their cup, they
-break them; and hence the custom so general in
-this country, of using vases with a sort of cock,
-which may be drunk out of without touching the
-lips. All their practices are enveloped in mysteries.
-Their oratories always stand alone, and are constantly
-situated on eminences: in these they hold
-their secret assemblies, to which women are admitted.
-It is pretended they perform ceremonies
-there in presence of a small statue resembling an
-ox or a calf; whence some have pretended to prove
-that they are descended from the Samaritans. But,
-besides that the fact is not well ascertained, the
-worship of the ox may be deduced from other circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>“They have one or two books which they conceal
-with the greatest care, but chance has deceived their
-jealousy; for, in a civil war, which happened six or
-seven years ago, the Emir Yousef, who is <i>Djahel</i>,
-or ignorant, found one among the pillage of their
-oratories. I am assured by persons who have read
-it, that it contains only a mystic jargon, the obscurity
-of which doubtless renders it valuable to adepts.
-Hakem-b’amr-ellah is there spoken of, by whom they
-mean God, incarnated in the person of the calif. It
-likewise treats of another life, of a place of punishment
-and a place of happiness, where the Okkals
-shall of course be most distinguished. Several
-degrees of perfection are mentioned, to which they
-arrive by successive trials. In other respects these
-sectaries have all the insolence and all the fears of
-superstition: they are not communicative, because
-they are weak; but it is probable that, were they
-powerful, they would be promulgators and intolerant.”</p>
-
-<p>On returning to France after an absence of nearly
-three years (which M. Durozoir, who loves to differ
-with the traveller upon such points, will have to be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
-nearly <i>four years</i>), Volney employed himself in preparing
-his “Travels” for the press. Upon the appearance
-of the work the public, which is seldom
-in the wrong in such matters, received it as a masterpiece
-of its kind; and from that time to the present
-its reputation may be said to be on the increase.
-I am averse from adopting the unmeaning or exaggerated
-panegyrics of his French biographers, who
-are satisfied with nothing short of regarding Volney
-as the continuator of Herodotus, with whom they
-seem to consider him upon a par. No person can
-be more desirous than myself to enhance the just
-praises of Volney, who has exhibited, in his description
-of Syria and Egypt, remarkable force and depth
-of thinking, and powers of delineation of no ordinary
-class. But in Herodotus we have a picture of
-the whole world, as far, at least, as it was known
-in his time, sketched with inimitable truth and
-brevity, and adorned with a splendour of colouring
-which with matchless skill he has known how to
-unite with the severest accuracy. To many of the
-excellences of this writer Volney has no pretensions.
-Others he may have possessed in an equal degree;
-but I will not continue a comparison in itself absurd,
-never dreamed of by the traveller himself, and
-which could only have suggested itself to writers
-blinded by national vanity.</p>
-
-<p>To proceed, however, with the events of our traveller’s
-life. No sooner had the travels appeared,
-than the Empress Catherine II., who, besides her
-desire to wheedle every writer of distinction in
-Europe, was really actuated by an admiration for
-genius, sent him a gold medal in token of her satisfaction.
-This was in the year 1787. In the following
-year he published his “Considerations on the
-War between the Turks and Russians.” In this
-political pamphlet the knowledge which he had acquired
-in his travels was of course the basis of his
-reasoning; but he had likewise received, perhaps
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>
-from the Russian court, information which would appear
-to have been correct, respecting the resources
-of the Scythians; for events, says his French biographer
-with a kind of triumph, have realized nearly
-all his predictions. He did not, continues the same
-writer, forget, in the consideration of this great
-quarrel, the interests of France, and dwelt more
-particularly on the project of seizing upon Egypt, in
-order to counterbalance the aggrandizement of Russia
-and Austria. But to the execution of this project
-he foresaw numerous obstacles. “In the first
-place,” said he, “it will be necessary to maintain
-three separate wars: the first against Turkey, the
-second against the English, and a third against the
-natives of Egypt, which, though apparently the least
-formidable, will be the most dangerous of the three.
-Should the Franks venture to disembark in the
-country, Turks, Arabs, and peasants would all arm
-against them at once: and fanaticism would serve
-them instead of art and courage.”</p>
-
-<p>From the period of his return into his country,
-being actuated by the desire of being useful, which
-seems to have been ever predominant in his mind,
-though it did not always manifest itself in a rational
-way, Volney conceived the idea of introducing improvements
-in agriculture in the island of Corsica.
-For this purpose he began to concert measures for
-purchasing an estate in that island, on which he
-meant to make several experiments in the culture
-of the sugar-cane, cotton, indigo, coffee, &amp;c. The
-utility of these schemes induced the French government
-to nominate him Director of Agriculture and
-Commerce in Corsica; but other duties retained him
-in his country. Upon the convocation of the States
-General in 1789, he was elected deputy for the seneschalship
-of Anjou. Shortly after this he resigned
-the place he held under government, being persuaded
-that the duties of a representative of the people,
-and those of a dependant on the government, are
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>
-incompatible. In the tribune of the Constituent
-Assembly Volney advocated the same opinions
-which are found in his writings. He was the declared
-enemy of despotism, whether exercised by
-one individual or by many; and constantly distinguished
-himself by his bold and liberal advocacy of
-popular rights. His intimate connexion with Cabanis,
-celebrated for the extravagance of his metaphysical
-opinions, frequently brought him into contact
-with Mirabeau, the Catiline of the revolution. This
-able improvisator, equally indifferent respecting the
-<i>meum</i> and <i>tuum</i> in ideas as in money, in a discussion
-concerning the clergy, borrowed from Volney his
-well-known rhetorical flourish <i>on the window of
-Charles IX.</i>, from whence that gracious monarch
-amused himself with shooting at his subjects.
-Twenty deputies were besieging the tribune, and
-among these was Volney, who held a written discourse
-in his hand. “Show me what you are going
-to say,” said Mirabeau. “This is beautiful, sublime,”
-he exclaimed, after having glanced over the
-manuscript; “but it is not with a feeble voice and
-a clear countenance that such things should be
-uttered. Give the manuscript to me!” Such consummate
-arrogance was not to be resisted. Volney
-yielded up his speech to the audacious sophist, who,
-melting up our traveller’s original ideas with his
-own, poured out the whole with that artificial theatrical
-enthusiasm which produces upon inexperienced
-minds nearly the same effects as eloquence.
-It is said that Volney ere long began to perceive
-that the storm which had been raised with so much
-labour and artifice was likely to sweep away in its
-fury much more than was intended; and that he
-then began to think of moderating its rage. But if
-he was in earnest in his opposition, he very quickly
-had the mortification to discover that his efforts
-were futile; that revolution had, in fact, become a
-general movement, which bore down with irresistible
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>
-violence every obstacle which might be opposed to
-it, whether by friends or foes.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of these political labours Volney
-found time to produce two works of very different
-character and pretensions: “The Chronology of the
-Twelve Centuries preceding the Invasion of Greece
-by Xerxes,” and his well-known rhapsody called the
-“Ruins.” Shortly after this, the Empress Catherine,
-who found that she had been made the dupe of
-the French sophists, declared herself the enemy of
-France; upon which Volney, eager to display his
-contempt for his fickle admirer, returned the medal
-which she had formerly presented to him. Upon
-this, Grimm, the literary gladiator of the empress,
-and up to that moment the friend of Volney, addressed
-him a letter filled with the most biting sarcasms
-and unjust personalities, but written in so
-keen a style that it has been attributed to Rivarol,
-another clever advocate of ancient abuses.</p>
-
-<p>In 1792 Volney accompanied Pozzo di Borgo to
-Corsica, with his old design of making agricultural
-experiments. He accordingly purchased the estate
-of La Confina, near Ajaccio, and was proceeding to
-realize some of his useful plans, when he was driven
-from the island by the troubles excited by Pascal
-Paoli, who sold his estate by auction, notwithstanding
-that he had recently given him various assurances
-of friendship. During his residence in Corsica our
-traveller became acquainted with Napoleon, who
-was at that time only an officer of artillery. He is
-said to have divined the character of this ambitious
-man from the first; and some years later, upon
-learning in America that Napoleon had been appointed
-commander of the army of Italy, he remarked
-to several French refugees, “Provided that
-circumstances second him, he will be found to possess
-the head of Cæsar on the shoulders of Alexander.”
-This oracular saying, which is by no means
-the best thing of the kind attributed to our traveller,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
-is remarkable merely for the pomposity of the expression,
-and signifies little or nothing, except that
-Napoleon was as able as he was ambitious. On his
-return to France, in 1793, he published a “Sketch
-of the State of Corsica,” and the “Law of Nature,”
-the latter of which M. Durozoir, with characteristic
-exaggeration, pronounces to be “one of the best
-treatises on morals which have ever been published
-in any language.” The “Law of Nature” is well
-known in England, and proves its writer to have
-been a man of an acute and vigorous mind, as well
-as an accomplished master of style; but it would be
-paying Volney an absurd compliment to place his
-little catechism, in which there are no ideas absolutely
-new, on a level with the “Ethics to Nichomachus,”
-or the great work of Panætius, of which
-we may form a tolerably clear conception from the
-“De Officiis” of Cicero, which is little more than a
-copy of it. Moreover, in the “Law of Nature,” man
-is considered too much in a material, and too little
-in a spiritual light; which, though it may be a merit
-in the eyes of such a writer as M. Durozoir, must
-to a person of a different creed appear to be a very
-remarkable defect. Considering the question merely
-in a philosophical point of view, it can, I think, admit
-of no dispute that the incentives to good actions
-can never be too numerous; but Volney, from
-his peculiar notions, could only speak of morals as
-of physical science, which, taken as a whole, it certainly
-is not. Whatever merit this little tract may
-possess, therefore, it seems to be essentially defective
-in attributing to one set of principles effects
-which they never produce unless in combination
-with others.</p>
-
-<p>In 1793 our traveller, whose political opinions
-were purely republican, was imprisoned ten months
-as a <i>royalist</i>, and only recovered his liberty after the
-events of the 9th of Thermidor. To console him in
-some degree for this injustice, he was shortly afterward
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>
-appointed historical professor in the Normal
-School, which had just then been established by the
-friends of order and of their country. Volney was
-eminently well qualified to shine in this capacity.
-His reading, which was immense, had lain much, if
-not chiefly, among historical writers; and his calm,
-penetrating genius enabled him to discover with extraordinary
-precision the natural chain of events.
-Nevertheless, from a passion for vain paradox, which
-has of late been but too common both in France and
-Germany among persons who would be thought to
-be philosophers, he unfortunately exhibited in his
-historical researches a degree of skepticism highly
-absurd. He had perhaps read and admired the
-startling proposition of Aristotle, that doubt is the
-foundation of all science; but if doubt eternally
-generate doubt, upon what basis are the sciences to
-be erected? The Greek philosopher, I conceive,
-merely intends to say, that without doubt there can
-be no inquiry, and without inquiry no science. However,
-notwithstanding this radical defect, Volney’s
-lectures at the Normal School were received with
-applause, principally perhaps from the striking originality
-of the author’s style, and the novelty of his
-views. Truths long and familiarly known, appear
-to lose their beauty, and are eagerly exchanged for
-errors, tricked out in all the dazzling gloss of novelty.</p>
-
-<p>His oratorical career was not of long duration.
-The Normal School was quickly suppressed; and
-Volney, disgusted and fatigued with fruitless endeavours
-to benefit his country, determined on deserting
-it for ever, and seeking in the New World that
-tranquillity which he had failed to find in the Old.
-On his arrival in the United States of America, in
-1795, he was well received by Washington, who
-gave him many public marks of his confidence and
-friendship. It is said, however, though I know not
-upon what grounds, that John Adams, elected president
-in 1797, entertained feelings highly inimical to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>
-Volney, who, a short time before, had criticised severely,
-perhaps unjustly, his “Defence of the Constitutions
-of the United States.” It is even insinuated
-by Durozoir, whose unsupported testimony I should,
-however, refuse to accept in a matter of this kind,
-that our traveller was driven from America by the unmanly
-revenge of John Adams in the spring of 1798.
-Be this as it may, he was suspected by the Americans
-of being engaged in a conspiracy for delivering up
-Louisiana to the Directory; while in France, on the
-other hand, he was accused of having asserted that
-Louisiana could never become an advantageous possession
-of the French republic. While his mind was
-thus harassed by contradictory and absurd suspicions,
-Dr. Priestley published his “Observations
-on the Progress of Infidelity,” &amp;c., in which Volney,
-says Durozoir, who probably had no more read
-Priestley’s pamphlet than I have, was denounced as
-an “atheist, an ignoramus, a Chinese, and a Hottentot.”
-Priestley was no doubt a rough polemic,
-too much addicted, perhaps, to hard names; but the
-work which he denounced had, in many respects, a
-highly mischievous tendency, and in refuting it some
-degree of warmth was pardonable.</p>
-
-<p>On our traveller’s return to France, where he had
-been elected a member of the Institute during his
-absence, he became once more intimately connected
-with Napoleon, whom, in 1794, he had dissuaded
-from seeking military employment in Turkey or
-Russia, and by his influence caused to be restored
-to his rank in the army. Napoleon was not ungrateful,
-and when elected to the consulate was desirous
-of naming Volney his colleague. This dignity, however,
-the traveller refused, as well as that of minister
-of the interior, which was soon afterward offered
-him. He was content with the mere rank of senator.
-When at a future period Napoleon was about
-to assume the title of emperor, Volney ventured to
-oppose him, observing that <i>it were better to restore the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>
-Bourbons</i>. From this time forward he was invariably
-found among that small minority in the senate
-who condemned and opposed the despotic measures
-of the emperor; yet he allowed himself to be decorated
-with the rank of count, and the title of commandant
-of the Legion of Honour. Still he took
-little share in political matters, preferring before all
-distinctions retirement and study.</p>
-
-<p>In 1803 appeared his “Description of the Climate
-and Soil of the United States,” a work possessing,
-no doubt, considerable merit, but which has been far
-from obtaining equal success with his “Eastern
-Travels.” He now resumed his chronological studies,
-which had been for some time interrupted. In these
-he gave vent to all his heterodox opinions, which it
-could answer no good purpose either to retail or refute
-in this place. Others, more deeply versed than
-I in the chronology of the world, have performed
-this task; which was not, however, extremely necessary,
-as Volney’s labours on this subject seem
-designed never to acquire popularity. In 1810 he
-married Mademoiselle Chassebœuf, his cousin, for
-whose amusement he purchased a large mansion,
-with extensive gardens, &amp;c., in the Rue Vaugirard.
-Here he lived in a kind of morose and misanthropic
-retirement, heightened, if not caused, by his gloomy
-and unhappy opinions; and here he died, on the
-25th of April, 1820, in the sixty-third year of his
-age.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="EDWARD_DANIEL_CLARKE">EDWARD DANIEL CLARKE.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1769.&mdash;Died 1822.</p>
-
-<p>Edward Daniel Clarke was born on the 5th of
-June, 1769, at Willingdon, in the county of Sussex.
-Even when a child he is said to have displayed great
-narrative powers, which he exercised as frequently
-as possible for the amusement of his father’s domestics
-and parishioners. In his boyish studies,
-however, he was wanting in application; a fault
-arising from the quickness and vivacity of his mind,
-actuated by insatiable curiosity, and characterized
-from the beginning by a decided partiality for natural
-history. Still, the loss sustained by this species
-of negligence he afterward severely felt, when,
-notwithstanding the habits of industry which he acquired
-at a later period of youth, it was found impossible
-by any degree of exertion to retrieve the
-moments misspent or wasted in boyhood. At the
-same time there was one advantage derived from
-his unstudious inclinations; they urged him to be
-much abroad in the open air, where he amused himself
-with running, leaping, and swimming, in which
-last accomplishment he was particularly skilled, and
-on one occasion had the satisfaction of saving by
-this means the life of his younger brother, who was
-seized by the cramp while bathing in the moat
-which surrounded his father’s house.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1786, through the kindness of Dr.
-Beadon, afterward Bishop of Bath and Wells, Clarke
-obtained the office of chapel clerk at Jesus College,
-Cambridge, whither he removed about the Easter
-of the above year. Next year he sustained the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span>
-heavy calamity to lose a pious, beneficent, affectionate
-father, by which misfortune, young and inexperienced
-as he was, without a profession, and with
-few prospects of advancement, he was entirely
-thrown upon his own resources, his remaining parent
-not possessing the means of aiding him with aught
-beyond her prayers. Fortunately his deceased
-father had, instead of wealth, bequeathed to his
-family a more valuable inheritance; a name revered
-for sanctity, and a number of noble-minded friends,
-who not only provided for the immediate necessities
-of its several members, but continued to watch
-over their progress, and on many important occasions
-to advance their interests in after-life. Nevertheless,
-Clarke had to contend with numerous difficulties.
-“Soon after the death of their father,”
-says Mr. Otter, “the two elder sons returned to college;
-and Edward, having now acquired a melancholy
-title to one of the scholarships of the society
-of Jesus College, founded by Sir Tobias Rustat, for
-the benefit of clergymen’s orphans, was elected a
-scholar on this foundation immediately upon his return.
-The emoluments of his scholarship, joined to
-those of an exhibition from Tunbridge school, and
-the profits of his chapel clerk’s place, amounting in
-the whole to less than 90<i>l.</i> a year, were his principal,
-indeed it is believed his only resources during
-his residence at college; and, however well they
-may have been husbanded, it must be evident that,
-even in those times of comparative moderation in
-expense, they could not have been sufficient for his
-support, especially when it is understood that he was
-naturally liberal to a fault. It does not appear, however,
-that he derived during this time any pecuniary
-assistance from his father’s friends; and as there is
-the strongest reason to believe that he faithfully adhered
-to the promise he had made to his mother,
-that he would never draw upon her slender resources
-for his support, it may excite some curiosity to know
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>
-by what means the deficiency was supplied. The
-fact is, that he was materially assisted in providing
-for his college expenses by the liberality of his tutor,
-Mr. Plampin, who, being acquainted with his circumstances,
-suffered his bills to remain in arrear; and
-they were afterward discharged from the first profits
-he derived from his private pupils.”</p>
-
-<p>The indolent inactivity which had marked his
-school studies did not desert him at college. He
-seems, in fact, to have been disgusted with the system
-of education pursued at Cambridge, caring nothing
-for mathematics, which were there regarded
-as all in all, and finding among the other mental pursuits
-of the place nothing whatever to kindle the ardour
-of his ambitious mind. Still the desire of fame,
-without which man never performed any thing great,
-began gradually to manifest itself in his character
-both to himself and others. Exceedingly uncertain
-as to the mode, he yet determined to acquire in one
-way or another a reputation in literature; and while
-many of those around him were descanting complacently
-upon his failings, and the consequent backwardness
-of his acquirements, he silently felt the
-sting which was so soon to goad him on to a destiny
-more brilliant than his compassionate comrades ever
-dreamed of. His favourite studies, however, such
-as they were, he seems to have pursued with considerable
-eagerness; and by degrees his taste, after
-wavering for some time, settled definitively on
-literature.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1790 Clarke obtained, through the
-recommendation of Dr. Beadon, then Bishop of
-Gloucester, the office of private tutor to the honourable
-Henry Tufton, nephew to the Duke of Dorset.
-The place selected for his residence with his pupil,
-says Mr. Otter, was a large house belonging to Lord
-Thanet, inhabited at that time only by one or two
-servants, situated in a wild and secluded part of the
-county of Kent, and cut off, as well by distance as
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span>
-bad roads, from all cheerful and improving society;
-a residence suitable enough to a nobleman with a
-large establishment and a wide circle of friends, but
-the last place, one would have thought, to improve
-and polish a young man of family just entering into
-active life. His pupil, moreover, had conceived a
-dislike for study and for tutors of every kind, which
-promised to enhance the tedium of a life spent in
-such a scene. But Clarke, who probably sympathized
-with the young man’s aversion from intellectual
-task-work, very quickly succeeded by his gay,
-lively, insinuating manners in winning his confidence,
-and, apparently, in convincing him that a
-certain degree of knowledge might be useful, even
-to a man of his rank. This agreeable result, which
-seems to have been somewhat unexpected, so raised
-our incipient traveller in the estimation of the Duke
-of Dorset, that the engagement, which appears to have
-been at first for nine months only, was prolonged
-another year, the latter part of which was occupied
-in making with his pupil the tour of Great Britain.
-Of these domestic travels he on his return published
-the history; but the performance appears to have
-been hastily and slovenly written, and, as has been
-the fate of many other youthful works, to have been
-severely judged by the mature author, jealous of his
-fame, and averse from exhibiting to the public the
-nakedness of his unformed mind.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the conclusion of this tour he accompanied
-his pupil in a little excursion to Calais,
-when he enjoyed the satisfaction, which none but a
-traveller can appreciate, of treading for the first time
-on foreign ground. In 1792 he was fortunate enough
-to obtain an engagement to travel with Lord Berwick,
-whom he had known at college, and in the
-autumn of that year set out in company with that
-young nobleman, through Germany and Switzerland
-into Italy. He was now in the position for which
-nature had originally designed him. “An unbounded
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>
-love of travel,” says he, “influenced me at a very
-early period of my life. It was conceived in infancy,
-and I shall carry it with me to the grave. When I
-reflect upon the speculations of my youth, I am at a
-loss to account for a passion which, predominating
-over every motive of interest and every tie of affection,
-urges me to press forward and to pursue inquiry,
-even in the bosoms of the ocean and the
-desert. Sometimes, in the dreams of fancy, I am
-weak enough to imagine that the map of the world
-was painted in the awning of my cradle, and that
-my nurse chanted the wanderings of pilgrims in her
-legendary lullabies.” This was the spirit which
-urged the Marco Polos, the Chardins, and the Bruces
-to undertake their illustrious journeys; and if Clarke
-was compelled by circumstances to confine his researches
-to less remote and better known countries,
-he exhibited in his rambles through these a kindred
-enthusiasm, and similar devotion and energy.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke and his companion having passed the Alps,
-which, however frequently seen, still maintain their
-rank among the most sublime objects in nature, descended
-into Italy, visited Turin and Rome, and then
-proceeded to Naples, in which city and its environs
-they remained nearly two years. In the summer of
-1793 there was, as is well known, an eruption of
-Mount Vesuvius, which our traveller, now an inhabitant
-of Naples, enjoyed ample opportunities of
-visiting. And here a striking manifestation of the
-daring intrepidity of the English occurred: for not
-only Clarke himself, part of whose business as a
-traveller it was to familiarize himself with danger,
-but numbers of other English gentlemen, and even
-ladies, ascended to the mouth of the burning crater
-and the sources of lava-streams in an active state
-for mere amusement; where, on one occasion, a
-lady narrowly escaped death from a large stone from
-the volcano, which flew by her like a wheel. At
-another time the whole party were menaced with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>
-the fate of the elder Pliny. It was in the month of
-February. “I found the crater in a very active state,”
-says Clarke, “throwing out volleys of immense
-stones transparent with vitrification, and such
-showers of ashes involved in thick sulphurous
-clouds as rendered any approach to it extremely
-dangerous. We ascended as near as possible, and
-then crossing over to the lava attempted to coast it
-up to its source. This we soon found was impossible,
-for an unfortunate wind blew all the smoke of
-the lava hot upon us, attended at the same time with
-such a thick mist of minute ashes from the crater,
-and such fumes of sulphur, that we were in danger
-of being suffocated. In this perplexity I had recourse
-to an expedient recommended by Sir W.
-Hamilton, and proposed immediately crossing the
-current of liquid lava to gain the windward side of
-it; but felt some fears, owing to the very liquid appearance
-the lava there had so near its source. All
-my companions were against the scheme, and while
-we stood deliberating, immense fragments of stone
-and huge volcanic bombs that had been cast out by
-the crater, but which the smoke had prevented us
-from observing, fell thick about us, and rolled by
-with a velocity that would have crushed any of us,
-had we been in the way. I found we must either
-leave our present spot, or expect instant death;
-therefore, covering my face with my hat, I rushed
-upon the lava and crossed over safely to the other
-side, having my boots only a little burnt and my
-hands scorched. Not one of my companions, however,
-would stir, nor could any persuasion of mine
-avail in getting a single guide over to me. I then
-saw clearly the whole of the scene, and expected
-my friends would every moment be sacrificed to
-their own imprudence and want of courage, as the
-stones from the crater fell continually around them,
-and vast rocks of lava bounded by them with great
-force. At last I had the satisfaction of seeing them
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-retire, leaving me entirely alone. I begged hard for
-a torch to be thrown over to me, that I might not be
-lost when the night came on. It was then that André,
-one of the ciceroni of Resina, after being promised
-a bribe, ran over to me, and brought with him a bottle
-of wine and a torch. We had coasted the lava, ascending
-for some time, when looking back I perceived
-my companions endeavouring to cross the
-lava lower down, where the stream was narrower.
-In doing this they found themselves insulated, as it
-were, and surrounded by two different rivers of liquid
-fire. They immediately pressed forward, being terribly
-scorched by both currents, and ran to the side
-where I was; in doing which one of the guides fell
-into the middle of the red-hot lava, but met with no
-other injury than having his hands and face burnt,
-and losing at the same time a bottle of vin de grave,
-which was broken in the fall, and which proved a
-very unpleasant loss to us, being ready to faint with
-excessive thirst, fatigue, and heat. Having once
-more rallied my forces, I proceeded on, and in about
-half an hour I gained the chasm through which the
-lava had opened itself a passage out of the mountain.
-To describe this sight is utterly beyond all
-human ability. My companions, who were with me
-then, shared in the astonishment it produced; and
-the sensations they felt in concert with me were
-such as can be obliterated only with our lives. All
-I had seen of volcanic phenomena before did not
-lead me to expect such a spectacle as I then beheld.
-I had seen the vast rivers of lava which descended
-into the plains below, and carried ruin and devastation
-with them; but they resembled a vast heap of
-cinders on the scoriæ of an iron foundry, rolling
-slowly along, and falling with a rattling noise over
-one another. Here a vast arched chasm presented
-itself in the side of the mountain, from which rushed
-with the velocity of a flood the clear vivid torrent
-of lava in perfect fusion, and totally unconnected
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>
-with any other matter that was not in a state of complete
-solution, unattended by any scoriæ on its surface,
-or gross materials of an insolvent nature; but
-flowing with the translucency of honey, in regular
-channels cut finer than art can imitate, and glowing
-with all the splendour of the sun.”</p>
-
-<p>In the July of the same year our traveller viewed
-Vesuvius under another aspect, when soft, tranquil
-beauty had succeeded to terrific sublimity. “While
-we were at tea in the Albergo Reale,” says he,
-“such a scene presented itself as every one agreed
-was beyond any thing of that kind they had ever
-seen before. It was caused by the moon, which
-suddenly rose behind the convent on Vesuvius; at
-first a small bright line silvering all the clouds, and
-then a full orb which threw a blaze of light across
-the sea, through which the vessels passed and re-passed
-in a most beautiful manner. At the same
-time the lava, of a different hue, spread its warm tint
-upon all the objects near it, and threw a red line
-across the bay, directly parallel to the reflection of
-the moon’s rays. It was one of those scenes which
-one dwells upon with regret, because one feels the
-impossibility of retaining the impression it affords.
-It remains in the memory, but then all its outlines
-and its colours are so faintly touched, that the beauty
-of the spectacle fades away with the landscape;
-which, when covered by the clouds of the night, and
-veiled in darkness, can never be revived by the pencil,
-the pen, or by any recourse to the traces it has
-left upon the mind.”</p>
-
-<p>In the autumn of 1793 Clarke received from Lord
-Berwick a proposal that he should accompany him
-to Egypt and the Holy Land, with which our traveller,
-whose secret wishes had long pointed that
-way, immediately closed. While preparations were
-making for the journey, Lord Berwick suddenly
-recollected that some living, to which he was to
-present his brother, might fall vacant during his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
-absence, and be lost to his family. He determined,
-therefore, on sending an express to England; and
-when he had hired his courier, Clarke, who perhaps
-felt the want of violent exercise, offered to accompany
-the man, that no time might be lost. He accordingly
-set out for England, and having remained
-two or three days in London to execute the commission
-with which he had been intrusted, he hurried
-down to Shropshire, and arranged the business
-which had brought him to England. This being accomplished,
-he returned to London, where, to his
-infinite surprise and mortification, he found a letter
-from Lord Berwick, informing him that the expedition
-to Egypt had been postponed or abandoned.
-His engagement with this nobleman, however, had
-not yet expired. He therefore, after a short stay in
-England, hastened back to Italy, from whence he
-finally returned in the summer of 1794.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke now spent some time with his mother and
-family at Uckfield, and in the autumn of the same
-year undertook, at the recommendation of the
-Bishop of St. Asaph, the care of Sir Thomas Mostyn,
-a youth of about seventeen. This engagement
-continued about a year, during which period he resided
-with his pupil in Wales, where he became
-known to Pennant, with whom he afterward maintained
-a correspondence. When this connexion had,
-from some unexplained causes, ceased to exist, our
-traveller undertook a small periodical work called
-“Le Rêveur,” which, when twenty-nine numbers
-had been published without success, was judiciously
-discontinued, and sunk so completely into oblivion
-that not a single copy, it is believed, could now be
-found.</p>
-
-<p>In the autumn of 1796 Clarke entered into an engagement
-with the family of Lord Uxbridge, which,
-under whatever auspices begun, was highly beneficial
-to himself and satisfactory to his employers.
-The youth first placed under his care, delicate and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
-feeble in constitution, soon fell a prey to disease;
-but the next youngest son of the family, the honourable
-Berkeley Paget, succeeded his brother; and
-with him, in the summer and autumn of 1797, our
-traveller made the tour of Scotland. This was in
-every respect an agreeable and fortunate journey for
-our traveller, who not only enjoyed the scenery,
-wild, varied, and beautiful, which the north of England
-and many parts of Scotland afford, but secured
-in his pupil a powerful friend, who, so long as our
-traveller lived, promoted his interests, and when his
-life had closed, continued the same benevolent regard
-to his family.</p>
-
-<p>On the termination of his connexion with Mr.
-Paget, who was now sent to Oxford, Clarke retired
-to Uckfield, where, for a time, he seemed entirely
-immersed in the pleasures of field-sports. His devotion
-to this species of amusement, however, was
-destined to be of short duration. A young gentleman
-of Sussex, whose education had been very
-much neglected, succeeded about this time to a considerable
-estate, upon which he intimated his desire
-of placing himself for three years under the guidance
-and instruction of our traveller, first at Cambridge,
-and afterward during a long and extensive tour upon
-the Continent. The pecuniary part of the proposal
-was very liberal, says Mr. Otter, and the plan was
-entered upon without delay. The traveller and his
-pupil remained a whole year at Cambridge, during
-which the former, who fully understood the advantages
-of knowledge, and had been hitherto prevented
-by his wandering life from pursuing any regular
-course of study, profited quite as much as the latter.</p>
-
-<p>The preliminary portion of their studies being
-over, Clarke and his pupil began to prepare for their
-travels. Two other individuals were at first associated
-with them, Professor Malthus, author of the
-celebrated treatise on population, and the Rev. Mr.
-Otter, afterward the biographer of our traveller.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
-The party set out from Cambridge on the 20th May,
-1799, and arrived at Hamburgh on the 25th. Here
-they made but a short stay before they set out for
-Copenhagen, and from thence, by way of Stockholm,
-across the whole of Sweden to Tornea, on the Gulf
-of Bothnia. Malthus and Otter left them at the
-Wener Lake. Clarke, with all the enthusiasm of a
-genuine traveller, could never imagine he had carried
-his researches sufficiently far; but, having
-reached the 66th degree of northern latitude, declared
-he would not return until he should have
-snuffed the polar air. His pupil, Cripps, seems to
-have shared largely in his locomotive propensity,
-and in the courage which prompts to indulge it.
-They therefore proceeded towards the polar regions
-together; but having reached Enontakis, in latitude
-68° 30´ 30´´ north, our traveller, who had previously
-been seized by a severe fit of illness, was constrained
-to abandon the polar expedition and shape his course
-towards the south. Writing from Enontakis to his
-mother, “We have found,” says he, “the cottage of
-a priest in this remote corner of the world, and have
-been snug with him a few days. Yesterday I
-launched a balloon eighteen feet in height, which I had
-made to attract the natives. You may guess their
-astonishment when they saw it rise from the earth.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it not famous to be here within the frigid
-zone, more than two degrees within the arctic, and
-nearer to the pole than the most northern shores
-of Iceland? For a long time darkness has been a
-stranger to us. The sun, as yet, passes not below
-the horizon, but he dips his crimson visage behind a
-mountain to the north. This mountain we ascended,
-and had the satisfaction to see him make his
-courtesy without setting. At midnight the priest
-of this place lights his pipe during three weeks in
-the year by means of a burning-glass from the sun’s
-rays.”</p>
-
-<p>Having, for the reason above stated, given up the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
-design of visiting the polar regions, they returned to
-Tornea, and thence proceeded through Sweden and
-Norway; which latter country (probably for the
-same reason which made Pope of the opinion of the
-last author he read) he preferred for sublimity of
-scenery to Switzerland. They then entered Russia,
-and arrived at Petersburg on the 26th of January,
-1800. Clarke, it is well known, entertained a very
-mean opinion of the Russians; but, judging from the
-testimony of Bishop Heber&mdash;a calmer and more dispassionate
-man&mdash;as well as from that of many other
-travellers, it would appear that his judgment was
-neither rash nor ill founded. “We have been here
-five days,” says he. “Our servants were taken from
-us at the frontiers, and much difficulty had we with
-the Russian thieves as we came along. Long accustomed
-to Swedish honesty it is difficult for us to
-assume all at once a system of suspicion and
-caution: the consequence of this is that they remove
-all the moveables out of their way. I wish much to
-like the Russians, but those who govern them will
-take care I never shall. This place, were it not for
-its magnificence, would be insufferable. We silently
-mourn when we remember Sweden. As for our
-harps there are no trees to hang them upon; nevertheless
-we sit down by the waters of Babylon and
-weep. They open all the letters, and therefore
-there is something for them to chew upon. More
-I dare not add; perhaps your experience will supply
-the rest.”</p>
-
-<p>To this, if we add his picture of the execrable
-despot who then governed Russia, enough will have
-been said of his experience at Petersburg. “It is
-impossible,” he writes, “to say what will be the end
-of things here, or whether the emperor is more of a
-madman, a fool, a knave, or a tyrant. If I were to
-relate the ravings, the follies, the villanies, the
-cruelties of that detestable beast, I should never
-reach the end of my letter. Certainly things cannot
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span>
-long go on as they do now. The other day the
-soldiers by his order cudgelled a gentleman in the
-street because the cock of his hat was not in a line
-with his nose. He has sent the Prince of Condé’s
-army to the right-about, which is hushed up, and it
-is to appear that they are ceded to Great Britain.
-He refuses passports even to ambassadors for their
-couriers. One is not safe a moment. It is not
-enough to act by rule, you must regulate your
-features to the whims of a police officer. If you
-frown in the street you will be taken up.”</p>
-
-<p>From Petersburg they proceeded in sledges to
-Moscow, which, like most oriental cities, seemed
-all splendour from a distant view, but shrunk upon
-their entering it into a miserable collection of hovels,
-interspersed with a few grotesque churches and
-tawdry palaces. This place, which is too well
-known to require me to dwell much upon its appearance,
-they quitted to proceed to the Crimea.
-Arriving at Taganrog, on the Sea of Azov, Clarke
-amused himself with swimming in the Don, the
-ancient Tanais, between Europe and Asia, and in
-thinking of the vast extent of country over which
-his good fortune had already carried him, and
-of the far more glorious scenes&mdash;Palestine&mdash;Egypt&mdash;Greece&mdash;which
-yet lay in his route. “Do, for
-God’s sake imagine,” says he in a letter to a friend,
-“what I must feel in the prospect of treading the
-plains of Troy!&mdash;Tears of joy stream from my eyes
-while I write.” To a person of such a frame of
-mind&mdash;and no others should ever leave their firesides&mdash;travelling,
-next to the performance of virtuous
-actions, affords the most exquisite pleasure
-upon earth. The imagination, impregnated by a
-classical education with glowing ideas of what
-certain scenes once were, invests them with unearthly
-splendour, of which no experience can ever
-afterward divest them.</p>
-
-<p>Upon their arriving at Achmedshid in the Crimea,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span>
-they remained some time in the house of Professor
-Pallas, who entertained them in so hospitable a
-manner that Clarke, who spoke of men as he found
-them, could not forbear imparting to his friends at
-home the warm gratitude of his heart. “It is with
-him we now live,” says he, “till the vessel is ready
-to sail for Constantinople; and how can I express
-his kindness to me? He has all the tenderness of a
-father to us both. Every thing in his house he
-makes our own. He received me worn down with
-fatigue and ill of a tertian fever. Mrs. Pallas nursed
-me, and he cured me, and then loaded me with all
-sorts of presents; books, drawings, insects, plants,
-minerals, &amp;c. The advantage of conversing with
-such a man is worth the whole journey from England,
-not considering the excellent qualities of his
-heart. Here we are in quite an elegant English
-house; and if you knew the comfort of lying down
-in a clean bed after passing months without taking
-off your clothes in deserts and among savages, you
-would know the comfort we feel. The vessel is at
-Kosloff, distant forty miles; and when we leave the
-Crimea Mr. and Mrs. Pallas and their daughter, who
-has been married since we were in the house to a
-general officer, go with us to Kosloff; and will dine
-with us on board the day we sail. They prepare all
-our provisions for the voyage.”</p>
-
-<p>The whole of their stay in Russia was rendered
-so exceedingly disagreeable&mdash;first by the savage
-tyranny of the emperor, and secondly by the evil
-character of his subjects, which, as being everywhere
-felt, was infinitely more annoying&mdash;that our
-traveller regarded himself among a civilized and
-hospitable people when he reached Constantinople.
-In fact, he found himself in a sort of English society
-which, congregating together at the palace of the
-embassy, engaged in the same round of amusements
-which would have occupied them in London. The
-time which these agreeable occupations left him was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
-employed in searching for and examining Greek
-medals, and in viewing such curiosities as were to
-be found in Constantinople; among other things the
-interior of the seraglio, where no Frank, he says,
-had before set his foot. He moreover found time
-to peruse many of the various publications called
-forth by the Bryant controversy respecting the existence
-of Troy; and so unsteady was his faith on
-this point, that, after dipping a little into the subject,
-he began to imagine something like a new theory to
-explain the manner in which we are required to believe
-Homer might have invented the whole groundwork
-of the Iliad! However, upon shortly afterward
-arriving on the spot, this flimsy vagary
-vanished. Jacob Bryant and his followers were
-found to be the pettifogging skeptics which they
-have always been considered by sensible men.
-“The Plain of Troy now,” exclaims our traveller,
-“offers every fact you want; there is nothing
-doubtful. No argument will stand an instant<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>
-opposition to the test of inquiry upon the spot;
-penetrating into the mountains behind the Acropolis
-the proofs grow more numerous as you advance,
-till at length the discussion becomes absurd, and the
-nonsense of Bryantism so ridiculous that his warmest
-partisans would be ashamed to acknowledge
-they had ever assented for an instant to such contemptible
-blasphemy upon the most sacred records
-of history.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a>
-An intaglio purchased by Clarke at Constantinople is exceedingly
-remarkable, as throwing light upon the original story of Æneas, before
-it had been deformed by Virgil or Ovid. “There are poor Turks at Constantinople,
-whose business it is to wash the mud of the common sewers
-of the city, and the sand of the shore. These people found a small onyx,
-with an antique intaglio of most excellent workmanship, representing
-Æneas flying from the city, leading his boy by the hand, and bearing on
-his shoulders (who do you suppose?)&mdash;not his father&mdash;for in that case
-the subject might have been borrowed from Virgil or Ovid&mdash;but&mdash;his
-wife, with the Penates in her lap; and so wonderfully wrought that
-these three figures are brought into a gem of the smallest size, and
-wings are added to the feet of Æneas,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Pedibus timor addidit alas!’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>to express by symbols of the most explicit nature the story and the
-situation of the hero. Thus it is proved that a tradition, founded neither
-on the works of Homer nor the Greek historians (and perhaps unknown
-to Virgil and the Roman poets, who always borrowed their stories from
-such records as were afforded by the works of ancient artists), existed
-among the ancients in the remotest periods, respecting the war of Troy.
-The authenticity of this invaluable little relic, the light it strews on
-ancient history, its beauty, and the remarkable coincidence of the spot
-on which it was found, with the locality of the subject it illustrates, interested
-so much the late Swedish minister, Mr. Heidensham, and other
-antiquarians of the first talents in this part of the world, that I have
-given it a very considerable part of this letter, hoping it will not be indifferent
-to you.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>From the Troad Clarke proceeded to Rhodes, the
-Gulf of Glaucus, on the coast of Asia Minor, and
-thence by sea to Egypt, where the English fleet was
-then lying in Aboukir Bay. He did not, however,
-see much of Egypt on this occasion, for the country
-was still in the possession of the French; and
-therefore, after a short visit to Rosetta, he sailed
-for Cyprus, and on returning from this voyage proceeded
-in the Romulus to Palestine. Here he
-visited Jerusalem, Nazareth, Bethlehem, and the
-Lake of Genesareth; near which he enjoyed an
-opportunity of conversing with a party of Druses.
-Almost every traveller in Syria has given us some
-new particulars respecting this curious people.
-“They are,” says Clarke, “the most extraordinary
-people on earth; singular in the simplicity of their
-lives by their strict integrity and virtue. They only
-eat what they earn by their own labour, and preserve
-at this moment the superstitions brought by the
-Israelites out of Egypt. What will be your surprise
-to learn that every Thursday they elevate the
-molten calf, before which they prostrate themselves,
-and having paid their adoration, each man selects
-among the women present the wife he likes best,
-with whom the ceremony ends. The calf is of gold,
-silver, or bronze. This is exactly that worship at
-which Moses was so incensed in descending from
-Mount Sinai. The cow was the Venus of the
-Egyptians, and of course the calf a personification
-of animal desire; a Cupid before which the sacrifices
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>
-so offensive to Moses were held. For it is related
-they set up a molten calf, which Aaron had made
-from the earrings of the Israelite women; before
-which similar sacrifices were made. And certainly
-the Druses on Mount Lebanon are a detachment
-of the posterity of those Israelites who are so often
-represented in Scripture as deserters from the true
-faith, falling back into the old superstitions and
-pagan worship of the country from whence they
-came. I could not visit Mount Lebanon; but I took
-every method necessary to ascertain the truth of
-this relation; and I send it you as one of the highest
-antiquities and most curious relics of remote ages
-which has yet been found upon earth.”</p>
-
-<p>His stay in Palestine was exceedingly short, just
-sufficient to enable him to say he had looked at it.
-He then returned to Aboukir Bay, where his brother
-was commander of an English ship; which now, on
-the 6th of August, 1801, swarmed with French
-prisoners like a beehive. When the road to Cairo
-was rendered practicable by the defeat of the
-French, our traveller proceeded to that city, where
-the most interesting objects existing were the
-beautiful young women who had been torn by the
-French soldiers from the harems of the bey; and
-then, when they evacuated the country, deserted
-and abandoned to their fate. Here he procured a
-complete copy of the “Arabian Nights,” which,
-with many other works that were so many sealed
-books to him, gave rise to much unavailing regret
-that he had bestowed little or no attention on the
-Arabic language. The Pyramids he of course
-admired. “Without hyperbole,” says he, “they
-are immense mountains; and when clouds cast
-shadows over their white sides they are seen passing
-as upon the summit of the Alps.” From the
-pinnacle of the loftiest he dated one of his letters to
-England, all of which are filled with lively dashing
-gossip, accompanied with rash, headlong, unphilosophical
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>
-decisions, which the reflections of a
-moment, perhaps, might have served to dissipate.
-The news of the capitulation of Alexandria induced
-him to hurry back to the coast. He found the
-French troops still in the city, but preparing to embark
-with all speed. Great disputes, he says, had
-already arisen between General Hutchinson and
-Menou respecting the antiquities and collections of
-natural history which had been made by the French;
-the former claiming them as public, and the latter
-refusing them as private property. The part performed
-by Clarke himself in this affair he shall
-relate in his own words:&mdash;“When I arrived in the
-British camp, General Hutchinson informed me that
-he had already stipulated for the stone in question
-(the Rosetta marble), and asked me whether I
-thought the other literary treasures were sufficiently
-national to be included in his demands. You may
-be sure I urged all the arguments I could muster to
-justify the proceeding; and it is clear they are not
-private property. General Hutchinson sent me to
-Menou, and charged me to discover what national
-property of that kind was in the hands of the
-French. Hamilton, Lord Elgin’s secretary, had
-gone the same morning about an hour before with
-Colonel Turner of the Antiquarian Society about
-the Hieroglyphic Table. I showed my pass at the
-gates, and was admitted. The streets and public
-places were filled with the French troops, in desperate
-bad-humour. Our proposals were made known,
-and backed with a menace from the British general
-that he would break the capitulation if the proposals
-were not acceded to. The whole corps of sçavans
-and engineers beset Menou, and the poor old fellow,
-what with us and them, was completely hunted.
-We have been now at this work since Thursday the
-11th, and I believe have succeeded. We found
-much more in their possession than was suspected
-or imagined. Pointers would not range better for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
-game than we have done for statues, sarcophagi,
-maps, MSS., drawings, plans, charts, botany, stuffed
-birds, animals, dried fishes, &amp;c. Savigny, who has
-been years in forming the beautiful collection of
-natural history for the republic, is in despair.
-Therefore we represented to General Hutchinson,
-that it would be the best plan to send him to England
-also, as the most proper person to take care
-of the collection, and to publish its description if
-necessary.”</p>
-
-<p>No man, I suppose, who has passed beyond the
-frontiers of his own country, can fail to have experienced
-frequent depressions of spirit, during which
-he has probably repented him of his wandering
-habits. But Clarke was like a weathercock, now
-pointing to the east, now to the west. In the island
-of Zea, off the promontory of Sunium, he repented
-heartily of having undertaken the voyage to Greece.
-“Danger, fatigue, disease, filth, treachery, thirst,
-hunger, storms, rocks, assassins,&mdash;these,” he exclaims,
-“are the realities which a traveller in
-Greece meets with!” Anon, at Athens, he writes,
-“We have been here three days; we sailed into the
-port of the Piræus after sunset on the 28th. The
-little voyage from Cape Sunium to Athens is one
-of the most interesting I ever made. The height
-of the mountains brings the most distant objects
-into the view, and you are surrounded by beauty
-and grandeur. The sailors and pilots still give to
-every thing its ancient name, with only a little difference
-in the pronunciation. They show you as
-you sail along, Ægina and Salamis, Mount Hymettus
-and Athens, and Megara, and the mountains of
-Corinth. The picture is the same as it was in the
-earliest ages of Greece. The Acropolis rises to
-view as if it were in its most perfect state: the
-temples and buildings seem entire; for the eye, in
-the Saronic Gulf, does not distinguish the injuries
-which the buildings have suffered, and nature, of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>
-course, is the same now as she was in the days of
-Themistocles. I cannot tell you what sensations I
-felt: the successions were so rapid I knew not
-whether to laugh or to cry,&mdash;sometimes I did both.</p>
-
-<p>“Our happiness is complete, we have forgotten
-all our disasters, and I have half a mind to blot out
-all I have written in the first part of this letter.
-We are in the most comfortable house imaginable,
-with a good widow and her daughter. You do not
-know Lusieri. He was my friend in Italy many
-years ago. Think what a joy to find him here,
-presiding over the troop of artists, architects,
-sculptors, and excavators that Lord Elgin has sent
-here to work for him. He is the most celebrated
-artist at present in the world. Pericles would have
-deified him. He attends us everywhere, and Pausanias
-himself would not have made a better cicerone.</p>
-
-<p>“Athens exceeds all that ever has been written or
-painted from it. I know not how to give an idea of
-it; because, having never seen any thing like it, I
-must become more familiar with so much majesty
-before I can describe it. I am no longer to lament
-the voyage I lost with Lord Berwick; because it is
-exactly that which a man should see <i>last</i> in his travels.
-It is even with joy I consider it is perhaps the
-end of all my admiration. We are lucky in the
-time of our being here. The popularity of the English
-name gives us access to many things which
-strangers before were prohibited from visiting, and
-the great excavations that are going on discover
-daily some hidden treasures. Rome is almost as insignificant
-in comparison with Athens as London
-with Rome; and one regrets the consciousness that
-no probable union of circumstances will ever again
-carry the effects of human labour to the degree of
-perfection they have attained here.”</p>
-
-<p>No one after this will accuse Clarke of being deficient
-in enthusiasm; but this is not all. On reaching
-the summit of Parnassus, he bursts forth into
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>
-expressions of admiration, which, if they were not
-justified by the sublime beauty of the scenes themselves,
-or by the historical glory with which they
-must be eternally associated, would be absurd. “It
-is necessary to forget all that has preceded&mdash;all the
-travels of my life&mdash;all I ever imagined&mdash;all I ever
-saw! Asia&mdash;Egypt&mdash;the Isles&mdash;Italy&mdash;the Alps&mdash;whatever
-you will! Greece surpasses all! Stupendous
-in its ruins! Awful in its mountains!&mdash;captivating
-in its vales&mdash;bewitching in its climate. Nothing
-ever equalled it&mdash;no pen can describe it&mdash;no
-pencil can portray it!</p>
-
-<p>“I know not when we shall get to Constantinople.
-We are as yet only three days’ distance from
-Athens; and here we sit on the top of Parnassus, in
-a little sty, full of smoke, after wandering for a
-fortnight in Attica, Bœotia, and Phocis. We have
-been in every spot celebrated in ancient story&mdash;in
-fields of slaughter, and in groves of song. I shall
-grow old in telling you the wonders of this country.
-Marathon, Thebes, Platæa, Leuctra, Thespia, Mount
-Helicon, the grove of the Muses, the cave of Trophonius,
-Cheronea, Orchomene, Delphi, the Castalian
-fountain, Parnassus; we have paid our vows
-in all! But what is most remarkable, in Greece
-there is hardly a spot which hath been particularly
-dignified that is not also adorned by the most singular
-beauties of nature. Independently of its history,
-each particular object is interesting.”</p>
-
-<p>From Athens they proceeded by land to Constantinople
-through ancient Thrace, by a route partly
-trodden by Pococke. After a short stay at this
-city, they directed their course homewards through
-Roumelia, Austria, Germany, and France, and arrived
-in England after an absence of upwards of
-three years. Cripps now returned for a short period
-to his family, and Clarke, who had by this time
-acquired an immense reputation, took up his residence
-at Cambridge, where, with very few intervals
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>
-of absence, he remained nearly twenty years.
-He was very soon rejoined by his pupil, the completing
-of whose education, together with the arranging
-of his curiosities and antiquities, and the
-composition of his travels, fully occupied his leisure
-for some time. A statue of Ceres which our traveller
-had dug up, and sent home from Greece, was
-presented, on his return, to the university; in consequence
-of which the degree of LL.D. was conferred
-upon Clarke, and that of M.A. upon his companion.</p>
-
-<p>In 1805 Dr. Clarke published a “Dissertation on
-the Sarcophagus in the British Museum,” which,
-though necessarily neglected by the public, is said
-to have given considerable satisfaction to the learned,
-and procured for its author many valuable acquaintances.
-Another and a very different subject employed
-his mind throughout a great part of the following
-year. This was no less a thing than matrimony;
-which, as soon as the idea got footing in his
-brain, occupied his ardent imagination to the exclusion
-of every thing else. His suit, however, was
-successful. The lady of his choice became his wife;
-and to increase this piece of good fortune, two livings,
-for he had entered into orders, were presented
-him by his friends, the one shortly before, and the
-other immediately after his marriage. He now occupied
-himself with lectures on mineralogy, which
-were delivered at the university to crowded audiences,
-and were a source of considerable profit.
-This, as he expected, led to his appointment as professor
-of mineralogy; and “thus,” says Mr. Otter,
-“were his most sanguine wishes crowned with success;
-and thus were his spirit and perseverance rewarded
-with one of the rarest and highest honours
-which the university could bestow.”</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Clarke now began to think of turning the
-treasures he had picked up in his travels to account;
-he sold his MSS. to the Bodleian Library at Oxford
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span>
-for 1000<i>l.</i>, and his Greek coins to Mr. Payne Knight
-for 100 guineas. The publication of his travels next
-followed, and produced him a clear sum of 6595<i>l.</i>
-In the year 1814 his old passion for travelling revived,
-and an expedition was projected into the Grecian
-Archipelago for the purpose of collecting antiquities,
-manuscripts, &amp;c. But he was overruled
-by his friend, who probably believed that his constitution
-was now unequal to the fatigue which would
-be the inevitable attendant on such a mission. To
-this scheme he would appear to have been urged by
-the extravagant manner in which he had for some
-time lived; but a more practicable, or at least a
-more certain mode of recovering from the effects of
-this false step presented itself; which was no other
-than reducing his expenses, and living within his income.
-This he had the courage to undertake and
-execute; and from that day forward seems to have
-led the life of a sensible man. His passion now
-took a new turn, and he was wholly absorbed by
-chymistry. In September, 1816, he wrote as follows
-to a friend: “I sacrificed the whole month of
-August to chymistry. Oh how I did work! It was
-delightful play to me, and I stuck to it day and night.
-At last, having blown off both my eyebrows and eyelashes,
-and nearly blown out both my eyes, I ended
-with a bang that shook all the houses round my lecture-room.
-The Cambridge paper has told you the
-result of all this alchymy, for I have actually decomposed
-the earths, and obtained them in a metallic
-form.”</p>
-
-<p>I adopt from Mr. Otter the following account of
-Clarke’s death. It was hastened, if not entirely
-caused, by continued high-wrought mental excitement.
-He was carried to town for advice by Sir
-William and Lady Rush, where he was attended by
-Sir Astley Cooper, Dr. Bailey, and Dr. Scudamore,
-but their efforts to save him were in vain; the rest
-of his life, about a fortnight, over which a veil will
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>
-soon be drawn, was like a feverish dream after a day
-of strong excitement, when the same ideas chase
-each other through the mind in a perpetual round,
-and baffle every attempt to banish them. Nothing
-seemed to occupy his attention but the syllabus of
-his lectures, and the details of the operations he had
-just finished; nor could there exist to his friends a
-stronger proof that all control over his mind was
-gone, and that the ascendency of such thoughts at a
-season when the devotion so natural to him, and of
-late so strikingly exhibited under circumstances far
-less trying, would, in a sounder state, have been the
-prime, if not the only, mover of his soul. One lucid
-interval there was, in which, to judge from the subject
-and the manner of his conversation, he had the
-command of his thoughts, as well as a sense of his
-danger; for in the presence of Lieut. Chappel and
-Mr. Cripps, he pronounced a very pathetic eulogium
-on Mrs. Clarke, and recommended her earnestly to
-the care of those about him; but when the currents
-of his thoughts seemed running fast towards those
-pious contemplations on which they would naturally
-have rested, his mind suddenly relapsed into the
-power of its former occupants, from which it never
-more was free. At times, indeed, gleams of his
-former kindness and intelligence would mingle
-with the wildness of his delirium, in a manner the
-most striking and affecting; and then, even his
-incoherences, to use his own thoughts respecting
-another person who had finished his race shortly
-before him, was as the wreck of some beautiful decayed
-structure, when all its goodly ornaments and
-stately pillars fall in promiscuous ruin. He died on
-Saturday, the 9th of March, and was buried in Jesus
-College chapel on the 18th of the same month.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="FRANCOIS_LE_VAILLANT">FRANCOIS LE VAILLANT.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1753.&mdash;Died 1824.</p>
-
-<p>In commencing the life of this traveller I experience
-some apprehension that the interest of the
-narrative may suffer in my hands; since his exploits,
-as Sallust observes of those of the Athenians, appear
-to acquire much of their importance from the
-peculiar eloquence with which they are described.
-The style of Le Vaillant, though regarded by many
-as declamatory and negligent, is in fact so graceful,
-natural, and full of vivacity,&mdash;his sentiments are so
-warm,&mdash;his ideas, whether right or wrong, so peculiarly
-his own, that, whether he desires to interest
-you in the fate of his friends or of his cattle, of
-his collections or of his cocks and hens, the result
-is invariably the same: he irresistibly inspires you
-with feelings like his own, and for the moment compels
-you, in spite of yourself, to adopt his views and
-opinions. I cannot, however, flatter myself with the
-hope of equal success. Things really trifling in
-themselves might, I am afraid, continue to appear
-so when dressed in my plain style; and it therefore
-only remains for me to select, to the best of my
-judgment, such actions and events as really deserve
-to be remembered, and must always, with whatever
-degree of simplicity they may be described, command
-a certain degree of attention. The scene of
-this writer’s adventures had in many instances all
-the charm of novelty when his travels first appeared.
-No European had preceded him in his route.
-He could form no conjecture respecting the nature
-of the objects with which the morrow was to bring
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>
-him acquainted, and at every step experienced the</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Novos decerpere flores.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In all the pleasures to be derived from pursuing an
-untrodden path, from penetrating into an unknown
-world; for such then was Africa, and such, in a
-great measure, it still continues&mdash;from beholding
-new species of birds and animals which his enthusiasm
-and perseverance were about to make known
-to mankind;&mdash;in all these pleasures, I say, he skilfully
-makes his readers his associates, and thus, apparently
-without effort, accomplishes the intention
-of the most consummate rhetorical art, the object
-of which is only to lead the imagination captive by
-the allurements of pleasure, or to urge it along by
-the keen sting of curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>François le Vaillant was born in 1753, at Paramaribo,
-in Dutch Guiana, where his father, a rich merchant,
-originally from Metz, filled the office of consul.
-Even while a child the tastes and habits of his
-parents inspired him with a partiality for a wandering
-life, and for collections of objects of natural history,
-which quickly generated another passion, the
-passion for hunting; and this amusement, unphilosophical
-as it may seem, not only occupied his boyish
-days, in which man is cruel from thoughtlessness,
-but his riper and declining years, when suffering
-and calamity might have taught him to respect
-the lives even of the inferior animals.</p>
-
-<p>His father, actuated by the love of science, or by
-the vanity of forming a collection, employed much
-of the leisure which he enjoyed in travelling through
-the less frequented parts of the colony, accompanied
-by his wife and son; and to this circumstance may
-be attributed Le Vaillant’s twofold passion for travelling
-and for natural history. The desire of possessing
-a cabinet of his own soon arose. Birds and
-beasts being as yet beyond his reach, he commenced
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>
-with caterpillars, butterflies, and other insects; but
-his ambition increasing with his acquisitions, he at
-length armed himself with the Indian sarbacan and
-bow, and before he had reached his tenth year had
-slain innumerable birds.</p>
-
-<p>In 1763 he proceeded with his parents to Europe,
-where every object which presented itself to his eye
-was new. They first landed in Holland, where the
-phlegmatic Dutchmen, who, like the Chinese, pique
-themselves upon being “slow and sure,” viewed with
-astonishment the pert and forward urchin, who, at ten
-years of age, began to babble of science, cabinets,
-and collections. From Holland, however, they soon
-removed to the more congenial soil of France. Here
-precocity, which too frequently generates hopes
-never destined to be fulfilled, has always been viewed
-with more complacency than in any other country
-in Europe; and accordingly our youthful traveller,
-whose vanity amply made up for his want of knowledge,
-was flattered and encouraged to his heart’s
-content. In this particular instance the flowers were
-succeeded by fruit. Being capable of existing in
-solitude, which is difficult in youth, but yet absolutely
-necessary to the acquisition of studious habits,
-he yielded to his natural inclination for the chase,
-and spent whole weeks in the forests of Lorrain and
-Germany, intently studying the manners of animals
-and birds. His education, meanwhile, was not in
-other respects neglected; but the books which occupied
-him most agreeably were voyages and travels,
-as his mind seems already to have turned towards
-that point from which he was to derive his fame.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the year 1777 some fortunate circumstance
-conducted him to Paris, where the collections
-and cabinets of learned and scientific men
-at first afforded him extraordinary delight; but
-ended, he says, by inspiring him with contempt, the
-richness of the treasures which they contained being
-equalled only by the confusion and absurdity observable
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>
-in their arrangement. He discovered likewise
-in the current works on natural history, even
-in those of Buffon, so much exaggeration, and so
-many errors, notwithstanding the masterly eloquence
-with which those errors are clothed, that, convinced
-that no degree of genius could preserve from delusion
-the man who describes nature at second-hand,
-he at length determined to become a traveller before
-he became a natural historian, that he might observe
-in their native woods and deserts the animals which
-he wished to make known to the world. With these
-views, without communicating his plans to any person,
-he departed from Paris on the 17th of July,
-1780, and proceeded to Holland.</p>
-
-<p>Having visited the principal cities of the republic,
-and admired at Amsterdam the superb collection and
-aviary of M. Temminck and others, he obtained permission
-to proceed to the Cape of Good Hope in one
-of the ships of the Dutch East India Company, and
-set sail for that country on the 3d of December, 1780,
-the day before England declared war against the
-Dutch. Had this event taken place twenty-four
-hours sooner, the company, he observes, would not
-have allowed them to depart; in which case all his
-projects might have been frustrated. During the
-voyage the ship was cannonaded during several
-hours by a small English privateer, while the Dutch
-captain, rendered incapable of reflection by terror,
-never returned a single shot; and although exceedingly
-superior in men and metal to the enemy, would
-undoubtedly have suffered himself to be taken prisoner,
-had not another Dutch ship-of-war hove in
-sight, and put to flight the audacious Englishman.
-This was the only incident worthy of mention which
-occurred to dissipate the <i>ennui</i> of their long voyage;
-and they arrived at Cape Town three months and
-ten days after their departure from the Texel.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant, who had taken care to provide himself
-previous to his departure from Amsterdam with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>
-numerous letters of recommendation, was received
-with remarkable attention by several individuals of
-distinction at the Cape. His design of exploring
-the remoter districts of the colony and the adjacent
-countries fortunately excited no jealousy or suspicion
-in their minds, and therefore, instead of labouring,
-as petty colonial governments too frequently
-do, to obstruct the interests of science, they evinced
-a disposition to favour the views of the traveller,
-entertained him with profuse hospitality during the
-many months which the preparations for his journey
-required him to remain among them, and, which to
-him was still more important, exerted their influence
-and authority to facilitate his movements towards
-the countries of the interior. So agreeable a reception
-could not, of course, fail to produce its effect
-upon the mind of the traveller. It quite melted
-away his affected misanthropy. He found himself
-in good-humour with mankind, and, as if benevolence
-and philanthropy were the peculiar attributes of the
-natives of Holland, observes, that this species of politeness
-was what he had reckoned upon, for that he
-knew he had to deal with Dutchmen!</p>
-
-<p>His remarks upon Cape Town, now no longer in
-the possession of the Dutch, are sufficiently curious,
-as they enable us to contrast its appearance fifty
-years ago with that which it at present wears under
-English government. Though a large proportion
-of the houses were spacious and handsome, the
-streets, in spite of their great breadth, appeared disagreeable
-even to a Frenchman, on account of the
-badness of the pavement, and the stench which
-everywhere offended the nostrils, arising from the
-heads, feet, and intestines of slaughtered animals
-which the butchers of the company were in the habit
-of casting forth in heaps before their doors, and
-which, with more than Ottomite negligence, the authorities
-allowed to putrefy upon the spot. The effluvia
-proceeding from these abominations Le Vaillant
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>
-with reason regarded as one of the active causes of
-those epidemics which usually prevailed in the city
-during those seasons in which the violent south-east
-wind had not blown. While this cleansing wind was
-performing its operations, the streets were almost
-rendered impassable. The hurricane, precipitating
-from the mountains dense masses of vapour, raged
-for several days with indescribable impetuosity, overthrowing
-every thing in its course, and filling all
-places, even to the closets, trunks, and drawers, with
-dust. Trees and plants were frequently torn up by
-the roots; and well-planted gardens were rendered
-in the course of twenty-four hours as bare and naked
-as a desert.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant found the native colonists of the Cape
-handsome and well formed, particularly the women;
-but, although they studied with perseverance the important
-science of dress, they were still very far, in
-his opinion, from the ease and elegance of the ladies
-of France; a result which he in a great measure
-attributes to the practice of employing slaves as wet-nurses,
-and of otherwise living with them in habits
-of great familiarity. Slavery under any form is a
-thing to be abhorred; but our traveller here seems
-to exaggerate its deformities. Gracefulness, taste,
-decorum, which should, perhaps, be numbered among
-the virtues in a well-regulated state, are things with
-which slavery is by no means incompatible. The
-most polished nation of antiquity, which every person
-but a Frenchman will allow to have at least
-equalled the Parisians in refinement, constantly employed
-domestic slaves, and lived with them on terms
-of considerable familiarity. But ignorance and refinement
-are necessarily repugnant to each other;
-and in general the Dutch inhabitants of the Cape
-were, according to Le Vaillant, remarkable for their
-ignorance, which, without the aid of slavery, would
-sufficiently account for the absence of graceful and
-elegant manners.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span></p>
-
-<p>Strangers, however, arriving at the Cape were
-almost invariably received with great hospitality,
-more particularly the English, who were admired
-for their generosity, as much as the French, for their
-sordid avarice and egotism, were despised and hated.
-Le Vaillant, in fact, observes that he has frequently
-heard colonists declare they would prefer being
-conquered by the English to their owing their safety
-to a nation whom they regarded with such aversion
-as the French; and the French troops which shortly
-afterward arrived in the colony, spreading around
-them vice and profligacy like a pestilence, debauching
-the wives and daughters of those who hospitably
-received them into their houses, and sowing dissension
-and eternal regrets in the bosoms of a hundred
-families, fully justified this deep-rooted hatred.
-The great number of persons in France who from
-selfish motives remain unmarried, and speculate
-upon the gratification of their feeble passions at the
-expense of the weak-minded and the miserable, must
-always render the nation an object of aversion
-among a remote people like the Dutch colonists of
-the Cape, whose ignorant simplicity necessarily exposes
-them to the shame of suffering by such immorality.</p>
-
-<p>But if the English were so much the objects of admiration
-to the people, their numerous and powerful
-fleets, which have for centuries exercised an undisputed
-omnipotence on the ocean, rendered them no
-less terrible to the authorities, who, to secure the
-company’s vessels from their dreaded cannon, commanded
-them to be removed from Table Bay to that
-of Saldanha, where, it was hoped, their chances of
-escape would be more numerous. On board of one
-of these our traveller embarked on the 10th of May,
-and next morning arrived safely in the Bay of Saldanha,
-happy that the dreaded English flag had not
-encountered them on their passage.</p>
-
-<p>In the waters of this bay, which was then but seldom
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span>
-visited, great numbers of whales were continually
-seen sporting about; and Le Vaillant, whose
-hunting propensities were immediately awakened by
-the sight of a wild animal, frequently amused himself
-with firing at this new species of game. He
-could never perceive, however, that his balls produced
-the least effect upon them. But in Mutton
-Island, situated in the entrance of the bay, his fowlingpiece
-was more fortunate; for, from the prodigious
-number of rabbits with which that isle abounded, he
-found it easy on all occasions to kill as many as he
-pleased. In fact, this little isle became the warren
-of the whole fleet.</p>
-
-<p>Various species of game abounded in the neighbourhood,
-among which the principal were the partridge
-and the hare, and that small kind of gazelle
-denominated steen-bock by the colonists. The panther,
-too, following in the track of his prey, was
-found in great numbers in this district. A few days
-after his arrival Le Vaillant was invited by the commandant
-to join him in a hunting-party. Their chase
-was unsuccessful: they killed nothing. Towards
-the close of the day, as if fate had decreed that his
-courage should at once be put to the proof, Le Vaillant
-found himself separated from his companion;
-and continuing as he proceeded to fire at intervals,
-in the hope of arousing the game, he started a small
-gazelle, which his dog immediately pursued. The
-gazelle was quickly out of sight, but the dog, which
-still seemed to be upon his track, stopped on the
-skirts of a large thicket, and began to bark. Le
-Vaillant, who had now no doubt that the game had
-taken refuge there, hastened to the spot with all the
-eagerness of a sportsman. His presence encouraged
-the dog, and he every moment expected to see the
-gazelle appear; but at length, growing impatient, he
-entered into the thicket, beating the bushes aside
-with his fowlingpiece. It is difficult, however, to
-describe the terror and confusion he experienced
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>
-when, instead of a timid and feeble gazelle, he saw
-before him a tremendous panther, whose glaring
-eyes were fixed upon him, while its outstretched
-neck, gaping jaws, and low, hollow growl seemed to
-announce its intention of springing. He regarded
-himself as lost. But the calm courage of his dog
-saved his life. It kept the animal at bay, hesitating
-between rage and fear, until the traveller had retreated
-out of the thicket. He then made towards
-the house of the commandant with all possible speed,
-frequently looking behind him as he ran.</p>
-
-<p>Another kind of terror shortly after seized upon
-him at sea. He was sitting at supper with the captain
-and the other officers, when a sudden strange
-motion was observed in the ship. Every person immediately
-ran on deck. The whole crew were
-alarmed. Some imagined they had run upon their
-anchors, and were beating against the rocks; others
-accounted for the shock in a different manner; but,
-perceiving from the position of the other ships that
-they were still exactly where they had been before,
-no one could conjecture the cause of what had happened,
-and their alarm was redoubled. Presently,
-however, upon more careful observation, a whale
-was discovered entangled by the tail, between the
-ship’s cables, and making furious efforts to disengage
-itself. This was the cause of the singular motion
-they had felt. All hands now rushed with harpoons
-into the boat; but the obscurity of the night
-retarding their movements, the whale, just as they
-were ready to attack it, succeeded in disentangling
-its tail, and escaped.</p>
-
-<p>In the entrance to Saldanha Bay there is a second
-small island, to which the colonists have given the
-name of the Marmotte. Upon this sequestered spot
-the captain of a Danish vessel, as our traveller had
-learned from tradition, having been long detained in
-the bay by contrary winds, had died there, and been
-buried by his crew. Le Vaillant now conceived the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>
-desire of visiting his grave. In sailing by this lonely
-rock, in the passage to and from Mutton Island, he
-had invariably been struck by a dull but startling
-sound, proceeding from the isle. He mentioned the
-circumstance to the captain. The good-natured
-navigator, anxious to oblige his guest, and perhaps
-himself desirous of beholding the Dane’s grave, replied,
-that if his wishes pointed that way they should
-immediately be gratified.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, accordingly, they proceeded towards
-the island. In proportion as they advanced,
-the noise, increasing in loudness, more and more excited
-their curiosity; and the sound of the waves,
-which broke with great violence against the rocks,
-contributed not a little to swell the deep murmur,
-the cause of which no one could conjecture. They
-landed at length amid spray and foam, and, clambering
-up the cliffs, succeeded with much difficulty in
-reaching the summit. Here they beheld a sight
-such, in the opinion of our traveller, as no mortal
-ever beheld before. There arose in a moment from
-the surface of the earth an impenetrable cloud, which
-formed, at the height of forty feet above their heads,
-a prodigious canopy, or rather sky, of birds of every
-kind and colour. “Cormorants, sea-swallows, pelicans,&mdash;in
-one word,” says he, “all the winged creatures
-of Southern Africa were collected, I verily
-believe, in that spot. The screams of so enormous
-a multitude of birds mingling together formed an
-infernal species of music, which seemed to rend the
-ear with its piercing notes.</p>
-
-<p>“The alarm,” he adds, “was so much the greater,
-among these innumerable legions of birds, in that it
-was the females with whom we had principally to
-deal, it being the season of nesting. They had
-therefore their nests, their eggs, their young ones to
-defend, and were as fierce as so many harpies.
-They deafened us with their cries. They stooped
-upon the wing, and in darting past us, brushed our
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>
-faces. It was in vain that we fired our pieces; nothing
-could frighten away this living cloud. We could
-scarcely take a single step without crushing some
-eggs or young birds: the earth was covered by them.”</p>
-
-<p>They found the caverns and hollows of the rocks
-inhabited by seals and sea-lions, of the latter of
-which they killed one specimen of enormous size.
-The various creeks of the island afforded a retreat
-to the manchot, a species of penguin, two feet in
-height, the wings of which, being entirely devoid of
-feathers, are only used in swimming. On land they
-hang down by the side of the body in a negligent manner,
-and communicate to the appearance and air of
-the bird something peculiarly sinister and funereal.
-These dismal-looking birds crowded every part of the
-island, but were nowhere so numerous as about the
-Dane’s tomb, around which they clustered as if to
-defend it from violation, and with their startling,
-melancholy cry, which mingled with the roar of the
-seal and the sea-lion, gave an air of sadness to the
-scene which deeply affected the soul. In itself the
-tomb was rude and simple,&mdash;a single block of stone,
-without name or inscription.</p>
-
-<p>During the whole of his stay on this part of the
-coast Le Vaillant was actively employed in adding
-to his collection, which, with his money, clothes, and
-papers, continued on board the Middleburg, the
-principal ship on the station. He had now been
-three months in this neighbourhood, which he had
-traversed in every direction. He still continued,
-however, to roam about with his dog and gun in
-search of birds and animals; but one day, on approaching
-the shore, the roaring of cannon struck
-his ear. He at first supposed it might be some <i>fête</i>
-given on board the ships, and hastened his march as
-much as possible, in the hope of sharing in the
-rejoicings. Upon his reaching the downs overlooking
-the bay, a very different spectacle presented
-itself. The Middleburg had just been blown up, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>
-its burning fragments still filled the air, or lay widely
-scattered upon the sea! Here, then, was the end
-of all his hopes; for not only the results of his
-labours, but his fortune, the basis upon which all his
-projects were founded, was now destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>The cause of this calamity was soon discovered.
-The English fleet, having obtained intelligence of the
-retreat of the Dutch, had burst upon them so suddenly,
-that the terrified commanders had all, with the
-exception of Vangenep, the commander of the Middleburg,
-been taken unawares, and prevented from
-executing the orders they had received, rather to
-run aground, sink, or blow up their ships, than suffer
-them to fall into the hands of the enemy. Instead
-of this, they all abandoned their vessels at the first
-appearance of the English, the sailors, notwithstanding
-their apprehensions of the enemy, carrying
-away with them every thing they could bring on
-shore, though the desire to escape beyond reach of
-the English cannon quickly compelled them to cast
-their burdens on the ground. Everywhere the roads
-and paths were crowded with fugitives, and covered
-with the plunder which they had abandoned on the
-way. Among the rest, an English prisoner was
-flying from the shore. Le Vaillant met him, and
-having, as well as he could, questioned him in
-English respecting the horrible catastrophe, was
-expecting an answer, when a cannon-ball carried off
-his head, and the answer with it. A large dog,
-which was running about wild and trembling, apparently
-in search of his master, was next moment
-killed by another ball; and Le Vaillant, apprehensive
-that the third might reach himself, immediately fled
-over the downs, and ensconced himself behind an
-eminence.</p>
-
-<p>His position at this moment, it must be confessed,
-was sufficiently calamitous. To repair to the Cape,
-there to petition among a crowd of adventurers and
-unfortunates for pecuniary aid, was a step he could
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>
-ill brook; yet, unless he submitted to this humiliation,
-what must be his fate? His family, his friends,
-his adopted country were two thousand leagues distant.
-His whole resources now consisted in his
-fowlingpiece, the clothes he then wore, and ten
-ducats. His misfortunes presented themselves to
-his mind in all their horrors, and he burst into tears,&mdash;a
-trait of weakness for which he might have
-pleaded the example of Homer’s and Virgil’s poetical
-heroes. An honest colonist, however, to whose
-house he repaired in this extremity, received him
-with a frank hospitality, which in some degree dissipated
-his chagrin; and he next day returned, though
-not without melancholy, to the first elements of his
-collection.</p>
-
-<p>His misfortunes were soon known at the Cape,
-and in a few days after this occurrence he was again
-placed, by the friendship of M. Boers, the fiscal, in
-a condition to act as if nothing had happened. He
-therefore directed his attention to the preparations
-required by his projected journey into the interior;
-and these, from the style in which he designed to
-travel, were numerous and considerable. He caused
-to be constructed two large four-wheeled wagons,
-covered above with double canvass, in one of which
-were placed five large packing-cases, which exactly
-filled the bottom of the vehicle, and could be opened
-without being removed. Over these was spread a
-mattress, on which he might occasionally sleep; and
-on this mattress, which during the day was rolled
-up in the back of the wagon, he placed the cabinet
-fitted up with drawers, in which he intended to preserve
-his insects. The other cases were filled with
-powder, lead for casting balls, tobacco, hardware,
-brandy, and toys. He had sixteen fowlingpieces,
-one of which, calculated for shooting elephants, rhinoceroses,
-and hippopotami, carried a quarter of a
-pound ball. Besides these he had several pairs of
-double-barrelled pistols, a scimitar, and a dagger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
-
-<p>The second wagon carried his kitchen utensils,
-which, as he was rather addicted to luxurious eating,
-were numerous for a traveller: a gridiron, a frying-pan,
-two kettles, a caldron, tea-kettles, tea-pots,
-coffee-pots, basins, plates, dishes, &amp;c. of porcelain.
-To supply these he laid in a large store of white
-sugar, coffee, tea, chocolate, and sugar-candy. His
-brandy and tobacco, to the use of which he was not
-at all addicted, were designed to purchase friends
-among the natives, and to keep his Hottentot attendants
-in good-humour. In addition to his wagons he
-had a great and a small tent, and numerous other
-conveniences, which he describes with great complacency.
-His train consisted of five Hottentots,
-nine dogs, and thirty oxen; but both his servants
-and his cattle were afterward considerably increased.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant judged rightly, that on proceeding on
-such an expedition it would be imprudent to have
-any associate of equal rank. Few men are calculated
-by nature to become travellers, though every
-person whose constitution will endure fatigue may
-perform a journey; but there are still fewer who are
-gifted with those happy qualities which render men
-desirable companions in an undertaking whence fame
-is expected to be derived. Some, from feebleness
-of purpose, desert you almost at the outset, and, to
-conceal their own pusillanimity, represent you in
-their coteries as feeble, or selfish, or impracticable;
-others, more mischievous still, proceed so far that
-they cannot return, but, clinging to your skirts, contrive
-on every trying occasion to impede your movements,
-or cast a damp upon your energies; while a
-third class, too brave to feel alarm, too consistent
-to shrink from an enterprise begun, too honest to
-misrepresent you, will yet thwart your designs
-through obstinacy, or through the pardonable but
-fatal desire to follow a plan of their own. For these
-reasons our traveller, though solicited by many who
-would have gladly borne him company, steadily refused
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>
-to admit of an associate, and determined to
-proceed on his journey alone.</p>
-
-<p>His preparations being at length completed, he
-took leave of his friends, and departed from Cape
-Town on the 18th of December, 1781. Whatever
-be the natural condition of man, his mind never so
-powerfully experiences the emotions of delight as
-when, escaping voluntarily from the restraints of
-society and civilization, he finds himself his own
-master, and trusting to his own prowess for protection,
-on the virgin bosom of the earth; for of all the
-enjoyments which Heaven bestows upon mankind
-perfect liberty is the sweetest. Something of this
-Le Vaillant now tasted; for, although still within
-the pale of the laws and the purlieus of government,
-he saw himself on the way to the freedom of the
-woods, and partook by anticipation of those pleasures
-which to the savage are, perhaps, an ample
-equivalent for the gratification which letters and refinement
-afford.</p>
-
-<p>The direction of his course lay along the eastern
-coast, towards the country of the Kaffers. At intervals
-the houses of colonists, with their orchards and
-plantations, appeared; but they became thinner as
-he advanced, while the woods and general scenery
-increased in magnificence; and the troops of wild
-animals, such as the zebra and the antelope, which
-stretched themselves out like armies on the plain,
-became strikingly more numerous and of more frequent
-occurrence. “We likewise,” says the traveller,
-“saw several ostriches; and the variety and the
-movements of these vast hordes were particularly
-amusing. My dogs fiercely pursued all these different
-species of animals, which, mingling together in
-their flight, often formed but one enormous column.
-This confusion, however, like that of theatrical machines,
-lasted but for a moment. I recalled my
-dogs, and in an instant each animal had regained his
-own herd, which constantly kept at a certain distance
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>
-from all the others.” Among these animals
-were the blue antelope, the rarest and most beautiful
-of all the known species of gazelle.</p>
-
-<p>The habits of a small kind of tortoise, which
-afforded them the materials of various feasts during
-this part of the journey, are very remarkable. When
-the great heats of summer arrive, and dry up the
-ponds in which they pass the winter, they descend
-into the earth in search of humidity, deeper and
-deeper in proportion as the sun penetrates farther
-and farther into the soil. In this position they remain
-plunged in a kind of lethargy until the return
-of the rainy season; but those who require them for
-food may always, by digging, discover an ample supply.
-Their eggs, which they lay on the brink of
-the small lakes and ponds which they inhabit, and
-abandon to be hatched by the sun, are about the size
-of those of the pigeon, and extremely good eating.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant was careful as he went along to augment
-his followers, both rational and irrational. He
-hired several new Hottentots, and purchased a number
-of oxen, with a milch-cow, and some she-goats,
-whose milk he foresaw might be an important possession
-in various circumstances. He likewise purchased
-a cock to awake him in the morning, and a
-monkey, which, besides serving as an almost unerring
-taster, his instinct enabling him immediately to
-distinguish such fruits and herbs as were innoxious
-and wholesome from such as were hurtful, was a
-still better watchman even than the dog, as the
-slightest noise, the most distant sign of danger, instantly
-awakened his terrors, and, by the cries and
-gestures of fear which it extorted from him, put his
-master upon his guard.</p>
-
-<p>Thus accompanied, he continued his journey towards
-the east, until his progress was stopped by
-the Dove’s River, upon the banks of which he determined
-to encamp until the decrease of its waters
-should render it fordable. His mode of life, which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>
-the hospitable invitations of the neighbouring colonists,
-to whom the sight of a stranger was like a
-spring in the desert, were not suffered to interrupt,
-was exceedingly agreeable. “I regulated,” says he,
-“the employment of my time, which was usually
-spent in the following manner:&mdash;At night, when not
-travelling, I slept in my wagon or in my tent; awakened
-by the break of day by my cock, my first business
-was to prepare my coffee, while the Hottentots,
-on their part, were busied about the cattle. As soon
-as the sun appeared I took my fowlingpiece, and,
-setting out with my monkey, beat about the neighbourhood
-until ten o’clock. On returning to my
-tent, I always found it well swept and clean. The
-superintendence of this part of my economy had
-been confided to the care of an old African whose
-name was Swanspoel, who, not being able to follow
-us in our rambles, was intrusted with the government
-of the camp, and invariably maintained it in
-good order. The furniture of my tent was not very
-abundant; a camp-stool or two, a table appropriated
-to the dissection of my animals, and a few instruments
-required in their preparation constituted the
-whole of its ornaments. From ten o’clock until
-twelve I was employed in my tents, classing in my
-drawers the insects I had found. I then dined.
-Placing upon my knees a small board covered with
-a napkin, a single dish of roasted or broiled meat
-was served up. After this frugal meal I returned to
-my work, if I had left any thing unfinished, and then
-amused myself with hunting until sunset. I then
-retired to my tent, lighted a candle, and spent an
-hour or two in describing my discoveries or the
-events of the day in my journal. Meanwhile, the
-Hottentots were employed in collecting the cattle,
-and penning them around the tents and wagons.
-The she-goats, as soon as they had been milked, lay
-down here and there among the dogs. Business
-being over, and the customary great fire kindled, we
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>
-gathered together in a circle. I then took my tea;
-my people joyously smoked their pipes, and for my
-amusement related stories, the humorous absurdity
-of which almost made me crack my sides with laughter.
-I delighted to encourage them, and they were
-by no means timid with me, as I was careful to treat
-them with frankness, cordiality, and attention. On
-many occasions, in fact, when the beauty of the
-evening succeeding the fatigues of the day had put
-me in good-humour with myself and with every
-thing about me, I involuntarily yielded to the spell,
-and gently cherished the illusion. At such moments
-every one disputed with his neighbour for the honour
-of amusing me by his superior wit; and by the
-profound silence which reigned among us, the able
-story-teller might discover how highly we appreciated
-his art. I know not what powerful attraction
-continually leads my memory back to those peaceful
-days! I still imagine myself in the midst of my
-camp, surrounded by my people and my animals; an
-agreeable site, a mountain, a tree,&mdash;nay, even a
-plant, a flower, or a fragment of rock scattered here
-and there,&mdash;nothing escapes from my memory; and
-this spectacle, which daily grows more and more
-affecting, amuses me, follows me into all places, and
-has often made me forget what I have suffered from
-men who call themselves civilized.”</p>
-
-<p>Provisions were plentiful; partridges as large as
-pheasants, and two kinds of antelopes, whose flesh
-was tender and nourishing. The colonists of the
-vicinity, rendered generous by abundance, gratuitously
-furnished him with an ample provision of
-milk, fruit, and vegetables, which the traveller shared
-with his monkey and his Hottentots. From this
-position, however, he was at length, by the shrinking
-of the river, enabled to remove; and, continuing
-to pursue his route in the same direction as before,
-he crossed several diminutive streams, and arrived
-on the banks of the river Gaurits, where, the stream
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>
-not being fordable, he encamped for three days
-among groves of mimosa-trees. Perceiving no sign
-of abatement in the waters, he then constructed a
-raft, upon which his wagons and baggage were ferried
-over, while the oxen and other animals swam
-across.</p>
-
-<p>His road during this part of the journey lay at no
-great distance from the sea, which therefore communicated
-a refreshing coolness to the breezes, presented
-him at intervals with magnificent prospects,
-and at the same time administered pabulum to his
-passion for shooting, its solitary margin affording a
-retreat to thousands of flamingoes and pelicans.
-His animals, meanwhile, fared luxuriously. The
-soil throughout these districts was remarkable for
-its fertility; but a small canton, a little to the east
-of Mossel Bay, called the country of the Auteniquas,
-surpassed in beauty and magnificence all the landscapes
-of southern Africa. Having with considerable
-toil ascended to the summit of a mountain, “we
-were well repaid,” says Le Vaillant, “for the fatigue
-which we had undergone. Our admiration was excited
-by the loveliest country in the world. In the
-distance appeared the chain of mountains covered
-with forests, which bounded the prospect on the
-west; beneath our feet the eye wandered over an
-immense valley, the aspect of which was diversified
-by hillocks, infinitely varied in form, and descending
-in wavy swells towards the sea. Richly enamelled
-meadows and splendid pasture-grounds still
-further increased the beauty of this magnificent landscape.
-I was literally in ecstasy. This country
-bears the name of Auteniquas, which, in the Hottentot
-idiom, signifies ‘the man laden with honey;’
-and, in fact, we could not proceed a single step without
-beholding a thousand swarms of bees. The
-flowers grew in myriads, and the mingled perfume
-which exhaled from them, and deliciously intoxicated
-the senses, their colours, their variety, the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
-cool pure air which we breathed, every thing united
-to arrest our footsteps. Nature has bestowed the
-charms of fairy-land upon this spot. Almost every
-flower was filled with exquisite juices, and furnished
-the bees with abundant materials for the fabrication
-of their honey, which they deposited in every hollow
-rock and tree.”</p>
-
-<p>This description, which no doubt falls far short of
-the reality&mdash;for what language can equal the beauties
-of nature?&mdash;reminds me strongly of Spenser’s
-noble picture of the Gardens of Adonis. Poetry
-itself, however, with all its metaphors and picturesque
-expressions, is faint and dim compared with
-the splendour of a summer landscape, where earth,
-air, and sea unite their rich hues and sublime aspect
-to entrance and dazzle the eye. But our old bard,
-whom no man ever excelled in minute painting of
-inanimate nature, contrives, by careful and repeated
-touches, to unfold before the imagination an exquisite
-view. “There,” says he, speaking of the
-gardens of the Assyrian youth,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“There is continual spring, and harvest there</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Continual, both meeting at one time:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For both the boughs do laughing blossoms bear</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And with fresh flowers deck the wanton prime,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And eke at once the heavy trees they climb,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which seem to labour under their fruit’s load:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The while the joyous birds make their pastime,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Among the shady leaves, their sweet abode,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And their true loves without suspicion tell abroad.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">
-
-<hr class="tb" /></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And all about grew every sort of flower,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To which sad lovers were transformed of yore,” &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The dwellings which the few colonists, who had
-been led by poverty so far from the Cape, erected
-in the midst of this smiling scene, offered a striking
-contrast with it. Huts covered with earth, like the
-dens of wild animals, in which the inhabitants passed
-the night stretched upon a buffalo’s hide, afforded
-shelter to men who lived in plenty, and were thus
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>
-badly lodged from mere idleness. It is now inhabited
-by Englishmen, and the contrast, it may well
-be imagined, no longer exists.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant, who apprehended that the country of
-the Auteniquas might prove a kind of Capua to his
-followers, made no stay in it, but pushed forward
-with all speed, and encamped on the skirts of an immense
-forest. This wood abounded with touracos,
-a species of bird of which he had hitherto been able
-to procure no specimen. His first business therefore
-was, if possible, to possess himself of this bird.
-His scientific ardour was kindled. He scoured the
-woods. The touraco presented itself before him,
-but its habits unfortunately inclining it always to
-perch upon the tops of the loftiest trees, he could
-never succeed in bringing it down. One afternoon,
-however, his eagerness increasing with his disappointments,
-he determined not to desist from the
-pursuit of his prey, and the bird, which appeared to
-delight in mocking him, confined itself to short
-flights, flitting from tree to tree, until it had drawn
-him to a considerable distance from his camp.
-Growing impatient, at length the traveller, though
-still believing the bird beyond the reach of his fowlingpiece,
-fired, and had the unexpected satisfaction
-of seeing it drop from the tree. His joy now knew
-no bounds. He rushed on to snatch up his prey,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Thorough bush, thorough briar,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>until his hands and legs were dripping with blood;
-but when he came up to the spot where the touraco
-should have been, he could discover nothing. He
-searched the surrounding thickets again and again; he
-proceeded farther, he returned, he examined the same
-spots twenty times, he peeped into every bush, into
-every hole; his labour was in vain. No touraco. “I
-was,” says he, “in despair, and the thick brushwood
-and thorny shrubs, which had now covered
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>
-even my very face with blood, had irritated me in an
-indescribable manner. Nothing less than the appearance
-of a lion or a tiger could at that moment
-have calmed my rage. That a wretched bird, which,
-after so many wishes and so much toil, I had at
-length succeeded in bringing down, should after all
-escape from me in so unaccountable a manner! I
-struck my fowlingpiece against the earth, and
-stamped with passion. All at once the ground gave
-way under my feet; I disappeared, and sunk, with
-my arms in my hand, into a pit twelve feet deep.
-Astonishment, and the pain caused by the fall, now
-succeeded my rage. I saw myself in one of those
-covered pitfalls which the Hottentots construct for
-the taking of wild beasts, particularly the elephant.
-When I had recovered from my surprise I began
-to reflect upon the means of escaping, and congratulated
-myself that I had not fallen upon the
-sharp stake fixed up at the bottom of the pit to impale
-the wild animals, and that I found no company
-in the snare. But as it was every moment possible
-that some might arrive, particularly during the night,
-should I be compelled to remain there so long, my
-terrors quickly increased as darkness approached,
-and retarded the execution of the only plan I could
-imagine for extricating myself without assistance;
-this was to cut out a kind of steps with my sabre in
-the sides of the pit, but this operation would be a
-tedious one. In this dilemma the idea of the only
-rational plan suggested itself; which was, to pick
-up and load my fusil. I did so, and fired shot after
-shot. It was possible I might be heard by my attendants.
-I therefore listened from time to time
-with the most painful anxiety and a palpitating
-heart, in order to discover whether my signal had
-been heard. At last two shots re-echoed through
-the wood, and overwhelmed me with joy. I now
-continued firing at intervals, in order to guide my
-deliverers to the spot, and in a short time they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>
-arrived, armed to the teeth, and full of uneasiness and
-alarm.”</p>
-
-<p>He was immediately delivered from the elephant-trap;
-but having incurred so much risk in searching
-for the touraco, he made it a point of honour not to
-be balked, and recommencing his scrutiny, with
-the dogs which had arrived with his servants, found
-it jammed close under a small bush. He immediately
-seized upon his prey, and the pleasure of possessing
-this new and rare bird very quickly obliterated
-from his memory the trouble and danger which
-it had cost him.</p>
-
-<p>In this encampment they remained until the setting
-in of the rains, when storms, accompanied by
-tremendous thunder, succeeded each other with singular
-rapidity. The thunderbolt several times fell
-near them in the forest. The whole country round
-was flooded, but they still clung to their encampment,
-until the whole was at length overflowed
-during the night. They then removed; but could
-proceed but a very short distance, for every paltry
-stream was now swelled to a furious torrent, which
-rushed down with impetuosity from the hills, rolling
-along with it mud, trees, and fragments of rock, and
-threatening whoever should attempt to traverse them
-with destruction. Meanwhile his cattle, pressed
-by hunger, had escaped from the camp; his dogs,
-which no degree of want could estrange, were reduced
-to skeletons, and fought with each other for
-the most revolting food; his Hottentots, less affectionate
-than the dogs, began to murmur, but could
-discover no just cause of complaint, and were but
-little disposed to aid themselves. A drowned buffalo,
-however, which was accidentally found in one of
-the torrents, came opportunely to appease their hunger;
-they dragged it on shore with shouts of joy, and
-having cut it in pieces, and given the dogs their
-share, they feasted upon the remainder and were
-happy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span></p>
-
-<p>At length the month of March arrived, and the
-rains abated. The torrents, ceasing to receive their
-aliments from the clouds&mdash;for, like the Nile, they are
-strictly διϊὲες&mdash;shrunk to their ordinary insignificance,
-the camp was immediately put in motion, and
-pushing onwards for a few leagues, they discovered
-a more convenient site on the acclivity of a hill,
-where they remained some time to recruit themselves
-and their cattle. Le Vaillant travelled for
-pleasure, and was gifted with the happy faculty of
-discovering at a glance its springs and sources.
-Near the site of his camp there was a small eminence,
-the summit of which was crowned with a
-diminutive grove, where the trees had so grown into
-each other that the whole seemed one solid mass
-of foliage. He immediately conceived the idea of
-transforming this thicket into a palace; and causing
-a covered entrance to be cut into the centre, he there
-hewed out two large square apartments, one of which
-was immediately converted into a study, and the
-other into a kitchen. If we keep out of sight the
-kitchen, and the share which art had in its formation,
-Spenser has admirably described this arbour, as well
-as the hill on which it stood:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">Right in the middest of that paradise</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">There stood a stately mount, on whose round top</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A gloomy grove of myrtle-trees did rise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Whose shady boughs sharp steel did never lop,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Nor wicked beasts their tender buds did crop.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But like a girlond compassed the height,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And from their fruitful sides sweet gum did drop,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That all the ground, with precious dew bedight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Threw forth most dainty odours and most sweet delight.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">And in the thickest covert of that shade</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">There was a pleasant arbour, not by art,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But of the trees’ own inclination, made,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Which knitting their rank branches, part to part,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With wanton ivy-twine entrailed athwart,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And eglantine and caprifole among,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Fashioned above within their inmost part,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That neither Phœbus’ beams could through them throng,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor Æolus’ sharp blast could work them any wrong.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span></p>
-
-<p>But, whatever charms his arbours might possess
-for him, his plans rendered it necessary soon to leave
-them. He therefore, after spending a pleasant week
-with M. Mulder, the last of the colonists in his route,
-pushed on towards the Black River, which he crossed
-on rafts, and at length found himself beyond the
-Dutch settlements. Here an accident occurred
-which might at once have terminated his journey.
-In toiling up a rough, precipitous mountain, where
-it was found necessary to yoke twenty oxen to a
-wagon, the traces of the principal vehicle snapped
-asunder, immediately in front of the great shaft-oxen,
-which being unable to resist the enormous weight
-to which they were attached, reeled back, and the
-wagon at once rolled down along the edge of an
-abyss; while Le Vaillant and his whole party stood
-still, watching, with uplifted hands and looks of
-dismay, each shock and slide of the cumbrous
-machine, which, after twenty hair-breadth escapes,
-ran against a large rock on the edge of the torrent,
-and stopped, without receiving any material injury.
-Loss of time, therefore, was the only injury he sustained.
-By patience and industry they succeeded
-in passing the mountain, which being effected, they
-descended into a magnificent country, watered by
-numerous rivers, covered with woods, abounding in
-game, and affording numerous specimens of birds
-and quadrupeds unknown to natural history.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of this new scene he was overtaken
-by disease. Though of a disposition naturally intrepid,
-the idea that he might be destined to perish
-in the wilderness, surrounded by savages, two thousand
-leagues from home, disturbed his imagination.
-Charles the Twelfth of Sweden, attacked by a fever
-when flying through the Ukraine after the battle of
-Pultowa, experienced a diminution of courage, and,
-unless my memory deceive me, was seen to shed
-tears; and Cæsar, when the fit, as Shakspeare has
-it, was on him, cried, “Give me some drink, Titinius,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span>
-like a sick girl.” Le Vaillant, therefore, had good
-authority for his melancholy. His temperament,
-moreover, in proportion as it was more susceptible
-of exhilarating impressions in health, was proner in
-sickness to yield to despondency. He was, besides,
-entirely ignorant of medicine; knew nothing of the
-nature of the disease by which he was attacked;
-and was surrounded by persons still more ignorant
-than himself. All he could do, therefore, was to
-remain quiet, and allow nature to work. For twelve
-days he lingered on the confines of life and death,
-kept in a perpetual bath of perspiration by the heat
-of the atmosphere; and this heat was his Pæon and
-Æsculapius, for by its sole aid the fever, which had
-so fiercely menaced him, was entirely subdued.
-However, it is extremely probable that he owed the
-disease as well as the remedy to the climate. To
-enhance his misfortunes, his Hottentots were at the
-same time attacked by dysentery; but, by strictly
-attending to regimen, a difficult task to a gross
-and sensual people, they all, without exception, recovered.</p>
-
-<p>This danger being removed, they proceeded on
-their journey, the interest of which was every day
-increased by the greater solitude of the scene, and
-the more frequent occurrence of wild animals, or
-their traces. I would willingly describe at length
-the pleasures and the adventures of this romantic
-excursion; but my plan forbids me to indulge in
-voluminous details, and I want the art to present by
-a few masterly strokes the whole of a complicated
-and animated scene to the mind. However, I must
-attempt what I can. After wandering a full month
-in a vast plain, intersected by forests, and, in a manner,
-walled round by precipices, they were driven
-back upon their own footsteps, fatigued and mortified,
-and unable to conjecture in what direction it
-would be possible to advance. While they were in
-this humour, they discovered in their route the footmarks
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>
-of a herd of elephants. To Le Vaillant, who
-had never yet enjoyed the satisfaction of hunting
-this enormous animal, though it might, perhaps, be
-said to have constituted one of his principal reasons
-for travelling in Africa, the sight was sufficient to
-restore his equanimity. The order for halting was
-immediately given, and having, as soon as the tents
-were pitched, selected five of his best marksmen,
-our traveller set out in pursuit of the game.</p>
-
-<p>The traces were so fresh and striking, that they
-had no difficulty in following them. They therefore
-pushed on vigorously, expecting every moment to
-come in sight of the herd. But still they saw
-nothing; and night coming on, they bivouacked in
-the woods, and having supped gayly, lay down to
-sleep, though not without considerable agitation and
-alarm. At every puff of wind rustling through the
-leaves, at every hum of a beetle, the whole party
-was roused, and put upon its guard. It was feared
-that the monsters of which they were in search
-might rush upon them unawares, and trample them
-to atoms. However, the night passed away, as did
-likewise the day and night ensuing, without their
-being disturbed by any thing more formidable than
-a stray buffalo, which approaching the fire, and discovering
-that it was in the vicinity of man, rushed
-back with all speed into the woods.</p>
-
-<p>On the third day, after a painful march among
-briers and underwood, they arrived in a rather open
-part of the forest, when one of the Hottentots, who
-had climbed up into a tree to reconnoitre, perceived
-the herd in the distance, and putting his finger on
-his lips to enjoin silence, informed them by opening
-and closing his hand of the number of the elephants.
-He then came down; a council was held; and it
-was determined they should approach them on the
-lee-side that they might not be discovered. The
-Hottentot now conducted Le Vaillant through the
-bushes to a small knoll, and desiring him to cast his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>
-eyes in a certain direction, pointed out an enormous
-elephant not many paces distant. At first, however,
-Le Vaillant could see nothing; or, rather, he mistook
-what he saw of the animal for a portion of the
-rock by which it stood. But when at length a slight
-motion had corrected his mistake, he distinguished
-the head and enormous tusks of the beast turned
-towards him. He instantly levelled his musket, and,
-aiming at the brain, fired, and the elephant dropped
-down dead. The report of the gun put the whole
-herd, consisting of about thirty, to instant flight;
-and our traveller beheld with amazement their huge
-ears flapping the air with a violence in proportion
-to the rapidity of their motion.</p>
-
-<p>The whole party now experienced that joyous
-alacrity which man always feels when engaged in
-the work of destruction. They fired upon the
-enemy, for as such the beasts were now to be regarded,
-and the sight of the excrements mingled with
-blood, which escaped from the wounded animal, and
-informed them that their bullets had taken effect,
-delighted them exceedingly. Their pursuit now
-became more eager. The elephant, writhing with
-pain, at one moment crouched to the earth, at another
-rose, but only to fall again. The hunters,
-however, who hung close upon his haunches, constantly
-by fresh volleys compelled him to rise. In
-this condition he rushed through the woods, snapping
-off, or uprooting trees in his passage. At length,
-becoming furious with pain, he turned round upon his
-pursuers, who immediately fled in their turn. Le Vaillant,
-more eager than the rest, had unhappily advanced
-before them, and was now but twenty-five paces
-from the animal. His gun of thirty pounds’ weight
-impeded his movements. The enemy gained upon
-him every moment. His followers gave him up for
-lost; but just as the elephant had overtaken him, he
-dropped down, and crept under the trunk of a fallen
-tree, over which the furious beast, whose great height
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span>
-prevents it, at least in such situations, from seeing
-under its feet, bounded in an instant. Being terrified,
-however, by the noise of the Hottentots, it had not
-advanced many paces before it stopped, and with a
-wild but searching eye, began to reconnoitre the
-spot. Our traveller had his long gun in his hand,
-and might, had he chosen, have fired upon his enemy;
-but he knew that instant destruction must ensue
-should he miss his aim, and he therefore preferred
-trusting to the chances of concealment. Presently
-the elephant faced about, and drew near the tree; but
-he again leaped over it without perceiving Le Vaillant,
-who, as soon as he retreated to a sufficient
-distance, sprang from his hiding-place, and shot him
-in the flank. Notwithstanding all this, he succeeded
-in effecting his escape, though his bloody traces too
-clearly showed the terrible condition to which their
-balls had reduced him. In this critical conjuncture,
-Klaas, his principal Hottentot, exhibited proofs of
-courage and affection which infinitely endeared him
-to his master, who thenceforward regarded him
-more in the light of a brother than a servant.</p>
-
-<p>To those who have all their lives been accustomed
-to live upon the flesh of the ox and the sheep, elephant
-cutlets may appear revolting; but in the deserts
-of Africa, where imperious hunger silences the
-objections of prejudice, and teaches man to regard
-the whole animal creation as his farmyard, the palate
-quickly accommodates itself to the viands within its
-reach, and even learns to discover delicacy in things
-which, in a fashionable dining-room, it might have
-loathed. However this may be, Le Vaillant and his
-Hottentots, whose appetites were grievously sharpened
-by fatigue, immediately employed themselves
-in cutting up and cooking their game. For the
-former, as the most dainty personage of the party,
-a few slices off the trunk were broiled, and he found
-them so exquisite that, being as I have already said,
-to a certain degree, an epicure, they gave him a taste
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>
-for elephant hunting, which he afterward seized
-every occasion of indulging. But he was informed
-by Klaas that by far the greatest delicacy, which
-would cause him to forget the flavour of the trunk,
-was yet to come. This consisted of the elephant’s
-foot, which his people undertook to dress for his
-breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>The reader who has perused Captain Cook’s
-“Voyages in the South Seas,” or Ledyard, or the
-“Histoire Naturelle de l’Homme” of Lesson, will
-remember the description given by those navigators
-of the curious subterranean ovens employed by the
-native islanders in cooking. A large opening is
-made in the earth, which is filled with red-hot stones
-or charcoal, and upon these a great fire is kept up
-for several hours. The hole is then cleared, and
-the thing which is to be baked inserted in the centre.
-Then the top is again closed, and a blazing fire once
-more kindled; which, having burned during a great
-part of the night, is at length extinguished, when
-the oven is opened, and the meat taken out, more
-exquisitely cooked than any man accustomed to the
-ordinary culinary processes can conceive.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the process by which the elephant’s
-feet were baked for Le Vaillant. When they presented
-him one for breakfast, “The cooking,” says
-he, “had enlarged it prodigiously; I could scarcely
-recognise the form. But it looked so nice, and
-exhaled so delicious an odour, that I was impatient
-to taste it. It was a breakfast for a king. I had
-heard much of the excellence of bears’ feet, but
-could not have conceived that an animal so awkward,
-so material as the elephant, could have afforded so
-tender, so delicate a meat. Never have our modern
-Luculluses, thought I, seen any thing comparable
-upon their tables; it is in vain that they confound
-and reverse the seasons by the force of gold, and
-lay all the countries in the world under contribution:
-there are bounds to their craving sensuality; they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span>
-have never been able to reach this point.” I do not
-see, however, what should prevent our rearing elephants,
-as we rear sheep and oxen, for the slaughter;
-in which case many persons, not ambitious of rivalling
-Lucullus in luxury, might enjoy the sight of this
-<i>ne plus ultra</i> of cooking upon their tables.</p>
-
-<p>In proceeding eastward from this spot they encountered
-a horde of wandering Hottentots, with
-whose women our traveller’s followers, now considerably
-increased in number, contracted connexions
-with that easy effrontery which, at first consideration,
-would appear to be an attribute peculiar to civilized
-man. Le Vaillant is the apologist of the Hottentots;
-they were the instruments of his pleasure.
-His imagination associated them with romantic
-wanderings, with adventures, with dangers, with
-escapes; and when, after his return to France, he
-wished to remember and paint them in their true
-colours, the idea that they had been his companions,
-that they had suffered privations, and tasted of many
-enjoyments together, rushed into his mind, and
-blinded his judgment by interesting his heart. This
-natural result is not dishonourable to his feelings;
-but it can have no influence with me. I have received
-from them neither good nor harm. I must,
-therefore, confess that in my estimation they rank
-very low, even in the scale of savage excellence.
-Timid even to cowardliness, they are not urged
-by their temperament towards violence and bloodshed:
-but this induces cringing and dastardly habits,
-and causes them to desert their dearest friends when
-in danger. Gratitude is a plant which flourishes
-only in noble breasts. Among the Hottentots it is
-feeble and shortlived, unless nourished by a constant
-stream of benefits. That they have little religion,
-or superstition, though no proof of immorality, is
-an incontrovertible evidence of want of capacity and
-genius; for intellect, wherever it exists, is skilful
-in the discovery of intellect, and few, even among
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span>
-savage nations, are cursed with perceptions so obtuse
-that they cannot, if I may venture so to express
-myself, discover the footsteps of the sovereign intellect
-among the phenomena of the visible world.
-How far the profound indifference in which they are
-said to grovel on this point may exist, however, I
-will not presume to determine. It is possible that
-travellers may sometimes make these and similar
-savages the interpreters of their own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>On approaching the country of the Kaffers, a brave
-and warlike people, exceedingly hostile to the Hottentots,
-whom they regarded as the slaves and spies
-of the colonists, the most terrible apprehensions were
-awakened in his camp. Night and day they were
-on the alert. Every sound which startled the darkness
-was transformed, by their terror, into the footsteps
-of a Kaffer; and if they did not at once burst
-into open mutiny against their chief, it was rather
-the fear of the dangers to which the loss of him
-might expose them, than any ideas of discipline or
-fidelity, that restrained them.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant’s determination, nevertheless, still was
-to advance into Kaffraria; but finding after repeated
-endeavours that no argument could prevail upon his
-attendants, a very small number excepted, to accompany
-him, he contented himself with despatching an
-envoy to the Kaffer king, or chief. Meanwhile he continued
-to roam about on the frontiers, hunting, shooting,
-and adding to his collections. Here he encountered
-the fury of an African tempest. “The rain,”
-he observes, “fell all night in such abundance, that,
-in spite of all our efforts, it extinguished our fires.
-Our dogs made an indescribable clamour, and kept
-us awake all night, though no wild beast appeared.
-I have observed that during these rainy nights the
-lion, the tiger, and the hyena are never heard; but
-the danger is increased twofold; for, as they still
-roam about, they thus fall suddenly and unexpectedly
-on their prey. Still further to increase the fright
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
-which this unfortunate fact must occasion, the great
-humidity almost entirely deprives the dogs of the
-power of smelling, which renders them of little use.
-Of this danger my people were well aware, and therefore
-laboured with remarkable energy to keep alive
-the fires.</p>
-
-<p>“It must be confessed,” he continues, “that the
-stormy nights of the African deserts are the very
-image of desolation, and that terror, on such occasions,
-involuntarily comes over one. When you are
-overtaken by these deluges, your tents and mats are
-quickly drenched and overflowed; a continual succession
-of lightning-flashes causes you twenty
-times in a minute to pass abruptly and suddenly from
-the most terrific light to entire darkness: the deafening
-roarings of the thunder, which burst from every
-side with horrible din, roll, as it were, against each
-other, are multiplied by the echoes, and hurled from
-peak to peak; the howling of the domestic animals;
-short intervals of fearful silence; every thing concurs
-to render those moments more melancholy.
-The danger to be apprehended from wild beasts still
-further increases the terror; and nothing but day can
-lessen the alarm, and restore nature to her tranquillity.”</p>
-
-<p>In the interim between the departure and return
-of his messengers to the Kaffer chief, he fell in with
-a horde of wild Hottentots whom he denominates
-Gonaquas. A small party of them arrived at his
-camp during the night, and on awaking in the morning
-he saw himself with surprise surrounded by
-about twenty strange savages. They were accompanied
-by their chief, who advanced in a polite manner
-to pay his respects to the traveller, while the
-women, at once curious and timid, followed close
-behind, adorned with all their ornaments. Their
-bodies, the greater part of which was naked, were
-all newly anointed and sprinkled with red powder,
-which exhaled an agreeable perfume; while their
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>
-faces had been painted in a variety of fashions.
-Each came, in the manner of the East, bringing or
-bearing a present. From one he received a number
-of ostrich’s eggs, a lamb from a second, while a
-third presented him with a quantity of milk in baskets.
-These baskets, woven with exquisite ingenuity
-with fine reeds or roots, are of so close a texture,
-that they may be used in carrying water. The chief’s
-present consisted of a handful of ostrich feathers of
-rare beauty, which Le Vaillant, to show how highly
-he valued them, immediately fixed in his hat, instead
-of his own plume. He then, in return, laid before
-the old chief, whose name was Haabas, several
-pounds of tobacco, which the Gonaqua at once distributed
-in equal portions among his people, reserving
-merely his own share, which did not exceed any
-other person’s, for himself. Other gifts, highly
-valued by savages, such as tinder-boxes, knives,
-beads, and bracelets, were added to the tobacco, and
-diffused universal joy among the tribe.</p>
-
-<p>Among the women there was a girl of sixteen,
-who, by the pleasure with which she seemed to regard
-his person, particularly attracted the attention
-of Le Vaillant. Considered as an African she might
-be pronounced beautiful, and her form, which would
-have tempted the pencil of an Albano, possessed all
-those amorous contours which we admire in the
-Graces. Our traveller appears to have been in general
-but little susceptible of the charms of women;
-but the beautiful Gonaqua quickly caused him to feel
-that when accompanied by a desire to please, female
-attractions are everywhere irresistible, and to express
-his admiration he bestowed upon the savage
-beauty the name of Narina, which, in the Hottentot
-idiom, signifies “a flower.” Presents, it may be
-easily imagined, were not spared in this instance.
-The riches of his camp were in her power,&mdash;shawls,
-necklaces, girdles, every ornament which his European
-taste loved to contemplate on the female
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span>
-form, was lavished on Narina, who, in the intoxicating
-delight of the moment, scarcely knew whether
-she was in heaven or earth. She felt her arms, her
-feet, her head; and the touch of her dress and ornaments
-caused fresh pleasure every moment. He then
-produced a small mirror, more faithful than the lake
-or stream which had hitherto served for this purpose,
-and put the finishing stroke to the picture by
-showing her her own image reflected from its surface.
-His days now passed in one uninterrupted
-series of feasts, visits, dances, amusements of every
-kind. Nothing could have been more favourable to
-his views of studying Hottentot manners; but with
-respect to his ulterior design of penetrating far into
-the solitudes of the desert, the case was different,
-for his followers contracted in these Circean bowers
-a disease from which their chief himself, perhaps,
-was not altogether exempt; that is, an effeminate
-aversion to fatigue, a secret repugnance to toil, and,
-what was still worse, the habit of viewing dangers
-in the light thrown over them by an enamoured
-fancy, which distorts even more powerfully than the
-mirage of the desert.</p>
-
-<p>It was now three weeks since the departure of
-his messengers for Kaffer-land, and he began to entertain
-apprehensions for their safety. His attendants,
-who partook of the same fears, became more
-than ever averse to advance eastward, and, as he was
-quickly informed by Klaas, began to concert among
-themselves various schemes of desertion. The
-camp at this period was stationed near a river, on the
-rich banks of which his oxen were turned out to
-graze, under the care of several Hottentots, who
-were kept by their fear of the Kaffers in a strict attention
-to their duty. One day, when Le Vaillant
-was accidentally detained in his tent, a messenger
-from the herdsmen arrived in breathless haste, to
-announce the fearful intelligence that a party of the
-enemy was approaching, and had already reached
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>
-the opposite side of the river. Klaas and four fusileers
-were immediately despatched to reconnoitre,
-while the traveller called out and examined his forces
-and his arms, and prepared to give the Kaffers a
-warm reception should their intentions be found to
-be hostile; but it was shortly discovered that they
-had been invited to his camp by his envoys, whom
-they had accordingly accompanied on their return.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller had with laudable patience acquired
-a knowledge of the Hottentot language, but the
-people who now thronged his camp spoke a different
-dialect, not one word of which could he conjecture
-the meaning. But the languages of savages are easy
-in proportion as they are simple and poor, and the
-acquisition of Greek or Arabic would probably cost
-more pains and study than would render a man master
-of half the uncultivated languages of the world.
-It was not long, therefore, before he learned to disentangle,
-as it were, the intertwisted sounds which
-re-echoed around him, and to assign a meaning to
-them. The Kaffers employed much gesticulation
-and grimace in speaking, which aided him, likewise,
-in divining their thoughts; and he soon began to
-entertain reasonable hopes that an interpreter might
-not always be necessary in his intercourse with this
-lively people.</p>
-
-<p>He imagined that his firearms, and the skill with
-which he made use of them, inspired the Kaffers
-with wonder; but he was no doubt mistaken. His
-fancy placed him among those simple tribes described
-by early travellers and navigators, to whom
-our weapons were utterly unknown; while the
-savages who were now his guests had frequently
-fought hand to hand with the colonists, and not only
-beheld their firearms, but learned, at the expense
-of their blood, how destructive they were. This
-illusion, however, appears to have afforded him
-pleasure, and he honestly cherished it; and as no
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span>
-injury can arise from it to the reader, it will have
-been sufficient to allude to it thus briefly.</p>
-
-<p>The history of his intercourse with this people
-affords a striking example of the incalculable benefits
-which one civilized man, who possessed courage to
-make the experiment, might confer upon a wild
-nation, whose Menû or Manco Capæ he would thus
-become. For genius the Kaffers are decidedly superior
-to the Hottentots; and if the picture which
-Le Vaillant draws of them be correct, it would require
-no very extraordinary impulse to launch them
-into the career of civilization. He saw them, however,
-but for a moment, as it were; for not long
-after their arrival, it was discovered that several
-half-castes, or bastards, as they are termed at the
-Cape, had been commissioned by the colonists to
-insinuate themselves into his camp, for the purpose
-of discovering whether or not he was entering into
-an alliance with the Kaffers. This, at least, was the
-interpretation which, after all the information he
-could obtain, he was induced to put upon the matter;
-but, like Rousseau, he seems to have amused himself
-with the idea that spies were continually placed upon
-his movements, and by this hypothesis he explained
-many little events resulting much less from design
-than from a fortuitous concourse of circumstances.
-Still, the poor Kaffers, who had suffered grievously
-by the Dutch, fully participated in his alarm, and
-made a precipitate retreat into their own country,
-but not before they had given him a pressing invitation
-to follow them.</p>
-
-<p>Upon considering the state of the camp, and the
-inclinations of his people, it was judged imprudent
-to attempt against their will to lead them away
-farther from the colony; and therefore, selecting
-from among them a small number of the bravest,
-and leaving the remainder under the care of Swanspoel,
-he departed on his long-desired journey into
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>
-Kaffer-land. Upon quitting the encampment they
-ascended the banks of the Great Fish River, and
-having forded its stream, entered Kaffer-land, moving
-in a north-easterly direction. The whole plain was
-covered with mimosa-trees, which, as Burckhardt
-observes, cast but a scanty shade. They were,
-therefore, greatly exposed to the heat of the sun,
-which was now intense. After marching for several
-days in this manner through a country which had
-once been inhabited, but was deserted now, and
-abandoned to the wild beasts, fires at night, deserted
-kraal, gardens overrun with weeds, and fields, the
-culture of which had recently been interrupted, inspired
-the belief that some half-stationary, half-wandering
-hordes must be in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>The fatigue of the journey, united with a scarcity
-of water, began at length to cause the luxuries of
-the camp and the neighbourhood of the Great Fish
-River to be regretted; but although Le Vaillant himself
-evidently shared to a certain degree in these
-regrets, he was still unwilling to relinquish his enterprise
-before he caught a single glimpse of the
-Kaffers. At length a small party was discovered,
-whose dread of the whites equalled at least the
-terror with which they themselves inspired the pusillanimous
-Hottentots. From these men Le Vaillant
-learned that the greater part of the nation had
-retreated far into the interior, and as his imagination,
-at this time, seems to have exaggerated every difficulty
-and danger, for he was weary of the journey,
-he gladly seized upon the first excuse for relinquishing
-his enterprise, and returned with all possible
-celerity to his camp.</p>
-
-<p>All his thoughts and wishes now pointed towards
-the Cape. Narina and the friendly Gonaquas in vain
-exerted their influence. The desert had lost its
-charms. For the moment he was weary of travelling.
-However, not to encounter in vain the fatigue
-of a long journey, he formed the design of verging
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>
-a little to the north of his former route, through the
-immense solitudes of the Sneuw Bergen. The caravan,
-therefore, quitted the vicinity of the sea, and
-proceeded towards the west through forests of mimosa-trees,
-which were then in full flower, and imparted
-all the charms of summer to the landscape.
-The extreme silence of the nights during this part
-of the journey was sublime. All the functions of
-life seemed for the time to be suspended; except
-that, at intervals, the roaring of the lion resounded
-through the forests, startling the echoes, and according
-to the interpretation of the fancy, hushing the
-whole scene with terror.</p>
-
-<p>At length, on the 3d of January, 1782, he discovered
-in the north-west the formidable summits of
-the Sneuw Bergen, which, though surrounded on all
-sides by burning plains, it being in those southern
-latitudes the height of summer, bore still upon its
-sides long ridges of snow. Prodigious herds of
-antelopes, amounting to more than fifty thousand in
-number, now crossed their route, driven by insufferable
-heat and drought towards the north. The
-scenery every league became more dreary. Wastes
-of sand, rocks piled upon each other, chasms, precipices,
-barrenness, sublimity, but no pasturage; and
-men in want of the necessaries of life regard as insipid
-whatever refuses to minister to their wants.
-Thus we can account for the little interest with
-which the sight of the Sneuw Bergen inspired Le
-Vaillant, who would otherwise appear to have been
-constitutionally deprived of that masculine energy
-which impels us rather to rejoice than be depressed
-at the sight of steril and desolate mountains, seldom
-trodden but by the brave, and seeming to have
-been expressly thrown up by nature as a rampart
-upon which freedom might successfully struggle
-against the oppressors of mankind. This is the true
-source of that indescribable delight with which we
-all tread upon mountain soil. A secret instinct seems
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>
-to whisper to the heart the original design, if it may
-be said without impiety, with which those inexpugnable
-fastnesses were fashioned by the hand of
-God. “Here,” say we to ourselves, “here at least
-we may be free;” and we look down from these arid
-heights with scorn upon the possessors of the fattest
-pastures, if the mark of tyranny, like that of the
-Beast in the Apocalypse, is set upon the soil.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant’s enthusiasm, which greatly depended
-upon the state of his animal spirits, was now evaporating
-rapidly. His care and circumspection were
-likewise proportionably diminished, and, in consequence,
-the want of provisions and water was frequently
-experienced. To give a keener edge to
-these calamities and privations, it was rumoured
-among his followers that the recesses of the snowy
-mountains afforded a retreat to numerous Bushmans
-or banditti, men whom necessity or inclination had
-arrayed in opposition to the laws, and those who
-lived under their protection. Every privation was
-therefore borne with greater impatience. They considered
-themselves as persons wantonly exposed to
-danger by the caprice of their leader; hence his authority
-was daily less and less respected. Nevertheless,
-he drew near the mountains, and climbing
-up with difficulty to the summit of one of their
-peaks, enjoyed the wide prospect it afforded. This
-satisfied his curiosity, more particularly as three
-men, supposed to be bandits, were discovered among
-the ravines, but made their escape at their approach.
-A few days afterward one of these fierce robbers
-was killed in an attempt to murder one of the Hottentots
-of the escort.</p>
-
-<p>The want of water, which they had already begun
-to experience, continued to increase as they advanced.
-The oxen, like the men, suffered extremely,
-and several of them dropped down, and
-were unable to rise again. The feet of the dogs
-were exceedingly lacerated; they limped along painfully,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>
-and with the greatest exertion. In one word,
-every man and animal in the camp required repose;
-and with inexpressible joy they at length saw the
-day of their arrival at the Cape, which put an end to
-the toils and sufferings of sixteen months.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant had not yet satisfied his locomotive
-passion, and had, indeed, notwithstanding the interest
-which his adventures inspire, seen but little of
-Africa. He now amused himself with visiting the
-various districts of the colony, and, among other
-spots, the extreme point of the promontory, which
-opposes its rocky snout to the eternal storms and
-waves of the Southern Ocean. Here, as with a
-sombre melancholy, he viewed the constant succession
-of the billows, which, confused and foaming
-under the influence of the winds, hurled themselves
-against the cliffs, a depression of soul came over
-him, and he compared the phenomenon before him
-to the life of man, and the annihilation which, according
-to his creed, succeeds it. This miserable
-dogma, the offspring of insane reasoning, and a distrust
-in the power or goodness of the Divinity, was
-at that period in dispute among the sophists of
-Europe; but I pity the man who could make so
-bestial a creed the companion of his soul amid the
-vast solitudes of the desert, where we might expect
-that the very winds of heaven would have winnowed
-away so vile a chaff, and rendered back its native
-whiteness and purity to the mind.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to Cape Town, he began, but with less
-enthusiasm than on the former occasion, his preparations
-for a second journey into the interior.
-Experience, he imagined, had enabled him to improve
-upon his former plans. He had seen the
-country, he had studied its inhabitants. Had he not
-laid the foundation for almost certain success? The
-result showed how dim, how bounded, how little to
-be depended upon is human foresight.</p>
-
-<p>His followers were now more numerous than formerly:
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span>
-eighteen men, one woman, three horses,
-thirteen dogs, three milch cows, eleven goats, and
-fifty-two oxen. With this train he departed from
-Saldanha Bay, June 15th, 1782, directing his course
-towards the north, along the western coast of Africa.
-During the early part of the journey, in the district
-of the Twenty-four Rivers, he found the prodigious
-nests of the Termites or white ant, which, though
-inferior in dimensions to those described by other
-travellers, were yet four feet in height. These ants,
-which are accounted a delicacy by the Chensu Karir,
-a wandering people of the Deccan, are likewise
-eaten by the Hottentots, who seem to regard them
-with a more favourable eye even than locusts, which
-are, however, highly esteemed.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding that, in pursuance of the advice
-of his Cape friends, he had set out in the rainy
-season, the party had not advanced far before the
-want of water was experienced. The men and oxen
-suffered extremely, but the dogs were still more
-severely afflicted, and several of them, after exhibiting
-symptoms of their approach to a state bordering
-upon hydrophobia, ran off into the desert, where
-they perished, or relapsed into their original wildness.
-The party was in this position when Le Vaillant,
-whose mind was tortured by the most gloomy forebodings,
-was startled from his reveries by the sharp
-cry of a bird which was passing over his head. It
-was a mountain duck, which, he doubted not, was
-proceeding towards a spring. He therefore put his
-horse to the gallop, and earnestly pursuing the flight
-of the bird with his eye, had very quickly the satisfaction
-of observing it alight upon a great rock,
-where it disappeared. Persuaded that it had stopped
-to drink, he clambered up the rock, and found in fact
-a large basin, or hollow in the rock, filled with water,
-in which the duck was gayly swimming about and
-amusing itself. He had not the ingratitude to fire
-at it, but he frightened it away, in the hope that,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>
-not having sufficiently quenched its thirst, it might
-fly to another cistern within sight; but in this he
-was disappointed. They now laid up a provision of
-water for several days, and having allowed all the
-cattle to quench their thirst, proceeded on their
-journey. During those excessive droughts, it was
-curious, when a shower came on, to behold the contrivance
-of the animals: observing that whatever
-water fell upon the sands was immediately absorbed
-and lost, while the quantity with which their own
-bodies were drenched ran down in little tread-like
-streams over their sides, they drew near to each
-other, and by applying their mouths to those diminutive
-currents, thus succeeded in quenching their excruciating
-thirst. I am surprised that, in the tremendous
-extremities to which our traveller and his
-followers were reduced by want of water, they
-never had recourse to a method which, disgusting
-and terrible as it may seem, has, I believe, been successfully
-tried for quenching thirst by other travellers,
-as well as by certain tribes of savages; I mean,
-to drink the blood of the animals they slaughtered.
-Man has no doubt a natural repugnance to such expedients,
-but may yield, under the pressure of imperious
-necessity, to whatever means, short of injustice,
-Providence may afford him of preserving life.</p>
-
-<p>Upon arriving, after extraordinary privations and
-fatigue, upon the banks of the Elephant’s River, they
-indeed found water in abundance; but there was no
-pasture for the cattle, not even under the shade of
-the mimosas and willows which bordered the stream.
-All was burnt up. They proceeded farther inland,
-therefore, in search of verdure, and arrived on the
-banks of the Koïgnas, where they encamped upon a
-spot called the “Bat’s Rock.” From the fresh footmarks
-of the lion in the sand, they knew that there
-were enemies in the neighbourhood, and accordingly
-were more than ordinarily cautious in keeping watch,
-and in the kindling of their night-fires. But,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Incidit in Scyllam qui vult evitare Charybdin:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>for no sooner had the fires begun to blaze, than there
-issued forth from the hollows of the rocks myriads
-of bats, which, flittering hither and thither, struck
-against their faces, and stunned them with their obscene
-cries, until, no longer able to endure their
-clamour, they struck their tents and decamped. Virgil
-probably derived the idea of his famous description
-of the Harpies from some such adventure as
-this; for he had travelled a good deal in the Grecian
-islands, where bats, I believe, are numerous:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">At subitæ horrifico lapsu de montibus adsunt</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Harpyiæ, et magnis quatiunt clangoribus alas,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Diripiuntque dapes, contactuque omnia fœdant</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Immundo: tum vox tetrum dira inter odorem.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant, who had a partiality for adventure,
-was here engaged in one which I must describe at
-some length. Leaving the greater number of his
-people encamped on the banks of the Elephant
-River, he had descended with a small detachment to
-the seashore. Here a whale was found, from which
-the Hottentots drew several skins of oil. The traveller,
-having been disappointed in his expectations
-of meeting with elephants on the right bank of the
-stream, concluded, with some degree of probability,
-that they had crossed the river, and taken refuge on
-the opposite side: he was therefore desirous of following
-them. But he was near the mouth of the
-river, which, at all times wide and rapid, had been
-exceedingly increased by the late rains, and now presented
-a formidable appearance. Unhappily, he was
-incapable of swimming, and for constructing a raft
-there was no time. After much consideration, therefore,
-it was resolved to attempt the stream in a novel
-mode. The trunk of a fallen tree was selected; the
-tent, with the garments of the Hottentots, was
-fastened upon its centre, the oil-skins at each end;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>
-while Le Vaillant himself, having suspended his
-watch and powder-flasks about his neck, and tied all
-their fowling-pieces on his shoulders, got astride
-upon the tree as soon as it was afloat. The Hottentots,
-having fastened strips of leather to the end of
-the trunk, then jumped into the water, and pushed
-off from the shore. They were four in number, and
-it was agreed that two should tow the tree along,
-while the other two pushed it forward from behind,
-taking these different offices in turn. As long as
-they remained in smooth water their progress was
-rapid. Nothing could appear more easy than their
-undertaking. They laughed, they jested with each
-other, and already thought themselves on the opposite
-shore. But their triumph was premature: for
-they had no sooner entered the current than the
-tree became unmanageable; now pitching forward
-upon the swimmers, now recoiling with invincible
-force against those who laboured to impel it from
-behind; dragging the former after it, submerging the
-latter in the waves. No jests were now heard.
-Every limb was plied, every nerve strained, to force
-a way through the impetuous current; every man
-exerted himself to the utmost; but the river rushed
-along with irresistible violence, and instead of
-making way towards the shore, they saw themselves
-hurried down by the stream towards the sea, where
-inevitable death awaited them. Meanwhile Le Vaillant
-perceived with dismay that their strength began
-to fail them. They breathed short, their strokes became
-irregular, their efforts grew fainter and fainter;
-yet they tugged desperately at the tree, apparently
-resolved at least to perish at their posts, and to share
-the fate of him whom they could not save. Still
-they drew nearer and nearer to the sea, and their
-hopes diminished in proportion. Observing this, the
-two men who had been placed in the rear sprang forward,
-and by their united strength endeavoured to
-force along the trunk. At length Le Vaillant thought
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span>
-he perceived a diminution in the violence of the current,
-and this discovery being communicated to the
-swimmers, they redoubled their efforts, and in a few
-minutes one of them found that he could touch the
-bottom. This he announced by a loud cry of joy,
-which was re-echoed by the others. They now began
-to recover their tranquillity, and pushing forward
-with vigour, were quickly landed on the shore.
-Here they joyously kindled an immense fire, and
-having along with them a small quantity of brandy,
-they drank it, dried themselves, and next day departed
-on their return to the camp.</p>
-
-<p>Here fresh troubles awaited the traveller. His
-oxen were dying of hunger and fatigue; his followers
-were discouraged; even his own resolution was
-shaken. But the shame of succumbing to surmountable
-difficulties,&mdash;of entertaining a base fear
-of dangers which other men had braved,&mdash;of returning,
-in fact, baffled and defeated to the Cape, urged
-him forward, and he accordingly struck his tents,
-and moved once more towards the north. Courage
-and intrepidity are of vast importance in every circumstance
-of life, in none more so than in the circumstances
-in which an African traveller is placed;
-but these virtues will not draw wagons, or silence
-the murmurs of the appetite when clamouring for
-food. Le Vaillant was prepared to endure, and he
-cheerfully abandoned his chariots in the desert when
-oxen were wanting to drag them along; but he
-abandoned at the same time much of that merchandise
-with which he was accustomed to purchase the
-friendship and aid of the savage, and from that moment
-all rational hope of traversing the whole continent,
-from the Cape of Good Hope to the Mediterranean,
-vanished. He continued his journey, however,
-from the laudable desire of performing what
-he could, though what he had projected might prove
-impracticable.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant’s difficulties were far from being imaginary.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>
-Thirst, that most maddening of human privations,
-was now felt once more, and the parched
-herbage afforded neither nourishment nor cooling
-juices to the cattle. All their hopes now centred
-in those thunderstorms which, at certain seasons of
-the year, are common in southern Africa, and the
-jocular extravagance of Aristophanes, who represents
-men as cloud-worshippers, was now scarcely
-an exaggeration: for both our traveller and his followers
-almost bowed down in religious adoration to
-every cloud that sailed aloft in the blue firmament,
-and seemed to announce a tempest. At length vast
-masses of black vapour began to gather together in
-heaps over their heads, and to spread in sombre files
-along the sky. Flashes of lightning were perceived
-on the edge of the horizon; and all the forerunners
-of a storm successively presented themselves to
-their delighted senses.</p>
-
-<p>It came at length. “I heard,” says the traveller,
-“the sound of some large drops, the happy precursors
-of an abundant shower. All my senses, dilated
-at once by joy and gladness, unfolded themselves to
-the vital influence. I crept out from under my covering,
-and lying down on my back, with my mouth
-open, I received with delight the drops which
-chanced to fall on me, every one of which seemed
-to be a refreshing balm to my parched lips and
-tongue. I repeat it, the purest pleasure of my whole
-life was what I tasted in that delicious moment,
-which had been purchased by so many sighs and
-hours of anguish. It was not long before the shower
-poured down from all sides; during three hours it
-fell in torrents, seeming in noise to rival the thunder,
-which all the while continued roaring over our
-heads. My people ran about in all directions through
-the storm, seeking for one another, with triumphant
-mutual congratulations for the drenching they experienced;
-for they felt themselves revived; and
-appeared as if desirous of inflating their bodies that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>
-they might thus offer a larger surface to the rain,
-and imbibe a greater quantity of it. For my own
-part, I enjoyed so delicious a pleasure in soaking
-myself like them, that, in order the longer to preserve
-the refreshing coolness, I would not at first
-change my dress, which I was at length, however,
-compelled to do by the cold.”</p>
-
-<p>On the following night one of his followers disappeared,
-a circumstance which, as they were now in
-the country of the Bushmen, to whom it was possible
-the fugitive might betray them, was a source of
-peculiar uneasiness. However, after causing considerable
-alarm among the whole party, each of
-whom indulged a different conjecture, the man returned,
-announcing the discovery of a Hottentot
-kraal at no great distance. Towards this spot the
-whole party immediately proceeded, again and again
-quenching their thirst on the way, in reservoirs of
-crystal purity, which had been formed in the hollows
-of the rocks by the recent storm. Arrived, Le
-Vaillant found that the horde of which they had
-come in search was fortunately that of a man to
-whom he had been strongly recommended by a
-friend at the Cape. He was received with hospitality.
-The chief, flattered by the visit, undertook
-for a time to become his guide; and having generously
-and successfully exerted himself for the recovery
-of the chariots abandoned in the desert, and
-performed numerous other kind offices for his guest,
-the caravan was once more put in motion.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening, on their arriving at the halting-place,
-Le Vaillant observed with surprise a tent,
-guarded by Hottentots, pitched a little in advance of
-him; and upon inquiry, found that it belonged to a
-M. Pinard, one of the individuals he had rejected at
-Cape Town. A presentiment of evil immediately
-flashed upon his mind. He regarded the tent with
-inquietude. Misfortune seemed to perch upon its
-summit. And in the sequel he learned, with vexation,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span>
-how well-founded his apprehensions had been. However,
-for the moment, the encounter seemed to offer
-nothing but pleasure. Pinard was the bearer of letters
-from some of his dearest friends, and to a man
-of sound feelings a person thus armed is irresistible;
-but to an evil disposition the very counterfeiting of
-goodness is too painful long to be endured. Our
-Dutch adventurer, whose wealth chiefly consisted in
-brandy, a commodity which experience had taught
-him was omnipotent with Hottentots, seemed to consider
-his casks as too weighty, and habitually exerted
-himself in diminishing the burden. In one
-word, he was a drunkard; and having indulged himself
-with an extraordinary dose on the very evening
-of Le Vaillant’s arrival, the brandy-casks were
-abandoned to the Hottentots, and in a short time
-both camps were a scene of wild revelry and intoxication.</p>
-
-<p>To those who have observed the manners of savages,
-whether in our own country or in the woods, it must
-be well known that the Circean transformations are
-not fabulous. Brandy has everywhere the power of
-changing men into beasts, and into beasts which are
-the more dangerous, inasmuch as they retain, under
-their new forms, a memory morbidly retentive, which
-seems to rejoice at its escape from the restraints of
-reason. Le Vaillant’s followers, having nothing to
-fear from the reproaches of decorum, now plunged
-into the delights of drunkenness with an avidity
-which appeared as if intended as an imputation on
-his want of generosity; for they considered his prudent
-economy as a niggardly doling out of a necessary
-of life, brandy being by them regarded in that
-light. Though he had given orders that the caravan
-should be put in motion at the break of day, the
-men, with the exception of Klaas and two or three
-of his companions, were all furiously intoxicated before
-the oxen could be yoked to the wagons. Even
-old Swanspoel, who had hitherto conducted himself
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>
-with prudence, yielded to the seduction, and endeavouring
-with reeling steps to mount the wagon, his
-foot slipped, and he rolled under the wheel, which immediately
-passed over his body. Le Vaillant, who
-loved the old man, feared he had been crushed to
-pieces; but it was afterward found, upon examination,
-that he merely had two ribs broken; though this fracture
-caused him such terrible anguish on the road, that
-he conjured his master, with clasped hands, to blow
-out his brains with one of his pistols. As our traveller
-was utterly ignorant of surgery, it was necessary
-to leave the treatment of the fracture to nature.
-The pain, meanwhile, was excruciating, and
-in order to blunt its point, the old Hottentot continued
-to drink immoderate quantities of brandy, which,
-as it failed to kill him, obtained, in the sequel, the
-honour of a cure. In six weeks he was able to resume
-his occupations.</p>
-
-<p>At length, after enduring his company with a patience
-which it were easier to praise than to imitate,
-he separated from Pinard. He now discovered another
-remarkable person, a sailor, who, having deserted
-from the Dutch navy, had retired into the wilderness,
-where he had adopted, as far as possible,
-the manners of a savage; married several wives, by
-whom he had numerous children, and laid the foundation
-of what might have proved a powerful horde.
-But this individual affords an example of how difficult
-it is for the civilized man, of whatever rank he
-may be, to retrograde; for, although possessed of
-considerable wealth, and, which is still sweeter, of
-independence, and the germs of power, he yearned
-after that society in which he must always be as nothing;
-and afterward, upon Le Vaillant’s obtaining
-him his pardon, deserted his harem, returned with
-his children to the colony, married, and sunk into
-the dull lethargy of ordinary Dutch life.</p>
-
-<p>This man, whose name was Shoenmaker, became
-our traveller’s guide through the neighbouring regions.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span>
-They continued still to advance towards the
-north, passed through the countries of the Lesser
-and Greater Namaquas, and arrived at length in the
-district in which the giraffe is found. Here all his
-ardour for the chase was at once revived by the
-sight of one of these animals’ skins, which, in one
-of the kraals he visited, served as a covering to a
-hut. A few days afterward, while he was admiring
-the nest of the constructor bird, one of his Namaqua
-guides came in great haste to inform him that
-he had just seen a giraffe browsing upon the leaves
-of a mimosa-tree. “In an instant,” says the traveller,
-“I mounted my horse, being intoxicated with
-joy, and causing Bernfry” (a deserter from the colony
-whom he encountered in the desert) “to follow
-my example, I hurried with my dogs towards the
-mimosa-tree. The giraffe was no longer there. We
-saw her crossing the plain towards the west, and
-put spurs to our horses in order to overtake her.
-She then got into an easy trot, but did not seem at
-all hurried. We galloped after her, firing at her
-from time to time; but she insensibly gained ground
-upon us in such a manner that, after continuing the
-chase for three hours, we were compelled to stop,
-our horses being out of breath, and we immediately
-lost sight of her.” He now found himself alone, at
-a distance from his camp; and, what was worse,
-knew not how to shape his course towards it.
-Meantime he suffered considerably from thirst and
-hunger; but having killed and cooked some birds,
-his wants were soon satisfied, and he had leisure for
-reflection. In the midst of his reveries he was found
-by some of his attendants, and conducted back to
-the camp. Next day the hunting of the giraffe was
-continued with equally bad success. On the third
-day seven of these animals were discovered, and
-immediately pursued by his dogs. “Six of them,”
-says he, “went off together; but the seventh, cut off
-by my pack, took a different direction. Bernfry, who
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span>
-happened just then to be on foot, immediately
-vaulted into the saddle, and set off in pursuit of the
-former. I pursued the latter at all speed; but in
-spite of the swiftness of my horse, she gained upon
-me so much that, on turning a small eminence, I
-lost sight of her, and gave up the chase. My dogs,
-however, had quickly overtaken her, and pressed
-her so closely that she was compelled to stop in her
-own defence. From the place where I was I heard
-them give tongue with all their might; but as their
-voices all appeared to come from the same spot, I
-conjectured that they had got the animal into some
-corner, and I again pushed forwards. As soon as I
-had turned the hill, I in fact discovered her surrounded
-by the dogs, and making desperate efforts
-to drive them off by heavy kicks. In a moment I
-was on my feet, and a single shot from my carbine
-brought her to the earth. Enchanted with my victory,
-I returned to call my people about me, that they
-might skin and cut up the animal. As I was looking
-about, I observed Klaas Bastard eagerly making
-signals to me, which I could not at first comprehend;
-but on turning towards the direction in which
-he pointed, I perceived a giraffe assailed by my dogs
-under an ebony-tree. Supposing it to be another
-animal, I ran towards it; but it was the same, which
-had risen again, and just as I was about to fire a
-second time dropped down dead.</p>
-
-<p>“Who could have believed that a conquest like
-this would have excited me to a transport almost
-approaching to madness! Pains, fatigues, cruel
-privations, uncertainty as to the future, disgust
-sometimes as to the past&mdash;all these recollections
-and feelings fled at the sight of this new prey. I
-could not satisfy my desire to contemplate it. I
-measured its enormous height. I looked from the
-animal to the instrument which had destroyed it.
-I called and recalled my people about me. Although
-we had combated together the largest and the most
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span>
-dangerous animals, it was I alone who had killed the
-giraffe. I was now able to add to the riches of natural
-history; I was now able to destroy the romance
-which attached to this animal, and to establish a
-truth. My people congratulated me on my triumph.
-Bernfry alone was absent; but he came at last, walking
-at a slow pace, and holding his horse by the
-bridle. He had fallen from his seat, and injured his
-shoulder. I heard not what he said to me. I saw
-not that he wanted assistance; I spoke to him only
-of my victory. He showed me his shoulder; I
-showed him my giraffe. I was intoxicated, and I
-should not have thought even of my own wounds.”</p>
-
-<p>He now paid a visit to the Kameniqua horde.
-His camp abounded with provisions; but his people,
-who had for some time been accustomed to the
-company of women, drew so many of these fair ones
-about them, that it was feared nothing else would be
-thought of. However, Le Vaillant was obliged to
-wink at this irregularity, to prevent the desertion of
-the whole body, and his complaisance, as it happened,
-drew after it no evil consequences. In proceeding
-through the country of the Greater Namaquas
-he arrived at a kraal, which had been thrown
-by the death of its chief into the utmost confusion,
-and, upon his making strenuous exertions to restore
-order, was himself elected chief. This dignity, however,
-he delegated to another, and had the satisfaction
-of observing, at his departure, tranquillity and
-good order taking the place of discord and bloodshed.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller now drew near the country of the
-most extraordinary people which he ever met with
-during his travels. These were the Hoozwanas, a
-nation by the Hottentots confounded with the Bushmen,
-but which, in the opinion of Le Vaillant, differed
-from them entirely; as while the latter were
-a collection of vagabonds from all nations, living in
-holes and caves, and subsisting chiefly by plunder,
-the former were as nearly as possible homogeneous.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>
-They differed in a remarkable manner from the Hottentots
-in being enterprising and brave, and enjoyed
-among their neighbours so great a reputation for
-these qualities, that their very name was a talisman
-which struck terror into all who heard it. For this
-reason Le Vaillant could not, in this instance, pursue
-his ordinary practice of sending forward native
-ambassadors or agents to prepare him a welcome
-reception among the horde. At the bare mention
-of the Hoozwanas his followers and allies felt their
-blood curdle with fear, and not only refused to advance
-before him, but endeavoured likewise to dissuade
-him from the attempt, which, in their opinion,
-could terminate no otherwise than fatally.</p>
-
-<p>Le Vaillant, who remembered their vain terrors in
-the case of the Kaffers, was thoroughly convinced
-that their present apprehensions had no better foundation.
-His wagons and a considerable number of
-his attendants had been left encamped on the banks
-of the Gariep, or Orange River; he was now resolved
-rather to dismiss the remainder, and proceed
-alone, than shrink from his undertaking; and Klaas
-and five of his companions voluntarily engaging to
-undertake the expedition, he informed the remainder
-that they were at liberty to depart, their services
-being no longer required. But if they were afraid
-to advance, to retreat seemed no less terrible; so
-that, whipped into enterprise by their very fears,
-they one and all announced their readiness to follow
-the fortunes of their chief.</p>
-
-<p>He therefore proceeded towards the north; but,
-while he despised the fears of his Hottentots, and
-somewhat doubted the correctness of their representations,
-he nevertheless considered it prudent to
-move along in a guarded manner, seeing that every
-thicket might contain an enemy. For some days
-silence and solitude prevailed around. There appeared
-no traces of man; or if any human beings
-ever started up in the distance, it was only to flit
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>
-immediately away like phantoms among the rocks
-and sandhills, leaving behind them strong doubts of
-the reality of their apparition. Meanwhile their
-route led them over a burning desert, covered with
-saline dust, which, lifted up by the winds, entered
-their eyes and almost maddened them. The vehement
-heat of the sun, from which no contrivance
-could wholly shield them, likewise began to disorder
-their senses and their imaginations; so that, like
-mariners in a calenture, they saw mountains, green
-fields, or groves, or running streams, where in reality
-there was nothing but a prodigious plateau of scorching
-sand.</p>
-
-<p>At length, upon halting in the evening, they observed,
-as the darkness came on, several vast fires
-among the peaks of the distant hills, which they
-doubted not belonged to the Hoozwanas. With this
-discovery all their old terrors returned. The watch,
-therefore, it may be easily imagined, was vigilant
-that night; and as soon as the morning appeared,
-Le Vaillant, taking a few of his attendants along
-with him, proceeded to reconnoitre. The scene
-which now presented itself was desolate beyond description.
-Steep ridges of barren rock, rising from
-a plain of sand, and broken into ravines, gullies,
-chasms, precipices; beyond a few stunted, miserable
-plants, no signs of life; while a dead silence brooded
-over all, save when the wild daman sent forth its
-shrill cry from among the rocks, or when the vulture
-or the eagle screamed aloft over their heads.</p>
-
-<p>After a fatiguing march through these savage
-mountains, they reached a slender stream which
-flowed from a narrow opening in the rocks, and discovered
-upon its banks a small Hoozwana encampment.
-No persons but a few women were visible;
-but upon their uttering a cry of alarm, the men immediately
-rushed out, armed with bows and arrows,
-and taking their families along with them, retreated,
-and took up their position on a small eminence commanding
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span>
-their huts. Failing to make himself understood
-by the ordinary signs of friendship and
-good-will, he advanced towards their huts, deposited
-a quantity of beads and tobacco, and then retired to
-observe their movements. When they considered
-him at a sufficient distance, they returned, and upon
-examining the presents exhibited tokens of extraordinary
-satisfaction; but upon the approach of the
-traveller a second time they again retreated, though
-to a smaller distance than before. He now resolved
-to endeavour, by going forward alone and unarmed,
-to remove their apprehensions; and, taking in his
-hand a new present, he proceeded towards them.
-This manœuvre succeeded. One of the savages immediately
-came to meet him; and addressing him in
-the Hottentot language, demanded who he was, and
-whence he came. Le Vaillant replied that he was
-a traveller, desirous of examining the country, and,
-if possible, of finding friends in it. The man then
-came up to him. The Hottentots likewise drew
-near, and entered into conversation with the stranger,
-who, they found, belonged to their nation. Observing
-that no evil had befallen their friend, the remainder
-of the horde now joined the group, and were
-rendered, by a few trifling presents, as friendly and
-peaceful in their deportment as the least ferocious
-of the Hottentot tribes.</p>
-
-<p>The manners of this people were remarkable.
-They remained in their rocky fastnesses, to which
-they were habitually confined by the hostility of
-their neighbours, as long as the gazelles, white ants,
-or locusts, which abound in those districts, afforded
-them provisions. When a scarcity happened, however,
-then wo to the surrounding nations. They
-stood upon the lofty summits of their mountains,
-and casting their eyes around, selected for the scene
-of their desperate foray the region which presented
-the richest aspect. Flocks and herds were seized,
-and killed upon the spot, or driven to the mountains,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span>
-as circumstances required; but, unless when attacked
-and put in actual peril, the Hoozwanas abstained
-from shedding human blood. Their appearance,
-when engaged in war, was peculiarly striking.
-Naked, excepting that small portion of the body
-which instinct alone teaches man to conceal, they
-yet wore a species of helmet or war-cap on their
-heads, upon which there was a crest formed of the
-hyena’s mane. Though considerably below the
-middle size, their well-formed active bodies, and
-daring character, the evidence of which was deeply
-written in their countenance, admirably fitted them
-for warriors. In peace, however, no men could exhibit
-more gentleness, or regard for strangers; and
-our traveller observes, that had he attempted the
-traversing the African continent from the Cape to
-the Mediterranean, he should have chiefly founded
-his hopes of success on the active, faithful character
-of the Hoozwanas.</p>
-
-<p>The Hoozwana women exhibited that peculiar
-conformation of the nates which is generally supposed
-to be a characteristic of the Hottentot race.
-With the latter, however, it is the growth of years,
-and commences only at a late period of life; while
-in the former it is a portion of the original form
-with which the infant is born, and which increases
-merely in proportion as the whole body is developed.
-Upon this strange projection mothers carry their
-children, which, when two or three years old, stand
-upon it as a footman does behind a carriage. But,
-notwithstanding that they were in this respect deformed,
-they possessed hands and arms of extraordinary beauty.
-They wore the war-bonnet and sandals
-like their husbands; but were in other respects
-naked, with the exception of a small apron. A small
-wooden, ivory, or tortoise-shell case hung by their
-side, in which they carried their ointment; and the
-tail of some small animal, fastened on a staff, served,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span>
-instead of a pocket handkerchief, to wipe away the
-dust or perspiration from their faces.</p>
-
-<p>Having spent some time in the country of the
-Hoozwanas, he bent his course towards his camp on
-the Gariep, his gallant hosts serving him as guides
-across the mountains. In the course of the journey
-one of the oxen threw from off its back the box of
-toys and cutlery, which, making a frightful clatter,
-terrified the animal, which ran off roaring in a furious
-manner. Le Vaillant, in endeavouring to force it
-back, found himself engaged in a dangerous adventure;
-for, instead of returning towards his companions,
-it rushed impetuously at the horse, which,
-springing suddenly aside, threw his rider and took to
-flight. The ox now rushed with stooping head at
-the traveller, who, having fortunately fallen with his
-musket in his hand, pointed his piece, and carefully
-levelling it at his enemy, fired, and shot him dead
-upon the spot.</p>
-
-<p>This accident seemed to be merely the forerunner
-of that which happened immediately after his arrival
-at the camp. He had crossed the Gariep with his
-tents and baggage; but the oxen, never having seen
-so broad a stream, could by no means whatever be
-induced to attempt the passage. They resisted all
-the efforts of their drivers, and even their very blows
-seemed to render them more stubborn. It was
-therefore determined to take them farther up the
-stream, and renew their endeavours next morning.
-The herdsmen, however, rendered heedless or confident
-by the vicinity of the camp, fell asleep, and
-allowed their fires to die away. At this moment
-the Bushmen, who had been lying in wait for them,
-stole quietly into the circle, and, driving off the oxen,
-escaped, and before the break of day were already
-far on their way towards their secret haunts.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, early, Le Vaillant was suddenly
-awakened by Klaas, who informed him of what had
-happened; and counselled him to arm a number of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span>
-his followers, and pursue the robbers. This advice
-was instantly adopted. He took thirteen of the
-bravest, and following the track of the oxen, which
-was visible enough upon the sand, during six hours,
-found that it struck off from the river. Here they
-passed the night. Next morning before day they continued
-the pursuit, and finding that the herd had been
-divided into two parts, pursued the track of the more
-numerous, not doubting that the division had been
-made merely for the purpose of distracting their attention.
-From a Hottentot village by which they
-passed they obtained two guides, who, being perfectly
-acquainted with the country, undertook to
-conduct them to the hiding-places of the Bushmen.
-They therefore again set forward, and after tracking
-the robbers for several leagues, found that they had
-crossed the river, in which they discovered the body
-of one of the oxen which had been drowned in the
-passage. The stream being here deep and rapid
-rendered the passage both difficult and dangerous.
-They, however, succeeded in gaining the opposite
-shore, but what was their vexation when, having
-ascended a short distance up the river, it was perceived
-that the artful bandits had again crossed, and
-were therefore on the other side. This manœuvre
-was repeated three times, for so frequently had the
-Bushmen crossed and recrossed the stream. But at
-length the track was lost in the path leading to a
-kraal, in which, therefore, they concluded the oxen
-must be concealed.</p>
-
-<p>The guides, fearful lest their presence among the
-traveller’s attendants might occasion a war between
-these bandits and their nation, here demanded permission
-to remain behind during the attack upon
-the kraal, and their request was unhappily complied
-with. Le Vaillant himself, conceiving that darkness
-would be favourable to his views, resolved to defer
-the execution of his project until night. They accordingly
-encamped upon the spot, and a little after
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>
-midnight set off in the greatest silence. “Soon
-afterward,” says he, “we perceived, at the distance
-of about three-quarters of a league, the light of
-several fires; and advancing a little farther, we
-heard songs, cries of joy, and immoderate shouts of
-laughter. The bandits were amusing themselves,
-and making good cheer at my expense. Their
-clamour, however, had one good effect; for my dogs
-began to set up so loud a barking on drawing near
-the kraal, that it became necessary to muzzle them,
-so that but for the frightful tumult within we should
-infallibly have been betrayed. I was now, therefore,
-in a state of warfare with savages, and resolved
-to employ against them the resources of art, should
-they oppose me with superior force. The moment
-not being favourable for commencing the attack, I
-put it off until the break of day, and in order to conduct
-it in the most advantageous manner, I intrenched
-myself and my troop behind a copse, which,
-by affording us an impenetrable shield against the
-attacks of our enemies, would render our own
-doubly terrible. The copse, in fact, was sufficiently
-extensive to contain and conceal all my musketeers;
-and each of us, by pushing aside or breaking off a
-few branches, immediately formed a sort of porthole
-through which we could fire. In this position
-we patiently and silently awaited the moment for
-action. The villains themselves appeared, by their
-conduct, to favour our views. Their noisy merriment
-died away by degrees; and at length, yielding
-to fatigue, they retired into their huts to rest, and
-the noise entirely ceased.</p>
-
-<p>“The day soon appeared, when we discovered
-that the position we had taken up was too far from
-the kraal. Leaving our oxen, and my two horses,
-ready saddled in case of a defeat, behind the bushes,
-under the care of one of my people, we advanced,
-therefore, and posted ourselves within gunshot of
-the kraal. It was a considerable hamlet, consisting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span>
-of not less than thirty or forty huts, and occupied
-the slope of a hill, behind which a range of high
-mountains swept round in the form of an amphitheatre.
-Though our muskets were all loaded, it
-was not my intention to commence hostilities with
-the effusion of blood. I designed merely to alarm
-the brigands, and by the consternation caused by a
-sudden attack, to compel them to take to flight. For
-this reason I commanded my followers to fire in the
-air, and on no account to take aim at a single individual
-unless by my express orders. I began the
-assault by firing my large carbine, the report of
-which, multiplied by the echoes of the neighbouring
-mountains, produced a terrible noise. We had persuaded
-ourselves that at the sound of this thunder
-the whole horde would fly in consternation, and my
-companions were preparing to augment their terrors
-by a general discharge. But, to our astonishment,
-not a creature appeared. It was in vain that we
-fired round after round; every thing remained calm,
-and I knew not what to conjecture. This security
-was merely apparent. While external appearances
-announced sleep and peace, every soul within was
-given up to terror and confusion. But by a stratagem
-to which they, no doubt, had been long accustomed,
-no one wished to appear before the whole
-body were armed; and it is probable that they communicated
-with each other by signals. When they
-were ready for battle, they all at the same moment
-rushed out of their huts, and advancing with frightful
-howlings towards us, let fly a cloud of arrows, which
-falling far short of their mark, we still replied to
-by firing over their heads. Observing that none of
-their party were hurt, they began to imagine that
-our muskets would not carry so far, and therefore
-uniting into one body, they came on with fury. We
-awaited the assault with firmness. My people, in
-the mean time, called aloud to them to restore my
-oxen. Whether they heard us or not I cannot determine;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span>
-but they had now advanced so near that
-their arrows fell about us in showers. I now
-thought it full time to fire in earnest, and issuing
-my orders to aim at their bodies, we fired several
-volleys in rapid succession, and had very quickly the
-satisfaction to see this numerous band of men scattered
-about like emmets, flying in all directions, and
-uttering fearful shrieks, which were no longer, as
-at first, cries of valour and defiance, but the howlings
-of despair. Their wives and children had retreated,
-during the combat, to the summit of the hill, where
-the oxen were grazing; and it was thither that they
-now fled; whence, having rapidly collected the
-cattle, they plunged down into the hollow on the
-opposite side, and disappeared. Being well persuaded
-that, should they once reach the defiles of
-the mountains, all pursuit would be vain, I mounted
-my horse, and dividing my men into two bodies,
-directed one party to cut off their retreat on one
-side, while I myself with the remainder should
-attack them on the other. It was not many minutes
-before we discovered the savages hurrying down
-the hill towards a plain, in which there was a small
-wood; and, in fact, the greater number of them
-quickly disappeared a second time, but those who
-drove the cattle were necessarily more slow, and
-seeing us close upon their heels, they likewise took
-to flight, leaving the oxen behind them. At this
-moment my other detachment coming up, fired at
-them, and stretched one of their number upon the
-earth. The rest escaped.”</p>
-
-<p>Having thus regained possession of his cattle, and
-fearing he might fall into some ambush laid for him
-by the savages, he hastened back to the kraal, where
-he found their own herd. In lieu of one of the oxen
-which had been killed and eaten, he took away a
-young cow and two sheep, and hurried towards the
-spot where he had left his Kameniqua guides. Here
-he was shocked by a very horrible spectacle. One
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</span>
-of the men had been torn to pieces during the night,
-and the other likewise had suffered severely. They
-had, in fact, neglected to keep alive their fire, and
-had been attacked by a lion in their sleep. Le Vaillant
-caused them to be placed upon his horses, and
-carried along with them; but abandoned the dying
-man at the first halting-place. The other eventually
-recovered.</p>
-
-<p>Though dogged all the way by the Bushmen, he
-reached his camp in safety, from whence, having
-now entirely abandoned the idea of traversing the
-African continent, he turned his face southwards,
-and directed his course towards the Cape. His constitution
-had considerably suffered during this journey,
-and he suddenly began to experience unequivocal
-symptoms of illness. While he was in this condition
-he encountered a white family, who, having
-endured signal misfortunes in the world, had succeeded
-in snapping asunder the links which ordinarily
-bind men to society, and were now, with a few
-Hottentot servants, and a wagon which contained
-all their worldly possessions, proceeding towards
-Namaqua-land in search of a better fortune than
-they had hitherto met with. Le Vaillant, who
-could easily read indolence and inactivity in the
-countenance of the father, was still deeply interested
-in his fate, by an air of goodness which accompanied
-the indication of those qualities; and anticipating the
-consent of the owner, he bestowed upon them a small
-house and ground in the vicinity, four sheep, a goat,
-a dog, together with a quantity of toys and cutlery,
-wherewith to purchase the friendship of the savages.
-With these riches they departed on their way, blessing
-the friendly hand which had enabled them to
-live in comfort, and praying for the happiness of
-him who, under Providence, had been the creator
-of theirs.</p>
-
-<p>He now pushed forward to the banks of the Kansi,
-where his progress was put a stop to by a buinsy,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</span>
-accompanied by violent fever. This disease is generally
-mortal in Africa. Of this circumstance he
-was perfectly aware, and accordingly from the beginning
-began to fear the worst, and gave himself
-up for lost. But his followers, who, with ignorance
-of physic equal to his own, indulged more sanguine
-hopes, requested his permission to apply the only
-remedy known among them; and having obtained
-his consent, applied round his neck towels dipped
-in boiling milk, until the skin was nearly scalded off.
-This treatment was continued during three days;
-but finding no benefit from it, he abandoned the physicians,
-and resolved to leave the whole to nature.
-Meanwhile his condition was alarming. His throat
-and tongue were so much swelled that he could
-swallow nothing but a few drops of weak tea, and
-at length lost entirely the power of speaking, except
-by signs. The fears of his Hottentots were no less
-than his own. When Klaas or Swanspoel entered
-his tent, the other attendants would thrust their black
-woolly heads in after them, in the expectation of
-gathering from their looks whether there was still
-any hope. Such was the state of the case when
-several persons of the Lesser Namaqua horde arrived
-in the camp, among the rest a little man, who, when
-informed of the disorder of the chief, immediately
-undertook his cure. Our traveller, willing to make
-trial of every means within his power, permitted
-the Hottentot Æsculapius to treat him as he pleased;
-and had once more to endure a hot cataplasm on
-his throat, which, together with a gargle of sage-juice,
-formed the whole remedy. In the course of
-one night his freedom of respiration and the power
-of swallowing were restored, and in three days he
-was well.</p>
-
-<p>This danger being over, Le Vaillant returned to
-the Cape, dismissed his Hottentots, and taking leave
-of his South African friends, set sail for Europe,
-July 14th, 1784. He arrived in Paris in the beginning
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</span>
-of the January following, and from thenceforward
-his whole life was occupied in putting his collections
-in order, in compiling the account of his
-travels, and in composing the various works which
-he afterward published or left in MS. on the natural
-history of the birds and quadrupeds of Africa.&mdash;Though
-his occupations were thus simple and peaceful,
-he was not able during the stormy days of the
-Revolution to escape unsuspected; he was apprehended
-and imprisoned in 1793, and is supposed to
-have escaped the guillotine only by the fall of Robespierre.
-His habitual residence during the latter part
-of his life was on a small estate that he possessed at
-La Noue, near Sezanne. There, when not engaged
-in his literary labours, he amused himself with hunting;
-and in this manner he lived during nearly thirty
-years. He died on the 22d of November, 1824.
-During the whole of that time he had seldom quitted
-his retreat to visit Paris, except for the purpose of
-seeing his works through the press. His “Travels,”
-upon which his hopes of fame must chiefly rest, appear
-to have occupied him nearly eleven years, the
-first part having been published in 1790, and the
-second in 1796. It has often been asserted, says
-M. Eyriès, that these travels were compiled from
-the author’s notes by Casimir Varron but this is a
-mistake; he merely read the proof sheets for the
-purpose of correction, Le Vaillant not being sufficiently
-acquainted with the French language to enable
-him to confide in his own judgment.</p>
-
-<p>It was Le Vaillant who first made the giraffe
-known in France, and the stuffed specimen in the
-king’s collection is the one which was brought over
-by him. His other works are, “The Natural History
-of the Birds of Africa,” of the parroquet, and
-of the birds of Paradise. The figures, designed
-under his inspection by Barraband, are said to possess
-great merit; and his scientific works occupy the
-first rank among books of that kind.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BELZONI">BELZONI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>This able and interesting traveller, descended from
-a respectable Roman family, was born at Padua,
-whither his relations had many years previously removed.
-Being designed by his parents for some
-monastic order, he was at a very early age sent to
-Rome, the original abode of his ancestors, where he
-received his education, and spent the greater part
-of his youth. Here the sciences would appear to
-have obtained a decided preference in his mind, over
-every other branch of study; particularly hydraulics,
-to which he owed the reputation which he afterward
-acquired in the world, and a success which was by
-no means equal to his deserts. The invasion of
-Italy, and the capture of Rome by the French, disturbed
-the peaceful but insignificant plan of life
-which he had traced out for himself. Instead of a
-monk he became a traveller. Departing from Rome
-in the year 1800, he for some time wandered about
-the Continent, deriving his subsistence, as he himself
-observes, from his own knowledge and industry,
-and occasional remittances from his family, who,
-though by no means wealthy, seem to have been
-generously disposed to afford him a support, which
-he, in a short time, no less generously refused to
-accept.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1803 he arrived in England, where he
-not long afterward married. In this country he
-supported himself, as is well known, by performing
-in public feats of prodigious strength, and by scientific
-exhibitions; still, with a manly independence,
-preferring the gaining of a precarious subsistence by
-these means to the idea of draining the slender resources
-of his family, or of resorting to those more
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</span>
-easy but less reputable sources of gain which too
-frequently employ the talents of foreigners in England.
-Having remained nine years in Great Britain,
-Belzoni conceived the desire of visiting the south
-of Europe; and, taking his wife along with him,
-travelled through Portugal, Spain, and Malta. It
-seems to have been during this part of his travels
-that he learned, from what he considered unexceptionable
-authority, that his scientific knowledge
-might be turned to good account in Egypt, where an
-hydraulic machine would be of the greatest utility
-in irrigating the fields, which want water only to
-make them produce at any season of the year.</p>
-
-<p>He accordingly took his passage on board of some
-ship bound for Egypt, and arrived in the harbour of
-Alexandria on the 9th of June, 1815. The plague,
-he was informed, was now in the city, but gradually
-decreasing in malignity. St. John’s day, the 24th
-of June, was likewise at hand, on which it usually
-ceases entirely, through the interference, as the
-vulgar believe, of the saint, but in reality from the
-intense heat of the sun, which has by that time
-exhaled those damp miasmata which are the immediate
-cause of the plague. Belzoni, who was accompanied
-by his wife and a young Irish lad, named
-Curtain, landed, notwithstanding the disease; and
-having remained secluded in the occale, or khun,
-until after the 24th, set off for Cairo. On reaching
-this city, where he meant to make an offer of his
-services to the pasha, to whose principal interpreter
-he brought letters of recommendation, he obtained
-lodgings in an old house, which from its vast size
-and ruinous condition would have made a handsome
-figure in one of Mrs. Ratcliffe’s romances. Though
-antiquities, as he observes, were not at that time
-his object, he could not refrain from visiting the
-Pyramids. He accordingly accompanied an English
-gentleman to the spot, where they passed the night,
-and long before dawn had ascended the summit of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</span>
-the highest pile, to behold the sun rise over the land
-of Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>“The scene here,” says he, “is majestic and grand
-far beyond description: a mist over the plains of
-Egypt formed a veil, which ascended and vanished
-gradually as the sun rose, and unveiled to the view
-that beautiful land, once the site of Memphis. The
-distant view of the smaller pyramids on the south
-marked the extension of that vast capital; while the
-solemn endless spectacle of the desert, on the west,
-inspired us with reverence for the all-powerful Creator.
-The fertile lands on the north, with the serpentine
-course of the Nile, descending towards the
-sea; the rich appearance of Cairo, and its minarets,
-at the foot of the Mokatam mountain, on the east;
-the beautiful plain which extends from the Pyramids
-to that city; the Nile, which flows magnificently
-through the centre of the Sacred Valley; and the
-thick groves of palm-trees under our eyes, altogether
-formed a scene of which a very imperfect idea can
-be given by the most elaborate description.”</p>
-
-<p>A few days after his return to Cairo he was to
-have been presented to the pasha, but on the way to
-the citadel was attacked and wounded by a Turkish
-soldier in such a manner that he was compelled to
-defer his presentation for thirty days. Mohammed
-Ali had not at that time properly established his
-power; for, when informed of the injury which had
-been inflicted on his guest, he only observed that
-such accidents were not to be prevented in cities
-filled with troops. This point was very soon made
-still clearer. In a few days the soldiers burst out
-into open rebellion, pillaged the inhabitants, committed
-every description of atrocity, and pursued his
-highness himself into his castle, where they for some
-time held him besieged. When this storm had
-blown over, Belzoni, whose hydraulic project was
-highly approved of by the pasha, commenced the
-construction of his machine in his highness’s gardens
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</span>
-at Soubra, three miles from Cairo. As Mohammed
-Ali is not bigotedly attached to oriental
-fashions, he freely permitted Belzoni to be witness
-of his amusements, which he was sometimes even
-called upon to multiply. During his stay at Soubra
-business frequently required his presence at Cairo,
-where, on one occasion, he narrowly escaped being
-shot by a Turkish soldier. The ruffian having struck
-him in the street, he returned the blow; upon which
-the Turk drew his pistol, fired at him, singed his
-hair, and killed one of his comrades who happened
-to be standing behind the traveller. The man was
-next day apprehended by the pasha, and never more
-heard of. When the hydraulic machine was completed,
-its power was made trial of in the presence
-of Mohammed, who, perceiving that as an innovation
-it was regarded with extraordinary dislike by
-the Turkish and Arabic cultivators, abandoned the
-project altogether, without even remunerating the
-traveller for the loss of time and money which he
-had incurred.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding these circumstances, which reflect
-but little honour on Mohammed Ali, Belzoni
-found, upon calculation, that his finances would still
-enable him to ascend the Nile as far as Assouan;
-and was about to proceed up the country when
-Burckhardt and Mr. Salt, who had previously discussed
-the point together, determined upon the removal
-of the colossal head of young Memnon to
-England, for the purpose of being presented to the
-British Museum; and requested our traveller, as one
-of the fittest persons that could be thought of, to
-undertake the task. The expenses Burckhardt and
-Mr. Salt were to defray between them. A report
-was, it seems, circulated even during the lifetime of
-Belzoni, and previous to the publication of his travels,
-that in this affair he was merely the paid agent
-of Mr. Salt (for, as a professed Mohammedan, Burckhardt
-did not choose to appear). This, however, was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</span>
-clearly not the case. The expenses incurred in the
-undertaking they could do no other than defray. Mr.
-Salt’s instructions are written, as Belzoni himself
-observes, in an assuming style, but nevertheless have
-not the air of being addressed to a paid agent. But
-the testimony of Sheïkh Burckhardt, which I insert
-in justice to the memory of an enterprising and worthy
-man, completely sets the matter at rest. In a
-letter addressed to the African Association, dated
-Cairo, February 20th, 1817, he says, “You will be
-pleased to hear that the colossal head from Thebes
-has at last, after many difficulties, safely arrived at
-Alexandria. Mr. Belzoni, who offered himself to undertake
-this commission, has executed it with great
-spirit, intelligence, and perseverance. The head is
-waiting now at Alexandria for a proper conveyance
-to Malta. Mr. Salt and myself have borne the expenses
-jointly; and the trouble of the undertaking
-has devolved upon Mr. Belzoni, whose name I wish
-to be mentioned, if ever ours shall, on this occasion,
-because he was actuated by public spirit fully as
-much as ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>Few things are more interesting in themselves, or
-less captivating in description, than a search after
-antiquities. Belzoni, after visiting Hermontis and
-Dendara, arrived at Thebes, which, from the time
-of Germanicus to the present moment, has excited
-the wonder and admiration of every traveller who
-has beheld it. “It is absolutely impossible,” says
-Belzoni, “to imagine the scene displayed, without
-seeing it. The most sublime ideas that can be
-formed from the most magnificent specimens of our
-present architecture would give a very incorrect picture
-of these ruins; for such is the difference, not
-only in magnitude, but in form, proportion, and construction,
-that even the pencil can convey but a faint
-idea of the whole. It appeared to me like entering
-a city of giants, who, after a long conflict, were all
-destroyed, leaving the ruins of their various temples
-as the only proof of their existence.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</span></p>
-
-<p>After a brief examination of these mighty ruins,
-he crossed to the western bank of the Nile, where,
-amid the vast remains of the Memnonium, was the
-colossal head which he was to remove. He found
-it, he says, near the remains of its body and chair,
-with its face upwards, and apparently smiling on him
-at the thought of being taken to England. The implements
-which he had brought from Cairo were
-sufficiently simple: fourteen poles, eight of which
-were employed in making a sort of car to lay the
-bust on, four ropes of palm-leaves, and four rollers,
-without tackle of any sort. Their boat lying too far
-to be used as a lodging every night, they established
-themselves in the Memnonium, where, as the traveller
-remarks, they were handsomely lodged in a
-small hut formed of stones. Mrs. Belzoni seems, in
-fact, to have been as enterprising and romantic as
-her husband, and made no difficulty about the rudeness
-of their accommodation. Into a detail of his
-laborious exertions, or those of the Arabs in conveying
-the head to the Nile, I do not think it necessary
-to enter. It will be sufficient to state, that
-after incredible toil and perseverance, it was at
-length brought to the edge of the stream on the 12th
-of August, 1816.</p>
-
-<p>This object being effected, he made an excursion
-to the sepulchral excavations in the mountain of
-Gornou, celebrated for the quantity of mummies
-which they contain. Into this vast labyrinth he entered
-with two Arabs and his interpreter. They
-were in search of a sarcophagus which was said to
-have been discovered by Drovetti; but, in roaming
-about amid the dreary passages, lost their way,
-which, without extraordinary good fortune, might
-have been the first step to losing their lives. In
-labouring to find a passage out, they came to a
-small aperture, through which the interpreter and
-one of the Arabs passed easily, but Belzoni, who was
-a very large man, found it too small. “One of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</span>
-Arabs, however, succeeded, as did my interpreter;
-and it was then agreed,” says he, “that I and the
-other Arab should wait till their return. They proceeded
-evidently to a great distance, for the light
-disappeared, and only a murmuring sound from their
-voices could be distinguished as they went on. After
-a few moments I heard a loud noise, and the interpreter
-distinctly crying, ‘O mon Dieu! O mon Dieu!
-je suis perdu!’ after which a profound silence ensued.
-I asked my Arab whether he had ever been in that
-place. He replied, ‘Never.’ I could not conceive
-what could have happened, and thought the best plan
-was to return to procure help from the other Arabs.
-Accordingly, I told my man to show me the way out
-again; but, staring at me like an idiot, he said he did
-not know the road. I called repeatedly to the interpreter,
-but received no answer. I watched a long
-time, but no one returned, and my situation was no
-very pleasant one.”</p>
-
-<p>At length, however, by dint of laborious perseverance,
-they issued into upper air; and as the sarcophagus,
-which they had discovered, could not at that
-moment be removed, our traveller conceived the design
-of making a small excursion into Nubia. Accordingly,
-he proceeded up the river to Assouan,
-where, after much altercation, he procured a fresh
-boat to carry him to the second cataract. He admired,
-in passing, the beautiful island of Phile, rich
-in the ruins of antiquity. On the next day several
-natives, armed with spears and shields of crocodile
-skins, came in boats to attack them on the river;
-but observing them, Mrs. Belzoni and all, to be
-armed with pistols, they very prudently retired. At
-Deir, the capital of Lower Nubia, our traveller purchased
-with a small looking-glass permission to continue
-his voyage. Previous to this, many of the
-people of the country had never enjoyed the gratification
-of contemplating the reflection of their own
-countenances, unless, like Polypheme, they made a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</span>
-mirror of the glassy stream. On arriving at Ipsambul,
-he saw with amazement the great rock-temple
-discovered by Burckhardt. He immediately conceived
-the design of clearing away the sand which
-obstructed the entrance into the temple, and made
-the proposal to the villagers, promising, in order to
-excite them to the task, a present in money; but
-soon found that he had at length arrived in a region
-where money had ceased to be omnipotent. The
-people stared at his piasters as they would have
-stared at a letter in an unknown language, and inquired
-who would give them any thing for such small
-bits of metal as those? However, he by degrees
-succeeded in convincing them that money possessed
-over civilized men, and all who came within their
-influence, a mysterious power which they could not
-resist, and thus awakened in their souls the “accursed
-thirst of gold.” This seemed at first to produce
-a good effect; but the love of money once excited,
-they knew not where to stop; and their avarice,
-which he had reckoned his best ally, soon
-exhausted his means, so that before he had half-completed
-his undertaking he was compelled to
-desist, and continue his voyage up the Nile to Ibrim
-and the first cataract.</p>
-
-<p>Having gratified his curiosity with a glance at
-these celebrated spots, Belzoni returned to Assouan,
-and from thence proceeded to Thebes, where he immediately
-put in train the measures necessary for
-conveying down the river the Memnon’s head, and
-various other antiquities. The obstacles which
-were thrown in his way by the obstinacy of the natives,
-and the intrigues of Drovetti, and other collectors
-of antiquities, were numerous, and highly
-disgraceful to their originators. Nevertheless, on
-the 17th of November, 1816, he succeeded in placing
-the head on board of a boat, in which he set sail on
-the 21st for Cairo, where he arrived on the 15th of
-December, after a voyage of twenty-four days. All
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</span>
-professions reckon among their members many
-knaves and many fools; but the antiquarians with
-whom Belzoni came in contact deserved, in several
-instances, to be sent to the galleys. His labours
-were, as a matter of course, depreciated by several
-foreigners of this cast, who absurdly misrepresented
-his researches. In this number must be reckoned
-Count Forbin, who was frightened away from Thebes
-by beholding the apparition of an English waiting-maid
-in a blue pelisse among the ruins. This gentleman,
-in his absurd “Travels,” represents our
-traveller as having employed six months in placing
-the colossal bust on board the boat, although he
-knew, or should have known, that the operation did
-not occupy a sixth part of that time. The origin of
-this contemptible fiction was the jealousy which the
-idea of seeing this extraordinary piece of antiquity
-in the possession of the English inspired. An able
-writer in the Quarterly Review, after animadverting
-in a very spirited manner upon the meanness of these
-proceedings, observes, “But detraction, it would appear,
-is not all that Mr. Belzoni has had to sustain
-from this irrational jealousy. M. Drovetti, French
-consul, has, as Count Forbin observes, two agents
-at Thebes,&mdash;the one a Mameluke, named Yousuf,
-originally a drummer in the French army; the other
-a Marseillese renegade of the name of Riffo, ‘small
-in stature, bold, enterprising, and choleric; beating
-the Arabs because they had neither time nor taste
-to understand the Provençal language.’ These persons
-are more than suspected of being concerned in
-a plot against the life of Mr. Belzoni, who was recently
-fired at from behind a wall, while employed
-in his researches among the ruins of Carnac, where
-these two fellows were then known to be lurking.
-The affair has been brought before the Consular
-Court at Cairo; and we trust that M. Drovetti, for
-the sake of his own character and that of his country,
-will not interfere with the judicial proceedings,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</span>
-nor attempt to shelter his agents from the punishment
-which awaits them.”</p>
-
-<p>From Cairo Belzoni proceeded with the bust down
-the Nile to Rosetta and Alexandria; from whence,
-after having placed his charge in the pasha’s warehouses,
-he quickly returned, for the purpose of proceeding
-on a second voyage up the Nile. It was on
-this occasion that he had the good fortune to become
-known to Mr. Briggs, with whom he returned
-to Cairo. Captain Caviglia had at this period commenced
-his researches in the interior of the first
-pyramid of Ghizeh; but was about to discontinue them
-for lack of means, when Mr. Briggs munificently engaged
-to furnish funds for the purpose, in which he
-was seconded by Mr. Salt. It was proposed by this
-latter gentleman that Belzoni should join Captain
-Caviglia in his researches; but our traveller, with
-commendable ambition, preferred some undertaking
-in which all the credit should redound to himself;
-and, having left his wife at the house of a friend at
-Cairo, he once more ascended the Nile, accompanied
-by Mr. Beechey, to whom he had been introduced
-at Alexandria.</p>
-
-<p>At Eraramoun, near Ashmouneir, Belzoni obtained
-intelligence that two agents of M. Drovetti were
-hurrying on towards Thebes, in the hope of forestalling
-him in the purchase of antiquities; upon
-which he hired two asses, and, leaving Mr. Beechey
-to come up slowly with the boat, hurried off by night.
-On reaching the ruins, after an incredibly fatiguing
-journey of five days, he found that, although the
-agents were not arrived, Mr. Salt’s neglect, in not
-paving the way with a handsome present, had so
-completely irritated the bey, that he had appropriated
-to the French ex-consul the very ground upon which
-Belzoni had commenced his excavations during his
-first journey. Into the details of these wretched
-squabbles, which it is humiliating to the lovers of
-art even to peruse, I shall of course not enter. Belzoni,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</span>
-it should be observed, was forced into them
-much against his feelings; for he was an educated,
-liberal, and high-minded man, altogether averse from
-low caballing and intrigue, which appear to have
-formed the native element of Drovetti and his congenial
-coadjutor, the Count de Forbin.</p>
-
-<p>The most interesting transaction, perhaps, in which
-our traveller was anywhere engaged, was his visit
-to the Necropolis of Thebes, in the mountain of
-Gournou. This is a tract of about two miles in
-length, at the foot of the Libyan ridge. Every part
-of these rocks is scooped out into a sepulchre, which,
-however close it may be to other sepulchral chambers,
-has rarely any interior communication with
-them. It is impossible, as Belzoni observes, to convey
-by description an adequate idea of these subterraneous
-abodes and their inhabitants. No other
-sepulchres in the world resemble them. There are
-no excavations or mines that can be compared with
-those astonishing places, which, when once seen,
-for ever after haunt the imagination, like a glimpse
-of the regions beyond the grave. Few travellers see
-more of these catacombs than the exterior chambers,
-from which the dead have been removed. In
-the interior sepulchres the air is suffocating, and frequently
-causes fainting. The dust of decayed mummies,
-which is so fine that it quickly penetrates in
-vast quantities to the lungs, and causes a difficulty
-of respiration; the strong effluvia of decomposed
-bodies; the dark, dismal, lonesome nature of the
-place;&mdash;every thing tends to discourage the intruder.
-Belzoni was not, however, to be deterred. In describing
-the difficulties which he here encountered,
-he observes, “In some places there is not more than
-the vacancy of a foot left, which you must contrive
-to pass through in a creeping posture, like a snail,
-on pointed and keen stones that cut like glass. After
-getting through these passages, some of them two
-or three hundred yards long, you generally find a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</span>
-more commodious place, perhaps high enough to sit.
-But what a place of rest! surrounded by bodies, by
-heaps of mummies, in all directions, which, previous
-to my being accustomed to the sight, impressed me
-with horror. The blackness of the wall; the faint
-light given by the candles or torches for want of
-air; the different objects that surrounded me seeming
-to converse with each other; and the Arabs with
-the candles or torches in their hands, naked and
-covered with dust, themselves resembling living
-mummies,&mdash;absolutely formed a scene that cannot
-be described. In such a situation I found myself
-several times, and often returned exhausted and fainting,
-till at last I became inured to it, and indifferent
-to what I suffered except from the dust, which never
-failed to choke my throat and nose; and though fortunately
-I am destitute of the sense of smelling, I
-could taste that the mummies were rather unpleasant
-to swallow. After the exertion of entering into
-such a place, through a passage of fifty, a hundred,
-three hundred, or perhaps six hundred yards, nearly
-overcome, I sought a resting-place, found one, and
-contrived to sit; but when my weight bore on the
-body of an Egyptian, it crushed it like a bandbox. I
-naturally had recourse to my hands to sustain my
-weight, but they found no better support; so that I
-sank altogether among the broken mummies, with a
-crash of bones, rags, and wooden cases, which raised
-such a dust as kept me motionless for a quarter of
-an hour, waiting till it subsided again. I could not
-move from the place, however, without increasing
-it, and every step I took crushed a mummy in some
-part or other. Once I was conducted from such a
-place to another resembling it, through a passage of
-about twenty feet in length, and no wider than that
-the body could be forced through. It was choked
-with mummies, and I could not pass without putting
-my face in contact with that of some decayed Egyptian;
-but as the passage inclined downwards, my
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</span>
-own weight helped me on. However, I could not
-help being covered with bones, legs, arms, and heads,
-rolling from above. Thus I proceeded from one
-cave to another, all full of mummies, piled up in various
-ways, some standing, some lying, and some on
-their heads. The purpose of my researches was to
-rob the Egyptians of their papyri, of which I found
-a few hidden in their breasts, under their arms, and
-in the space above the knees, or on the legs, and
-covered by the numerous folds of cloth that envelop
-the mummy.”</p>
-
-<p>Belzoni continued indefatigably making new researches
-both at Gournou and Carnac, but was at
-length put to flight by the machinations of the
-French, who had succeeded in gaining over to their
-party the bey of the province. He then resolved
-once more to ascend the Nile to Ipsambul, and was
-fortunate enough to meet with two English travellers,
-Captains Irby and Mangles, who were desirous
-of performing the same voyage. They hired a
-boat between them at Philo, where they celebrated
-the birth-day of George the Third, and setting out
-together in high spirits, visited the second cataract,
-and then returned to Ipsambul. Here the wrong-headedness
-and quarrelsome disposition of the Nubians
-considerably obstructed their labours in clearing
-away the entrance to the temple. But at length,
-having dismissed the native labourers, and undertaken
-the task themselves, they succeeded, and enjoyed
-the satisfaction of beholding one of the most
-perfect and beautiful rock-temples in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Having completed this laborious operation, our
-traveller returned to his old station at Thebes, where
-he continued his researches in the valley of Beban
-el Malook. Here, among other remarkable antiquities,
-he discovered one relic of the ancient
-world, which certainly appears to rank among the
-most beautiful that have ever been exhumed. “It
-is,” says he, “a sarcophagus of the finest oriental
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</span>
-alabaster, nine feet five inches long, and three feet
-seven inches wide. Its thickness is only two inches,
-and it is transparent when a light is placed inside it.
-It is minutely sculptured within and without with
-several hundred figures which do not exceed two
-inches in height, and represent, as I suppose, the
-whole of the funeral procession and ceremonies
-relating to the deceased, united with several emblems,
-&amp;c. I cannot give an adequate idea of this
-beautiful and invaluable piece of antiquity, and can
-only say, that nothing has been brought into Europe
-from Egypt that can be compared to it. The cover
-was not there; it had been taken out and broken into
-several pieces.”</p>
-
-<p>Of the tomb in which this extraordinary monument
-was found a model was many years afterward
-exhibited in London, and so exceedingly well executed
-was the representation, that had it not been
-for the crowds of visiters, one might easily have
-imagined one’s self in the sepulchres of the Egyptian
-kings. Belzoni wanted but one thing to render him
-one of the greatest antiquarian collectors in the
-world: this one thing was money. But for the
-lack of this, many of his most arduous and well-planned
-enterprises came to nothing.</p>
-
-<p>From Thebes, with which he was now as familiar
-as he was with London, he some time after this
-proceeded to Cairo. He had by this time acquired
-quite a passion for excavations, tomb-opening, and
-all those other pursuits by which travellers aim at
-diving into the mysteries of Egyptian manners and
-arts; and reflecting upon the success of Captain
-Caviglia in descending into the well of the Great
-Pyramid, the project of attempting the opening of
-the second occurred to him. It were beside my
-purpose to describe the difficulties which he encountered
-and overcame in the execution of this design.
-His labours were incessant; his expenses considerable;
-but, at length, after success had frequently
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</span>
-appeared hopeless, the entrance to the interior
-chambers was found. “After thirty days’ exertion,”
-says he, “I had the pleasure of finding myself in
-the way to the central chamber of one of the two
-great pyramids of Egypt, which have long been the
-admiration of beholders!”</p>
-
-<p>This object having been happily effected, Belzoni
-again set out for Thebes. There he was made acquainted
-with the history of a pretended discovery,
-which became a motive for a journey to the coast
-of the Red Sea. The history of this expedition is
-given in a very few words by a writer in the Quarterly
-Review whom I have already cited. “A French
-mineralogist, of the name of Caillaud, had accompanied
-some Arab soldiers sent by the pasha of
-Egypt in search of emeralds among the mountains
-between the Nile and the Red Sea. On their return,
-this person gave out (as we learn from an intelligent
-correspondent in the Malta Gazette) that in this expedition
-he had discovered the ancient city of the
-Ptolemies, the celebrated Bernicé, the great emporium
-of Europe and the Indies, of which he gave a
-magnificent description. Mr. Belzoni, doubtful of
-the accuracy of the story, set out from Edfoo, with
-one of the former party, to visit the supposed
-Bernicé; where, instead of the ruins of 800 houses
-and three temples, as stated by M. Caillaud, he could
-find no more than eighty-seven scattered houses, or
-rather cells; the greater number of which did not
-exceed <i>ten feet square</i>, built with unhewn stones,
-and without cement; and the only appearance of a
-temple was a niche in a rock, without inscription or
-sculpture of any kind; there was no land for cultivation,
-nor any water within twenty-four miles;
-no communication with the sea but by a rough road
-over the mountains of twenty-four miles; and the
-shore was so covered with projecting rocks for
-twenty or thirty miles on each side, that there was
-no security even for the smallest boats, much less
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</span>
-for ships trading to India. These, therefore, he was
-quite certain, could not be the remains of Bernicé.</p>
-
-<p>As, however, the site of this celebrated city had
-been fully described by the ancient writers, Mr. Belzoni
-determined to prosecute his researches; and at
-the end of twenty days he discovered, close to the
-shore, the extensive ruins of an ancient city near
-the Cape Lepte Extrema, the Ras el Auf of the
-present day; the projection of which forms an
-ample bay (now named Foul Bay), having at the
-bottom an excellent harbour for vessels of small
-burden. These ruins, which are beyond dispute
-those of the celebrated emporium founded by Ptolemy
-Philadelphus, were four days’ journey from
-the rude cells of the quarrymen or miners, which
-M. Caillaud is stated to have so strangely mistaken
-for the magnificent vestiges of the ancient Bernicé.
-Several wells of bitter water were found among the
-ruins; and between them and the mountains was an
-extensive plain fit for cultivation. The remains of
-more than 3000 houses were counted, about the
-centre of which were those of a temple with sculptured
-figures and hieroglyphics.”</p>
-
-<p>Having made this discovery, he again returned to
-the valley of the Nile, where he was for some time
-occupied in the removal of various antiquities. He
-then descended to the seacoast, and on the 20th of
-April, 1819, set out from Rosetta, on an excursion
-to the district of Fayoum, and the Oasis of Jupiter
-Ammon. After roaming about the shores of Lake
-Mœris for some time, for he had no leisure for
-making researches, he visited the ruins of Arconde,
-consisting of a few granite columns and fragments
-and mounds of burnt bricks. He then prepared to
-cross the desert to the Oasis, which was an affair of
-some difficulty. Nevertheless, he at length succeeded
-in completing his preparations, and commenced
-his journey, accompanied by a Bedouin
-guide, and three or four other persons. Even here,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</span>
-in the desert, ruins of Egyptian edifices, beautifully
-sculptured with hieroglyphics, were found. The
-scene at first lay among low rocks, sandy hills, and
-barren valleys, which were gradually exchanged for
-a plain of sand, as level as the sea, and thickly
-strewed with brown and black pebbles. They continued
-during five days their journey over this dreary
-waste, at the end of which time they perceived the
-rocks of the Oasis, and beheld two crows coming, as
-it were, to meet them. In the afternoon they entered
-the valley, which is surrounded by high rocks,
-and forms in the midst a spacious plain, about twelve
-or fourteen miles long, and about six in breadth.
-“There is only a very small portion of the valley
-cultivated on the opposite side to that which we
-reached, and it can only be distinguished by the
-woods of palm-trees which cover it. The rest of
-the valley is wholly covered with tracts of sand, but
-it is evidently seen it has once been cultivated everywhere.
-Many tracts of land are of a clayey substance,
-which could be brought into use even now.
-There are several small hills scattered about, some
-with a natural spring at the top, and covered with
-rushes and small plants. We advanced towards a
-forest of date-trees, and before evening we reached
-within a mile of a village named Zaboo, all of us
-exceedingly thirsty: here we observed some cultivation,
-several beds of rice and some sunt-trees, &amp;c.
-Before the camels arrived, they scented the water at
-a distance; and as they had not drank since they
-left Rejan, they set off at full gallop, and did not
-stop till they reached a rivulet, which was quite
-sweet, although the soil was almost impregnated
-with salt. I observed here a great many wild birds,
-particularly wild ducks, in greater abundance than
-any other.”</p>
-
-<p>The first man who perceived them after their entrance
-into the valley evinced a disposition to shoot
-Belzoni; but, upon the explanation of the Bedouin
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</span>
-guide, consented to conduct them to the village.
-“We advanced,” says our traveller, “and entered a
-lane between these plants; and as we penetrated
-farther, we entered a most beautiful place, full of
-dates, intermixed with other trees, some in blossom
-and others in fruit: these were apricots, figs, almonds,
-plums, and some grapes. The apricots were in
-greater abundance than the rest, and the figs were
-very fine. The soil was covered with verdure of
-grass and rice, and the whole formed a most pleasing
-recess, particularly after the barren scenes of
-the desert.”</p>
-
-<p>His reception at this village was equivocal: there
-being several sheïkhs, each of whom made pretensions
-to authority. Some were disposed to treat
-him kindly, while others, more morose, kept at a
-distance; but a few cups of coffee, judiciously distributed,
-and followed by a sheep boiled in rice,
-reconciled the whole; although they next morning,
-when they were again hungry, relapsed into their
-former rude manners. Like all other ignorant
-people, they supposed that he must necessarily be
-in search of treasure, and for some time refused to
-conduct him to the ruins of which he was in search;
-but upon being assured that whatever treasures might
-be discovered should fall to their share, while all he
-stipulated for were a few stones, they consented to
-accompany him. The ruins, which, with much
-probability, he concluded to be those of the temple
-of Jupiter Ammon, now served, he found, as a basement
-for nearly a whole village, in the vicinity of
-which he discovered the famous “Fountain of the
-Sun,” which is warm at midnight and cold at noon.
-This is a well of sixty feet deep by eight square,
-which, overflowing in a considerable rivulet, serves
-to irrigate some cultivated lands. All around it is a
-grove of palm and other trees. The temperature
-of the water, however, continues at all times the
-same; all its apparent changes being accounted for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</span>
-by the greater or less degree of heat in the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>From this excursion Belzoni returned to Egypt,
-from whence he embarked for Europe about the
-middle of September, 1819. After an absence of
-twenty years he returned to his family; whence he
-departed for England, where he completed and published
-his travels. A few years afterward this enterprising
-and able traveller fell in an attempt to penetrate
-into the interior of Africa.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="DOMINIQUE_VIVANT_DENON">DOMINIQUE VIVANT DENON.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1754.&mdash;Died 1825</p>
-
-<p>This traveller was born at Givry, near Chalons-sur-Soane,
-in Burgundy. He was descended from
-a noble family, and commenced his career in life as
-a royal page. When he had for some time served
-in the palace in this capacity, he was nominated
-gentleman in ordinary to the king; not long after
-which he obtained the office of secretary to an embassy.
-In this capacity he accompanied the Baron
-de Talleyrand, ambassador of France to Naples,
-where, during the absence of the ambassador, he
-remained <i>chargé des affaires</i>. At the epoch of the
-emigration he incurred the displeasure of Queen
-Marie Caroline, and in consequence removed to
-Venice, where he was known under the name of the
-Chevalier Denon, and became one of the most distinguished
-members of the society of Madame Albrizzi.
-This lady has sketched his portrait in her
-<i>Ritratti</i>. After having spoken in a highly laudatory
-strain of his passion for knowledge, his intrepidity
-in danger, the constant gayety of his mind, the fertility
-of his imagination, the versatility of his character,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</span>
-his irresistible inclination to drollery, she
-adds, “He is generally supposed to resemble Voltaire.
-For my own part, I would admit that in his
-physiognomy you may discover that of Voltaire,
-but in the physiognomy of Voltaire you would look
-in vain for that of Denon. That which, in my opinion,
-they possess in common, is simply an indication
-of sprightliness, vivacity, versatility, and a certain
-sarcastic air in the look and smile, which amuses
-while it terrifies; but the physiognomy of Voltaire
-indicates none of those qualities which characterize
-the soul of Denon.”</p>
-
-<p>During his stay in Italy, Denon diligently applied
-himself to the art of design, in which, as was afterward
-seen, he acquired a remarkable facility and
-power. On the breaking out of the revolution he
-adopted its principles, and even connected himself
-with the most furious jacobins, with the intention,
-it has been said, of snatching a few victims from
-their fangs. But, notwithstanding all this, he would
-probably have sunk into that oblivion which has
-already devoured the memory of so many actors in
-those sanguinary times, had not the Egyptian expedition
-placed him in an advantageous position before
-the world. He had all his life, he says, been desirous
-of travelling in Egypt, and easily obtained the
-consent of Napoleon to accompany him. Embarking
-at Marseilles on the 14th of May, 1799, he sailed
-along the shores of Corsica, Sardinia, Sicily, and
-Malta, where he landed and made some stay, and
-then proceeded to Egypt. Having had the good fortune
-to escape the English fleet in a fog, he landed
-near Alexandria with the French troops, of whose
-movements I shall take no further notice, except in
-as far as they may be connected with the actions
-of Denon.</p>
-
-<p>It has been truly remarked by Volney, that on arriving
-any foreign country, how many descriptions
-soever you may have read of it, you nevertheless
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</span>
-find every thing new and strange; as if, in fact,
-you had just discovered it. Denon was precisely in
-this predicament. He had, no doubt, read what had
-been written respecting Egypt; yet he looked upon
-it as a country of which little beyond the name was
-known in Europe, and consequently commenced the
-study of its antiquities with all possible enthusiasm.
-His views, though vanity had some influence in the
-formation of them, were tolerably correct. Egypt
-has indeed been often visited, and in many instances
-by able men and accomplished scholars; but no one
-who has toiled, as I have, through the descriptions
-of these various travellers, can avoid making the
-discovery that very much remains yet to be done
-before we can be said to possess a thorough knowledge
-of Egypt, ancient or modern.</p>
-
-<p>From Alexandria Denon proceeded with Kleber’s
-division towards Rosetta; clouds of Arabs
-hung on their front and in their rear, cutting off
-every man who lagged behind, or strayed to the
-distance of fifty yards from the main body. Desaix
-himself narrowly escaped; and several young officers,
-less on the alert, were either made prisoners
-or shot. After making numerous little excursions
-in the Delta, he set out for Upper Egypt, which, in
-his opinion, had never before been visited by a
-European; so that, if we interpret him literally, all
-the travellers who had previously described that
-country were so many fiction-mongers. In ascending
-the Nile, he beheld at ten leagues’ distance from
-Cairo the points of the Pyramids piercing the horizon.
-These prodigious monuments, which, even
-more powerfully than Thebes itself, command the
-attention of every traveller in Egypt, he soon visited
-with an escort, and sketched from various positions.
-The city of Cairo disappointed his expectations,
-which appear to have been absurd, since he had
-formed his ideas of the place from the “Arabian
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</span>
-Nights,” rather than from the descriptions of
-travellers.</p>
-
-<p>The population of Cairo, which, though far less
-numerous than is commonly supposed, is still very
-great, saw with disgust and horror the triumph of the
-Franks; who, they feared, might soon introduce
-among them the eating of the “unclean beast,” abhorred
-by Jews and Mussulmans, with drinking,
-gambling, and other accomplishments which Mohammed
-had prohibited to his followers. They
-therefore determined to shake off the yoke which
-they had too tamely suffered to be placed on their
-necks. Rushing fiercely to arms, they attacked their
-invaders with fury. The house which had been appropriated
-to the learned men who accompanied the
-expedition stood apart from the city, and was surrounded
-by gardens. Here they were collected
-together when the revolt began. The report of
-musketry and symptoms of increasing consternation
-soon informed them, however, of what was going
-forward in the more populous quarters, and their
-alarm was proportioned to the solitude by which
-they were surrounded. Presently a report reached
-them that the house of General Caffarelli had been
-sacked and pillaged, and that several members of
-the commission of arts had perished. They now
-reviewed their numbers, and four of the party were
-missing. In an hour after this it was ascertained
-that they had been massacred. Meanwhile no one
-could give any account of Napoleon; night was
-coming on; the firing continued; shouts and clamours
-filled the air; and it was evident that the insurrection
-was general. A tremendous carnage had already
-taken place, but the inhabitants still held out, having
-in one half of the city adopted that barricading system
-in which they were recently imitated by the
-people of Paris; and in others, taken refuge, to the
-number of four thousand, in a spacious mosque,
-from whence they repulsed two companies of grenadiers.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</span>
-Night produced a pause in the struggle. At
-the commencement of the insurrection the literati
-had been granted a guard, but about midnight the
-exigences of the moment caused this to be withdrawn;
-when they themselves took arms, and,
-though every man was disposed to command and
-none to obey, prepared to receive the insurgents.
-Thus the night passed away in confusion and slaughter,
-and in the morning the French were again masters
-of the city.</p>
-
-<p>It must be acknowledged, to the honour of the
-French, that, whatever their conduct in Egypt may
-have been in other respects, nothing could be more
-constant than their ardour for the sciences. In the
-midst of battles, revolts, and dangers of every kind,
-their researches were still continued. We accordingly
-find Denon, just escaped from becoming a
-mummy himself, busily engaged in dissecting an
-ibis, five hundred mummies of which bird had just
-been discovered in the caverns of Saccara. He next
-witnessed an exhibition of the achievements of the
-Psylli; but his incredulity and self-sufficiency disinclined
-him from making any serious inquiries on the
-subject of their power over serpents, which he was
-contented with turning into ridicule: an unfortunate
-propensity for a traveller, who should abandon all
-such absurd displays of littleness to the wits of the
-metropolis.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after this Denon accompanied General
-Desaix on an expedition into Upper Egypt. The
-Mamelukes, though forced to retire, still continued
-to make head against their enemies, who, if they triumphed
-over them through the effects of discipline,
-were assuredly neither more brave nor more enterprising.
-When they drew near the place where the
-Mamelukes under Murad Bey were reported to be
-encamped, Desaix was informed that Murad was
-already putting himself in motion to attack him.
-The French general, no less chivalrous than Murad,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</span>
-determined at once to anticipate the attack. Both
-armies came in sight of each other in the evening.
-It was too late for battle. The victory which both
-parties promised themselves was deferred until the
-morrow. In the Mameluke camp the night was
-spent in rejoicings; and their sentinels approached,
-with laughter and insult, the advanced posts of the
-French. The battle commenced with the dawn.
-Murad, at the head of his redoubtable Mamelukes
-and eight or ten thousand Arabs, appeared ready for
-the attack. The French formed with rapidity, and
-the combat commenced. Never, on any occasion,
-was more impetuous bravery displayed than by
-Murad and his Mamelukes on this day. Finding
-that the chances of battle were turning against
-them, their habitual courage degenerated into fury:
-they galloped up, reckless of danger, to the ranks of
-their enemies, and endeavoured to open themselves
-a way through the bayonets and muskets of the
-French, which they attempted to hew in pieces with
-their sabres. Failing in this, they made their horses
-rear and plunge into the opposing lines, or backed
-them against the bayonets, in the hope of breaking
-and dispersing them. When this desperate measure
-also deceived their hopes, they lost all government
-of their rage, and in the madness of their despair,
-threw their muskets, pistols, and blunderbusses at
-the enemy; or, if dismounted, crept along the ground,
-beneath the bayonets, to cut at the legs of the soldiers.
-It was in this fight that an instance of ferocity
-on both sides, unsurpassed by any thing of
-the kind recorded in history, occurred: a French
-soldier and a Mameluke, engaged in mortal struggle
-on the ground, were discovered by an officer, just as
-the Frenchman was cutting the throat of his enemy.
-“How can you be guilty of so horrible an action,”
-said the officer, “in the state in which you are?”
-The soldier replied, “You talk very finely, at your
-ease, sir; for my own part, however, I have but a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</span>
-moment to live, and I mean to enjoy it!” The
-Mamelukes retired, but they did not fly; and it cost
-the French torrents of blood before the victory was
-completed.</p>
-
-<p>This victory caused Desaix to return once more
-to Cairo for a reinforcement, after which the journey
-towards the south was resumed. At Miniel Guidi,
-while Denon was sitting beside the general in the
-shade, a criminal, who had been caught in stealing
-the muskets from the volunteers, was brought up
-for judgment. It was a boy not more than twelve
-years of age, beautiful as an angel, but bleeding from
-a large sabre wound which he had received in his
-arm. He paid no attention to his wound, but presented
-himself with an ingenuous and confident air
-before the general, whom he soon discovered to be
-his judge. How great is the power of unaffected
-grace! The anger of every person present immediately
-disappeared. He was first questioned respecting
-the person who had instigated the crime.
-“No one,” he replied. The question was repeated
-under another form: he answered that “he did not
-know&mdash;the powerful&mdash;the Almighty.”&mdash;“Have you
-any relations?”&mdash;“Only a mother, very poor, and
-blind.” He was then informed, that if he confessed
-who had sent him nothing would be done to him;
-whereas certain punishment would ensue upon his
-concealing the truth. “I have told you,” he said,
-“I was sent by no one; God alone inspired me!”
-Then placing his cap at the feet of the general, he
-continued, “Behold my head, command it to be
-struck off.”&mdash;“Poor fellow!” exclaimed Desaix, “let
-him be dismissed.” He was led away, and divining
-his fate from the looks of the general, he departed
-with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>Here they enjoyed the unusual pleasure of a
-shower of rain. On visiting the ruins of Oxyrinchus,
-Denon suffered one of the penalties attached to a
-hopeless creed; beholding around him nothing but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</span>
-desolation and sterility, a thousand melancholy
-ideas glided into his mind; he saw the desert encroaching
-upon the cultivated soil, as the domain of
-death encroaches upon life; the tombs in the pathless
-waste seemed the emblems of death and annihilation.
-The gayety described by Signora Albrizzi
-had now fled. He thought himself alone, and felt all
-that awful solitude inspired by a want of faith in the
-spiritual nature of man, that faith which sheds around
-us, wherever we move, a light by which we discern the
-links that unite us to our Creator, and to every thing
-noble and immortal in the works of his hands. He
-was not, however, alone. Desaix had wandered to
-the same spot, and having apparently yielded, like
-himself, to the fatal error of the times, experienced
-the same sensations, and was oppressed by the same
-gloom.</p>
-
-<p>They shortly afterward set out together, escorted
-by three hundred men, on an excursion to the ruins
-of Hermopolis; which, being the first monument of
-ancient Egyptian architecture that he beheld, the
-Pyramids excepted, became in his mind the type of
-that sublime style. Notwithstanding the number
-of his escort, Denon soon found that, although arms
-might indeed open him a way to places which had
-hitherto been inaccessible to travellers, other circumstances,
-over which neither himself nor Desaix
-could exercise any control, prevented him from maturely
-studying what he beheld. A few hours satisfied
-the curiosity of the general, and overwhelmed
-the soldiers, who felt no curiosity about the matter,
-with fatigue. It was therefore necessary to be contented
-with a few fugitive glances, as it were, with
-a few sketches hastily made, and the hope of returning
-again under more favourable auspices.</p>
-
-<p>On approaching Tentyris Denon ventured, he says,
-to propose that the army should halt there. Desaix,
-though no less sensible than himself of the charms
-of these antique ruins, had his mind filled with other
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</span>
-cares, and met the proposal with anger. Passion,
-however, could possess but a momentary influence
-over that beautiful mind; shortly afterward he
-sought out the enthusiastic traveller, in whose
-company he visited Denderah, and admired the sublimity
-of its ponderous architecture. In the evening,
-Latournerie, a young officer remarkable for his
-courage and the delicacy of his taste, observed to
-Denon, “Ever since I have arrived in Egypt, continual
-disappointment has made me ill and melancholy.
-The sight of Denderah has revived me.
-What I have seen this day has repaid me for all my
-fatigues; and whatever may be the fate to which
-the present expedition shall lead me, the remembrance
-of this day will cause me to rejoice, as long
-as I live, that I was engaged in it.”</p>
-
-<p>Two days after this, on turning the point of a chain
-of mountains, the army came in sight of the ruins of
-Thebes. Denon loved above all things to be original.
-In approaching the wreck of this mighty city,
-Homer’s phrase, “Thebes with its hundred gates,”
-occurred to him; he repeated it, and then descanted
-upon its poetical vanity, and the folly of those who
-harped upon this string. As soon as the army came
-in sight of these gigantic ruins, the whole body
-stopped spontaneously as one man, and clapped their
-hands with admiration and delight. The conquest
-of Egypt appeared to be complete. Our traveller,
-who rivalled Dr. Syntax himself in his love of the
-picturesque, immediately set about sketching the
-view, as if it had been merely a city of vapour, like
-that which appears under the name of the “Palace
-of the Rajah Harchund,” in the desert of Ajmere.
-Being desirous of beholding at once all the wonders
-of this stupendous city, he quickly visited those
-colossal statues which are found in a sitting posture
-in the neighbouring plain, which he supposed to be
-those of the mother and son of Ossymandyas.</p>
-
-<p>From Thebes he proceeded with General Belliard
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</span>
-to Syene, while Desaix struck off into the desert in
-search of a detachment of Mamelukes. Here he resided
-for some time, making the island of Elephantina
-his country-house, and Syene his head-quarters.
-He visited the cataracts, the island of Phile, and
-made drawings of whatever was striking or remarkable
-in the vicinity. After a considerable stay, he
-returned towards the north, where he bade adieu to
-his friend Desaix, never to meet again. He afterward
-made a second excursion to Thebes, Denderah,
-and other celebrated spots; and experienced, during
-one of these rambles, the effects of the Khamsyn
-wind, variously described by travellers, according to
-the variety of their temperaments. It was about
-the middle of May, the heat was almost intolerable,
-a complete stagnation seemed to have taken place in
-the air. “At the very moment,” he says, “when to
-remove the painful sensation occasioned by such a
-state of the atmosphere, I was hastening to bathe in
-the Nile, all nature seemed to have put on a new
-aspect: the light and colours were such as I had
-never seen before; the sun, without being concealed,
-had lost its rays; become dimmer than the moon, it
-yielded but a pale light, diffused around every object
-without shadows; the water no longer reflected its
-rays, and appeared troubled: the aspect of every
-thing was changed; it was the earth which now appeared
-luminous, while the air was dim, and seemed
-opaque; the trees, beheld through a yellow horizon,
-wore a dirty blue colour; a long column of birds
-swept before the cloud; the terrified animals wandered
-wild through the plain, and the peasants, who
-pursued them with shouts, failed to collect them
-together. The wind, which had raised this prodigious
-mass of sand, and transported it along
-through the atmosphere, had not yet reached us, and
-we hoped, by entering into the water, to escape from
-its effects. But we had scarcely stepped into the
-river before its waves were lifted up by the hurricane,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</span>
-dashed over our heads, and carried in an instantaneous
-inundation over the plain. The bed of
-the Nile seemed shaken under our feet, and its banks
-with our garments appeared to have been blown
-away. We hurried out of the water, the dust fell
-upon us like rain, we were immediately covered as
-with a crust. Too much terrified even to put on our
-garments, we crept along through a reddish, insufficient
-light, partly guiding our steps by the walls,
-until at length we found refuge in our lodgings.”</p>
-
-<p>Denon, who really possessed all the genuine enthusiasm
-of a traveller, shortly after this undertook
-a journey to Cosseir on the Red Sea, where he enjoyed
-an opportunity of beholding the manners of the
-Arabs under less disadvantages than in the valley of
-the Nile. He then returned again to Thebes, where
-he visited the sepulchres of Gournon, and descending
-the Nile to the seacoast, embarked with Napoleon
-on board a frigate, and sailed for France. The
-ship, fearful of encountering the English, coasted
-along the shores of Africa, as far as the Gulf of Carthage
-and Biserta; then, after passing close to Sardinia,
-and touching at Corsica, arrived safe on the
-coast of Provence.</p>
-
-<p>On his return to France, Napoleon, of whom he
-was a devoted admirer, and in whose praise he was
-frequently guilty of adulation, conferred upon him
-the office of superintendent of museums and the
-striking of medals. The triumphal column in the
-Place Vendôme was erected under his direction. On
-the fall of Napoleon, the king, who was not ignorant
-of the merits of Denon, continued him in his offices;
-but as on the reappearance of Napoleon in 1815 he
-returned to his allegiance to his first sovereign, he
-naturally sank with him upon his final fall. In his
-place of superintendent of the medal mint he was
-succeeded by M. de Puymaurin and by the Comte de
-Farbin, as director-general of museums. Denon
-enjoyed the reputation, however, of being the most
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</span>
-competent person in Paris for filling the offices of
-which he had been deprived. Remarking upon those
-changes, “It would be difficult,” says the Quarterly
-Review, “to discover on what grounds an old and
-meritorious servant, who, like Denon, had distinguished
-himself by his knowledge of antiquities, by
-his taste and execution in the fine arts, and by his zeal
-for their promotion among his countrymen, was dismissed
-to make room for the present Apollo of the
-Museum, who has not the good fortune to be gifted
-with science, art, or taste, or even with the semblance
-of zeal or respect for any of them.” Denon
-died in 1827, leaving behind him an extensive and
-well-merited reputation, which is likely long to survive.
-His travels have been translated into English,
-and are still highly esteemed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="REGINALD_HEBER">REGINALD HEBER.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">Born 1783.&mdash;Died 1826.</p>
-
-<p>Reginald Heber, equally distinguished for his
-talents and for his piety, was born on the 21st of
-April, 1783, at Malpas, in the county of Chester.
-From his earliest years religion was the predominant
-feeling of his mind. His passions, which would
-seem to have been naturally ardent, he quickly
-learned to hold in subjection; and was thus happily
-delivered from those stormy agitations and poignant
-regrets to which those who are formed of more fiery
-materials are but too frequently liable. Like most
-other men who have been remarkable for their attainments
-in after-life, Heber was strongly addicted,
-while a boy, to extensive miscellaneous reading. Guicciardini
-and Machiavelli were among his early favourites.
-He admired the great Florentine historian
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</span>
-for his style, and with a freedom from prejudice which
-indicated the purity of his mind, ventured to make
-the discovery, that this much-calumniated advocate
-of freedom was a far better man than the world was
-inclined to admit. At the same time his study of
-the sacred Scriptures was incessant. Even while a
-child, the principal events which they record were
-so firmly imprinted on his memory, that his friends
-used to apply to him, when at a loss where to find
-the account of any important transaction, or any remarkable
-passage.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1800 Heber was entered a student of
-Brazen Nose College, Oxford, where he exhibited
-on all occasions the same high sense of religion and
-primitive piety which had distinguished him in his
-earlier years. His studies in the mean while were
-pursued with a passionate ardour, particularly all
-those which were connected with poetry, for the
-mind of Heber was eminently imaginative; and although
-circumstances, which I know not whether
-to denominate fortunate or unfortunate (since in
-either case he would, like the divine Founder of his
-religion, have been employed in doing good), prevented
-him from devoting himself to the study and
-building of the “lofty rhyme,” his soul was yet a
-fountain, as it were, of poetry, which, if possible,
-cast additional beauty and splendour on his faith.
-However, as I am not, on the present occasion, engaged
-in viewing Heber as a poet, or as a divine, it
-will not be necessary for me to enter minutely into
-a description of his poetical or theological studies.
-His “Palestine,” the principal contribution which
-he has made to our rich poetical literature, was a
-juvenile performance, written before or soon after
-he had completed his twentieth year; but the effect
-which it produced on those who heard it recited in
-the theatre of the college was more extraordinary,
-perhaps, than the bare reading of the poem would
-lead one to conceive; though the judgment of those
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</span>
-who then heard it has since been confirmed by the
-public. “None,” says an able writer in Blackwood’s
-Magazine, who heard Reginald Heber recite his
-‘Palestine’ in that magnificent theatre, “will ever
-forget his appearance&mdash;so interesting and impressive.
-It was known that his old father was somewhere sitting
-among the crowded audience, when his universally
-admired son ascended the rostrum; and we
-have heard that the sudden thunder of applause
-which then arose so shook his frame, weak and
-wasted by long illness, that he never recovered it,
-and may be said to have died of the joy dearest to a
-parent’s heart. Reginald Heber’s recitation, like
-that of all poets whom we have heard recite, was
-altogether untrammelled by the critical laws of elocution,
-which were not set at defiance, but either by
-the poet unknown or forgotten; and there was a
-charm in his somewhat melancholy voice, that occasionally
-faltered, less from a feeling of the solemnity
-and even grandeur of the scene, of which he was
-himself the conspicuous object&mdash;though that feeling
-did suffuse his pale, ingenuous, and animated
-countenance&mdash;than from the deeply-felt sanctity of
-his subject, comprehending the most awful mysteries
-of God’s revelations to man. As his voice grew
-bolder and more sonorous in the hush, the audience
-felt that this was not the mere display of the skill
-and ingenuity of a clever youth, the accidental triumph
-of an accomplished versifier over his compeers,
-in the dexterity of scholarship, which is all
-that can generally be truly said of such exhibitions;
-but that here was a poet indeed, not only of bright
-promise, but of high achievement; one whose name
-was already written in the roll of the immortals.
-And that feeling, whatever might have been the share
-of the boundless enthusiasm with which the poem
-was listened to, attributable to the influence of the
-‘genius loci,’ has been since sanctioned by the judgment
-of the world, that has placed ‘Palestine’ at the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</span>
-very head of the poetry on divine subjects of this
-age. It is now incorporated for ever with the poetry
-of England.”</p>
-
-<p>In this eloquent tribute to the memory of Heber
-there appears to be but one error; it is that which
-attributes the death of Reginald’s father to the influence
-of excessive joy on a frame debilitated by illness;
-a report which we are assured by the widow
-of our traveller was wholly without foundation.
-During the same year, Napoleon conceived the insane
-design of invading England; and thus roused
-in the ardent breasts of our countrymen a fierce
-spirit of resistance, which affected even the peaceful
-college student, who, to use the familiar expression
-of Heber in describing himself thus engaged,
-“fagged and drilled by turns.” Neither Napoleon
-nor his army, however, had been doomed by Providence
-to lay their bones in English clay, as, had the
-invasion taken place, they must have done; and our
-traveller’s military enthusiasm was quickly suffered
-to cool.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the year 1804, Heber sustained one of the
-heaviest calamities which men can experience on
-this side of the grave&mdash;the loss of a father; which
-he bore with that deep but meek sorrow which a
-youth full of religious hope and untiring resignation
-to the will of Providence might be naturally expected
-to feel. In the autumn of the same year he was
-elected a fellow of All Souls; shortly after which
-his academical career terminated, and he exchanged
-the mimic world of the university for that far more
-arduous scene where many an academical star has
-grown dim, though Heber, with the happy fortune
-which usually attends the virtuous, continued even
-in the great theatre of the world to command the
-approval and admiration of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of the year 1805, he accompanied
-his early friend, Mr. John Thornton, whose
-virtues would appear to have been akin to his own,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</span>
-on a tour through the north of Europe. They proceeded
-by sea to Gottenburg in Sweden, where they
-experienced the effect of that strangeness and novelty,
-which is felt once by all persons who travel in
-a foreign country, but which can never, by any possibility,
-visit the mind a second time. Here they
-purchased a carriage, and proceeded through the
-wildest and most sublime scenery, interspersed with
-meadows and corn-fields, on a tour among the mountains
-of Norway. At intervals, dispersed over craggy,
-desolate heaths, immense numbers of cairns and
-Runic columns were discovered,&mdash;which, with pine
-forests of sombre hue, large bays of the sea nearly
-land-locked, and appearing like so many lakes; cascades,
-rocks, cloud-capped mountains,&mdash;produced a
-series of impressions upon the mind, characterized
-by so high a degree of solemn grandeur, that even
-the vast solitudes of the Brenner Alps or Wetterhorn
-could scarcely inspire a deeper sense of sublimity.
-Amid those wild landscapes the natives
-amused themselves with wolf-hunting on sledges,
-during the winter; but their ferocious game sometimes
-come out in such multitudes from the woods,
-that even the most skilled huntsmen were in danger.</p>
-
-<p>At Munkholm, or Monk’s Island, called the Bastille
-du Nord, Heber saw, among other prisoners, a
-very old man, who had been confined there for
-above fifty years, and had lost in a great measure the
-use of his faculties; they were much moved by his
-appearance, and the answers which he gave. On
-being asked how old he was, he answered three hundred
-years. His crime was variously reported:
-some said he was sent there by his relations for violent
-behaviour to his father; others as being a spend-thrift;
-and M. Leganger said, as being mad. A
-pretty government this, where a man is shut up for
-his whole life, and three or four different reasons
-given for his imprisonment, all equally uncertain! In
-Norway, as well as in some parts of Hadramaut and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</span>
-the Coromandel coast, the cattle are fed upon the
-refuse of fish, which fattens them rapidly, but seems,
-at the same time, totally to change their nature, and
-render them unmanageably ferocious.</p>
-
-<p>Heber’s stay in Norway was short. He had the
-talent to describe whatever was presented to his
-view, but his mild and gentle nature inspired him
-with no sympathy for the craggy, barren, desolate
-scenery of the Norwegian mountains; and he appears
-to have hastened his return to the abodes of
-civilization from an instinctive perception of this
-fact. Upon passing from Norway into Sweden, they
-spent some time at Upsala and the capital; from
-whence they crossed the Gulf of Bothnia in a fishing-boat,
-to Abo, in Finland. From hence, however,
-as it seems to have contained nothing worth
-seeing, they proceeded with all possible celerity, the
-approved English mode of travelling, to Petersburg.
-Notwithstanding the rapidity of their movements,
-they found time to make one discovery, which, as it
-is the echo of what most travellers repeat of the
-countries they visit, I insert for the honour of the
-Finns and Russians: “In one point,” says he, “both
-the Finlanders and Russians are unfortunately
-agreed, I mean in the proverbial knavery of the
-lower classes. In Sweden every thing was secure
-from theft, and our carriage, with its harness,
-cushions, &amp;c., stood every night untouched in the
-open street. But we soon found how very inferior
-the Sclavonian race is to the Gothic in honesty, and
-were obliged to keep a constant watch. I cannot
-account for this apparently generic difference. If the
-Russians only had been thieves I should have called
-it the effects of the slavery of the peasants, but
-Swedish Finland is just as bad, and the peasants are
-as free as in England.”</p>
-
-<p>Our travellers remained at St. Petersburg until the
-30th of December, amusing themselves with learning
-the German language, and in seeing sights, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</span>
-then departed for Moscow, travelling at the same
-prodigious rate as when they fled thither from Abo.
-“Our mode of travelling,” says Heber, “deserves
-describing, both as very comfortable in itself, and
-as being entirely different from every thing in England.
-We performed the journey in kabitkas, the
-carriages usually employed by the Russians in their
-winter journeys: they are nothing more than a very
-large cradle, well covered with leather, and placed
-on a sledge, with a leather curtain in front; the luggage
-is placed at the bottom, the portmanteaus serving
-for an occasional seat, and the whole covered
-with a mattress, on which one or more persons can
-lie at full length, or sit supported by pillows. In
-this attitude, and well wrapped up in furs, one can
-scarcely conceive a more luxurious mode of getting
-over a country, when the roads are good, and the
-weather not intense; but in twenty-four or twenty-five
-degrees of frost (Reaumur), no wrapping can
-keep you quite warm; and in bad roads, of which
-we have had some little experience, the jolting is
-only equalled by the motion of a ship in a storm.”</p>
-
-<p>From Moscow, where they arrived on the 3d of
-January, 1806, they shortly afterward made an excursion
-eastward to Yaroslav, on the banks of the
-Volga, during which Heber made the remarkable
-discovery that the Russian clergy almost universally
-were inimical to the government; being more
-connected than most other classes of men with the
-peasants, many of whose sufferings and oppressions
-they shared. They witnessed at Yaroslav a wolf-hunt
-on the frozen Volga. It should rather, however,
-be termed a “wolf-baiting;” for the animals,
-which had been previously caught for the purpose,
-were at once set upon by a number of dogs, and
-beaten almost blind by the long whips of savages,
-whom I cannot term hunters. A couple of hares
-were likewise chased upon the ice by Siberian greyhounds,
-very beautiful creatures, with silky hair and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</span>
-a fan tail, which, though less swift, were said to be
-more hardy than our greyhounds.</p>
-
-<p>Heber, somewhat dazzled, as was natural, by the
-gorgeous taste of the Muscovites, seems to have
-been highly gratified by the reception which he and
-his fellow-traveller experienced at the ancient capital
-of the empire: “The eastern retinues and luxuries,”
-says he, “which one meets with here are almost
-beyond belief. There are few English countesses
-have so many pearls in their possession as I have
-seen in the streets in the cap of a merchant’s
-wife. At a ball in the ancient costume, which was
-given by M. Nedilensky (secretary of state to the
-late empress, whose family we have found the most
-agreeable in Moscow), the ladies all wore caps entirely
-of pearls, and the blaze of diamonds on their
-<i>saraphaus</i> (the ancient Russian tunic) would have
-outshone, I think, St. James’s. The pearl bonnet is
-not a becoming dress, as it makes its wearer look
-very pale, a fault which some ladies had evidently
-been endeavouring to obviate.” The heads which
-were thus gaudily garnished on the outside were
-generally exceedingly empty, as may safely be inferred
-from the degree of information possessed by
-their fathers, husbands, and brothers; so that the
-comparison with English ladies, in whom beauty and
-intelligence usually go hand in hand, could, I imagine,
-be carried no further.</p>
-
-<p>Upon leaving Moscow about the middle of March,
-our traveller proceeded southward through the
-Ukraine, the country of the Cossacks, at Charkof,
-the capital of which, a university had recently been
-established. The professors of this establishment,
-who were all very handsomely paid, presented a
-motley assemblage of Russians, Germans, and
-Frenchmen, nearly every individual of which was
-big with some new scheme of teaching or college
-government; but this ludicrous appearance would
-wear off in time, while the benefit conferred on the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</span>
-people would be extensive and permanent. From
-hence they hurried on, for they were still rapid in
-their motions, to Taganroy, or the “Cape of the
-Teakettle,” so called from the form of the rock on
-which the fortress stands; and from thence to Nakitchivan
-on the Don. “This town,” says Heber, “is
-a singular mixture of Cossack houses and the black
-felt tents of the Kalmucs, all fishermen, and with
-their habitations almost thrust into the river. From
-the windows of the public-house where I am writing,
-the view is very singular and pleasing. The moon
-is risen, and throws a broad glare of light over the
-Don, which is here so widely overflowed that the
-opposite bank is scarcely visible; the foreground is
-a steep limestone hill covered with cottages and circular
-tents; and we hear on every side the mingled
-characteristic sounds of the singing of the boatmen
-on the river, the barking of the large ferocious Kalmuc
-dogs, which in all these countries are suffered
-to prowl about during the night, blended with the
-low monotonous chant of the Cossack women, who
-are enjoying the fine evening, and dancing in a large
-circle in the streets.”</p>
-
-<p>Tcherkask, their next station, which in spring was
-mostly under water, seemed in some degree to resemble
-Venice. It was, in the opinion of our travellers,
-one of the most singular towns in the world,
-where, in the season of the inundation, the communication
-between one house and another was preserved
-by a kind of balcony or gallery, raised on
-wooden pillars, and running along the streets on
-both sides. From hence they continued their journey
-along the banks of the Kuban and the frontiers
-of Circassia, having in view the wild range of the
-Caucasus, with vast forests of oak at its roots. The
-population of these districts, fierce marauding mountaineers,
-beheld with regret the efforts which were
-making by the Russian government to wean them
-from their sanguinary habits. Their whole delight
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</span>
-consisted in bloodshed and plunder. But their
-frays had gradually become less and less frequent:
-“Formerly,” said their guide, “we were ourselves
-a terror to our neighbours&mdash;but we are now,” added
-he with a sigh&mdash;“a civilized people!” “The land
-on the Russian side of the river (Kuban),” says
-Heber, “is but scantily wooded; on the southern
-side it rises in a magnificent theatre of oak woods,
-interspersed with cultivated ground, and the smoke
-of villages, with the ridges of Caucasus above the
-whole. The nearest hills are by no means gigantic;
-but there are some white peaks which rise at a vast
-distance, and which proved to us that these were
-only the first story of the mountain.”</p>
-
-<p>Our travellers now traversed the Crimea, and proceeded
-across a stepp intersected by numerous
-streams, inlets of the sea, and some large salt-water
-lakes, to Odessa, an interesting town, which in the
-opinion of Heber owed its prosperity to the administration
-of the Duc de Richelieu far more than to
-any natural advantages. Their route now lay across
-Russian Poland, Hungary, Austria, and Northern
-Germany. They arrived at Yarmouth on the 14th
-of October, 1806, and Heber immediately set forward
-to join the family circle at Hodnet, where he enjoyed
-the satisfaction which every wanderer feels
-when returning, after a long and toilsome journey, to
-his native home.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1807 Heber took orders, and obtained
-the living of Hodnet, in Shropshire, which was in
-his brother’s gift; he then returned to Oxford for the
-purpose of taking his degree as master of arts. It
-will readily be supposed that he, whose piety was
-truly apostolical, even while in a secular station,
-now that he had assumed the habit of a Christian
-minister, became doubly anxious to render not only
-his conduct, but the very thoughts of his mind, pure
-as became his holy calling. The church has in no
-age been destitute of teachers remarkable for their
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</span>
-virtue and benevolence; but even among preachers
-of the gospel it is not often that a man so gifted as
-Heber with genius, with enlarged knowledge of mankind,
-with almost boundless charity and benevolence,
-can be found, the perusal of whose life must create
-in the reader as well as in me the vain wish that we
-had numbered him among our friends. Yet Heber
-was far from being an ascetic. Like all men of high
-imaginative powers who have never suffered vice to
-brush away the down from their nobler feelings, he
-had a bold faith in the enduring nature of affection,
-and spoke of love, not like a pert worldling, whom no
-excellence could kindle, but like a philosopher, aware
-of the prejudices of the vulgar, but far above being
-swayed by them. “To speak, however, my serious
-opinion,” says he, in a letter to a friend, “I believe
-that were it possible for a well-founded passion to
-wear out, the very recollection of it would be more
-valuable than the greatest happiness afforded by
-those calm and vulgar kindnesses which chiefly proceed
-from knowing no great harm of one another.
-You remember Shenstone’s epitaph on Miss Dolman:
-<i>Vale, Maria, Puellarum Elegantissima, heu
-quanto minus est cum reliquis versari quam tui meminisse.</i>
-I am not sure how long that romance of passion
-may continue which the world shows such
-anxiety to wean us of as soon as possible, and which
-it laughs at because it envies; but, end when it may,
-it is never lost, but will contribute, like fermentation,
-to make the remainder of the cup of happiness more
-pleasant and wholesome.”</p>
-
-<p>In the April of 1809 Heber married Amelia, youngest
-daughter of Dr. Shipley, dean of St. Asaph. On
-this occasion he undertook an excursion in Wales,
-the beauties of which, notwithstanding the variety
-of scenes he had beheld, he seemed to consider
-equal to those of any country in the world. He then
-settled on his rectory, and employed himself earnestly
-in diffusing among his parishioners a proper
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</span>
-sense of religion, and habits of piety and virtue.
-“He became, indeed,” says his excellent widow,
-“their earthly guide, their pastor, and friend. His
-ear was never shut to their complaints, nor his hands
-closed to their wants. Instead of hiding his face
-from the poor, he sought out distress; he made it a
-rule, from which no circumstances induced him to
-swerve, to ‘give to all who asked,’ however trifling
-the sum; and wherever he had an opportunity, he
-never failed to inquire into, and more effectually to
-relieve their distress. He could not pass a sick person,
-or a child crying, without endeavouring to
-sooth and help them; and the kindness of his manner
-always rendered his gifts doubly valuable.”</p>
-
-<p>Heber, whose leisure, however, was not considerable,
-was now led, by a praiseworthy literary ambition,
-to become a contributor to the Quarterly Review,
-where many of the excellent critiques on
-books of travels which appeared about that period
-were of his writing. Having himself travelled, he
-knew how to appreciate the historian of foreign
-manners, while the high tone of his Christian virtues
-emancipated him from that mean jealousy with
-which little minds are inspired by the success of a
-rival. He was, moreover, admirably calculated by
-the extent and variety of his reading, in which perhaps,
-he was scarcely excelled even by Dr. Southey
-or Sir Walter Scott, for determining the amount of
-information which any particular observer added to
-the common stock; without which no critic, however
-able or acute, can possibly judge with accuracy
-of the merits of a traveller. The Castalian rill,
-which Providence had intrusted to our traveller’s
-keeping, was not, in the mean while, permitted to
-stagnate. Various poems, of different character and
-pretensions, he from time to time composed, and submitted
-to the world; and in 1812 published a collected
-edition of all his poetical works. In the same
-year he was afflicted by a severe and somewhat protracted
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</span>
-illness. Indeed, he continued through life,
-observes Mrs. Heber, subject to inflammatory attacks,
-though rigid temperance and exercise enabled
-him to pursue his studies without inconvenience.
-He was an early riser, and having performed his
-daily devotions, devoted the larger portion of the
-day to literature; from which, nevertheless, he was
-ready to separate himself at the call of duty.</p>
-
-<p>I have before observed that Heber’s character was
-by no means morose or ascetic; he was full of vivacity,
-good-humour, wit, and no enemy to amusements;
-but he conceived that on Sunday it was the
-Christian’s duty to abstain as far as possible from
-every species of business. An anecdote illustrative
-of this point, which is related by Mrs. Heber, is well
-worth repeating: As Mr. Reginald Heber was riding
-one Sunday morning to preach at Moreton, his horse
-cast a shoe. Seeing the village blacksmith standing
-at the door of his forge, he requested him to replace
-it. The man immediately set about blowing up the
-embers of his Saturday night’s fire, on seeing which,
-he said, “On second thoughts, John, it does not signify;
-I can walk my mare; it will not lame her, and
-I do not like to disturb your day of rest.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1815 he was appointed Bampton lecturer. His
-subject was necessarily theological, so that it is not
-within my competence to decide respecting the
-merit of his mode of treating it; but notwithstanding
-that it excited the opposition of one antagonist,
-who called in question his orthodoxy, the lectures
-appear, when published, to have been generally approved
-of by the clergy, the legitimate judges in
-such matters. Two years after this he was promoted
-to a stall in the cathedral of St. Asaph, an
-appointment which led to many journeys into Wales,
-during which he yielded up his mind to the delight
-of poetical composition. In the midst of these and
-similar enjoyments, which, to a mind so purely and
-beautifully constituted as his, must have been secondary
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</span>
-only to those arising from the exercise of
-virtue, Heber underwent the affliction of losing at a
-very early age his only child. This bereavement,
-however, severely as it affected his heart, he submitted
-to with that religious resignation which his
-character would have led us to expect from him.</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller himself appeared, in the spring of
-1820, in extreme danger of being snatched away from
-the world. By constantly attending in the chambers
-of the sick, during the prevalence of putrid
-sore-throat in his neighbourhood, he caught this dangerous
-disorder, which from himself was communicated
-to seven members of his household, to none
-of whom, however, did it prove fatal. In the autumn
-of the same year he paid a visit to Oxford, “when,”
-says Mrs. Heber, “he had the gratification of hearing
-‘Palestine’ performed as an oratorio in the same
-theatre, where, seventeen years before, he had recited
-it to an equally, or perhaps a more crowded
-audience than was then assembled. To the eye the
-scene was the same, but its component parts were
-widely different. Of the relations who were present
-at the former period, some had paid the debt of nature;
-the greater number of his contemporaries were
-scattered abroad in the pursuit of their respective
-professions; new faces occupied the arena.”</p>
-
-<p>About the close of the year 1822 Heber received,
-through his friend, the Right Honourable Watkins
-Williams Wynn, the offer of the bishopric of Calcutta.
-Our traveller had long viewed with deep interest
-the progress of Christianity in the East, and
-the prospect opened to him by this offer, of contributing
-by his own zeal and exertions to the success
-of so holy a cause, seems quickly to have outweighed
-in his mind every consideration of personal
-interest, and to have determined him, at all hazards,
-to accept of that distinguished but dangerous post.
-The conduct of Mr. Wynn on this occasion, his ardent
-desire that India should not be deprived of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</span>
-services of so good, so great a man (for virtue like
-Heber’s is true greatness), while he was scarcely
-less unwilling to lose, certainly for a considerable
-time, if not, as it happened, for ever, a friend of incomparable
-value, reflects the highest honour on his
-heart and character. “The king,” said he, “has
-returned his <i>entire</i> approbation of your appointment
-to Calcutta, and if I could only divide you, so as to
-leave one in England and send the other to India, it
-would also have mine; but the die is now cast, and
-we must not look on any side but that which stands
-uppermost.” To this Heber replied, “For this last,
-as well as for all former proofs of your kindness, accept
-my best thanks. God grant that my conduct
-in India may be such as not to do your recommendation
-discredit, or make you repent the flattering
-confidence which you have placed in me.”</p>
-
-<p>When Heber’s intention of leaving England was
-made known, he received from every quarter those
-warm voluntary testimonies of affection and regret
-which nothing but virtue, distinguished, persevering,
-exalted, can command. His own parishioners, as
-was natural, were the foremost in their demonstrations
-of their profound esteem. Rich, poor, old, and
-young&mdash;all joined in presenting their exemplary pastor
-with a lasting mark of the veneration in which
-his character was held among them. “Almost the
-last business,” says Mrs. Heber, “which Dr. Heber
-(he had recently been created D.D. by the University
-of Oxford) transacted before he left Shropshire was
-settling a long-standing account, in which he had
-been charged as debtor to the amount of a hundred
-pounds; but it was believed by those who were best
-acquainted with the circumstances, that he was not
-bound either in law or probity to pay it. As he himself,
-however, did not feel certain on this point, he
-resolved to pay the money, observing to a friend who
-endeavoured to dissuade him, ‘How can I reasonably
-hope for a blessing on my undertaking, or how
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</span>
-can I commence so long a voyage with a quiet conscience,
-if I leave even the shadow of a committed
-act of injustice behind?’ About the same time an
-unknown person sent him a small sum of money
-through the hands of a clergyman in Shrewsbury,
-confessing that he had defrauded him of it, and stating
-that he could not endure to see him leave England
-for such objects without relieving his own
-conscience by making restitution. On the 22d of
-April, 1823,” she continues, “Dr. Heber finally took
-leave of Shropshire: from a range of high grounds
-near Newport, he turned back to catch a last view
-of his beloved Hodnet; and here the feelings which
-he had hitherto suppressed in tenderness to others
-burst forth unrestrained, and he uttered the words
-which have proved prophetic, that he ‘should return
-to it no more!’”</p>
-
-<p>Heber, having made all necessary preparations for
-his long voyage, and received consecration, repaired
-on the 16th of June on board the Company’s ship
-Grenville, in which he and his family were to proceed
-to India. As our traveller’s first desire, in
-whatever position he happened to be placed, was to
-effect all the good in his power, he no sooner found
-himself on board than he endeavoured to communicate
-to the sailors a sense of their religious duties;
-which he did with all that authority and effect which
-genius and virtue invariably exert over inferior individuals.
-His exhortations were listened to attentively
-and respectfully; and there can be no doubt
-produced, in many instances at least, conviction and
-amendment of life. The influence which the majestic
-simplicity of his character enabled him to exercise
-over his rude audience may in some measure
-be conceived from the following anecdote: “We
-had divine service on deck this morning,” says he;
-“a large shoal of dolphins were playing round the
-ship, and I thought it right to interfere to check the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</span>
-harpoons and fishing-hooks of some of the crew. I
-am not strict in my notions of what is called the
-Christian Sabbath; but the wanton destruction of
-animal life seems to be precisely one of those works
-by which the sanctity and charity of our weekly
-feast would be profaned. The sailors took my reproof
-in good part.” Such were his occupations
-until, on the 3d of October, the ship safely anchored
-in Sangor roads, in the Hoogly, or great western
-branch of the Ganges.</p>
-
-<p>Heber was now arrived in the most extraordinary
-region, Greece and Egypt perhaps excepted, which
-has ever been inhabited by mankind. And he was
-well calculated by his high enthusiasm, extensive
-learning, and remarkable freedom from prejudice, to
-conceive all the splendour of the scene before him,
-to enter profoundly into the spirit of its institutions,
-and to describe with graceful and simple eloquence
-the picturesque variety of manners which the natives
-of this vast empire present to the contemplation
-of a stranger. “Two observations struck me
-forcibly,” says he; “first, that the deep bronze tint
-(observable in the Hindoos) is more naturally agreeable
-to the human eye than the fair skins of Europe,
-since we are not displeased with it even in the first
-instance, while it is well known that to them a fair
-complexion gives the idea of ill health, and of that
-sort of deformity which in our eyes belongs to an
-Albino. There is, indeed, something in a negro
-which requires long habit to reconcile the eye to
-him; but for this the features and the hair, far more
-than the colour, are answerable. The second observation
-was, how entirely the idea of indelicacy,
-which would naturally belong to such naked figures
-as those now around us, if they were white, is prevented
-by their being of a different colour from ourselves.
-So much are we children of association and
-habit, and so instinctively and immediately do our
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</span>
-feelings adapt themselves to a total change of circumstances!
-It is the partial and inconsistent change
-only which affects us.”</p>
-
-<p>They now entered the mighty Ganges, and sailing
-up towards Calcutta through the Sunderbunds, or
-rather along their western limit, beheld their dark
-impenetrable forests stretching away interminably
-towards the right, while a rich vegetable fragrance
-was wafted from the shore. The current of the
-river, when increased by the ebb-tide, was found as
-they ascended to be tremendously rapid, running at
-no less a rate, according to their pilot, than ten or
-eleven miles an hour. On arriving at Calcutta,
-Heber found that the ecclesiastical business of his
-bishopric, at all times multiplex and extensive, had
-now, since the death of Dr. Middleton, accumulated
-prodigiously; so that, although he had come out
-neither with the expectation nor the wish to find his
-place a sinecure, he felt somewhat alarmed at the
-laborious prospect before him. However, he was
-a man accustomed to labour, and not easily discouraged.
-He therefore diligently applied himself to
-business, and had soon the satisfaction to find that,
-notwithstanding the formidable appearance of things
-on his first arrival, it was still possible, after fully
-performing his duty, which no consideration could
-induce him to neglect, to command sufficient leisure
-for studying whatever was curious or striking in the
-natural or moral aspect of Hindostan. Former travellers,
-he now found, were, notwithstanding their
-numbers, very far from having exhausted the subject,
-either because the phenomena of Asiatic manners
-are, like those of the heavens, in a state of perpetual
-change, or because these, continuing the same, which
-however they do not, appear under various phases
-to different men, from being viewed by each individual
-from the peculiar point of observation afforded
-by his character and acquirements.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of seven months, Heber had achieved
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</span>
-that portion of his task which was to be performed
-in the capital. Next to this in importance was his
-visitation through the Upper Provinces, an expedition
-in which he had hoped to be accompanied by his
-family; but this being rendered impracticable by the
-delicate health of his wife, and the tender age of his
-infant child, he departed with his domestic chaplain,
-Mr. Stowe, in a sixteen-oared pinnace, for Dacca.
-The shores of the Ganges, though flat almost throughout
-Bengal, are far from wanting in stately or picturesque
-objects. Lofty pagodas, with their fantastic
-angular domes, towering over forests of bamboos,
-banyans, and cocoa-trees; ruins of Mussulman palaces;
-wild tracts of jungle inhabited by tigers; groves
-of peepul or tamarind-trees; with Hindoo villages or
-hamlets, perched upon artificial mounds to escape the
-periodical inundations of the river. But no scene
-is possessed of all advantages. There is always
-some small drawback, to afford man an excuse for
-enjoying the delicious pleasure of complaining.
-“One of the greatest plagues we have yet met with
-in this journey,” says Heber, “is that of the winged
-bugs. In shape, size, and scent, with the additional
-faculty of flying, they resemble the ‘grabbatic’
-genus, too well known in England. The night of
-our lying off Barrackpoor, they were troublesome;
-but when we were off the rajah’s palace, they came
-out, like the ghosts of his ancestor’s armies, in hundreds
-and thousands from every bush and every
-heap of ruins, and so filled our cabins as to make
-them barely endurable. These unhappy animals
-crowded round our candles in such swarms, some
-just burning their feet and wings on the edge of the
-glass shade, and thus toppling over, others, more
-bold, flying right into the crater, and meeting their
-death there, that we really paid no attention to what
-was next day a ghastly spectacle,&mdash;the mighty army
-which had settled on the wet paint of the ceiling,
-and remained there, black and stinking, till the ants
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</span>
-devoured them. These last swarm in my pinnace:
-they have eaten up no inconsiderable portion of my
-provisions, and have taken, I trust to their benefit, a
-whole box of blue pills; but as they do their best to
-clear it of all other vermin, I cannot but look upon
-them with some degree of favour.”</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman travelling as Heber travelled in
-India is likely to meet with few personal adventures.
-He runs no risk, except from the climate, and moves
-on smoothly from one station to another, in that
-state of tranquillity which is useful, if not necessary,
-to calm, dispassionate observation. Thus our
-traveller sailed from Calcutta to Dacca, once renowned
-for the spaciousness and splendour of its
-palaces, but now ruined, deserted, and reduced to be
-the haunt of bats, serpents, and every loathsome
-thing. Here, in an interview with the nawâb, who,
-like his imperial master of Delhi, has long been reduced
-to subsist upon the bounty of the Company,
-Heber exhibited that delicate regard for the feelings
-of a man,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Fallen from his high estate,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>which a careful observation of his previous life
-would have led us to expect from him. Here he
-had the misfortune to lose Mr. Stowe, his domestic
-chaplain, who, by his many excellent and amiable
-qualities, had long occupied the place of a friend in
-his affections.</p>
-
-<p>From Dacca, where his stay was much longer
-than he had anticipated, he proceeded up the river.
-Furreedpoor, his next station, did not long detain
-him. Near Rajmahal he approached, but did not
-visit, the ruins of Gour, an ancient city, which
-almost rivalled Babylon or Nineveh in extent, and
-which fell to decay, because the Ganges, which once
-flowed under its walls, changed its bed, and took
-another direction, six or seven miles south of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</span>
-city. However, on arriving next day at the town
-of Rajmahal, to make up in some measure for this
-loss, he undertook a short excursion to the ruined
-palace of Sultan Sujah, brother of Araungzêbe. “I
-was a little at a loss,” says he, “to find my way
-through the ruins and young jungle, when a man
-came up, and in Persian, with many low bows, offered
-his services. He led me into a sort of second
-court, a little lower on the hill, where I saw two
-European tombs, and then to three very beautiful
-arches of black slate, on pillars of the same, leading
-into a small but singularly elegant hall, opening immediately
-on the river, though a considerable height
-above it, through similar arches to those by which
-we entered. The roof was vaulted with stone, delicately
-carved, and the walls divided by Gothic tracery
-into panels, still retaining traces of gilding and
-Arabic inscriptions. At each end of this beautiful
-room was a Gothic arch, in like manner of slate,
-leading into two small square apartments, ornamented
-in the same way, and also opening on the river.
-The centre room might be thirty feet long, each of
-the others fifteen square. For their size I cannot conceive
-more delightful apartments. The view was
-very fine. The river, as if incensed at having been
-obliged to make a circuit round the barrier of the
-hills, and impeded here again by the rocks under the
-castle, sweeps round this corner with exceeding
-violence, roaring and foaming like a gigantic Dee.
-The range of hills runs to the left-hand, beautiful,
-blue, and woody.”</p>
-
-<p>From thence he proceeded, as before, up the
-Ganges, observing whatever was remarkable, making
-a short stay at each of the European stations on his
-way, for the purpose of preaching or baptizing, and
-arrived on the 20th of August at Patna. At this
-city, which is extensive, and situated in a commanding
-position, he remained several days, for the purpose
-of preaching and administering confirmation.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</span>
-He then continued his voyage to Ghazeepoor, famous
-for its rose-gardens and salubrious air. “The rose-fields,
-which occupy many hundred acres in the
-neighbourhood, are described as, at the proper
-season, extremely beautiful. They are cultivated
-for distillation, and for making ‘attar.’ Rose-water
-is both good and cheap here. The price of a seer,
-or weight of two pounds (a large quart), of the best,
-being eight anas, or a shilling. The attar is obtained
-after the rose-water is made, by setting it out
-during the night and till sunrise in the morning, in
-large open vessels exposed to the air, and then skimming
-off the essential oil which floats at the top.”
-“To produce one rupee’s weight of attar, two hundred
-thousand well-grown roses are required.” This
-small quantity, when warranted genuine, for they
-begin to adulterate it on the spot, costs one hundred
-sicca rupees, or ten pounds sterling.</p>
-
-<p>A short way farther up the stream, Heber quitted
-his pinnace, and providing himself with bearers, continued
-his journey to Benares by land. Of Benares
-I have already given a brief description in the Life
-of Bernier. Heber’s stay in it was short. He
-visited with attention its principal curiosities, and
-conversed on several points with some of its Brahminical
-professors, whose belief in Hindooism he
-regarded as very equivocal. He then continued his
-voyage up the river to Allahabad, where he dismissed
-his pinnace, and made the necessary preparations
-for performing the remainder of his journey by land.
-Archdeacon Corrie, who had accompanied him from
-Calcutta, and Mr. Lushington, whom he joined on
-the way, were now his travelling companions, and
-with their attendants helped to increase his motley
-caravan, which consisted of twenty-four camels, eight
-carts drawn by bullocks, twenty-four horse-servants,
-ten ponies, forty bearers, and coolies of different
-descriptions, twelve tent-pitchers, and a guard of
-twenty sepoys under a native officer. With this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</span>
-retinue, which in the eyes of a European would
-have had something of a princely air, Heber proceeded
-by the way of Cawnpoor to Lucknow, the
-capital of the kingdom of Oude, where he enjoyed
-the honour of breakfasting with the monarch of this
-ill-governed state, who, on this occasion at least,
-appeared desirous of imitating the manners of the
-English.</p>
-
-<p>At Lucknow Heber separated from his companions;
-and, accompanied merely by his attendants,
-directed his course towards the wild districts at the
-foot of the Himalaya. On arriving at Barelly, not
-more than fifty miles distant from the nearest range,
-he vainly looked out for the snowy peaks of this
-“monarch of mountains;” but, instead, discovered
-nothing but a ridge of black clouds, and a gray autumnal
-haze through which no object was discernible.
-The features of the country now became wild and
-striking. Forests infested by malaria, tigers, and
-lions, and half-desolate plains, announced the termination
-of the fertile provinces of Hindostan, and
-the approach to a different region. Here “we had,”
-says Heber, “a first view of the range of the Himalaya,<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
-indistinctly seen through the haze, but not
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</span>
-so indistinctly as to conceal the general form of the
-mountains. The nearer hills are blue, and in outline
-and tints resemble pretty closely, at this distance,
-those which close in the vale of Clwyd.
-Above these rose what might, in the present unfavourable
-atmosphere, have been taken for clouds,
-had not their seat been so stationary, and their outline
-so harsh and pyramidical&mdash;the patriarchs of the
-continent, perhaps the surviving ruins of a former
-world, white and glistening as alabaster, and even at
-this distance, of probably one hundred and fifty
-miles, towering above the nearer and secondary
-range, as much as those last (though said to be
-seven thousand six hundred feet high) are above the
-plain in which we were standing. I felt intense
-delight and awe in looking on them, but the pleasure
-lasted not many minutes; the clouds closed in again,
-as on the fairy castle of St. John, and left us but
-the former gray cold horizon, girding in the green
-plain of Rohiland, and broken only by people and
-mango-trees.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a>
-The Himalaya mountains have been said, by some other travellers,
-to be visible, in clear weather, from Patna, a distance of two hundred
-miles. The fact appears to be by no means improbable. From the
-window of the library in which these pages are written, the snowy
-mountains of Switzerland and Savoy&mdash;Mont Blanc, the Great and Little
-St. Bernard, and the peaks of St. Corvin and St. Gothard&mdash;are almost
-constantly visible during the prevalence of the south-west wind. From
-the appearance of these mountains a tolerable idea may be formed of the
-aspect of the Himalaya. During summer thin vapours commonly
-obstruct the view, except in the early dawn; and if, as sometimes happens,
-the white peaks appear in the afternoon, when the sun’s rays are
-streaming upon them from the west, they are generally, by the unpractised
-observer, mistaken for clouds. But in the cool autumnal mornings
-just before the sun rises above the horizon, Mont Blanc, though one
-hundred and twenty-five miles distant, is painted with astonishing distinctness
-upon the sky, and towering above the sea of white vapour which
-overspreads the great plain of Burgundy and rises almost to the summit
-of the Jura, seems but a few leagues distant. A little before sunset it
-presents a totally different aspect. Instead of the dusky mass which
-we beheld in the morning, we discover the “monarch of mountains”
-clothed in dazzling white, rising far above every surrounding object;
-while the glittering pinnacles of the inferior mountains seem to stretch
-away interminably to the right and left, until their peaks are confounded
-and lost in the dimness of the horizon. The Mont St. Gothard, which
-is very distinctly visible, at least during clear weather, is distant one
-hundred and seventy miles from the point of observation. With respect
-to Mont Blanc, its whole aspect, when viewed through a good telescope,
-is so admirably defined, that every inequality in its surface is clearly
-discernible, so that an excellent sketch of it might be taken from my
-library. The dark chain of the Jura, which conceals its base, and
-stretches from Geneva almost to the Rhine, increases by contrast the
-magnificence of the view, which, for extent and grandeur, falls very
-little short, perhaps, of any landscape in Europe.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Next day, soon after sunrise, he saw distinctly,
-painted on a clear blue sky, the prodigiously lofty
-pinnacles of these mountains, the centre of earth,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Its altar, and its cradle, and its throne,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>which, as he justly observes, “are really among the
-greatest earthly works of the Almighty Creator’s
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</span>
-hands&mdash;the highest spots below the moon&mdash;and
-overtopping by many hundred feet the summits
-of Cotopaxi and Chimborazo.” To approach these
-mountains, however, from the south, the traveller
-has to traverse a belt of forest and jungle, where
-the air is impregnated with the most deadly qualities.
-“I asked Mr. Boulderson if it were true,” says
-Heber, “that the monkeys forsook these woods
-during the unwholesome months. He answered
-that not the monkeys only, but every thing which
-has the breath of life instinctively deserts them, from
-the beginning of April to October. The tigers go up
-to the hills, the antelopes and wild hogs make incursions
-into the cultivated plain; and those persons,
-such as dâkbearers, or military officers who
-are obliged to traverse the forests in the intervening
-months, agree that not so much as a bird can be
-heard or seen in the frightful solitude.” Yet the
-insalubrity of these districts is not of any ancient
-date. Thirty years ago, though fever and ague
-were common, the plains were populous and productive,
-and considerable progress was made in reclaiming
-the forest; but the devastation consequent
-upon the invasion of Meer Khan, in 1805, checked
-the course of population, which has never since been
-able to recover itself.</p>
-
-<p>Through this deadly region Heber passed with all
-possible rapidity, though the majestic trees which
-bordered the road, the songs of the birds in their
-branches (for it was now November), and the luxuriant
-vegetation which on all sides covered the
-soil, conferred a kind of syren beauty upon the scene,
-which tempted the wayfarer to a fatal pause. At
-length, after a long, fatiguing march, they found
-themselves upon rising ground, at the entrance to a
-green valley, with woody mountains on either side,
-and a considerable river running through it, dashing
-over a rocky bottom, with great noise and violence.
-The scenery now put on features of surpassing beauty.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</span>
-Mountains, precipices, narrow romantic dells; with
-rivers which were sometimes seen, and sometimes
-only heard rolling at the bottom of them; trees inhabited
-by innumerable white monkeys and singing
-birds, and copses abounding in black and purple
-pheasants. When they had climbed up to a considerable
-height upon the lower range of the mountains,
-there burst suddenly upon their sight the most awfully
-magnificent spectacle which the earth furnishes
-for the contemplation of man. Language always
-fails to convey an adequate conception of the tumultuous
-delight experienced in such positions. The
-mind, wrought upon by history, by poetry, by a secret
-hungering after the sublime, instantaneously feels
-itself in the presence of objects which, by their prodigious
-magnitude and elevation, enhanced by an
-idea of their unapproachableness, seem for a moment
-to surpass the most ambitious aspirations of the
-imagination, and in reality carry our thoughts</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Extra flammantia mænia mundi.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Our traveller, standing on the platform from whence
-the Indian Caucasus can be most advantageously
-contemplated, beheld a range of snow-white pinnacles,
-which, stretching like an interminable line
-of shining spears from east to west, appeared with
-their glittering points to pierce the deep blue sky,
-which formed the ground of this landscape of unrivalled
-glory and splendour. At the foot of these
-mountains stands Almorah, the last point of Heber’s
-journey in this direction; whence, after a short
-stay, he again descended to the plain, and pursued
-his route to Meerut, and thence to Delhi.</p>
-
-<p>The imperial city, the ruins of which extend over
-a surface as large as London, is still the residence
-of the descendants of the Mogul sovereigns of India.
-The reader who remembers how superb it was when
-visited by Bernier will learn with a melancholy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</span>
-regret that all its grandeur and power have departed
-from it, leaving in their stead want, wretchedness,
-decay, and disease. Heber was presented to the
-poor old man who, as the descendant of Akbar, is
-still, as it were in mockery, denominated “Emperor
-of Delhi.” Those who delight to triumph over
-fallen greatness may purchase this pleasure by a
-journey to Delhi; for myself, much as I abhor a
-tyrant, few remote scenes of distress, unless such
-in which whole nations are sufferers, could touch
-me more sensibly than the misfortunes of this Mogul
-prince, and I exclaim, with the prophet, “How are
-the mighty fallen!” It is true they deserved their
-fate&mdash;history in their, as in all other cases, justifies
-the ways of Providence&mdash;but we therefore pity them
-the more; and, before we lift up our hand to cast a
-stone at them, our heart involuntarily forms the
-earnest wish that we may by our justice and equity
-deserve the diadem which we have wrested from
-their brows. This consideration is the only thing
-which can confer an interest on such a presentation.
-In every other point of view it is, like every thing
-of the kind, a vulgar show, which has no more
-meaning than a theatrical exhibition.</p>
-
-<p>From Delhi Heber proceeded to the still more ancient
-capital of Agra, where the principal objects of
-curiosity “are the Motee Musjeed, a beautiful mosque
-of white marble, carved with exquisite simplicity
-and elegance; and the palace built by Akbar, in a
-great degree of the same material, and containing
-some noble rooms, now sadly disfigured and destroyed
-by neglect, and by being used as warehouses, armories,
-offices, and lodging-rooms for the garrison.
-The hall, now used as the ‘Dewanny Aum,’ or public
-court of justice, is a splendid edifice, supported by
-pillars and arches of white marble, as large and more
-nobly simple than that of Delhi. The ornaments,
-carving, and mosaic of the smaller apartments, in
-which was formerly the Zenanah, are equal or superior
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</span>
-to any thing which is described as found in the
-Alhambra. The view from those rooms is very fine,
-at the same time that there are some, adapted for the
-hot winds, from which light is carefully excluded.
-This suite is lined with small mirrors in fantastic
-frames; a cascade of water, also surrounded by
-mirrors, has been made to gush from a recess at the
-upper end, and marble channels, beautifully inlaid
-with cornelians, agates, and jasper, convey the
-stream to every side of the apartment.” Heber
-likewise visited the Taj-mahal, which I have described
-in the Life of Bernier, and observes, that after
-hearing its praises ever since he had been in India,
-its beauty rather exceeded than fell short of his expectations.
-After holding a confirmation, at which
-about forty persons were made full members of the
-Christian church, our traveller departed from Agra,
-and commenced his journey across the independent
-states of Western India. During this portion of his
-travels he obtained, from unexceptionable authority,
-an account of the gorgeous style in which that fortunate
-adventurer, Sir David Ochterlony, lived in
-Central India. “Dr. Smith,” he observes, “in his
-late march from Mhow to Meerut, passed by Sir
-David’s camp. The ‘barra sahib,’ or great man,
-was merely travelling with his own family and personal
-followers from Delhi to Jyepoor, but his retinue,
-including servants, escort, European and native
-aids-de-camp, and the various nondescripts of an
-Asiatic train, together with the apparatus of horses,
-elephants, and camels&mdash;the number of his tents, and
-the size of the enclosure, hung round with red cloth,
-by which his own and his daughter’s private tents
-were fenced in from the eyes of the profane, were
-what a European, or even an old Indian whose experience
-had been confined to Bengal, would scarcely
-be brought to credit.”</p>
-
-<p>Our traveller’s journey through Rajpootana was
-attended by circumstances flattering to his personal
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</span>
-feelings. The petty sovereigns through whose dominions
-his route lay invariably received him hospitably
-when he visited their capitals, and on some
-occasions, when he did not choose to diverge so far
-from the road, sent messengers expressly to meet
-him on the way with polite invitations to their court.
-He pushed on, however, with considerable expedition,
-and having traversed the territories, and beheld
-the capitals of Jyepoor, Ajmere, Bunaira, and others,
-proceeded, by way of Neemuch and Baroda, to
-Bombay. His time, during his stay in this city, was
-principally occupied with ecclesiastical business, in
-promoting the founding of schools, and in conversing
-with that venerable statesman and traveller, Mr.
-Elphinstone, the governor, who, from the most humane
-and enlightened motives, has endeavoured,
-with success, to diffuse among the natives a knowledge
-of our literature and sciences. Here Heber
-had the satisfaction of being joined by his wife and
-elder child. With these, shortly afterward, he visited
-the cavern temples of Elephanta and Kennery;
-and subsequently, in company with Archdeacon
-Barnes, made an excursion across the Western
-Ghants to Poonah, in the Deccan, during which he
-enjoyed an opportunity of examining another celebrated
-cavern temple at Carlee. I cannot refuse
-myself the pleasure, or deprive the reader of the
-advantage, of inserting in this place the character
-which Heber has drawn of the most extraordinary
-man whom he encountered during his travels. “Mr.
-Elphinstone,” says he, “is in every respect an extraordinary
-man, possessing great activity of body
-and mind; remarkable talent for and application to
-public business; a love of literature, and a degree
-of almost universal information, such as I have met
-with in no other person similarly situated, and manners
-and conversation of the most amiable and interesting
-character. While he has seen more of
-India and the adjoining countries than any man now
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</span>
-living, and has been engaged in active political and
-sometimes military duties since the age of eighteen,
-he has found time, not only to cultivate the languages
-of Hindostan and Persia, but to preserve and extend
-his acquaintance with the Greek and Latin
-classics, with the French and Italian, with all the
-elder and more distinguished English writers, and
-with the current and popular literature of the day,
-both in poetry, history, politics, and political economy.
-With these remarkable accomplishments,
-and notwithstanding a temperance amounting to
-rigid abstinence, he is fond of society; and it is a
-common subject of surprise with his friends, at what
-hour of the day or night he found time for the acquisition
-of knowledge. His policy, so far as India is
-concerned, appeared to me peculiarly wise and
-liberal, and he is evidently attached to, and thinks
-well of, the country and its inhabitants. His public
-measures, in their general tendency, evince a steady
-wish to improve their present condition. No government
-in India pays so much attention to schools
-and public institutions for education. In none are
-the taxes lighter; and in the administration of justice
-to the natives in their own languages, in the
-establishment of punchacts, in the degree in which
-he employs the natives in official situations, and the
-countenance and familiarity which he extends to all
-the natives of rank who approach him, he seems to
-have reduced to practice almost all the reforms which
-had struck me as most required in the system of
-government pursued in those provinces of our eastern
-empire which I had previously visited.”</p>
-
-<p>From Bombay, Heber sailed with his wife and
-daughter to Ceylon, a large portion of which he visited.
-He then proceeded to Calcutta. On the 30th
-of January, 1826, shortly after his recovery from a
-fever, he again quitted his family for the purpose of
-visiting Madras and the southern provinces of India.
-At Madras he was received with great kindness by
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</span>
-Sir Thomas Munro, who was warmly desirous of
-rendering his position as little disagreeable as the
-season and climate would permit. From thence he
-proceeded through Caddalore and Tanjore to Trichinopoly,
-where, on the 3d of April, 1826, his pious,
-active, and valuable life was closed. “It were a
-useless,” says Mrs. Heber, “and a deeply painful
-task to enter into any detail of the apparent cause
-of his death: it is sufficient to say that disease had,
-unsuspected, been existing for some time; and that
-it was the opinion of all the medical men in attendance,
-that under no circumstances could his invaluable
-life have been very long preserved, though the
-event was undoubtedly hastened by the effects of
-climate, by intense mental application to those duties
-which increased in interest with every step he took,
-and was finally caused by the effects of cold on a
-frame exhausted by heat and fatigue.” His mortal
-remains were attended to the grave with the highest
-honours, and followed by the tears of the inhabitants
-of Trichinopoly. They rest on the north side of the
-altar in St. John’s Church.</p>
-
-<p>THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Notes">
-Transcriber’s Notes
-</h2>
-
-<p>A number of typographical errors were corrected silently.</p>
-
-<p>Cover image is in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
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