Bulag mea Hi mii The Librarp fe ae of the || Gniversity of Morth Carolina THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL ENDOWED BY THE DIALECTIC AND PHILANTHROPIC SOCIETIES : Mi & y) This book is due at the LOUIS R. WILSON LIBRARY on the & last date stamped under “Date Due.” If not on hold it may be renewed by bringing it to the library. DATE DATE DUE RET. RET. GRSSS STE Sse Ge SESE ee ESE SES GSE SS GSES. GE SS SSS Se Se eee eS | | co) e& ; eo | i Sa = = - 4 — -c) = se 2 -— "7 @ee ta co es © 2. sy, meshes 3 de NEW-YORK: JOHN ALLEN, 189 NASSAU STREET. MANNERS AND CUSTOMS PRINCIPAL NATIONS aie ke GrL°@ BE BY THE AUTHOR OF “A / bys Be {C95 PETER PARLEY’S TALES.’ ST ¢-79 NEW-YORK: | JOHN ALLEN, 139 NASSAU STREET. MDCCCXLY. THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL ENDOWED BY THE DIALECTIC AND PHILANTHROPIC SOCIETIES INTRODUCTION, AMERICA, . : Polar Regions, The Esquimaux, British America, United States, Mexico, _ West Indies, South America, Europe, ; ‘ England, Wales, Scotland, Treland, _ France, Spain, Portugal, The Gypsies, Switzerland, The Tyrol, aly, ie % Greece, Turkey; Germany, CONTENTS. Holland, Belgium, Denmark, Sweeden, Norway, Lapland, Russia, . Poland, “i AFRICA, P f : ° ‘ The Moors and Arabs of Africa, The Negroes, : . . Abyssinia, .. Egypt, . ASIA, Russia in Asia, Circassia, Georgia, Siberia, Kamschatka, . Turkey, Arabia,. Persia,. . Afghanistan, Tartary, Hindostan, Farther India, China, Japan, OcEANICA, . $6€ Bd? MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF NATIONS. INTRODUCTION. = crexown. @ = Tue Manners and Customs of Nations embrace their various modes of thought, feeling and action, more especially as these are manifested in religion, marriage, burials, dress, dwellings, food, drink, amuse- ments, &c. Though mankind, in all ages and countries, possess the same elements of character, these are modified or A 6 INTRODUCTION. controlled by the potent influences of climate, religion, and government. There is, doubtless, such a thing as inherent character in nations, which belongs to the race, and may be traced back as far as we can investi- gate their records. Without entering into details, we may refer to the five grand divisions of the human family—the Caucasian, or European; the Mongolian, including the Chinese, Japanese, &c.; the Malaysian, embracing most of the South Sea Islanders ; the African; and the American, including our Indians. Though the individuals of these have each the same faculties and features, in number and kind, yet their forms, aptitudes, capacities and powers are widely dif- ferent. Still, the remark holds good, that national character is mainly dependent upon the transforming power of the three great circumstances above men- tioned. . Let us look a moment at the influence of climate. In a cold country, like that of New England, the in- clemency of the season, for six months in the year, compels the inhabitants, during the other six, to make provision for this period, by industry, frugality and providence. - Necessity thus becomes the parent of these qualities: and it may be observed that while the habits of the people are thus drawn into the paths of virtue, the physical system is braced, the intellectual faculties stimulated, and the moral qualities elevated — and ennobled. | Let us look at this process a little more in detail} and, in the first place, we may consider the subject of dwellings. In a severe climate, these must be sub- stantial, to withstand the effects of hail, frost and snow; INTRODUCTION. Y and they must be tight, to exclude the blasts of winter. So far, stern necessity is a dictator, that enforces its demands with despotic authority. The house, then, becomes a matter of the first importance, and naturally engrosses a large share of attention and care. When _ at last gt is completed, it becomes the point around which many lively feelings revolve. It is associated with ideas of shelter from the severities of winter; of peace, comfort and protection. It affords these bless- ings to the wife and the children. A fire is kindled upon the ample hearth, and while the tempest rages without, light and warmth are dispensed upon the family circle. Day by day, new thoughts and feel- ings spring up here, and associate themselves with the place in which we dwell, until at last the full idea of home is formed in the heart. When once we have bestowed this title upon our dwelling, it possesses an invincible claim upon our affections. An object thus cherished cannot be permitted to decay, or to linger in a state of barbarism. Year by year it will be improved ; new comforts and con- veniences will be added, as taste demands or means allow. When the claims of comfort are satisfied, plans of embellishment and notions of luxury succeed. At first, a rough wall of plaster was sufficient for the sides of a room—for then the object was to exclude the weather; but now, these must be papered, and finally, they must be hung with pictures. A naked floor of plank was sufficient in the infancy of society, but now, carpets, decorated with graceful figures, and made pleasant to the foot and eye by a soft nap and harmonious colors, are indispensable. Nor are these Xu 8 INTRODUCTION. palpable advantages enough: the proportions -of the rooms must satisfy a cultivated taste in architecture, and even the exterior of the edifice must gratify that fine perception of blended ‘utility and beauty, which springs up in the bosom of refined society. ‘Such are the wonderful results of climate, operating ugon man- kind; necessity, which seems a severe task-master, becomes, in fact, the benignant parent of a thousand thrifty virtues, as well as the source of those tastes, powers and privileges, which belong only to the high- est stages of civilization. To illustrate more fully the force of climate, in forming the manners and customs of nations, let us consider the subject of dwellings in a tropical region. Here no stern winter comes to wrap the blighted leaves and flowers in a ‘winding sheet of:snow; to lock up the bosom of ovr mother earth, and freeze the fountains of nature, On the contrary, the fruits and flowers go on unchecked in ‘endless rotation. The breeze is always balmy, and one may safely sleep in the open air, without shelter. What need of industry, forecast, frugality here? Why build an expensive dwelling, when a slight fabric of cane poles, covered with leaves of the palm, are sufficient to provide against every attack of the season in this genial cli- mate? We can see that mankind would naturally reason thus; and every one who has been in a warm country has had abundant evidence that they do reason thus. The mass of the dwellings, in all tropical re- gions, are slight structures, small and inconvenient. They are objects of little cost and little consideration. The ideas which cluster around a northern home, never Miia, % % enter.there. They are like the lair of the wild beast or the nest of the bird, always temporary, and only regarded as a transient necessity. A similar train of observations might be made in respect to dress—though it is proper to notice a prin- ciple here, that does not belong to the subject just noticed. It would seem that among all animated be- ings there is an inherent affection founded upon per- sonal appearance, if we may be allowed the term. The gaudy decoration of the feathered and insect tribes; their diversified forms, attitudes and move- ments, are doubtless, to some extent at least, designed to attract attention and excite interest among the mem- bers of their several species. There is no more reason to doubt that the modest pea hen looks with approba- tion upon the gaudy peagantry of her lord and master, with his expanded tail glittering in. the sunbeam, than that the Indian maiden admires the young warrior in his paint, or that the city lass approves the smart at- tire and glistening soap-locks of her lover. This hint is sufficient, at least, to indicate that uni- versal regard to appearance, which belongs to animat- ed nature, and more especially to the human species. Everywhere, and in all stages of society, personal ap- pearance is significant of feelings and character. Looks are a kind of language understood in all countries, which appeal with more or less effect to every bosom. Conscious of this, personal appearance becomes an ob- ject of study in the very rudest stages of society. At first, tattooing is adopted, as aiding the expression of the features; though this often runs at last into a kind. of hieroglyphic language, to mark the tribe to which <= 1” & INTRODUCTION. the wearer belongs. Next, nai is adopted, and at last, certain ornaments, as beads, rings, caps, feathers, &c. Thus far the main idea is that of decora- tion, with a desire to give a favorable effect to personal appearance. Among: warlike tribes, the embellish- ments of the men are designed to render their aspect — fearful and appalling, and they are thought to be beautiful in proportion as they appear terrible. . In considering dress, then, we must not overlook this eternal foppery of our race. But allowing due influence to this, we may still repeat, that climate operates upon human attire much as it does upon human dwellings. In a stern wintry zone, a leading idea in dress ever must be protection from the cold. Ample garments, under such circumstances, are indis- pensable. The supply of these, demands care, indus- try, providence. Objects obtained at such cost «will be prized, and in proportion as they are prized, they will become important and interesting. Made thus the subject of thought and study, they will gradually become improved. At first the sheep-skin, with its native covering of wool, will be sufficient; and every man may then be his own tailor: but in the progress of society, the taste rises step by step, until at last the wool must be shorn off and wrought into a delicate fabric ; a glossy nap must be raised with infinite art upon the outer side; the garment must be cut with a profound ‘knowledge of human anatomy, and finally, it must possess that indescribable air, which bespeaks an appearance of the most subtle, shifting and shadowy of all existences—fashion. Such is the career of society, in respect to dress, where it begins "INTRODUCTION, oe in ideas of siitileocessity: It is climate which is the law-giver,—harsh and stern, it might seem, as the blood-written code of Draco; but if we look at results, we shall observe that they are truly beneficent, and afford one, among the thousand proofs of benign watch- fulness in providence, by thus affording a compensa- tion to the inhabitants of the frigid regions of the earth, in the energy of character and refinements of life, which spring up in the soil of necessity. If we look at the condition of society in hot countries, and see the indolence, weakness and raggedness, which pervade the mass of society, we shall, by strong contrast, be made to feel the force of these observations. Let a per- son turn round an artificial globe, and mark the coun- tries which lie within the tropics, and observe that there is not one among them all where the spirit of liberty, the light of learning, the love of industry, the voice of piety, or the arts of refined life, pervade society—and he may then bless Providence that his lot is cast in the chill regions of the Pilerims. -We have not space to consider this subject more in detail, and with these suggestions, we must leave it to the reflections of the reader, only remarking that the. descriptions of manners and customs in the following pages will afford ample illustrations of these views. In respect to religion, we may remark that not only the ceremonies of worship, but those which belong to births and burials, courtship and marriage, as well as many others, are shaped or modified by its potent in- fluence. Nor is government less efficient in moulding the manners of nations. If it be despotic, it crushes the thoughts and feelings into a common mould, re- % mo INTRODUCTION: x we presses personal independence, and diffuses a sort of uniform livery, mental and moral, over the nation. In such a country, society is divided into castes, each one of which is marked with its significant badges. Here, the son follows the trade of the father, and pos- sessions, estates, titles, descend unto the third and fourth generation. Each man is a tool in the hand of the despot, and he never dreams that he can do otherwise than work in the grooves to which he is fitted. On the other hand, if the Se cacalea be free, if every man is allowed to choose his own path of life ; to think, feel, speak and act as he pleases, having no check but the law, which requires him to regard the rights of others,—it is clear that society will assume a very different character from that in the case we have just considered. There are other modes in which the power of government upon national character is made manifest, but we have not space to notice them here. Our purpose, in these introductory remarks, is but to sug- gest these topics, and leave the obvious principles laid - down, to the application of the reader, as he peruses the succeeding pages. | AMERICA.. Tuts portion of the globe snbiece about 15, 000, 000 square miles, and a population of nearly 50,000,000, thus distributed : N. America, West Indies and Guiana. |. South America. Russian America, 50,000 | New Grenada, 1,680,000 Danish America, 110,000 | Venezuela, 900,000 British America, 2,150,000 | Equator, “650,000 United States, 20,000,000 | Peru, 1,700.000 Spanish Islands, 1,050,000 | Bolivia, 1,300,000 Hayti, . 600,000 | Chili, 1,400,000 French America, 240,000 | La Plata, 1,800,000 Dutch America, 114,000 | Uraguay, 90,000 Mexico, 8,000,000 | Paraguay, 250,000 © Texas, * 100,000 | Brazil, 5,000,000. Guatemala, 2,000,000 | Independent Indies, 1,400,000 34,314,000 16,170,000 Of this: number, about 20,000,000 are whites; 10,000,000 of the aboriginal race ; 9,000,000 negroes, -and the remainder, mixed races; the latter, called mestizos, being chiefly within the Spanish settlements. The Indians of the American Continent were marked with ‘shades of difference; yet, exclusive of the Es- quimaux, who doubtless belong to the Mongolian family, and are of the same stock as the Samoides of Asia, there is a striking resemblance between them all. Within the British provinces, and the United States, they are still numerous; but they generally preserve their original independence, and savage habits. Some 14 AMERICA. of the tribes have partially adopted agricultural pur- suits. In the Spanish and Portuguese settlements, smost of them have submitted to the government, and occupy settled abodes; yet they are generally poor and depressed.* In Mexico and Peru, Mey consti- tute one half of the inhabitants. The negroes, for the” most part, are in a state of slavery, and though the cheerful temperament of the race prevents ce from becoming gloomy and despe- rate, they are still reduced to the lowest scale in respect to whatever may dignify and ennoble human nature. : The whites, in America, are descended from Eu- ropeans, and still bear distinct traces of their origin, in person, manners and customs. . In many cases, es- pecially in the Spanish settlements, there is little to distinguish the people from those of the mother coun- try. In the following pages, we shall, for these rea- sons, treat briefly of American manners, that we may give more ample details respecting the. leading nations of the globe which seem to. have given law to the rest of mankind. * For a full view of this subject, see “ Manners, Ne A ae and Antiquities of the American Indians.” va THE POLAR REGIONS. Human society in this bleak extremity of the earth, exists in the rudest form, and on the most limited scale. The ungrateful soil refuses to man any sup- port; but the huge amphibia, particularly the seal and the walrus, with which the shores are crowded, being attacked with a skill and diligence prompted by neces- sity, yield a precarious but not scanty subsistence. _ All the arctic regions are peopled by that peculiar race called Esquimaux. The greater number of them, not belonging to America, are found on that extensive mass of land called West Greenland. The dominion of this region is clairaed by Denmark, which maintains along the shores a few scattered settlements, occupied each by a handful of Danes, who often intermarry with the natives. They employ themselves in cap- turing the seal, and in, exchanging with the people some European goods for skins, blubber, feathers, and the tusks of the narwhal. A vessel comes annu- ally from the mother country, bringing provisions and the materials of trade, and receiving the above articles. A few missionaries, chiefly Moravian, have employed their pious labors in the conversion of the natives, but ‘their success has been limited. . In height, the Greenlanders seldom exceed five feet’; they have flat faces with high cheek bones, and very 16 " GREENLAND. full cheeks. From their manner of life they are much inclined to fat. Their eyes are small and black, but with little lustre; and their hair is long and black. They have little beard, which they carefully eradicate. A life of alternate plenty and want in a severe climate is so little favorable to longevity, that few males live to above fifty years; the females, who endure less hardship, sometimes attain to eighty years. The Greenlanders generally dress in the skins of seals; their winter houses are built of straw and mud, near the sea; in summer they dwell in tents. The pursuit of the seal, is the chief pleasure and employ- ment of the men; the common drudgery is performed by the women. Their sports are wrestling and danc- ing, the latter being performed with many ludicrous stimaces. They have some obscure notions of a future state, and many superstitions, by means of which the jugglers practise gross impositions upon the people. Moravian missionaries have some stations among them, and a few have been converted to Chris- tianity. There is no formal magistracy in Greenland, and custom furnishes the law of the land. THE ESQUIMAUX. Tus race of people, which is spread over nearly the whole of the northern coast of America, differs much in form, manners and customs from any other tribes of the continent. They resemble more some of the natives of the north of Europe than the American Indians. In stature, they are below the Europeans generally. Those to the northwest of Hudson’s Bay are of a larger size than those of Labrador, but THE ESQUIMAUX. 17 all are dwarfish. Although they are diminutive, they are well-formed and hardy. ‘Their faces are round and full, their eyes small and black, and in some, the cheeks were as prominent as the nose. ‘Their eyes are not horizontal, but the lowest point is nearest the nose. ‘Their teeth are short and regular, and in the young very white. Their complexions are clear, and their skins smooth. Their hair is black and straight ; the men wear it long and loose; but the women who take pride in it separate it into two portions, and tie it so that one part hangs over each shoulder. Some of the men wear the beard on the upper lip and chin, and cut the hair on the crown, like the tonsure of a monk. Many of the females and children have pleasing coun- - tenances, even after the strictness of the European standard. ‘The old, however, are generally exceed- ingly ugly. The dress is of skins, with little variety of form. Along the shores the houses are of driftwood; in the interior they are tents of skins. In winter they build edifices of snow and ice. Their food is of fish, or the flesh of the seal and walrus. They often migrate, having no crops or permanent dwellings to bind them to one spot. They have vigorous dogs, which draw their sledges over the snow with the speed of the rein- deer. They are fond of dancing, and display much affection for their children. On the whole, the Esqui- maux are a gentle, simple and ignorant race, content- ed, if not happy, in the midst of a desolate and sterile extremity of the globe. = ate: BRITISH AMERICA. Tue extensive colonies of Great Britain in North America are chiefly inhabited by emigrants from Eng- land, Wales, Seotland and Ireland, and their descend- ants. The Irish brogue, the Scotch bagpipe and the ruddy English complexion are common in every part of the Provinces. Society has little to distinguish it that is not brought from the mother country, excepting, indeed, a bitterness of party spirit, not to be found in Great Britain, and surpassing anything to be met with in the United States. In Canada and the interior of Nova Scotia a New Brunswick, the descendants of the early French settlers are numerous, and present some interesting aspects in their society. They are called Haditans and possess much of the courtesy and contentment of their nations. They speak French, though it has become a species of patois. They enjoy a happy mediocrity of condition, possessing in abundance the necessaries of life and some of its luxuries. They are a contented, gay, harmless, ignorant, superstitious gossiping race. ‘They emigrate reluctantly and rarely, adhering to their paternal spot, and dividing it as long as possible among the members of their family. In religion the habitans have always adhered to their original Catholic profession. In this the British have “ BRITISH AMERICA. 19 fully protected them, continuing to support the estab- lishment, and levying a small. land-tax to defray the expense. The Canadian clergy are represented as exemplary in their conduct, diligent in the discharge of their functions, and by no means possessed of that violent spirit of proselytism, which has been often ascribed to them. Catholics are admitted to the house of assembly and to all offices, and are perfectly loyal. The amusements of Canada are not various. The French, always fond of dancing and of social parties, gave to the towns the character of being gay and hos- pitable; but Mr. Lambert says, “ that-since British residents have multiplied, a spirit of party, a propen- sity to scandal and jealousy as to rank, have consider- ably marred this harmonious disposition.” The food of the rural Canadian is chiefly pork, boiled in pea soup, which is the standing dish at break- fast, dinner, and supper. During Lent, fish, vegeta- bles and sour milk, supply its place. Knives and forks are accounted superfluous ; and to meals which can be eaten with a spoon, the whole party sit round and help themselves, from one general dish. Tea and coffee are only occasional treats. Unfortunately from its cheering influence, rum is much in request, and the habitant seldom returns from market without rather an undue portion. At certain seasons, and espe- cially after Lent, they have their “jours gras,” in which fifty or a hundred sit down to a table cov- ered with enormous joints, huge dishes of fruits and fowl and vast tureens of milk and soup. Dancing concludes the merriment. — be | UNITED STATES. Tue mass of the people of the United States are the descendants of English people who settled, im the country at various periods within the last two cen- turies. There have, indeed, been settlements formed here from France, Sweden and Holland, and emi- grants from these countries, as well as Ireland, Ger- many, and other portions of Europe, have been and still are pouring into the country. Still, the nation is essentially English, the tide of emigration hardly serving to tinge, certainly not to change, the general character of society. One of the most striking peculiarities of this coun- try, is, that from Maine to Louisiana, the people all talk better English than can be heard from the mass, in the city of London. For a space 1500 miles in extent, and among 15,000,000 of people, the traveller will ~ hear nothing like the provincial dialects of Lancashire, Northumberland, Yorkshire, &c., which render it difficult for the people of one county in England to understand those of another. There is not, probably, on the globe, an example of another nation, so’ popu- lous and so widely extended, that speaks any language so correctly, and with such uniformity, as do the Americans their English mother tongue. The freedom from those distinctions of rank which UNITED STATES. - 91 — Wy, 2 i . strike the traveller in other countries, is: a peculiarity of our 1 manners. We have no privileged classes, and’ none of the badges and liveries which- follow in their train. All classes dress alike ; all travel in the same vehicles; all meet: on the same footing of equality before'the law, and, for the most part, before society. The tendency to exclusiveness is checked and repress- ed by public opinion, which is exercised more to secure equality than even liberty. For this reason, American life appears to foreigners to be uniform, flat and insipid; as in costume, we are deficient in those picturesque dresses, which please the eye of a painter, so in thought and eedind we are regarded as wanting those contrasts which give interest and dramatic Geo to society in Europe. We are looked upon as all en- grossed in the single pursuit of wealth, not allowing time for those reflections and emotions which dignify and refine society. ; We are, doubtless, a busy, enterprising people ; ; the ample fields of prosperity, which lie open before us, are calculated to urge us steadily forward in the race of life. It may be admitted too, that society wears an aspect of uniformity:among us. But both of these points seem resolved into this—that we are an un- interesting people, because we are generally well off. We can easily afford to admit that we have no courtly standard of. _ manners, and ‘therefore ‘are, perhaps, be- hind some classes, in European nations, in artificial re- finements—while, as an offset, we may claim that-we have few paupers, and no beggars, except those that come from foreign lands. "When it is said, however, that. we are wholly engrossed in the chase of money, B 29: UNITED .STATES. “ ‘i we deny ne charge, and challenge the wrod to pro- duce another instance in history, in which so young a country has done so much-for literature, learning, re ligion and humanity, as these United States. One of the first things that strikes an American, in most foreign countries, is the constant appearance of military force in town and country. Such-a thing would not be endured here.- The few soldiers with us are confined to regular garrisons. The bristling of the bayonet, as a signal to the people, of their servitude and the necessity of their obedience, is tovaliing to every-sentiment of an American bosom. Another peculiarity of our country, is that we have no national church, no connection between church and state. very individual supports that worship which he prefers. It might have been supposed, that under such a system, religion would pass into neglect, but there is, probably, no part of the world where religion is better supported, and where it exercises a deeper in- fluence upon society. In dress, the people follow the fashions of Hurope: Paris gives the law in millinery and mantua- making, and the tailors of London are dictators as to male attire. We have no provincial costumes; law- yers and judges wear neither wigs nor gowns. The Catholic and Episcopal clergymen dress as in Europe, but those of other sects wear.a common black citizen’s dress, and sometimes a black gown in the pulpit. Our houses are chiefly of wood, and though the general arrangement is the same as in the houses of — England, yet the aspect is very different. Mr. Dick- ens, accustomed to the heavy-stone architecture and we UNITED STATES... | - 23 sombre hues of ‘the houses in. that country, was very much struck with the sharp outlines and white paint, of our New England dwellings. The American people are generally admitted by foreigners to display great energy and enterprise, and a remarkable power of mechanical invention. They are, doubtless, what might be expected of an Anglo- Saxon race, placed in circumstances to call every thrifty faculty into full exercise. “The United States,” says an able English writer, “ was colonized a century later than Spanish America ; but their brilliant and rapid progress shows, in a striking light, how much more the prosperity of nations depends on moral than on physical advantages. The North Americans had no gold mines, and a territory of only indifferent fertility, covered with impenetrable woods; but they brought with them intelligence, industry, a love of freedom, habits of order, and a pure and severe mo- rality. Armed with these gifts of the soul, they have converted the wilderness into a land teeming with life and smiling with plenty; and they have built up a social system so preéminently calculated to promote the happiness ‘and moral improvement of mankind, that it has become, truly, the envy of nations.” MEXICO. In this republic there are four distinct classes, viz. : the native Spaniards, called Chapetones ; Spaniards born in America, called Creoles ; mixed races, called Mestizos ; and the Indians. © The greater part of the first class have been ex- pelled; and the mestizos are chiefly in the lower sta- tions of life. ‘The Indians constitute nearly one half the population, and excepting a few wild and savage tribes to the north, they have submitted to the govern= ment, have adopted the habits of civilized life, and are a poor, quiet and inoffensive race. The Creoles, or Americans, as they choose to call themselyes, form a privileged class in comparison with | the other inhabitants. Retaining the general manners and customs of their Spanish ancestors, they are fond of splendor, and delight in riding horses richly capar- isoned. Many of them, descended from the first conquerors, or enriched by speculation in the mines, enjoy fortunes almost more than princely. Two or three hundred thousand dollars a year is not an un- common income for many of these families. These immense fortunes, however, are often dissipated in mining speculations, to which the owners are tempted ‘by one successful adventure, and in which they often squander all that they have gained, An ostentatious mode of living, a rage for gaminy’ and an ill-arranged. domestic economy, are also causes which involve the richest families in embarrassment. WEST INDIES. ‘Tuese islands, situated within the tropics, enjoy a delicious climate, and abound in the richest produc- tions of the vegetable kingdom. The original inhabit- ants—the first possessors of the soil, are swept away, and their sunny homes are parcelled out among various European nations, who hold them as’ colonies. ~Cuba, one of the finest islands on the face: of the globe, has continued in the hands of Spain since the days of Columbus. Its population is 800,000, three eighths of which are whites, three eighths slaves, and the remainder free blacks and. mulattoes. Among the white population, the manners of Spain, modified by condition and climate, prevail. Hospitality isa prom- inent virtue with the planters, and a general character of luxury and indolence pervades society. The Cath- olic religion is predominant, and displays its customary pageantry. . The slaves are severely tasked, uned- ucated and degraded. The cock-pit is common in Cuba, and the priest may be often seen there with his bantam. ‘Gambling i is a prevalent vice. Jamaica is also a fine island, having a population of | 380,000, and belonging to the British. About 40,000, are whites, the remainder are blacks and mulattoes. The slaves have been” recently emancipated, and, ac- cording to the testimony of numerous individuals, the 96 WEST INDIES. \ Da result is likely to prove favorable to the planters d io al well as the negroes. English manners prevail among the settlers, thongh the reserve and haughtiness of John Bull are exchanged for the hospitality and amen- ity which spring from a luxurious climate and the isolation of an insular position. Hayti, formerly called St. Domingo, has a popula- tion of 800,000, most of whom are blacks and mulat- toes. After a series of convulsions from 1791 to 1826, the independence of the .country was acknowledged by France, in consideration of 30,000,000 of dollars, to -be paid by instalments. Since the latter period, the country has possessed a regular government of a re- publican form. Thus Hayti presents the only exam- ple of an independent negro nation in the western hemisphere. The hopes of the friends of Hayti have not. been realized under its state of emancipation. The people are indolent, and the products of their fertile island have dwindled to a shadow of what they once , were. It is said, however, that very recently the industry of the people has revived, and thus the pros- pects of the country are improving. The state of morals is low; the government has slid into a kind of practical despotism; and the religion, which is Catho- lic, is slightly regarded. It may be remarked, that the benefits of independ: .ence have hardly been more conspicuous in Mexico and Buenos Ayres than in Hayti. We may therefore look to other sources than the negro character of the people for the partial success of their institutions. ) a _ SOUTH AMERICA. Tus portion of the Western Continent, embracing about seven million square miles, and about fifteen millions of inhabitants, is now parcelled out among independent nations, with the exception of Guiana, which is divided between Holland, France and Eng- land. Over such an immense extent of surface, there must be some diversity of manners, yet the whole may be grouped under two divisions. ~ Peru, Bolivia, Chili, Buenos Ayres, and the three states of Colombia were Spanish colonies for three centuries. The white population was derived. from Spain, and here Spanish manners, in dress, religion, arts, tastes and opinions, became established. These may be still found in Caraccas, Quito, Lima, Chuqui- saca, Valparaiso, and Buenos Ayres. In all these places may be seen cathedrals, monks, crosses, pictures of the virgin, and religious processions. The Spanish cos- tume ‘is also common with both men and women. — The stateliness of Castilian manners is, however, somewhat relaxed, and commercial habits are tending to introduce the arts and fashions of the oreat centres of European and American civilization. The tone of morals is by no means elevated, and the general as- pect of society presents little that inspires respect. The Indians, who constitute about one half the pop- = ye aS oO £5..75" foe tiple . a h i ‘ iz lL Ping 4 Ate asf A ie as, ie a : € on ah ae ; se ¥ iF { d V . at ee itt el 4 Se mas. a Ce ey wey : hi ; ii Pl te ee o ws : 28 ie SOUTH AMERICA. ed ulation, are even more depressed and degraded than, in Mexico. ary The other division of South America embraces the extensive and fertile empire of Brazil; a portion of the world peculiarly favored by its delicious climate and its varied productions. But the state of society furnishes a sad contrast to these bounties of nature. The population is about 5,000,000, one fourth of whom are whites, and the remainder Indians and negroes. Of the latter, a large portion are slaves, and in no. country does slavery possess a more revolting aspect than in Brazil. The country is now independent, being, governed by an emperor, who exercises almost despotic sway. The. religion is Catholic, and its im- posing ceremonials Gahvioh a large part of the amuse- ments ofthe people. In the cities, the manners of Lisbon still linger in respect to costume .and the gen- eral intercourse of society, though these are yielding to the general customs of Europe, which are every- where tending to an equilibrium. In morals and in- telligence the Brazilians stand even below the ‘other nations of South America. The colored population is in a state of extreme degradation; many of the In- dians still preserve their independence, while those who submit to the government and are regarded as within the pale of religion and civilization, appear to have derived little advantage from this condition,—for while they have lost the vigor and. independence of savages, they have adopted the degrading. vices..and superstitions of artificial society. ve) ee) 4 . EUROPE. Tuis division of the world, though smaller in extent ' than either of the other four, must still. be regarded as taking the lead in the arts and sciences, in literature and knowledge. ‘Though it was settled long after Asia; though it is less extensive, less populous, and less fertile than that cradle of the human family, still it has greatly outstripped it in all that belongs to civi- lization. | The present population of Europe is about 250, 000,- 000. . The principal cities are London, Paris, Vienna, Berlin, St. Petersburg, Rome and Constantinople. The means.of communication throughout. all parts of Europe are so.easy and abundant, that the manners of the people are becoming more and more assimilat- ed... The fashions of London and:Paris, in respect to dress, take the lead in all the commercial towns, ex- cept Constantinople. In general, the dress of the men in Europe is close, strongly contrasting with the loose and flowing costumes of Asia. The latter are more picturesque than the former, and are suited to an in- dolent and luxurious people, while the former are adapted to the active business habits of Europe. Nothing more incongruous could be imagined than the full dress of a Turk upon a. brisk shopkeeper of London or Paris. f 30 EUROPE. . Pree aif The leading nations of Europe, with their popula- , sot Mei , © tion, are exhibited in the following table. ' Great Britain and Ireland, - == - 26,863,957 France, - - - - - - 34,000,000 Spain, - - . o) - = 12,000,000 Portugal, - - - - - - 3,400,000 Italy, - - os - - - 21,800,000 Greece, - - - - - - 180,000 Turkey, - - eo - - - 10,000,000 Switzerland, = - - - - = ‘2,200,000 Austria, = - - - - - 35,000,000 Germany, - - - - - 38,204,000 Prussia, - - - - - - 14,500,000 — Holland, - - - - - - 2,545,000 Belgium, - - - - le 4,230,000 Denmark, - - - - - 2,190,000 Norway and Sweden, - - - 4,300,000 Russia, = - - - - - - 54,000,000 265,372,957 The energy of European nations has been remarlk- ably displayed within the present century, and pro- mises speedily to change the aspect of the other por- tions of the eastern continent. Africa is occupied at numerous maritime points by English, French and Portuguese colonies, and the light of civilization is rapidly encroaching upon the gloom of barbarism that has shrouded the country for ages. The exclusive systems of Asia are giving way before the arts and arms of Great. Britain and Russia, and even China, _ with its 340,000,000 of people, has, in our own day, been made accessible to the civilized world. The changes that will follow, before the close of the pre- sent century, will probably be in the highest degree interesting and important to the world at large. | ” iis ¥. ENGLAND. In external appearance, the English resemble the Aimericans. Their general mode of dress is what we adopt in the United States, though some of the ex- tremes of English costume do not cross the Atlantic. In high life the fashions are constantly changing, though more in details than in general forms. The varieties of English dress seem to have been exhaust- ed, and there is nothing new in it that has not once been old. The same garments have been used at every era for a long period, and the mutations operate chiefly on the forms of these. The greatest change in English fashions was ex- perienced during the period of the French revolution. In the ten years from 1790 to 1800, a more complete alteration was effected in costume by the spontaneous action of the people than had taken place at any pre- vious period during a century. This change began in France, and arose partly from a desire to show a contempt for old court usages, and partly from an imitation of certain classes in England, whose attire the French mistook for that of the nation generally. This new French costume was introduced by the party who were styled. Sans Culottes. It consisted of a round hat, a short coat, a light waistcoat and. pan- taloons ; a handkerchief was tied loosely round the o2 ENGLAND. neck, with the ends long and hanging down, and showing the shirt-collar above ; the hair was cut short, without powder; shoe-buckles were discarded for leather strings. “Ah, Monsieur! all is lost!” ex- claimed one of the old regime, when the minister, Roland, appeared at.court in shoe-strings. The comparatively simple dress of the Sans Cudottes found many admirers in England, and soon became common among young men there. The change from antique fashions was also greatly facilitated by the im- position of a tax upon hair-powder, which, from that time, fell into disuse. ‘Tight pantaloons remained in pretty common use till about 1814, when trousers, already introduced into the army, became fashionable. The general use of white neckcloths continued till the reign of George the Fourth, when that monarch’s taste for wearing a black silk kerchief or stock, and also the use of black stocks in the army, caused a very quick abandonment of the white neckcloth for the black one; this happened about the year 1825. The disbanding of the army after the peace of 1815, led to various other changes. While pantaloons were the fashionable dress, it was customary to wear Hessian boots: these, which had originated among the Hessian troops, were without tops, and were worn with small silk tassels dangling from a cut in front, and being drawn. over the lower part of the pantaloons, they had a neat appearance. When trousers were introduced, from. the practice of the army, the use of Welling- ton boots, to go beneath them, also’ became common. .. About the same time the surtout was also introduced. « When the collarless and broad-skirted: coat disappeared * ‘asnoy-wlof ys sug v4 ENGLAND. at the» commencement of the present century, the fashion of coats changed in various ways till the above-mentioned period, when the loose frock coat or surtout was added to the list of garments. ‘The sack, now in vogue as an outside sarmenb has been a dal introduced. 7 A man of fashion in Finglas 3 is compelled to. Sdehiotc a great portion of his time to putting on and off his clothes. Putting on the cravat, when cravats are in vogue, is an pier of great consequence. When Beau Brummell’s valet came down stairs with twenty or _ thirty rumpled cravats in his hand, and was asked what he had got there, he replied, “ These are our failures.” A well-dressed man, we are told, requires per week twenty shirts, twenty-four pocket handker- chiefs, nine or ten pairs of summer trousers, a dozen waistcoats, and neck-kerchiefs and stockings without number. He cannot get on without dressing three or four timesaday. Ist. At breakfast his toilette isa. chintz dressing-gown and Turkish slippers. 2d. Morning riding-dress: a frock coat, boots and spurs. 3d. Dinner dress: dress coat and shoes. 4th. Ball dress. - England is the paradise of tailors :- one of the fashionables of London has been known to wear three new suits every day for years. At his death, his old clothes sold at auction for fifteen thousand pounds ! : It is proper to remark, however, that neatness is the most striking feature of English dress. Men of high rank are nscale fastidiously neat and simple in eit common attire. A diamond of “ purest ray serene’ glitters upon the bosom, and a costly stone upon the finger ; but a display of gold chains, satin neckcloths, English Peer. 36, ENGLAND. 5 Se Pre, aii ‘ols nda facings, is esteemed aie The most refined taste rejects meary thing that appears to court admiration. | - As to the dress of lated: we can hardly venture to drole To paint the rainbow, is a task which demands a livelier pencil than ours—for while we are catching the form, the hues change, or perhaps have vanished from the view. It may be said, in general, however, that the ladies of England dress nearly in the fashion of ours. Both imitate the French, which is the Mecca of milliners and mantuamakers throughout Christen- dom. Yet the English ladies consult comfort and health, in their dress, more than ours. They wear thick shoes, and comfortable garments, when the season demands it, and do not sacrifice health and life, to the vain desire of showing a pretty foot in a pretty slipper, even though it be Décember. If the beauty of the English women is of a more masculine character than that of ours, they at least show a sound arid wise regard for the other sex in preserving it as fong as they can. In England, as well ds most otiee countries in Eu- rope, a particule costume is appropriated to some of the professions. ‘The gown is common in all pulpits, even out of the establishment. A hat turned up behind, is the mark cf.a bishop. The scholars at Oxford and Cambridge wear a gown, and cap with a. square top. Judges and lawyers wear gowns and wigs. The phy- sicians have no peculiar costume. When sitting in the House of Lords, the bishops appear in white surplices. In their habits and modes of life, the English may be called a domestic people, especially when compared ha: 8 Wace. Pe” ‘ ENGLAND: 37 with the French.. In regard to food, their taste is . inclined to that which i is solid and substantial. Roast beef, or other viands, cooked in the plainest manner, accord with their unsophisticated taste, and the repast is despatched more rapidly than on the continent, though not with the ravenous haste which ts-common in the United States. The English are fond of dining together in large companies on any- public occasion which can afford a plausible pretext for such an enter- tamment. A great dinner, followéd by a long train of toasts, forms the bond of union to all political par- ties, and to all patriotic, benevolent, and even religious associations. In the metropolis, various anniversaries are celebrated by persons who are natives of the same - county, or have been educated at the same university. It is not an uncommon thing for the stewards or com- mittees of these meetings to dine together on some day previous to the dinner, for the purpose of ordering it, and again on some day after it, for the purpose of dis- charging the bill. In common with other northern nations, the English retain a taste for fermented and distilled liquors, which, however, has been in a great measure corrected afd subdued in the higher and middle classes... Beer and porter constitute the staple drink of the great body of the people; but vast quan- tities of gin are also consumed by the lower orders, especially i in the metropolis, where it exercises a most pernicious effect upon their morals, the government making no exertion to check the consumption of it, as the excise upon this article constitutes a material item in the revenue. Among the middle classes, the wines of Spain, Portugal, and Madeira, are in general use C 38 ENGLAND. but the cellars of the rich are stored with the his a products of the French vineyards. : ’ . The dinner hour is usually five; the laboring pee of the community dine at one, ‘the highest rank at seven or eight, or even nine. The English eat more meat than the French, but their tables are not heaped with the immense loads common at American dinners. The roast beef of Old England is much superior to that of the continent, and is also better than the ave- rage of beef in the United States, but the best beef in England is in no respect superior, if it be indeed quite equal, to that of our own country. None but those in comparatively easy circumstances can enjoy much of: this luxury in England. The poorest of the laborers and manufacturers cannot have in a week as much animal food as the American laborer consumes in a day. With the rich, of course, the case is different. All bane of the globe are ransacked for an English-- man’s table. Turtle are brought alive from the West Indies, and their arrival is of so much consequence, that notices are immediately sent to the newspapers, particularly stating that they are “in fine order and lively!” India supplies sauces arfd curry powder ; they have hams from Portugal, Westphalia, and the United States; reindeer’s tongues from Lapland, caviare from Russia, sausages from Bologna, macaroni from Na- ples, and cheese from Parma. Fish come packed in ice from Scotland for the London market, and the epicures will eat no mutton but what is killed in Wales. The English: inns afford, the most perfect exhibition of. the manners of the middle classes. Every man shows himself here as he is, and seems to feel himself alone. The English traveller usually passes his time, ENGLAND. 39 when not out of doors, in what is called the coffee-room. In the evening the room is lighted with lamps; can- dies are carried, if ordered, to the gentlemen who sit at separate little tables, and it is amusing to observe. the perfect uniformity with which they all behave, as if they were machines out of one workshop. This is par- ticularly to be seen in their eating: though placed at separate tables, and no- individual taking the slightest notice of any other, they all seem to ey exactly the same usages and the same gastronomic tastes. A large joint of meat is sometimes carried from one to another, and each cuts off what he likes; this is accompanied by potatoes and other vegetables: sauces are placed on every table, and beer is poured out, and here commonly ends the dinner. Only the luxurious eat fish before meat; and soup is not to be had unless . bespoken beforehand. _* Now follows the second stage. The table-cloth is removed, a clean plate, knife and fork are laid; wine and a wine glass, a few wretched apples or pears, with _ hard biscuits, are brought on; and now the diner seems to enjoy tranquillity and comfort. His countenance assumes a placid expression; apparently sunk in pro- found meditation, leaning back in his chair and look- ing fixedly straight before him, he suffers a sip of wine to glide down his throat from time to time, only break- ing the death-like silence by now and then laboriously crunching his stony biscuit.. ‘When the wine is finished, succeeds stage the third: that of digestion. All motion now ceases; his appetite bemg satisfied, he falls into a sort of magnetic sleep with his eyes open. After this has lasted for half an hour or an 40 ENGLAND. hour, all at once it ceases: he cries out, as if under the influence of some sudden passion, “ Waiter, my slippers !” and, seizing a candle, walks off gravely to his chamber, to meet Tis slippers and repose. With the exception of the last item, pretty nearly the same scene is acted over in the first clubs of the metropolis. An Englishman shows more animation at breakfast than at dinner ; this meal consists of tea, bread and butter, eggs and cold meat. Custom enjoins it upon him to read the newspaper at breakfast, though she rigidly prohibits it at dinner, and at every sip of his tea he turns over the Times or the Morning Chronicle. The breakfast sometimes lasts for hours, and the sixth or ‘seventh cup is drank cold. . An-English traveller is excusable for complaining of the inconveniences of travelling in other countries, and he should be allowed some license in criticizing the accommodations for travellers in the United States. In England, the roads are excellent, the coaches easy, and. the speed great—not only on the railroads, by which almost every part of the country is now inter- sected, but on the highways and turnpike roads. In particular, the inns are much superior to those of any other country ; the houses are commodious, the furni- ture is’ good, the servants are prompt and attentive, and the host civil and obliging. All this is crowned with the neatness and propriety of arrangement that distin- guish the private dwellings of the English. As all these conveniences are for hire, it is but natural that the traveller whose appearance denotes most wealth should receive the greatest attention. The passenger who arrives in a stage-coach will not encounter such ENGLAND. 4) a rush of servants to welcome his arrival as he who comes in a post-chaise, and the pedestrian may often be left to wait upon himself, if he is even so fortunate as to be admitted to the house. The English travel much, and the life of the higher classes is almost migratory, being passed between London, the country, the watering places, and the continent. There are even among the yeomanry few of any substance who have not been at London. | The English servants are excellent, ee in the inns and lech tne and they are easily obtained, as it is considered no discredit to serve. At the inns the servants have no wages, and depend for support on the liberality of the guests.. Of course they are obsequious and obliging; they are always well dressed, and many of them are coxcombs. Some of them give a premium for their places instead of receiving a salary for their services. On. the arrival-of a coach there is a great rush of servants to assist the passengers in alighting. Two footmen stand at the door and proffer an elbow ; the chambermaid comes to show the rooms, and even Boots,” who gets his title from what he brushes, shares in the hospitable impulse. On the departure, the ser- vants range themselves in a line, and if any guest forgets a douceur, he is gently okt oie to “remember the chambermaid, Boots, &c.” It may be observed that every chambermaid is called Sally. Every one remembers Dr. Johnson’s panegyric of the English inns, where “the more trouble you give, the more welcome you are.” To this we may add the com- mendation of Shenstone, which is so often found scribbled upon the wainscot and windows— lei . oe a ee 42 ENGLAND. Whoe’er has travelled life’s dull round, , »Whate’er his stages may have been, » Must sigh to think he still has found His warmest weleome at an inn, The more numerous. class of travéllers, however, ’ who cannot afford the luxuries of the inns, resort to the alehouses; and these are often neat and commodi- ous. A traveller who desires to see the unsophisti- cated English character, will find it perhaps more at the idtioned than at the inns. In the establishment of an English eee the. men-servants are divided into two distinct classes: servants in livery, and servants out of livery. The servants who wear no livery, and who are considered superior to the others, are the butler, the under-butler, and the gentleman’s valet. The livery servants are the coachman, the footman, and the grooms. ‘To all families of. any consequence, a certain livery belongs. A livery is a coat and small-clothes of a particular color and stuff. The coat is of- fine cloth, and ‘the small-clothes of plush. Some wear a silver or gold epaulette on the left shoulder, or an aiguillette, which is a long silver or gold cord depending from the shoul- ders, and looped up with a gold or silver pin; also a hat with a gold or silver band. When a family isin mourning, the footmen wear black livery with.a black epaulette or aiguillette on the shoulder: — If the master of the house is a military man, or the lord lieutenant of a county, his footmen wear black cockades in their hats. ‘There is one livery which may be adopted by any family, as belonging to no peculiar oney this is a white cloth coat and scarlet plush small-clothes. Many ENGLAND. 43 families who dislike the color of their own liveries, dress their servants in this. The livery servants leave their liveries when they leave their places. The foot- men must wear powder ; so generally does the butler. _ Theking’s livery. is’ crimson and gold ;" so also is that of the Duke of Hamilton. The Fife livery is green and crimson with gold lace; that of the Earl of Weymess, dark blue and yellow with a profusion of silver. Pale blue and silver is the livery of several noble families. The coats ‘are lined and faced with silk the color of the small-clothes. The dress of the grooms is a frock coat, top boots, and white corduroy small-clothes. When they ride as postilions their dress is altered from a frock coat to a colored jacket agreeing with the livery, and the hat is changed to a black velvet cap, called a jockey cap. The under grooms, who, ate usually very small, light boys, are those chosen as postilions. The Sohelitan wears the same livery as the footman, but is distinguished by his frock coat.’ To this is added, when he mounts ‘the box, a bag wig powdered ‘and curled like that of a judge, to increase his dignified appearance ; also a cloth great coat with seven capes, three of the same color as his coat, the other four the same as his small- clothes. © | eh _ The duty of the coachman ‘is to superintend the carriage and horses, to see that the grooms do their duty, and to drive with grace and dexterity. The duty of the grooms is to rub down and feed the horses, and keep them in good condition; to brighten the harness, and keep the saddles, bits, stirrups, &c. in vorder. They are usually assisted by stable i and _ a4 ENGLAND. helpers. When the coachman mounts his box, two grooms should be in readiness to place his whip in’ his hands, and to hold the reins for him while he puts on his white gloves. A coachman of taste seldom ap- pears without a large bouquet in his coat. “The busi- ness of the butler is to take charge of the cellar, to see that the under-butler and. poinen do their duty, and to superintend at the serving of the table, upon which he usually places the first dish. The duty of an under- butler is. nearly the same. The gentleman’s valet attends solely to the personal appearance of his maSter. It is his duty to keep the gentleman’s wardrobe in order ; to curl his hair ; arrange his whiskers ; remind him. of his engagements; and to take care that his dress and appearance are exactly according to the last fashion. In a large establishment there are usually several footmen. Of these one belongs exclusively to the lady. He attends her wherever she goes, with a ‘cane in his hand, silk stockings, and a nosegay in his coat. He stands behind her carriage ; attends her to the opera, theatre, &c. &c., and walks behind her in the Park ; stands behind her chair at table, and should be six feet high. Footmen of this altitude are in great demand. The other footmen stand behind the car- riage, serve at table, clean the plate, and keep every- thing appertaining to the table in order. A separate table is usually kept for the upper and under servants, as the butler and gentleman’s personal servant con- sider it a degradation to eat with the footmen or grooms. Ladies of high hans in London are frequently at- tended by chasseurs and hussars, especially by the ‘ENGLAND. 45> former. © The dress of a chasseur is very splendid. It is either green and gold, or green and_silver. He wears a dress-coat covered with gold lace, loose trou- sers striped with gold, a cocked hat, and an enormous ' black plume and moustaches;. also, half boots of cha- mois colored leather, and gloves of the same, with a gold belt, in which is stuck a couteau-de-chasse. The tallest men are chosen for this office, and they are usually Italians. The hussar wears the dress: of a hussar officer, with a cap, cloak, and boots. It is the duty both of the hussar and chasseur to stand behind the carriage, and attend upon the lady, supplying the placesand doing the office of a lady’s footman. Architecture has received distinguished patronage from the successive sovereigns, and the principal nobility of England; and many recent specimens, both in the classic and Gothic: styles, reflect honor on the living professors of the art. London, the capital, is a well built city, yet the foreigner who visits it dis- covers that utility, not ornament, is the main charac- teristic of the place. The manner of building among the rich in England is not so much national as it is a collection of all that is national in other countries, and of what remains of former ages. Costly and magnifi- “cent piles of architecture are spread over the ible country, and there is scarcely a neighborhood which has not some edifice. that attracts the visits of travel- Jers. The Gothic, the Grecian, the Chinese, the Saracenic, the Egyptian, and various other styles of » building, for which art has no name, are found in England. The convenience of an Englishman’ s house is eyiivalicds everything is perfect in its kind; con- 46. ENGLAND. venience is more studied than: economy, and: there is not a door nor a window that is not’ jointed with the nicest art. The very farmhouses have an air of neat- ness and comfort that makes no part of the picture of a farmer’s dwelling in the United States. The walls are covered with creeping and flowering plants. .The roofs are frequently thatched with straw; andinsome | of the older towns, whole ‘streets of thatched houses. may be seen. England is the country of unequal wealth; and the cottage of the poor is strongly con- trasted with the mansion of the rich; “yet if there is luxury in the one, there is often comfort in the other. The cottages are both of brick and. stone, and though small, they are neat. The villages are generally old and dingy. It is in. the country mansion that the wealthy part of the English are seen to the best advantage. The traveller in England is struck with the beauty of the external aspect of England. Every house, every farm, séems to be’ kept with the utmost neat- ness. Nothing is seen unfinished; nothing is left as a blemish to the landscape; there are-no heaps of rubbish; no spectacles of dilapidation ; no works begun and abandoned as evidences of abortive schemes and ruinous enterprises. Whatever is begun seems to be carried on to completion. The lands are cultivated to the, highest pitch we per- . fection; the cattle are of fine breeds and are well- | kept ; the sheep are clean and fat; thé’ horses well . groomed, and generally in high condition. he's houses, though often old and meanly built, still bear. the marks of care so as to be kept tight and. dura- ay w ENGLAND. ° AO i mets Soper is displayed a taste for vines and flowers and‘shade-trees, about'the houses. The num- « ber of stately country seats is amazing, and the care anf ‘skill bestowed upon them are worthy of admiration. _ To account for this external aspect of wealth and # happiness, which strikes the traveller in England, we must bear in mind that a very large share of the soil - belongs to rich proprietors. Each. one of them is _ solicitous to preserve the family estate in good con- ~ dition, and to hand it down to his successor even , C4 improved | and embellished. To his cultivated taste, it “is as important that his house and grounds should pre- © - sent a tasteful aspect, as to afford convenient shelter or ample income. Thus a large part of the lands in the © _ kingdom are subjected to the cherishing influence of men of cultivated taste and abundant means. Nor is this all—the examples thus set are likely to establish a taste—a fashion—which will surely be followed by others. In respect to the humble tenements, it must be remembered that even these are usually the property of wealthy landlords, who are not likely to permit them — to offend against the general notion of propriety. If they are thatched, they must be well thatched, and brought near to the standard of penloeones in that style to which they belong. _ | The greater number of the egies in Tendon are of the following description. They are built of brick of a dingy brown color, and are of a pretty uniform style of architecture, plain and unornamented. They are narrow, and four or five stories in height; one of ° which contains the dining-room, another the sleeping apartments, a third the drawing-room, a fourth is ‘ le «i ‘Modern Houses in London pO a ENGLAND. 49 under ground for the kitchen, and the garret is for the servants. fs he ease and agility with which ‘the indi- viduals of the family run up and down and perch on the different stories, give the, idea of a cage with its birds hopping from roost to roost. ‘The plan of these houses is very simple: there are two rooms on each story, one in the front with two or three windows looking on the street, the other on a yard behind, often very small, the stairs being generally taken out of the breadth of the back roonf. The ground floor is usually elevated a few feet above the level of the street, and separated from it by what is called the area, a sort of ditch a few feet wide, and six or eight feet _ deep, inclosed by an iron railing; the windows of the kitchen are in this area, and a bridge of stone or brick ‘passes over it to the front door of the house. A: favorite sport of the English is fox-hunting; and as foxes are scarce in the south. of England, they are imported from France and turned loose upon the coast to keep up the breed for hunting. There is no race of people, not even the hunting tribes-of savages, who delight so passionately as the English in this sport. The fox-hunter of the last generation was a character as utterly unlike any other in society, and as totally absorbed in his own pursuits, as the alchymist. All his thoughts ran upon his hounds and his horses; his whole anxiety was that the weather might be favora- ble for the sport; his, whole conversation was of the kennel and stable, and history of his chases. This race, however, has much “decl ined, and now exists only in a few families, in which the passion has so long been handed down from father to son that it ‘ 50 ENGLAND. has become a sort of hereditary disease. The great alteration im society which has taken place during the present century, tends to obliterate all strong contrasts of character. The agriculturist has caught the spirit of commerce ; the merchant is educated like the noble- _ man; the sea-officer has the polish of. high life; and London is now so often visited, that the manners of the metropolis are to be found in every country gen- tleman’s house. But though hunting is less prevalent than formerly, it is still pursued with keen ardor and desperate perseverance, beyond even that of savages. The prey is the object for which these set their snares or lie patiently in wait; but with the English sports- man, the pleasure is in the pursuit. It is no uncom- mon thing to read in the newspapers of a chase of thirty or forty miles, and all this at full speed and without intermission; dogs, men and horses equally eager and equally delighted, if not equally fatigued. The grand resort of fox-hunters.at the present day. is at Melton Mowbray in Leicestershire, a place which — has sprung up within thirty years from an insignifi-’ cant village into a thriving town, where fifty thousand pounds sterling are annually spent in sporting. — This place generally contains from two to three hundred hunting horses in the hands of the most. experienced grooms which England can produce; the average. number of animals being ten to each sportsman, though some of them maintain double this number. A horse requires five days’ rest after a moderate run with the hounds, and seven or eight after a severe one. The stables and other conveniences here are ,on a superb scale. The horses, being of the first quality, cost at 4 ENGLAND. . wl least two. iiMindieedl 3 guineas each, and’ the annual... “expense of a stud of twelve hunters is not less than one thousand pounds. “The wear and tear of horse- flesh i is considerable, as one horse out of « every five or six; on an average, is lame, diseased or in some. way . unfit for work. Melton Mowbray is the metropolis of the fox-hunting world ; and the style of the sportsman here has long distinguished him above his brethren of. what he calls the provincial chase. When turned out of the hands of his valet, he exhibits the perfection: of his caste. The exact, Stultz-like fit of his coat, his’ superlatively well-cleaned leather breeches and boots, and the generally obvious high breeding of the man can seldom be matched Sciachie rb: The reader would be surprised by an enumeration of the persons of rank, wealth and fashion, who, during several months of evety year, resign the comforts and elegances of their family mansions for a small house in some paltry town of Leicestershire,—to the eye of any but a sports- man, one of the. most uninviting of all the counties of England. | ‘ The most marvellous feats are recorded in thé annals of sporting. We are told how a hunted animal, unable to escape, has sprung from a precipice, and _some of the hounds have followed; of a stag which, after one of these unmerciful pursuits, returned to its own lair, and, leaping a high boundary with its last effort, dropped down dead,—the only hound which had kept up with it to the last, dying in like manner. It is said hunting was the only English custom which William of Orange thoroughly and heartily adopted, as if he had been an ‘Englishman himself. He was a 52 ENGLAND. very bold rider, making it a point of honor never'to be outdone in any leap, however perilous. A certain» Mr. Cherry, who was devoted to the exiled family, took advantage of this to form perhaps the most pardon- . able design. hich was ever projected against a king’s life. He regularly joined the royal hounds, put him-* ~ self foremost, and took the most dangerous leaps, in “the hope that William might break his neck in follow- ‘ing him. One day, however, he accomplished a feat so imminently hazardous, that the king, when he came : to the spot, shook his head, and die back. Shooting is pursued with the same zeal. Many < a man who, if a walk of seven or eight miles were pror” « » posed to. him, would shrink from it as an exertion beyond his strength, will walk from sunrise till a late dinner hour, with a gun upon his shoulder, over heath ~ and mountain, never thinking of distance, and never feeling fatigue. A game-book, as it is called, is one of the regular publications in which the sportsman may . keep, an account of all. the game he kills, the time when, the place where, and chronicle the whole history of his campaigns. The preservation. of the game becomes necessarily an object of peculiar inter- est to the gentry, and the laws upon this subject are enforced with a rigor unknown in any other part of Europe. In spite of this, it is becoming scarcer every year. Poaching, that is, killing game without a license to do so, is made a regular occupation; from this source, the stage coaches carry hares, partridges, &c. from all parts of the kingdom to the metropolis for sale, and the larders of all the great'inns are thus regularly supplied; they who would eagerly punish, ENGLAND. 53 the poacher, never failing to encourage him by pur- chasing from his employers. Music and dancing can hardly be reckoned among the popular amusements of the English. Christmas, Easter and Whitsuntide, the only seasons of festival in England, are always devoted by the artificers and peasantry to riot and intoxication. Bull-baiting is a favorite sport of the vulgar, but nothing interests them more than a boxing-match,—although it is less in vogue than formerly. Pugilism, as it is scientifically called, seems to be peculiar to the English. This tiMEsious practice might easily be suppressed; it is against the laws; ities magistrates may interfere if they please; yet exhibitions of this sort are frequent. When a match is made between two prize-fighters, the tidings are immediately communicated to the public in what are called the flash newspapers, and paragraphs occasionally appear; stating the rivals to be in training, what exercise they take, and what diet,—for sometimes they feed upon raw beef as a preparative. Meantime, the amateurs and gamblers choose their party, and the state of the betting appears also in the newspapers from time to time; not unfrequently the whole isa concerted scheme, that a few rogues may cheat a great _many fools. _ When the combat at length takes place, a regular report is prepared for the newspapers, as if it were an affair of national concern; the particulars are recorded with a minuteness at once ridiculous and disgraceful, for every movement has its technical or slang name, and the unprecedented science of the successful combatant becomes the theme of general admiration. : D 54 ENGLAND. The Clubs form a main feature in the social system of the richer classes in London. Formerly they were merely the resort of gamesters, politicians, or men given to the pleasures of the table; at present they have assumed a more intellectual character ; and every calling has its peculiar club, from the soldier to the scholar. The effect which this multiplicity of clubs has produced is thought to be highly beneficial ; it has begun to counteract the reserved and solitary disposi- tion of the people: it opens a ready intercourse with foreign guests, who are usually admitted as honorary members. It has been thought that the clubs render men less domestic ; but in fact they render them less un- social, and form a cheap mode of intellectual relaxation, and unbend the mind while improving it. But these are their least advantages ; they contain the germ of a great improvement in the condition of the humbler classes, who will sooner or later adopt institutions so peculiarly favorable to their condition. By this species of codperation, a man with £200 a year can, at pres- ent, command the luxuries of a man of £5,000 a year,— airy and spacious apartments, the comforts of the table, lights, fires, a library, and intellectual society. The same principle, on a humbler scale, would procure the same advantages for the shopkeeper or, the artisan. All that luxury and convenience demand is found at the club-houses in as great perfection as in private dwellings. The stairs and rooms are covered with fresh and handsome carpets; marble chimney-pieces, superb mirrors, and a profusion of furniture, adorn the rooms. Numerous servants, neatly dressed, are in attendance ; and a porter is always at his post, to take # ENGLAND. 55 charge of great coats and umbrellas. In the elegant and well furnished library there is a person always ready to fetch you what books you want; all the magazines, newspapers, é&c. are provided in the reading-room; a large collection of maps and charts are arranged in a separate apartment ;—in short, every convenience for study may be found in these estab- lishments. The arrangements of the first-rate London clubs have now arrived at such a point of perfection, that young men of fashion not only spend the greater part of their time there, but care little for any other society than they find there. Newspapers, billiards, conversation upon sport, gaiety or politics, lounging at _the windows and quizzing the passers-by, usually fill up their morning hours, and dispose of those dull moments during which no votary of fashion can with propriety be seen out of doors. Returning either from his attendance at parliament, or from a fatiguing ride, a Member has the satisfaction of having a dinner at a moment’s warning, without the troublesome necessity of dressing or pulling off his boots. If he gives a dinner to a party of his fashionable friends, a private apart- ment is provided for him, together with every luxury and delicacy that London can afford,—the most perfect attendance, the best cookery and the rarest wines. The English are unquestionably the greatest gam- blers in Christendom. London abounds with gaming houses, great and small. The most famous is Crock- ford’s : it is situated in the fashionable part of the city, and is probably the most extensive and splendid gam- ing establishment in the world.. The house and fur- niture are supposed to have cost £100,000 sterling. 56 ENGLAND. The most sumptuous dinners are here given, free of charge, and the choicest wines are added in profusion. Young noblemen who have just succeeded to their estates, and others who have large expectancies; are sought out and taken by the arm by some person in the pay of the establishment, whose business it is to hunt for victims. By this agent they are invited to dine at Crockford’s, but not a word is said about cards or dice. They feel flattered by the invitation” and accept it. After the sumptuous dinner a liberal supply of choice wines will often inspire a disposition for gaming where it did not previously exist. It is a great object to dupe one of these “ flats,” as they are called, and a regular plan is concerted to effect it. All the skill and cunning of experienced gamblers are put in requisition. ‘The victim is treated with the utmost courtesy and attention, and for the first few nights he is allowed almost invariably to wm. During the interval, the proprietor of the establishment has informed himself of the amount of his property, and he has been inspired with confidence in his own skill and a deeper passion for play. The road to ruin is made smooth: all his desires are gratified; he seems to have everything in his own way: his purse is filled with unexpected gold, and he dashes into the fashion- able world with exultation and display. The wine-cellar is the great agent that ensures suc- cess to the establishment. This is an enormous vault filled with the choicest liquors in the world. The cook has a salary of a thousand guineas a year, and spreads an entertainment as exquisite as the most fas- tidious epicure could desire. After the young prac- oH, ix ENGLAND. 57. titioner has enjoyed his good luck and good dinners for some time the tables are turned, and he begins to lose. But he considers it only the fortune of the game: no man can expect to have all the luck on his side, and the play goes on. His ready money is gone ; what shall he do? The embarrassment cannot be borne: it must not be whispered in the circles of fashion and rank, where he has already made a sen- sation, that the young lord can no longer keep up his establishment; but he has no money. This matters not, since Crockford’s bank, which is always full, will advance him cash to the amount of his property. He is now ready for a deeper and more exciting game, with the belief that the luck will turn, and he feels that he must win back his money or fall from his elevation in disgrace. In this state of mind he is introduced to a private room, where the French hazard-table stands, and here the work of plunder and ~ robbery’ is prosecuted on a grand scale. The stakes are usually high: the first he wins; and then, per- suaded that the tide of fortune has turned in his favor, he grows more daring. The next stake is higher, and this also he wins. The delicious wines sparkle on the table afresh, for it is only under the maddening influence of the bottle that these deeds of desperation are performed, and the game once more goes on. An immense stake is laid, exceeding the aggregate of all that had gone before—the throw is made and he loses it! He now feels that unless he can recover himself by a single fortunate stake he is a ruined man; and in the madness of desperation he resolves to make or mar his fortune forever: he stakes his all : and the next cast of the dice makes the young nobleman a beggar! a + — 58 ENGLAND. Such is the manner in which the most princely for- tunes are dissipated. If a man, whose estate is known to be sufficiently large, offers to play for a stake of £100,000 at Crockford’s, the proffer is instantly accepted. Young noblemen under age have been known to con- tract “debts of honor” here to the amount of more than the above sum, which they paid off at the expira- tion of their minority. It is morally certain that every man who frequents this establishment will come off a beggar at last, unless he is a sharer in the gains of the~ house; and when his money and lands are gone, he is no longer wanted there, and is generally turned away with little ceremony. Crockford, the proprietor. of this establishment, died during the present year (1844,) leaving an immense fortune of a million and a half sterling, the whole obtained by his gaming tables. He was originally a fishmonger, and during his whole lifetime was to the last degree illiterate, coarse and vulgar; yet he was supreme lord among the-crowds of noblemen who flocked to his club-house. It is esti- mated that- the sums annually lost in the different gaming houses in London, or “ hells” as they are very appropriately termed, amount to eight millions sterling, annually. | Nor are the hells of London the only places where gambling is carried on. Betting at horse races, the cock pit, the sparring match and the ring, is practised by all classes, from the lord to the lackey. Betting, in fact, constitutes, at all these amusements, the pre- dominant source of interest. As the horses, at a race course, approach the stand of the judges, the whole mass of spectators seems to writhe with an intensity of ENGLAND. 59 feeling only to be accounted for by the fact, that in addition to the excitement produced by a spectacle of strife, a lively pecuniary interest is felt by thousands distributed through the multitude. Lords and ladies are present, and as they bet thousands of pounds, it must be expected that men and women will follow their imposing example, and where pounds are beyond their means, they will risk shillings or pence. Even boys catch the spirit of the occasion, and risk their money as bravely as their betters. Of all offences against the laws of good breeding in England, we are told that the three following are the greatest, viz.: to put the knife to the mouth in eating ; to take up sugar or asparagus with the fingers, and to ‘spit anywhere in a room. These may be laudable prohibitions in England, though manners differ greatly in different countries. A perfectly well-bred French- man uses his fingers where an Englishman does not. Marshal Richelieu detected an adventurer who pre- tended to be a man of rank, by the single circumstance of his taking up an olive with his fork. Eating with a knife is pretty common in the United States, owing, perhaps, to the fact that the food is of a more liquid character than in England. There is apparently an undue importance attached to these matters, but trivial things are always of the highest moment in what relates to etiquette. A person who has seen much of the world, gives the following advice to a young tra- veller. “In Naples, treat. the people brutally: in Rome, be natural: in Austria, never talk politics: in France, give yourself no airs: in Germany, assume a great many: and in England, don’t spit.” A Dutch- 60 ENGLAND, man who was very uneasy on account of the last pro= hibition, declared that an Englishman’ s only spitting- box was his stomach. e A traveller in England cannot fail to admire the well-adapted arrangement of everything belonging te the economy of life; and especially that of the public establishments. The systematic rigor with- which whatever has been determined on, is executed, is a striking national characteristic. In the United States our habits of change, our love of novelty, sometimes lead us to overturn a good institution without scruple ; it is the new broom only that sweeps clean. In Eng- land, the people go even to the opposite extreme. ‘be _ from a drawing made on the spot!” In our brief space, we cannot furnish a hetior idea of | - the pomp.and circumstance surrounding the throne of England, than by giving the following account from a _ recent English paper. “Lofty was the ceremonial, splendid. the feast, in “Windsor Castle” last night; ‘when Queen Wigtonia’s “ie Shc > I iy ZA te “AG es a } i Fel : | N i, ! ’ {| Q ‘| It H My iL Niel i; als he He] ee pn vith ; ARIEL BIIY APrtotes ea Ak Ke end of AG 4 Fe 7 7 J “its on Bh M te 3325 97 9: Tiare gee Paty easy) } aes i Nit L Ot | a i AAI | \ w 5 ee a, aed B Ny ah oe he A “ | H i ; if ac ¥488 *. Smtr as aha, alo Ais oat a Ke 2 AN Aa ll it ‘ Y a es ee ‘a SN ASIEN ZA T PEE IE ES LAGI t BIR bat BAER’ ETE RULE BATS Chapel at Windsor. ENGLAND. 85 second son was christened. Royal visiters began to arrive early in the afternoon,—the Duchess: of Kent, the Queen Dowager, with Prince Edward of Saxe Weimar, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with the Hereditary Grand Duke and Grand Duchess of Meck- lenberg Strelitz, the Duchess of Gloucester, Prince William of Prussia; all suitably attended. Many more distinguished visiters also came—foreign minis- ters, cabinet ministers, and others, and were admitted to seats: in the chapel. . The sacred place was gor- geously fitted up for the occasion: the altar covered with crimson velvet and gold, and illumined by wax lights in golden candlesticks. The Archbishop of Goskesury presided at the altar, aided by the Bishop of Norwich and the Bishop’ of Oxford, with the Queen’s and Prince Albert’s chaplains. After six o'clock all was ready, and the royal procession entered the chapel. This was distinguished from previous pageants by the presence of the elder children. First came some officers of the household. ‘Then the spon- sors—namely, the Duke of Cambridge, proxy for Prince George; the Duchess of Kent, proxy for the Duchess of Saxe Coburg Gotha; the Duke of Wel- lington, proxy for the Prints of Leiningen: followed by the ladies and gentlemen of their suites. More officers of the household. The Queen, leading the Princess Royal, walked with Prince William of Prus- sia by her side: Prince Albert was beside the Queen Dowager, and led the Prince of Wales. Then came the rest of the royal visiters ; and lastly, more officers. The Queen. wore a white satin dress trimmed with Honiton lace, a diamond tiara on her head, with the & i 86. ENGLAND. insignia of the Garter: the little children were dress- ed in white satin and lace; the princes in military uniforms. The service began with Palestrina’s ‘ O be joyful.” . When the music ceased, Prince Albert’s Groom of the Stole conducted into the chapel the Dowager Lady Lyttleton, bearing the royal infant; who was baptized by the Archbishop; the Duke of Cambridge giving the name—* Alfred-Ernest-A bert.” His Royal Highness Prince Alfred was carried out of the.chapel to the sound of Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus from Judas Maccabeus. A benediction closed the service, at seven o’clock ; and the procession withdrew in the order of its entrance. “ Within half an hour afterwards, a bevy of guests entered St. George’s Hall for the banquet. _Number- less wax-lights made it brighter than day; the tables and sideboards, covered with the riches of the house- hold treasury, ‘shone all with gold and stones that flame-like blazed.’ The Queen sat at one end of the table, Prince William on her right, the Duke her un- cle on her left; Prince Albert sat at the other:end, be-. tween Queen Adelaide and the Duchess of Kent. More royal guests, the clergy, cabinet and foreign ministers, ladies and gentlemen of the household and’ of the several suites, surrounded the board. The Steward of the Household gave the toasts, beginning with ‘His Royal Histindss Prince Alfred ;” music playing at the meal and between the toasts. “ After dinner, the Queen led the way to the Wa- terloo Chamber; where a concert was performed of instrumental music by Beethoven, Haydn, Mayerbeer, Spohr, Mendelssohn, Bartholdy, and Weber. Spohr’s piece was a manuscript symphony, describing the ENGLAND. » rs, 87, moral career of man—the bright innocence of child. hood, the age of passion, and the reign’ of mature vir- tue : it was composed for two orchestras, and was per- formed accordingly, by eleven solo-players in the east gallery, and a‘numerous orchestra in the west gallery, more than a hundred feet distant; seventy performers in all. Thus the rejoicings terminated.” _ The preceding sketches will enable the reader to form some idea of the gorgeous and imposing attributes with which royalty is clothed in England. Though the. good sense of the people forbid the Asiatic belief that the sovereign is a divinity, there is still an habitual idol- atry toward the king and queen, which is scarcely less profound. The present sovereign is seen to revolve in an orbit of peculiar splendor, and her sex, youth, and fair fame, have added a lively personal interest to the usual attractions of the occupant of the throne. _.It would be painful to turn from this glittering spec- tacle, to what are termed the lower classes of England. While the brilliant train of those who are called noble. “are rushing by in wealth and splendor, there are mil- lions of suffermg beings crushed beneath the relentless wheels of pomp and power. -It is not within the scope of these pages to exhibit the condition of the people of ' England, and if it were, the subject is: too familiar to require enlargement here. We need only say that the pictures of poverty, degradation and misery, throughout the three kingdoms, which are brought to - us in the English: papers, by every steamer, are in- deed frightful—and it would seem that even the mu- sical voice of adulation which fills the ear of majesty, must be drowned by the groans’ of suffering millions throughout the realm. WALES. “Tae Welsh, as a relic of an ancient Celtic people, possess few external marks of their origin, They have, to a great extent, become Anglicised in costume, and we should in vain search among them for the breacan, or. chequered clothing of their Seythian an- cestors. The general material of dress is home made, or, at least, a common kind of woollen cloth and flannel. The women wear close-fitting jackets and dark brown or striped linsey-woolsey petticoats. The most re- markable part of the Welsh costume is the hat worn by the women. All females in the parts of the country not modernized, wear round black hats, like those of the ‘men, and. this usage is countenanced to some extent, by ladies of the higher ranks. The fashion is . derived from England, but it is two or three centuries old. Young women wear mob caps pinned under the chin; the alder ones wrap up their heads in two or three colored handkerchiefs. Both young and: old throw a scarlet whittle over their shoulders, except in North Wales, where this is replaced by a large blue cloak descending to the feet, which is worn at all sea- sons, even in the hottest weather. Linen is rarely used, flannel being substituted in its place. Neither’ are shoes or stockings worn, except sometimes in fine weather, and then fi are carried in the hand if the e hey oy WALES. © 89 af “I woman be ‘going any Hstsmices and put on near the © place of destination. ~The Welsh peasantry live in cottages, vali are in general equally wretched without and within. There is a scantiness of furniture, and a great absence of comfort in the rooms. One small apartment with an uneven mud floor contains the family and effects. A miserably Small window, half covered with paper panes, admits a scanty portion of light: a bed in one corner, and one or two turn-up Hedsteads, looking like chests of drawers by day, show the room to be both dormitory and kitchen. The bed is an enormous square thing like a closet, opening with a kind of door at the side, and generally containing six or seven sleepers. ‘The rest of the furniture consists of a table, a chair, a stool or a bench, a pitcher, bucket, &c. The more ornamental furniture consists of a little earthenware on a rickety shelf or dresser. From the Pda floor you not unfreguently look into the loft, which is reached by a ladder leading to an opening’ in - whe ceiling, if the rafters have any ceiling at all. This loft is rarely occupied, being commonly used as a receptacle for lumber. It is surprising to see the num- ber of persons who live in these small dwellings; - Nine or ten children are sometimes counted at the door of a cottage scarcely larger than a sizeable closet, all of whom, with their parents, eat, drink and sleep within :° these creatures, however, look ruddy and healthy, and seem not to know that they are packed almost as closely as bees in a hive. A recent traveller in Wales observes, “I have seen two old women living together in a room that many a dainty well-styed pig 90. % WADES. would grunt and turn up his nose at. Two,beds entirely filled one side of the long, narrow apartment; a'little table, a chair and an old pre lined the other, whilst a mere passage in the middle led from the door to the. fire-place, by which the poor creatures sat. There was nosymptom of awindow. Did they require light in the depth of winter, when frost and snow were biting them, they were obliged to open the door to perform their necessary aiitioss even though the white flakes darted in upon their scanty furniture, and the cold blast whistled through the hovel, whilst their aged limbs shook and vibrated to it.” The Welsh market-women are exceedingly good riders; they sit on their horses as squarely and easily as they would in an arm chair, 'They wear large red cloaks and shawls; and a ludicrous. incident once occurred of a body of French invaders being seized with a panic and retreating to the coast, at the sight of a phalanx of mounted Welsh wives descending a hill. 'The-horse is commonly well laden; the tips of » his ears and of his tail, with a portion of his legs and feet, are alone visible on one side. In front sits a jolly” farmer’s wife, with a-round face and a broad hat; each cheek discovers ‘the flap of a very stiff cap, the 5 borders of which nearly meet-under the chin. A red cloak falls from her shoulders and almost covers the horse; beneath the cloak, a dark striped petticoat of coarse woollen material reaches nearly to the shoes, which are very substantial although ill-shaped. ‘One . hand carelessly holds the bridle, the other grasps — with care a huge basket. | The dame disdains a whip, or the horse requires none—as he jogs on at’a steady, sit Oy WALES. m” 91, untiring pace. Behind, on the:same horse, sits a ruddy-faced, strapping girl of about eighteen, the age at which Welsh females mature into prettiness. There is more attention to show in her costume. Her rounded figure is shrouded by no cloak, but a neat crimson handkerchief is pinned tightly over her shoulders, and as the loose outer skirt of her gown falls back, it displays a petticoat. of fine material striped with red. Look a little further up the road, and you will see a similar pair, the hindermost of which has a baby in her lap, whose disposition is none of the quietest, for he claps his little hands with glee at every jog of the animal they are riding. Ata marriage among the lower classes in. Wales there must be a staffell, which corresponds. with the trousseaw of the French, though it embraces a greater number of articles than that fishionsble appendage to a lady’s bridal. The generosity and attachment of the man, do not, generally speaking, make him unmindful of his household comforts, which he expects his in- “tended wife to provide for him before he takes her for better or worse. The earliest and most earnest desire of a Welsh woman is to procure a good staffell.. For instance : a girl enters’ service at the age of sixteen, and she may remain at service till thirty, before she has completed her staffell. With the first five shillings of her earnings she buys two cups with red and yellow birds upon them, a jug, a pictured plate, a teacup and saucer. It is true she is in want of a new gown, and ‘is obliged to go without stockings, except on Sundays, but what of that? Two cups, a jug, &c. are the beginning of a. staffell; and she knows that without a a 92 WALES. staffell she cannever get a husband. Year after year she is constantly adding to these articles of earthen ware. Not a fair or iteilcos does she visit without picking up something. There seems to be a strange fancy for jugs in this business. The traveller above quoted says, “ Upon a certain shelf in her mother’s house, and under lock and key, may be seen «some twenty or thirty jugs of all forms, and ornamented: with every species of device; large jugs and small jugs, tall jugs and short jugs, some painted over with — flowers, trees, birds and houses, and others with men, horses and hounds. She -has tea cups and saucers without end; plates with’ little. similarity of form or size; drinking cups in equal profusion; one or two choice glasses; several little china sheep and lambs, with trees growing out of their tails, and not, like the one which sheltered Baron Munchausen, proceeding from the back of the animals ; spoons that try to per- suade you they are silver; a deep blue thick glass teapot, &c.. All these she has, and much more, which has absorbed her income, or a considerable part of it, from the age of sixteen to thirty. Wonder not, oh ye damsels! at Sally’s early efforts at staffell-mak- ing. I know a respectable old maid who has been keeping company with a smart widower for the last twenty years, and whose banns have actually been published half a dozen times, yet whose devoted lover will not marry her because her staffell has not yet attained the size and substance he thinks necessary, for domestic comfort.” | * It has often been observed that eigitiguidetbe tosh knowledge have not made the same advances in the WALES. 93 Highlands as in the, Lowlands of Scotland ; and the observation’ is as applicable, perhaps, to Wales and England; in other words, the Highlanders are to the Lowlanders what the Welsh are to the English, al- though knowledge is gradually dispelling the dark- ness in which the inhabitants of both countries were so long benighted. It is worthy of remark that there are few absurd superstitions or ridiculous customs be= lieved or observed by the Welsh, to which analogies may not be found in the mountains of Caledonia. The Welsh “raptures” and the. “second sight” of the Highlanders derive their origin from the same source, and both may be traced to the period of the Druids. The Welsh prophets, or poets or rhapsodists, are call- ed Awenddion: they are a class of persons who ins dulge in poetical raptures, and like the ancient sibyls, prophesy in incoherent rhapsodies. ‘The prophet is carried out of himself, or is possessed by a spirit, and the only difficulty consists in attaching a meaning to his wild utterances; for ‘as soon as he returns to his usual state, he is supposed to forget all his poetic or insane effusions. It is but right to add that such ora- cles are now seldom consulted, and only in the most sequestered and thinly peopled parts of the country. | Among a variety of Welsh customs, those in court- ship, marriage, and at funerals, excite particular atten- tion: Hymenial negotiations are frequently carried on by the Welsh peasantry in bed. » The young swain goes sometimes several miles to visit the object of his choice at her residence—the lovers retire to a bed- chamber, and between two blankets converse on those subjects which the occasion suggests. This usage is ie 94 i WALES: » confined to the laboring classes of the community, and is scarcely ever - productive of those improprieties which might naturally be expected. Previous to the celebration of a wedding, a friend undertakes. the office of a bidder, and goes round the neighborhood to invite all persons of nearly the same situation of life as the contracting parties. In consequence, the friends and neighbors for a great distance round, make a point of attending the wedding, laden with presents’ of money, butter, cheese, &c.; these are carefully recorded by the clerk of the wedding, opposite to each respective name, and are to be repaid in the same public manner when occasion offers. This ancient custom is consid- ered as established by law, and the sums may be legally recovered in court, but a sense of the reciprocal. pid pyaprelly prevents litigation. The ‘funerals in Wales are attended by greater crowds of people than even the weddings. When the procession sets out, every person kneels,.and the min- ister repeats the Lord’s Prayer. _ At every cross way “the same ceremony is repeated, till they arrive at the church, the intervals of time being filled by singing psalms and hymns. A remarkable custom prevails in some parts of Wales, of planting the graves of depart- ed friends with various evergreens and flowers. Box, and other plants fit for edging, are planted round. in the shape of the grave for a border, and the flowers are . placed within, so that the taste of the living may. be known by the manner of embellishing these mansions of the dead. The snow-drop, violet, and primrose de- note the infant dust; the rocket, rose, and woodbine show maturer years ; while tansy, rue, and star-wort hie ee me es, rf Ld a \ Cae ate Cee ee: pe Fl eg he hobo DS is hes Sal ; ‘ . mark declining years.. Each grave has its little ever- green—fond emblem of that —— state where “change is known no more. tives ‘Tt has been observed itso mountainous scenery is peculiarly friendly to those aérial and imaginary exis- tences which constitute the objects of superstition. ‘This is exemplified in Wales. The belief in witchcraft is still strong ; many are the fatal effects supposed to be produced by supernatural agents ; and many are the. charms which are believed to be more or less efficacious ‘in averting the wrath of these unfriendly beings. A horse-shoe, a cross, or a circular stone, may be seen in almost every house, and the hypericwm, or St. John’s wort, which has now almost as many mystical virtues as were formerly attributed to the veronica of the Druids, is scattered at the entrance of many a cottage on the vigil of St. John. Witches are believed to be malevolent, and it is of much consequence to conciliate . them, for they are dreaded as having the power to commit great mischief. Many old women, on account of their age or deformity, bear the odium of preventing the cows from yielding milk, the butter from forming in the churn, and of spreading diseases among men’ and cattle. The spirits of the mountains, celebrated by the Welsh bards, are, on the contrary, benevolent beings—they protect the good.and punish the wicked ; and the same may be said of the elves, fays or fairies, that are supposed still. to dance by the light of the moon, and describe their circles on the green hills of Wales. In some degree connected with fairies is another species of supernatural beings called knockers. These, the Welsh miners say, are not to be seen, but i? _— 96 “WALES. are heard under ground, in or near the mines; and by their noises, which represent the different stages in the progress of mining, generally point out to the work- men a rich vein of ore. An opinion is prevalent with- ‘in the diocese of St. David’s, that sprevious to the death of a person, a light is sometimes:seen to pro- ceed from the house‘and pursue its way to the church, precisely in the track that the funeral will afterwards follow. This is traditionally ascribed to the special prayer of St. David, that no one in his diocese should die without this intimation of departure, which is call- ed canwyll corple, or the “ corpse candle.” fe ' m » ls er ae hye abs 4 AG ps Feet Ee 4 i pe’: i ‘ OP Bad et AN ‘i. ag Uy mts Bg .< tite, mg: By Ratatat Hix Dai +4 te) : ri 4 © gif sae a ny . ret 5 ie. Ey men il SCOTLAND. +i . mi X BY @ PT Gli y Mei SR ba sees ‘ fa z — sia , 4 Me iF Very little of the ancient national costume of: the Scotch remains at the present day. The inhabitants of Edinburgh, Glasgow, and other cities and towns of Scotland, are dressed in. precisely the. same fashion as those. of London. The original dress of the Scotch Highlanders resembled that of other Celtic tribes, and A os @ _ SCOTLAND. consisted of little else than a woollen garmentof ‘va- riegated colors. wrapped round the body and loins, _ with a portion hanging down to cover the thighs. In process of time this rude fashion was superseded by a istinct piece of cloth forming a philibeg or-kilt, while another piece was thrown loosely as a mantle over ‘the body and shoulders. The cloth was: variegat- ed in conformity with the prescribed symbol of the clan. As modernized and improved by the Highland regi- ments, this dress is one of the most picturesque and graceful i in the world ; though it leayes the limbs bare about the knee, the Highlanders never suffer any in- convenience from it, even in the coldest weather. The bonnet has been for ages a part of the Highland cos- tume, as it was formerly of the Lowlanders.: The full dress of the Highland chiefs and gentlemen is liberally adorned with i ored;3 baldric, dirk, large brooches, buckles, shot- -pouch and purse. The pipe: or sporan is a most important part of the costume; it is formed of the skin of a wild animal with the hair on, and tied to the waste by a band; it hangs down in front so as to fall easily upon the lap. It is usually ornamented with silver tags or tassels, and a flap covering the mouth.of the purse is sometimes decorated with the med of a fox. | After a period of sndigdrenict as to the preservation 6 this beautiful costume, there has latterly sprung’ up a more national tone of feeling on the subject, both among the Lowlanders and Highlanders. » ial “aged by. prizes. liberally awarded by’ the Caledonian Society of London, a public exhibition takes place tri- 2 SCOTLAND. = ee ennially at Edinburgh, at which, there is a competition of skill in playing the Highland bagpipes, dapeing; and taste in dressing in proper holiday ‘costume. A. hundred or more men. generally attend from all parts of the Highlands i in their respective clan tartans; and the exhibition, as ‘a surviving relic of manners’and customs among the most ancient in the world, is hii ys interesting. y « In the Lowlands, the gray checked plaid. ne sie. fs all, innovations, and. is universally worn by shep- herds and other persons in rural districts of the coun- try. The chequering is very simple, consisting. only of. small cross bars of white and black, and. the general effect is gray. The length is greater than: the breadth, to enable the wearer to wrap one end round his body and shoulders, and allow the other to hang gracefully down the back. The right arm is generally left. dis- engaged. The dress of the females consists.of a white mob cap,.a. short gown of coarse print, and a coarse woollen petticoat, either dark blue or red.'The sleeves are usually tucked up above the elbow. - Sometimes they have coarse shoes and stockings, but great num- bers: go barefoot. Sam Foote once told a story of his attending at kirk in Scotland where the preacher was declaiming against luxury, and, says he, si there was not a pair of shoes in the whole congregation.” » ‘The gentlemen in the Highlands, especially saiiaies of war, wear the tartan, the peculiar. dress of that country. Among the other classes, the Scottish bon- ‘net is now rarely seen except in the Highlands ; it was the usual covering for the head all, over. Europe, till towards the end of the sixteenth century, when the 100 _ SCOTLAND. hat, formerly worn only: i in riding or, hunting; ¢ into- general use. The Scotch peasantry sh 7 generally clothed in good, broadcloth, worsted stock: | ings and stout shoes, instead of the homespun garmen and nudity of the lower extremities. This last. singu- larity, common in Wales, and even in England about two centuries ago, is mostly abandoned, even by the Scotch lasses.. In the Highlands, the distinction... of dress which: still prevails, proves the most fatal intaade iment to the progress of civilization Reo tostarigy aad fional prejudices. Side In the luxuries of the table, the superior patos “of the Scotch rival the English, and the gentlemen, are perhaps rather more.fond of wine. The abundance and beauty of: the table- linen are highly praised: by strangers. Several national dishes, formerly» served up at the best tables, and originating from the F rench cooking in the reign of Mary, are now either: neglect: ed or abandoned to the’ lower classes, such as the hag- gis or hachis; the cock-a-leekie, or capon boiled with leeks; crapped heads or stewed haddocks, the heads being stuffed with a kind of forced-meat balls, &e. The diet of the lower classes deteriorates in.a gradual transition from the English border northward... The chief food is parritch, a thick porridge made of .oat- meal, savored with a relish of milk, ale, or butter ;-in a hard, lumpy form it is called drose. » With this the laborer is generally contented twice: or thrice, in the day, with a little bit of meat for Sunday. He -_envies . not the English laborer his bacon, it. being. a. food which he commonly detests, for the Scotch: have an old: antipathy to: swine as impure animals, into which a ~~ SCOTLAND. 101 the demons passed, as mentioned in the New Testa- ment. A similar antipathy prevails against eels, from their resemblance to a snake, and particularly to the old serpent. A great luxury to a Scotchman is a singed sheep’s head. In the matter of drink, the low- er classes of Scotland were little given to intemper- ance till a series of injudicious laws and regulations reduced the wholesome malt liquors to little better than mere water, and in a manner compelled the com- mon people to resort to the noxious beverage of whis- ky. In general, however, their sobriety is exemplary, and the Scotch laborer, instead of wasting his weekly gains at analehouse, is ambitious to appear with his fam- ily'in decent clothes on Sundays and. other holidays. This may be regarded as a striking characteristic of the Scotch peasantry, who generally prefer the lasting decencies of life to momentary gratifications. ~The amusements of the rich are similar to those of the English, but those of the peasantry have many variations. The game of curling consists in roll- ing large stones with iron handles upon the ice, to- ward a fixed mark, a favorite and healthy diversion in the winter. The English quoits are supplied by pen- ny-stones, or round, flat stones, which are tossed in the same manner. — . If the Scotch are not cheerful they are even-tem- pered, and at times they are given to merriment. “At Edinburgh, on the last night of the year, it is the cus- tom to sup abroad. At midnight, on the striking of the bells, the people sally forth in such numbers, that — all the inhabitants seem to be out of doors. It isa night of revelry ; the watchmen retire from their G Me hi 102 SCOTLAND. rounds, and anybody who is abroad, by accident or de- sign, is liable to be saluted with a kiss, and the severi= ty of the custom is seldom relaxed in favor of any’ rank. The Highlanders are very social, and their suppers are delightful meetings ; they are held about nine o’clock, and the company separate before mid- night. These meetings have little formality, but great freedom and cheerfulness. When they separate, they join hands and sing some little favorite song. The manners and customs of the Scotch have lately begun to assimilate more closely with those of the English. In their religious ceremonies attending bap- tism and marriage, there are, variations arising from the Presbyterian form, which does not admit of god- fathers or godmothers, but renders the parents alone answerable for the education of the child. The cler- gyman does not attend at funerals, nor is there any reli- - gious service, but generally great decency. The hearse seems a more appropriate machine than the close wagon so called in England, being a light and lofty carriage of trellis-work, painted black and spotted with the resemblance of falling tears, an idea derived from the ancient French ceremonies, as may be observed in Montfaucon’s collection. » Among the lower classes the funerals are generally far more numerously attended than in England ; nor is black an indispensable color of dress on such occasions. The houses of the opulent have long been erected on the English plan, which can hardly be surpassed » for interior elegance or convenience. Even the habi- tations of the poor have been greatly improved within these few years, and instead of the mud hovel thatched a SCOTLAND. 108 with straw, there often appears the neat stone cottage covered with tile or slate. Whence the ancient custom arose of placing the dunghill in front of the house, cannot well be imagined. Perhaps it was intended as a defence ; and if so, it is useless in pacific times. Some persons are of opinion that it was meant as a display of opulence. Among the Scottish superstitions, the most remark- able is that in relation to what is called second sight— a power believed to be possessed by certain persons in the Highlands of Scotland, and the isles of the western coast, of foreseeing future events, particularly of a disastrous kind, by means of a spectral exhibition of the persons to whom these events relate, accompanied with such emblems as denote their fate. This power has been attested by many credible authors, among whom is Mr. Martin, author of the natural history of the Western Islands, and however ‘strange it may appear, many have steadily believed it. ‘The second sight is a faculty of seeing things to come, or things done at a great distance, represented to the imagination as if actually visible and present. Thus if a man be dying, or about to die, his image, it is pretended, will appear distinctly in its natura] shape, in a shroud, with other funeral apparatus, to a second-sighted person, who, perhaps, never saw his face before, immediately after which the person so seen certainly dies. ‘This power, they say, is not hereditary ; the person who has it cannot exert it at pleasure, nor can he prevent it, nor communicate it to another; but it comes on him involuntarily, and exercises itself on him arbitrarily, and often, especially in the younger seers, to their PMN WOVE ae ey WV ureehoy 7 FS, Maat ce ae eens Say Ae errata ws MEN Trek a von rt "% ¥: ye Oa ie a '% I ad sh i \ 4 ey PEN ee ae 104 SCOTLAND. great trouble and terror’ At the sight of a vision the eyelids of the person are erected, ead the eyes con- tinue staring till the object vanishes. The seer knows neither the object, time, nor place of a vision before it appears, and the same object is often seen by different persons living at a considerable distance from each other. If an object is seen early in the morning, which is not common, the event will be accomplished within a few hours. If at noon, it will take place some time during the day. If in the evening, perhaps that night. If later, in a certain number of weeks, months or years, according to the lateness of the hour. Whena shroud is perceived about a person, it is a sure prog- nostic of death; the time is judged according to the height of it upon an individual: if it is not seen above the middle, death is not expected within a year ; the higher it ascends towards the head, the nearer ‘the event is judged to be at hand. If a woman is seen standing at a man’s left hand, it is a presage that she will be his wife. Visiters are seen coming to houses before their arrival, and the seers give accurate de- scriptions of their stature, complexion, dress, &c., which are sure to%be verified by the event, as we are asuded by Martin, who says, “I have been seen thus myself by seers of both sexes, at some hundred miles’ distance ; some that saw me in this manner had never seen me personally, and it happened according to their visions, without any previous design of mine to go to those places, my coming there being purely actidental » Molt is common with these persons to see houses, gardens and trees, in places void of these objects. Thus at eS Se Te SN ee Pee ye See Steele | Maree cipet CeO MURS ae, FU AL PRON RAC SRC a PMG WA Se meses Gee TY Ns Ja " 4 ote C pre ‘SCOTLAND. 105 Mogstot, in the Isle of Sky, as we are informed by the above author, such things were visible to a seer, although there were none such on the spot; but a few years after, several good houses were built, and orchards planted there. A person might exercise this species of second sight in the United States, without gaining the reputation of a necromancer. Children, horses and cows have the faculty of second sight, as well as men and women. “That children see,” says Martin, “it is plain, from their erying aloud at the very instant that a corpse or any ether vision appears to an ordinary seer. I was pres- ent in a house where a child cried out of a sudden, and being asked the reason of it, he answered that he had seen a great white thing lying: on the board which was in the corner; but he was not believed until a seer, who was present, told them that the child was in the right, ‘ For,’ said he, ‘I saw a corpse and the shroud about it, and the board will be used as part of a coffin, or some way employed about a corpse,’ and accord- ingly it was made into a coffin for one who was in perfect health at the time of the vision! That horses see, it is likewise plain from their violent and sudden starting, when the rider or seer in company with him sees a vision of any kind, night or day. It is observ- able of the horse that he will not go forward that way until he be led about at some distance from the com- mon road, and then he is inasweat. A horse fastened by the common road, on the side of Loch Skeriness, in Sky, did break his rope at noon day and run up and down without the least visible cause. But two of the neighborhood that happened to be at a little dis- 106 SCOTLAND. tance, and in view of the horse, did at the same time see a considerable number of men about a corpse direct- ing their course to the church of Snisort; and this was accomplished within a few days after, by the death of a gentlewoman who lived thirteen miles from that church, and came from another parish, from whence very few came to Snisort to be buried. That cows see the second sight appears from this: that when a woman is milking a cow and then happens to see the second sight, the cow runs away im a great fright at the same time, and will not be pacified for some time after.” Martin relates minutely a great number of stories similar to the above, in all of which he appears to have reposed implicit belief. Yet Doctor Johnson, who was ready to believe im almost anything of a supernatural character, after carefully examining the subject of the second sight, could find no good evi- dence of its reality. We scarcely need to add that it deserves to be classed with the exploded fables of witchcraft and ghosts, so tong prevalent in most countries. According to the faith of the Aebo there is a way of foretelling death by a cry which they call Taisk. This is heard without doors, and resembles the voice of the particular person, whose death is foretold. A spirit, by the country people called Browney, is fre- quently seen in the isles and the northern parts of Scotland; he appears in the shape of a tall man, but his visits are not so common as formerly. There are spirits also that appear in the shape of women, horses, swine, cats, and fiery balls, which follow men in the fields. These spirits make sounds in the air resem- rahe ei eae 2 1 ae i ny Rit SCOTLAND. | 107 bling those of a harp, pipe, the crowing of a cock, and the grinding of mills. Sometimes they sing Irish songs which relate to the condition of the dead in the other world. Such are some of the superstitions which still linger in the Highlands. Mountain ’ scenery, it has been remarked, is the favorite locality of such wonders. It is certainly not unfavorable to such delusions—for mountain scenery in most cases must be regarded as implying want of communications, want of intercourse, and want of the means by which knowledge is diffused, and education is extended to every order of the community. ; IRELAND. Tue Irish at an early period wore the same Celtic fashion of attire as was preserved in recent times, in the Scotch Highlands, but everything of the kind dis- appeared as the country became Anglicised. A prim- itive species of attire, including colored mantles, kir- tles, and other fanciful garments, remained in use till the sixteenth century, when laws were made by Henry VIII, enjoining the use of caps, cloaks, coats, doublets and hose, of English forms. The general dress in Ireland at the present day rare; ly varies from that in England. There are, however, some interesting peculiarities of costume among the peasantry of the southern and western counties. j ata - | 8 tamale gta” ‘ FRANCE. — 121 dread of returning adversity; while the memory é the brilliant successes of their arms tempts the latter to believe that their supremacy and prosperity must endure forever. The luxury, dissipation, and. bound- less extravagance which exist among the higher classes in England are strongly contrasted with the opposite habits of their neighbors in France. The French are become cautious, prudent and economical, and there is a certain atmosphere of good sense and good taste to be found in the better classes which prevents them from being foolish, ridiculous or vicious. ' At the present day, the fortunes in France, with a few exceptions, are not large, and the law of inherit- ance tends to diminish them; no cases oecur of men of rank and family plunging headlong into ruin. The temptations to extravagance and luxury are certainly asalluring at Paris as in any other capital, but not only every father of a family, but every young man who enjoys independence seems anxious to reculate his expenses by the scale of order and prudence. It would be considered an act of very bad taste to incur large debts’ without the immediate means of paying thet: “That reckless profusion which, in England, consigns whole estates to the hammer of the auctioneer, and entails poverty on future sab? al is almost unknown in France. The French families of distinction live more on their estates than formerly: le vie du chateau is not without its charms; the example. of England has given a taste for agriculture, and when the economy of a country life is combined with projects for the im- ‘provement of landed property, a four months’ residence 122 | FRANCE. in Paris may be deemed quite sufficient for all ‘the purposes of gaiety and pleasure. The French are comparatively a very contented people : they: enjoy whatever comforts are within their reach, and neither imitate nor envy those who possess. superior advan- tages of rank and fortune. Above all, they are free from that rivalry with each other in luxury and ex- pense, which proves the bane of so many: foxpaliccs? m England. ’ There is another site Mlent trait in the French charac- ter which foreigners seldom condescend to notice, or perhaps few have had the opportunity to appreciate. This is the great harmony and affection which gene- rally subsist among the different members. of each family, long after they have entered on the pursuits of ; active life; a circumstance which may be attributed to the patriarchal manner in which they often continue to dwell under the same roof with their parents. In England, and especially in the United States, when _sons and.daughters marry, they remove at once to another and perhaps distant residence, flushed with ideas of independence,.and anxious to form new. inti- macies more congenial to their youthful tastes, than the sober family party-which they have left at home. Thus parents and children, brothers and sisters are inevitably thrown into different spheres: each having their own objects in view, whether of pleasure or am- bition, till at last their meetings dwindle down to casual visits, they see less of each other, while con-— tinual absence gradually dissolves all the early ties of duty and affection. In France, they have no such worldly-minded separations: the son introduces his’ mak 3 FRANCE... 123 youthful bride to the paternal mansion, which then becomes doubly his home; they have their separate independent apartments and servants, they visit or receive their friends separately, but at the hour of dinner all assemble round the head of the house, and keep up that confidential intimacy, that bond of union, which continues through life to endear them’ to each other. A recent traveller pronounces the opinion that mar- riages im France are generally happy; and when it is considered that they. are in almost every instance concluded by the parents without any decided previous partiality between the contracting parties, it may be- come an interesting question why the so called love matches in England are often productive of such very different results. If the French marriages are happier than the English, it may perhaps be owing to the com- parative ascendancy which the French wives possess over their husbands, or more properly speaking, the equality which subsists between. husband and wife. There is a proverbial prejudice in an English domestic establishment against the interference of the female in anything that regards the husband’s conduct, which has drivenmany a weak and self-willed man to cause the misery both of himself and of his partner, rather than listen to advice which a moment’s.cool reflection would have taught him to approve. In what is called fashionable life, the regular habits of a French family, the prudent administration of a moderate fortune, and the sober enjoyment of quiet society are better calcu- _ lated to ensure happiness than nights spent at Crock- ford’s, under the fascination of play and excitement, 124 _. FRANCE. which inevitably bring in their train loss of. fortune, loss of character, and loss of internal peace. The vice of gambling is almost unknown in French society ; since the suppression of the gaming-houses, all games. of chance are strictly prohibited by law; and indeed, for the last few years of their existence, those houses were little frequented by men who were much known in the world. ¥ It has frequently been remarked by foreigners, but more particularly by the English, that the French are deficient in hospitality to strangers; and-with’ the exception of some few families the charge is not with- out foundation... But,,at the same time, allowance should be made for national habits, and also the posi- tion in which they are accidentally placed with regard. to their foreign visiters. . Society in France is now split into two sections, the partizans of the late, and. those of the present monarchy ; these are separated by. a barrier of antipathy which prevents all. communica- tion with each other. Political distinctions are here an inseparable bar to, general imtercourse, and those promiscuous crowds of tory, whig, and. radical, which overflow the halls and staircases of a great house in London, are never seen at Paris. Then the system of giving large formal dinners, which constitutes the groundwork of all London society, is quite a secondary consideration. with the French. It would be impossi- ble, where large families are constantly assembled, to. invite a number of strangers to their table: this cere- mony is not even in general use among themselves ; “a few intimate friends find there aconstant welcome, but the enjoyment of general society is reserved for FRANCE. | 125 the evening meetings, which take- eae without for- mality and.without invitation. — Few traits are more conspicuous :in the iesbah character than vanity and self-confidence. There is no contrast more striking, when we compare. the English with the French, than that exhibited by the reserve approaching to timidity, of the former, and the full confidence in themselves. displayed by the latter. A shrewd and experienced foreigner has remarked, that if. a hundred persons, indiscriminately, were stopped in the streets of London, and the same num- ber in the streets of Paris, and a proposal were made to each individual to undertake the government of his country, ninety-nine would accept the offer at Paris, and ninety-nine would refuse it in London. A Frenchman. believes that wit supplies the place of everything; the Englishman thinks that nothing can be. done without both knowledge and practice. A Frenchman being asked if he could play on the harp- sichord, replied, ae do not know, for I never tried, but Iwill go and see.” This reckless confidence is car- tied into the most serious matters, and may be pointed out as one of the chief causes which led to the calami- ties of the French revolution. Each member of the National Assembly thought himself equal to anything. Never were so many men congregated together who fancied themselves legislators capable of repairing the faults of the past, finding.a remedy for all the errors of the human mind, and securing the happiness of future generations. Doubt of their own powers: never once found its way into their bosoms. _ The most common mode of travelling in France is 126 FRANCE. by the Diligence, which is one of the cheapest, although at the same time one of the slowest methods. | ‘This vehicle is something between a wagon and a coach, It goes night and day till the journey is ended, stop- ping only for meals and the change of horses. ‘There’ are usually five of these: one is within a heavy pair of shafts; another is harnessed without the shafts’ at the side of the first, and the three others are harnessed with ropes abreast. The postilion is a peculiar char- acter: he wears a little round hat, a green jacket, hair en quewe, and a pair of enormously large jack- boots. The nature of his equipments calls upon him for constant expedients, and he seems to be always joining a bridle, knotting a whip, or knocking on'a saddle with a stone.- He-is off and on his horse’s back» many times’in a stage without stopping the vehicle. If a passenger calls, he dismounts, pops his:head into the window, or runs by the side. The diligence has a conductor who sleeps inthe cabriolet, or forward apartment, and who sits at the head of the table with the passengers. There are three apartments in the vehicle, with an upper story, called. the — where the passengers commonly lie down. Another mode of travelling in France is by the voiture, which is a more comfortable method of con- veyance than by the diligence.’ When a single party engage the whole voiture, it differs in no respect from travelling in a private vehicle, except that the right _ of property in the horses and carriage is but tempo- rary, and the coachman does not wear a livery. Tn France, there are but few’ stage-coaches, and no good ones except between Paris and the towns on the Brit- FRANCE. 127° ish Channel: »The post-houses furnish no carriages, but horses only. In every great town, there are per- sons whose trade is to keep. carriages for those who wish to travel, but have no carriage of: their own. Two.or three places being engaged, the voiturier makes up his cargo ashe can; and rather than have any vacant seat in his carriage, he will sell it at a low rate to such as-can afford to pay but a low price. He then makes up with dead lumber what is wanting in weight of live stock, and the company, being assem~ bled, proceed as they can under the auspices of the conductor, who presides at their meals, a bargain hav- ing been made with him previously, to. furnish food as well as lodgings. . Some of these men, of course, are ready to employ any means of overreaching their customers; all the precaution that can be taken against them is, to see everything, write down everything, ‘even to the number of the dishes, and above all, to have time at command. » A French innkeeper of the dishonest class ale tates care to keep some cracked china vase or broken pane of glass on hand, for which payment is demanded when the carriage is at the door. It is to no purpose that you examine the fractured articles and point out that the edges of the fractures are rounded by use,.and dirt is seen in the interstices, plainly showing that the damage is not of recent date; the innkeeper knows that you wish to depart immediately, and that you will rather submit to the imposition than lose your time. A travelling Englishman once, on leaving his apartment, was stopped by a demand for a cracked pane of glass; his conscience acquitted him of the ne x 4 128 FRANCE. deed: after having for some time fruitlessly pleaded hisannocence, he quietly raised his cane and broke in pieces the cause of the altercation. ‘This pane shall be paid for no more,” said he, patriotically mindfal ni ' the interests of his successors. The French have in their climate an aid to’ senj0y ment which is not within the reach of their neighbors the English, and which. goes far to account for the superiority of the Frenchman in cheerfulness and sociality... The sources of pleasurable and healthful pursuit are open to all classes, and even a tyrannical government cannot deprive them of this advantage. The English people, on the contrary, are the prisoners of their climate; their pleasures must be bought; and. their unhealthy and unnatural excitements—sub- ject to the grasp of taxation—are dearly purchased or painfully foregone.» Instead of a cheerful sun, they seek the comfort of a coal-fire, and even this enjoyment, is meted out to poverty in the smallest quantities,and at the dearest price; and when the rigor of the season drives the population to the use of fermented. liquors, the government with its grinding taxation stands be- tween the cup and the lip, and renders the question- able draught, without any pin of speech, a more than deadly’ poison. , » ile Among the many Picardie which (ier themselves in Paris, those afforded by its numerous and beautiful pub- lic gardens, are perhaps the cheapest andthe best. The ‘gardens of Tivoli, the Luxembourg, the Tuileries, the Garden of Plants, the Champs Elysées, the Bois de Boulogne, and the gardens and grounds of the many royal villas in the neighborhood of the capital, exercise FRANCE. 129° a beneficial influence, not only on the health and enjoy- ment, but also on the character and temperament, of the citizens of Paris.. The taste for out-of-doors amuse- ment thus engendered, by turning the public from an habitual indulgence in artificial excitements, favors that cheerful and elastic temperament which develops intellect, promotes courtesy and creates fixed habits of good breeding. The common people, always im the presence of nature, are more awakened and alert than the citizen of another country who is perpetually pent up in narrow streets or the walls of a tap-room, where, besotted with strong liquors, he has neither food for his mind nor organs in a state fitted for reflection. | ‘In the Champs Elysées, on a fine summer evening, the lively French temperament is seen in all its force, and to the greatest possible advantage. Here the sim plicity of the old French character is visible in the amusements and recreations of the lower orders, min- gled with the pursuits opened to them by modern improvements, while the social qualities of the higher orders come out in the most pleasing relief, and in the brightest light. The noble avenue of Neuilly, which is but a prolongation of the great alley of the Tuileries, _ is crowded with carriages, either drawn up, while their owners are seated under the trees, or in motion with those who are too indolent to descend, or too full dressed to encounter the dust. Groups of persons are listening to musicians of every country, performing their national airs, while the true French bands are chanting their vawdevilles and airs de théatre. These “musical troops move in succession from circle to circle, till a certain hour, when they assemble before the eh 130 FRANCE. pavilions of their respective cafés, by the glittering lights of which, seen through the cross avenues, they show with a fairy effect. The multitudes seated on the lawn, taking ices and lemonades, are of the middle and lower ranks, and are listening to the exquisite music of Rossini, Auber: and Pacini, with whose master-pieces they are as familiar as a New England psalm-singer with Old Hundred and. Little Marl- borough. » While pleasure and the arts are thus nist at smaller prices than’can purchase them in any other country in the world, a still lower range of amuse- - ments at a still lower rate, are offered to those who are fond of the swing, the roundabout, and sailing through the air in a ship, which produces all the agreeable effects of sea-sickness without the danger of drowning. Meantime, Punch and Judy announce the commence- ment ef their performances, by lighting the solitary candle in front of their little theatre, and take their ‘chance of remuneration from the munificent sous which indigent gaiety freely bestows in return for its hearty laugh. ~ The weighing-chair, with its tempting white cushions, is always in readiness ; and a course of mats ural philosophy is given on the green..sward by an Armenian ‘conjuror, who expounds the mysteries of nature toa class:of listeners, quite as intent on his ex- periments as if they proceeded from the Sorbonne. + The French females have exercised a greater influ- ence than any of their sex since the time-of the Baby- lonians and Egyptians. No country has produced a race of women so remarkable, or one which affords history so many great names and great examples. FRANCE. 131 Without going back into remote times, we may re- cord the names of Madame Roland and Madame de Staél. These two women, alone, without protection, save that of their own talent, boldly vindicated the power of the mind before its two most terrible adver- saries, the Mountain party and the despotic Napoleon ; and they have trrumphed with posterity even over the guillotine and the sword. There is an energy; a de- sire for action, a taste and a capacity for business, among the females of France, the more: remarkable - from the elegance, the grace, and the taste for pleasure . and amusement with which this sterner nature is com- bined. From the moment that women were admitted into society in France, they have claimed their share in public affairs. Excluded from the throne and the sceptre by the laws, they have frequently ruled by a power stronger than all laws: and amidst a people vain, frivolous, gallant, chivalric and fond of pleasure, —a people among whom the men have in their char- ‘acter something of the woman,—the women have taken their place in life by the side of the men. -- Whenever the French armies have been engaged in the neighborhood of France, there have always been found many of those delicate and graceful females who adorn the saloons of Paris, slain on the field of battle, to which they had been led, not so much by a violent passion for their lovers;—French women do not love so violently,—as by a passion for that action and ad- venture which they are willmg to seek, even in a camp. At the battle of Jemappes, General Dumourier had for his aides-de-camp two of the most beautiful, ‘accomplished and delicate young women in the so- if % 132 FRANCE. . ciety of that time. Equally chaste and warlike, these modern Camillas felt a veneration for the profession of arms: they delighted in the smoke of the cannon and the sound of the trumpet. In the most desperate charges of the battle, their slender but animated voices were heard rallying the flying regiments, and urging” on the attack; and their waving plumes and Amazo- nian garb were seen in the thickest of the fire. It is not only in high society and “good society ” that we find the female in France taking an important position. It is the same in the compting-room, the café, and the shop. ‘She is there also the chief per- sonage; she is book-keeper, cash-keeper, and general superintendent of the business. Go even into the shop of a sword-maker or gunsmith, and it is an equal chance that you will be waited on by a female, who will handle the sword and recommend the gun; and there is a mixture of womanly gentleness and mas- culine decision. in the little creature, so easy, so un- embarrassed, so prettily dressed and so delicately shaped, which you are at a loss to reconcile with all ‘vour preconceived notions of effrontery on the one y p i hand and effeminacy on the other. In the eyes of Frenchmen, especially of tHe ola school, la belle France is the centre of all that is re- fined and polished in human existence, and whatever lies beyond its sphere is marked with a deep taint of barbarism ; while their rougher neighbors: brand them as artificial, effeminate and fantastic. . The art’ of liv- ing in society certainly appears to be carried to a greater perfection in France than in any other country, and the manners are characterized by a peculiar gaiety, FRANCE. . 133 amenity and.courtesy.. The polish of the higher ranks seems to have descended to the lowest circles. The man who breaks stones upon the road takes off his hat to the woman who leads acowin a string. The tinker and the shoe-black whip off their caps to each other. A certain openness and kindness of disposition, called bonhommie, is evinced in the custom which we have de- scribed, of whole families with married sons:and daugh- ters continuing to dwell under the paternal roof. The Frenchman eos as it were,.in public ; his house for ‘apart of the day, i is open to a large circle of acquaint- ance. . He enjoys society without expense and cere- mony. ‘He resorts habitually to the theatre, spec- y y » Sp tacles, and places of public amusement. Im more serious points of view, the French possess estimable qualities. Intoxication is a vice confined to the lowest ranks, and swearing is repelled, at least, as a mark of barbarism. They are ingenious, acute, active and in- telligent; and if they have not what can strictly be eulled patriotism, they have; at least, a “ent pani national feeling. » In speaking of the French senda we are too apt only to think of Paris, and.to forget that the character and condition of the nation at large is to be sought in the great mass of the people throughout the country. While the ladies of the saiasail gli are perpetually changing their dress, the costumes of the middle and lower ranks are fixed by usage, and are subject to little change. Every station has, indeed, its peculiar cos- tume. The wife of a shopkeeper, ora milliner’s girl, wears a dress equally distinct from that of a: peasant ora lady. - A bonnet is considered as the exclusive I ; g% wet 134 FRANCE. mainilengh of a lady, and no severity of aM induce a Frenchwoman, not entitled. to ‘this article of attire, to adopt it. .A-cap, generally of an established form; is the covering of the head. which takes: ye Bigee of the bonnet. — ‘ The peasants in the different, departments of F rance | ‘have a costume peculiar to themselves... The most re- markable variety is that of the women of Upper Nor- mandy, who wear caps of starched muslin, sometimes half a yard in height. 'They stand up perpendicularly, and are. ornamented with long lace lappets, called co-" quilles. The hair is braided in front, and gathered up ina mass behind. A short scarlet petticoat, black’ _ jacket, ecolored apron, long gold earrings, and gold hearts or crosses fastened to a black velvet. ribbon around the neck, complete the costume. Other. styles of dress, which have descended from generation to generation, are to be found. indifferent’ sections of ‘the country. Wooden shoes, called sabots, though exceed- ingly sds are common with both sexes. ai The peasantry, who constitute a great majority of: the people, are a truly respectable body. Many of. them are poor; but their condition has been greatly improved by the revolution, and their frugal: habits generally place them above want. Every cottage has its cow, and a woman or, boy may be often seen attend- ing this cherished animal while it is feeding nines the highway. ’ sip The women. Ry in the fields ait the men, even more than in England, but it is hardly the toil of com- pulsion or poverty. They are allowed to feel an equal- ity, at least, im matters of property, and in many cases, rx “« FRANCE. 135 they have a leading share in the management of the garden and the farm. | Though Paris is the centre of gaiety, the same love of amusement is observable throughout every part of France. Great attention is paid to the religious fetes, and nearly all the spare money of the laboring classes is spent in these ceremonials. Almost every amuse- ment and occasion of festivity is terminated by dancing. In the most remote parts of the country, groups of peasants may be seen at. evening performing quadrilles and waltzing under the trees, to, the sound of a rustic violin, and frequently singing in chorus. While’ the gayer part of the people are thus engaged, the village politicians assemble at the inn, where they take light wines, engage in fierce debates, and sing convivial songs. fee eee saree Pit wit Men wc | . Hoge OES yey? eae Maly AG RS. SPAIN, pet - Ar the or when Spain aideorerea the New World, and conquered the rich and populous empires of Mexico and Peru; and when, not contented with domineering over a great part of Europe, she agitated and convulsed the remaining part by her intrigues and military enterprises, the Spaniards became jrtexbeee with national pride, which they exhibited in theif. dress, language and writings. Spain is now one’ of the wealeett ands poorest nations of Europe, but the modern Spaniard still preserves in his air and gesture the marks of his ancient greatness. Whether he. speaks or writes, his expressions have an exaggerated turn, which approaches to bombast. He still retains an exalted idea of his nation and of himself, and ex- presses this without disguise. His vanity does not show itself off with those pleasant exaggerations which in the mouth of a Gascon provoke laughter rather than’ anger; but when he. boasts, it is Abe gravely, and with all the pomp of language. In a word, the Span- iard is a Gascon who has put on the buskin. ~ _ But this loftiness and self-conceit are balanced by some very estimable qualities, or rather are the source of them. Individual as well as national pride elevates the mind, so far as to guard against meanness ; and such is the effect of Spanish haughtiness. In Spain there SPAIN. 137 are vices and crimes as in all other countries, but in gen- éral, they bear this national characteristic, which may be observed in the most obscure classes, in dungeons, and even under rags and misery. The Spanish gravity, which is proverbial, excludes what we call affability. The politeness of the Spaniard does not anticipate, but waits for you; yet this austere covering frequently conceals good feelings which a slight examination may discover, Strangers to the grimace and ostenta- tion of French adi iousi the Spaniards are sparing of professions ; their smile of benevolence is not merely a courtesy, for their hearts commonly answer to their features. The great among them have no dignity, if by that word be meant a circumspection that fears to provoke familiarity, and which looks less for affection than respect; they make no mortifying distinction of classes, nor disdain to form connections with those beneath them in rank. | _ Assassination was formerly common in Seis Every man of respectability had his assassins at com- mand, who were regularly hired in the kingdom of Valencia. . This dreadful custom was in some measure cherished by the species of weapon then. in use, a trian- gular poniard, concealed under the cloak, and which was drawn forth for vengeance in the moment of re- sentment. The practice of carrying the poniard still continues in some parts.of 07% but it is confined to the lowest ranks. : da EY It is seldom that the manners of a “eu are cor- rested by violent and precipitate measures ; but in the reign of Charles III. such an experiment was made in Spain. The minister, Squillaci, determined to reform 138 SPAIN. the national dress, which consisted of a long cloak and slouched hat pulled over the face.’ In this dress, a man could hardly recognize his most intimate friend, and it was therefore favorable to the most dangerous excesses. In order to abolish the use of these cloaks in Madrid, the minister resorted to open force. Men were posted at the corners of the streets, furnished with shears, who clipped all such cloaks as exceeded the prescribed length. Squillaci believed he should find the Castilians as submissive as were the Russians in the time of Peter the Great; but the people mutinied, the king was frightened, and sacrificed his minister. The fashion of dress, so suddenly attacked, was in part continued after his disgrace; but milder and slower measures, and the Apap of the court, added, to the activity of a ‘vigilant police, have contributed much to effect the desired object. atl "aan Almost every considerable town in Spain is provid- ed with a public walk, where the better classes assem- ble in the afternoon. » These places are called Ala- medas, from Alamo, a common name for the elm and’ poplar—the trees which: shade such places. Large stone benches run in the direction of the alleys, where people sit, either to rest themselves or to carry on @ long talk in whispers with the next lady, an amuse- ment which, in the idiom of the country, is expressed’ by the odd phrase of “ plucking'the hen-turkey.” The company in these walks presents a motley crowd of officers in their ‘regimentals, clergymen in their cas- socks, black coats and broad-brimmed hats. The ladies’ walking-dress is susceptible of little variety. Nothing short of the house being on fire would oblige SPAIN. ee 139 a Spanish woman to step out of doors without a black petticoat called a basguita or saya, and a broad black veil hanging from the head over the shoulders, and crossed on the breast like a shawl, which they call mantilla; this being generally of silk, trimmed round with broad lace. In summer evenings some white mantillas are seen; but no lady would,wear them in the morning, much less venture into.a church m so profane a dress. 2 A showy fan is indispensable in all seasons, ‘hot im and out of doors; an Andalusian lady might as well be without her tongue as without her fan. It has this advantage over the natural organ of speech, that it conveys thought to a greater distance. A dear friend at the farthest end of the public walk is greeted and cheered by a quick, tremulous motion of the fan, accompanied with significant nods. An object of - indifference is dismissed seve a slow, formal inclina- tion of the fan, which makes his blood run cold. The fan now screens the titter and whisper, now condenses a smile into the dark, sparkling eyes, which take aim just above it. A gentle tap of the fan commands the attention of’ the careless ; ; a waving motion calls the distant; a certain twirl between the fingers betrays’ doubt and anxiety ; a quick closing and displaying the folds indicate eagerness or joy. In perfect combina- tion with the expressive features of the Spanish wo- men, the fan is a magic wand ‘whose power Is more easily felt than described. ‘The Spanish priesthood sometimes claim and e exer- | cise a right to exclude from church such females as by a showy dress might disturb the abstracted yet suscep= a 140 _ SPAIN. tible minds of the clergy ; ; consequently, the women, especially those of the better class, are careful not to venture to church in any dress but such as habit has made familiar to the eyes of the zealots,. Whatever be the feelings that produce it, there is in Spain a sort of standing crusade against the fair sex, which. the priests, except such as have been secretly gained over to the enemy, carry on incessantly, though not with the same vigor at all times. The main subject of. contention is a right claimed by the clergy to regulate the dress’ of the ladies, and prevent the growth of such arts of charming as might endanger the péace of the church. Upon the appearance of. a new fashion, the “drum ecclesiastic”” never fails to sound tht.war-note? Innumerable were the sermons preached some years ‘ago against) silk shoes—for the Spanish ladies are $0 extravagant as to wear them out of doors,—the wear- ing of which, especially if embroidered with silk or gold, was declared by the soundest divines to be a mortal sin. Patience, however, and that watchful perseverance with which nature has armed the weaker sex against the tyranny of the stronger, have gradually phiethned a toleration for silk shoes, while taste has ex- tenuated the sin by. banishing the embroidery. ‘Yet the demon of millinery had lately set up. another stumbling-block by slily suggesting to the ladies that ‘their dress was inconveniently long, and concealed those fairy feet and ankles which are the pride of An- dalusia. The evil was the more dangerous as “its "progress was gradual and imperceptible. The petti- coats shrunk at first by barleycors ; halfan inch: was ‘then pared: off i some bolder sempstress; till at | length SPAIN. 141 ;the ground, the former place of safety for consecrated eyes, was found thickset with snares. In vain have the most powerful preachers thundered against this abomination; the.case was hopeless. A point gained upon petticoats was sure to be lost. upon top-knots, and when the pious were triumphing on the final subjec- tion of projecting stays, a pin threw them into utter confusion by altering its position on the orthodox neck-kerchief. The general style of architecture in. Spain is that adapted to hot countries, though there is some varia- tion in the different kingdoms. The most. common form. of houses is a quadrangle, with flat roofs, and an »area in the middle surrounded with colonnades or gal- leries. In the centre is commonly a fountain, and in summer a canopy is drawn over the top, and kept wet. to. cool the.air. Sometimes the lower windows have iron grates. There are few chimneys in the south, and the rooms are warmed by a pan or brazier of char- coal. There are many noble Gothic and Arabic struc- tures in Spain, and some remains of Roman magnifi- cence. _ Atthe hend of the aaareni of the S eons pation must be placed one which belongs almost exclusively to this country, and to which the Spaniards are sin- gularly attached, notwithstanding its condemnation by all the rest of Europe—namely, the bull fights, These are exhibited mostly i in summer, as the spectators are obliged to remain in the open air, and the animals are then more vigorous. . Peculiar breeds are set apart for this species. of sacrifice. . _A list is delivered to the ghecietons: 2 in which ae described the number and ihe 142 . SPAIN. country of the victims whose torture is intended) for) their amusement. The exhibition takes place in an amphitheatre with twenty rows of benches, the high- est of which is most coveted; above these are’ the, boxes. “In some cities where there is no regular building for the bull-fights, a temporary amphitheatre, is erected in the public square. . The sight of the peo- ple of every class assembled, expecting the signal for battle, and exhibiting in their countenances every sign of joy and impatience, has a very animating effect. ~The exhibition begins by a sort of procession, in which the champions, on horseback and on foot, who are to attack the fierce animal, make their appearance, dressed in all the elegance of Spanish costume. The* picadores wear a round hat, and are half igual with a short cloak, the sleeves of which float in the aur 5 they have white skin gaiters, and are mounted on horseback. Those on foot are dressed in the’ lightest and neatest manner, and wear pumps. Both have bright silk jackets, trimmed with ribands, and scarfs of different colors. Their hair is: bound up in large silk nets, the fringes of which hang down to the mid- dle. After the procession is fished two alguazils on horseback; i in wigs and black.robes, gravely advance to the president of thie fight for an order to begin. . The signal is immediately given. The bull, cals then shut up in a kind of pen, the door of which opens i the circle, makes his appearance. The animal sat first stunned by the shouts and noisy expressions 0 welcome uttered by the multitude. His first com is with. the picadores, who wait for: him, ee long lances. _ This exercise, which ‘requires address, ! _ & ie val ad strength and courage, has nothing in it degrading. Formerly, the highest among the es did not dis- dain to take a part init. - The bull frequently attacks the piiudotia souk ee provoked, and in this case, the spectators con- ceive a high opinion of his courage. If, notwithstand- ing the pointed: steél which repels his attack, he again returns to the’ charge, the. cries are redoubled, ae pleasure rises to enthusiasm. But if the animal be pacific, disconcertéd and cowardly, and runs round the eircle, avoiding his persecutors, murmurs and hissing resound throughout the amphitheatre. If nothing can rouse his courage, he is judged unworthy of being tormented by men, and the repeated cries of “dogs! dogs!” bring on him new enemies: These arelet loose, and they seize him by the neck and ears. The bull then applies his horns: the dogs’ are thrown into the air, fall, rise again, renew the attack, and com- monly overthrow — i ta 6 ‘ese thus © — perishes. dh ie le ; ~ On the other hand, if he enn velit courage, hs a career is more glorious, but longer and more painful. The first act of the tragedy belongs to the combatants on horseback ; this is the most animated, but the most bloody and disgusting part of the whole. Thevirritat- ed animal braves the steel, which makes deep wounds in his neck, falls furiously upon the horse, gores his sides, and overturns him with his rider, who, in this case, dismounted and disarmed, is in imminent dan- " ger, ‘until the combatants on foot come to him and pro- voke the animal, by shaking before’ him cloths of dif- ferent colors. But it is not without: iuaiaaie to them=. Per caare et MAG ype busar Yoana a. BW ke. US Rb RUC La ie Ls CR CB 144 SPAIN: , selves that they save the dismounted horseman ; the bull often pursues them, and they have. need of all their ‘agility to effect their escape. This is done by dropping the piece of cloth, which is their only wea= pon, and upon which the fury of the deceived animal is exhausted. But it sometimes happens that he is not thus imposed upon, and the champion has no other resource than leaping over the barrier, six feet high, which forms the interior of the circle. In some cases the bull also leaps over this, when the alarm of the spectators, and their crowding upon the upper benches, create indescribable confusion. Sometimes he returns to the charge; his dismounted adversary having had time to recover himself, immediately mounts his horse’ again, provided he be not seriously wounded, and t the attack is renewed ; but the. cavalier is frequently obliged to change. his horse ;. sometimes seven or eight horses have their bowels torn out by the same bull, and fall dead on the field of battle. No words can then sufficiently celebrate these acts of prowess, | which. for several days are the favorite subjects of conversation. The horses, astonishing examples: of patience, courage and docility, at times, before they die, present a sight most revolting to humanity : they tread under their feet the bloody entrails which fall from their lacerated she yet til ohey the hand which guides them. ial ar geile _ A new act in the piece now: gtiecsitie “When the bill is deemed sufficiently tormented by the combatants.on horseback, these withdraw and leave him to the ch: pions on foot, called Landerillos, who meet the animal, and at sean when he attacks them, stick into SPAIN. 145 his neck a sort of arrows, pointed like fish-hooks: and ‘ornamented with little streamers of ‘colored paper. The fury of the bull redoubles ; he roars and bellows, but’his vain efforts serve but to increase the anguish occasioned by these weapons. This last torment gives a fine opportunity for a display of the agility of his new adversaries. The spectators at first tremble for their safety, when they see them so near the horns of the animal; but their skilful hands inflict so sure a blow, and they escape so himbly from the danger, that it appears little more than pastime. When the strength of the bull appears almost exhausted, and his blood; flowing from twenty wounds, pours from. his neck, the fury of the spectators is at last satiated. The president now gives the signal for the animal’s death, which is announced by theesouhd-of drums and trumpets. The matador, or slayer, advances and remains alone in the circle; in one hand he‘holds a long knife, and in the other a sort of flag which he waves before his enemy. At first, each stops and looks at’ the other. The impetuosity of the bull is” several times avoided by the. agility of the matador, and ‘the pleasure of the spectators” 1s cutie more lively by their suspense. ify a Sometimes the animal remains ita dite scrap- ing the ground with his feet, and seeming to meditate vengeance. The bull im this situation, and the mata- dor, who penetrates his design and carefully observes his slightest motion, form a striking picture. The. assembly contemplate ‘this dumb scene in silence. - At length the matador gives the fatal blow, and if the animal immediately falls, the triumph of the con- . 146 SPAIN. queror is celebrated by a thousand ee if the blow. be not decisive and the bull survive, the murmurs are equally emphatic, and the matador is looked. upon as a clumsy butcher. He instantly re- solves-to retrieve his reputation ; his zeal becomes blind fury, and his partizans tremble for his life. At length he gives a successful blow ; the animal vomits streams of blood, staggers and falls dead.. The amphitheatre rings with applauses, then mules covered with bells and banners terminate the exhibition, dragging the ‘bull by his horns out of the’ arena. be vigil _ Sometimes eighteen or twenty. buts are sind killed in a single. day. The last three are left exclusively to. the matador, who, deprived of all assistance from the picadores, employs his dexterity..to» vary the pleasure of the spectators.. He sometimes. allows. an intrepid stranger, mounted upon another bull, to com- bat them ; at other times he turns a bear against. them. The last bull-is particularly devoted to the entertain- - ment of the populace: the tips of his horns are covered with a round case, which diminishes the effect of his strokes; the spectators descend in crowds to torment him, each after his own way; and. often pay for their | cruel pleasure by violent contusions: but the animal prem he falls at last under the blows of the matador. — _ The Spaniards look upon. the bull-fights as. one means of preserving in their nation a courageous and energetic spirit: yet it is difficult to imagine how these qualities can be nourished by a Speciale those who look on are exposed to no. danger, and where the actors prove by the rarity of sesdoutult cee they run. is not of a nature to excite much ia % ® ’ a SPAIN. 147 concern. Spanish gentlemen sometimes fight in pub- lic with’the bulls; but this does not often take place, except at the coronation of the kings and in their pres- ence. Such noblemen as are stole to engage: in the ieulons sport, volunteer their services for the sake of the reward, which is some valuable place under gov- ernment, if they prefer this to an order of knighthood. They appear on horseback, attended Da the Bast pro- fessional fighters on foot.. ; »The city corporation of Seville enjoy the an auiniledic of being the exclusive butchers of the place. They alone have a right to kill and sell meat, which,— passing through their noble hands, for this government _ is entailed on the first Andalusian families—is the worst and dearest in all Spain. Two droves of lean cattle are brought every week, to a large slaughter- house near one. ofthe city gates.. To walk. in that neighborhood when the cattle approach, is dangerous, for notwithstanding the emaciated condition of the ani- mals, and though many are oxen and cows, a crowd is sure to collect, and by the waving of their cloaks, and a sharp whistlmg, which they make through their fin- . gers, they generally succeed in dispersing the drove in order to single out the fiercest for their amusement. Nothing but the Spanish cloak is used on these occa- ‘ sions. Holding it gracefully at arm’s length before. atheist so as to conceal the person from the breast to the feet, they wave it. in the eyes of.the animal, shaking their heads with an air of defiance, calling out, “Ha! Toro, Toro!” The bull pauses a moment before he rushes upon the nearest object, and shuts his eyes, it is said, at the instant of pushing with his # ” ab oie Me ge Cre ee 2 . sain. horns!” “The’man,_ a his cloak suspended, flings it over the head of the animal, while he’ aces “body: to the left just when the bull, urged forward by the’ original impulse, must run on a few yards without being ‘able to turn upon his adversary, whom, upon wheeling round, he finds prepared to delude him as ‘before. This sport is exceedingly lively, and: when practised by proficients ‘in the art, is seldom attended. with danger. Within the walls of the slaughter-houseé, however, is the place where the bull-fighters by profes- sion are allowed to practise for improvement. A mem- ber of the city corporation presides, and admits, gratis, his friends, among whom, notwithstanding the filth “natural to such places, ladies do not disdain to appear. The slaughter-house is so’ well known as a school for bull- -Hghting that it»bears the cant appellation of the College. ‘Many of the first noblesse have frequented no other nee but this fashion is now wearing away. st years ants ~s ® Binion the amusements of f the Spaniards may be iikekc onfed? the festivals of “that Catholic church, which are sO numerous that we have not room ‘to’ specify them. Many of the ceremonies do not yield‘in mag- ~ nificence and imposing effect, to those of any country in Christendom. The attachment of the Spaniard to the external forms of his religion, is notorious. » Alt” Seville, the Passion Week ‘is celebrated with such a degree of pomp and enthusiasm that the pedple have ‘standing joke on the subject at the expense ‘of ‘the Se- villians, and affirm that, on the arrival of the king in that city during summer, it was moved by a worthy member of the municipality to get up a’ Passion Week _ extra, for the amusement of his majesty. & Ld 2 . SPAIN. 149 Convents are numerous in this country. Whena census was taken in 1787, it was found that the num- ber of Spanish females confined to the cloisters for life, amounted to thirty-two thousand. The arts by which young and inexperienced girls are lured into these Bastiles of superstition, and the inexorable ecclesiasti- cal laws which, aided by external force, bind their vic- tims with perpetual vows, are probably the causes of more suffering than exists in all the prisons and peni- tentiaries in the country. The first nascent wish to take the veil, is eagerly watched and seized by a con- fessor, who to a violent jealousy of earthly bride- erooms, joins a confident sense of merit in adding one virgin more to the thousands of the spiritual harem. Pious parents tremble at the thought of standing be- tween God and their daughter, and often with a bleed- ing heart lead her to the altar. ' There is an extreme eagerness in the Catholic pro- fessions of celibacy, both male and female, to decoy young persons into the toils from which they them- selves cannot escape. With profound sagacity the church has disguised the awful ceremony which cuts off an innocent girl from the sweetest hopes of life, with the pomp and gaiety which mankind have unani- mously bestowed on the triumph of legitimate love. The whole process which condemns a female to “wither on the virgin thorn,” and live a barren sister all her life, is studiously made to represent a wedding. The unconscious victim, generally in her fifteenth year, finds herself for some time previous to her taking the veil, the queen—nay, the idol of the whole monas- tic community which | has obtained her preference. J Are ee t 150 SPAIN. She is constantly addressed by the name of dride, and sees nothing but gay preparations for the expected day of her spiritual nuptials. Attired in a splendid dress, and pete with all the jewels of her family and friends, she takes public leave of her acquaintances, visits, on her way to the con- vent, several other nunneries, to be seen and admired by the recluse inhabitants, and even the crowds which collect in her progress, follow her with tears and bles- sings. As she approaches the church of her monas- tery, the dignified ecclesiastic who is to perform the ceremony, meets the intended novice at the door, and leads her to the altar amid the sounds of bells and musical instruments. The monastic weeds are blessed by the priest in her presence: and having embraced her parents and nearest relations, she is led by. the lady who acts as bride’s-maid, to the small door next to the double: grating which separates the nuns’ choir from the body of the church. Pa gi TURKEY. ae OTe" sixth commandment, that which enjoins’ the pilgrimage to Mecca, is of such vital importance to all Mussulmans, thatno one is exempt from its obligations except the Sultan, and he must perform it by proxy. After the Ramazan feast the caravans’ set out for the Holy City. In different years the number of pilgrims varies from 60,000 to 100,000, and the number of eamels from 80,000 to 150,000. The pilgrim or hadgi walks seven times round ‘the House of Abraham, as they call the chief mosque in Mecca, kisses a black Storie which they pretend fell white from heaven, plunges into the well Zem-zen and takes a draught of its fetid water. For this, infatuated multitudes tra- verse the burning deserts of Arabia, and hundreds of them annually leave their bones to bleach in the wide wilderness. As no man has any honor till he becomes a hadgi, every one endeavors to visit the. sai Gieys bap mah may be his circumstances. ' On the birth of a child, the father himself gives the bitettp putting at the same time a grain of salt into its mouth: The dead are perfumed with incense, and buried in a cloth, open at the top and bottom, that the deceased may be able to sit up and answer the ques- tions of the angels of death. The women howl over the dead as at an Irish wake. No sooner is the breath out of a man’s body than all the females in the neigh- borhood resort to the house and howl for a quarter of an hour. When the corpse is laid in the grave, the Koran says it is visited by two black angels of a terrible appearance : these make the dead person sit upright, and examine him concerning his faith in the Koran; if he ‘answers: rightly, his’ body i is, refreshed with the 228 TURKEY. air of Paradise, but if otherwise, they beat him on the | temples.with iron maces, and wiake him roar with anguish. ‘The burial grounds are near the highways, and. stones are placed at the heads of the graves, with carved turbans denoting the sex. As they never encroach upon.a fomiaer graye rt phe cemeteries are very extensive. The Turk, stretched at bit ease in his pavilion.on the banks of the Bosphorus, glides down the stream of existence without reflection. on the past, and with- out anxiety for the future. ‘His life is one continued and unvaried reverie... To his imagination the whole universe appears occupied in procuring him pleasure. The luxuriance of nature, and the labors of a tributary people spread out before him whatever can excite or gratify the senses; and every wind wafts to him the productions of the world, enriched by the arts and improved by the . taste of industrious Europeans. The luxuries of a Turkish life would sink, however, In the estimation of most people, on a comparison with the artificial enjoyments of Europe. The houses of the Turks are built in contempt of the rules of archi- tecture, their. gardens are laid out without order, and with little taste; their furniture is simple, and suited rather to the habits of a military or vagrant people than to the usages of settled life; their meals are fru- gal and generally unenlivened either by wine or con+ versation. Every custom invites to repose, and every. object inspires.an_ indolent voluptuousness. Their delight is to, recline on soft verdure under. the shade of trees, and to muse. without fixing their attention, lulled. by the trickling of a fountain or the os alah TURKEY. 229 murmuring | of a rivulet, and inhaling through their Pipe a gently inebriating vapor. Such pleasures, the highest that the rich can enjoy, are equally within the reach of the artizan or the peasant. _ The Turks, notwithstanding, have some points of character which indicate the gentle feelings of hu- manity lurking in the heart. The same species of benevolence which restrains the Hindoo from depriv- ing animals of life, appears to exist among them. In the Turkish towns, dogs and cats enjoy an abundance © which the beggars. of Christendom might envy. Flocks of pigeons traversing the air light on vessels loaded with grain to levy a tribute which is seldom denied, them. Water fowl swarm on the banks of the Bosphorus, and their nests are respected even by chil- dren. This benevolence is. extended even to trees. A useful and commendable prejudice prevents the most avaricious proprietor from depriving the village or the field of their pleasing and salubrious shade. The rich take a pride in adorning the public walks with fountains and seats, two things which are ren- dered necessary by the frequent ablutions and prayers enjoined by their religion. The khans, or caravanserais, are public inns, in which travellers and working people are lodged with- - out payment. In the houses of the Turks in various — parts of the empire, several travellers concur in te- matking purity of manners, domestic happiness, and a patriarchal hospitality. But the’ extreme pride of the Turks, rendered more offensive by the harshness of their manners, has so wounded the feelings of most travellers, that they have seen nothing in the whole 0 t SERS SOR Men te Ey TN SOE) ee CR RRMEE Yee Oe SAMO RTA Rays OU Ye apd EEE RN) Ne a er Stipes , : * ‘gS 930 TURKEY. race except a ferocity, an ignorance, and a grossness, which are proof . ing the means of civilization, tyals iy it , Re ¥ Saf ‘ ry ve fw z 4 PC wel 4 i - Naw A.-Caravansera. - GERMANY. an Ul View: on the Danube / _ Tus state of society in Germany exhibits two very distinct portions, not running into or. blending with each other,.as in most of the other civilized modern states. The class of, the population which are of noble birth, hold. themselves separated by the most marked and decided line from the body of the nation. They have divided themselves into high and low nobil- 239 GERMANY. ity. The former are those who either possess sovereign sway or are descended from those who once did, and are called ‘ mediatized’ princes. The low or feudato- ry nobles are those who cannot boast that any sovereign power ever resided in their families. There is anoth- er distinction, that of the old nobility, who must be able to count a line of sixteen noble ancestors, and that of the young or short nobility. The cities too, especially those that once ranked either as Hanse Towns or as Imperial cities, contain a class enjoying hereditary distinction as patricians or city nobles. The petty princes and great nobles of Germany thus retain many of the feudal habits, and their courts display rather rude baronial pride, and forms of empty pomp, .than the polish and elegance of the great European courts. The character of the Germans is strongly military, a quality partly derived from their feudal ancestors, and partly from their country having been the theatre of nearly all the great wars which have ravaged Europe. The common sounds in the cities of Germany are the clangor of military bands, the ringing of iron boot-heels and the measured tread of stately soldiers. The military character is said to rank higher here than in any other nation. The dress of the Germans has now few vie ciliate to distinguish it from that which has become general over civilized Europe. The higher classes follow English and French fashions. The lower classes dress in a manner convenient for their occupations. Caps are nearly universal with the men; they are made of cloth, with low crowns, two or three inches only in height, and have a small shade for the eyes. ‘The bs Shs Ah ae 4 . ; GERMANY. | 233 female peasants and domestics wear on holidays, gaudy caps of gold stuffs,and those who are too poor’ to wear these, adorn their heads and arms with a few flowers. The pomp and array among the’ Austrian and Hungarian nobles, and the blaze of jewels which they display, dazzle the other people of Europe.” ‘The Germans eat more than their neighbors of the South of Europe, who. stigmatize them as gluttons. Their food is of a plain, substantial kind, and the cook- ery is inferior to the French. They have some hard and harsh articles which are national favorites, such as ham, sausage, raw herring, sour krout and acid wine. They are much addicted to the use of intoxicating liquors, and this was a characteristic of the nation in ancient times. Great quantities of ale, beer and-por- _ ter are consumed, particularly in the north, where alehouses are abundant: the sign over many of the doors is “Welcome, friend,” and few coachmen pass without taking a‘ schnapp,’ oradram. The Germans are inveterate smokers. The pipe is ever at hand, and seldom out of use; the bowls are commonly of porcelain, large and ornamented with views of Ger- man scenery. The atmosphere of an alehouse is so filled with the smoke of numerous pipes, that the smok- ers are hardly visible. . The students at the German universities have many peculiarities. Their dress.is affectedly uncouth, and is worn with negligence. The coat is shapeless: the hair is worn long, and a wide shirt-collar is turned over the shoulders. Boots are worn, with spurs of ériormous size. One or more rings, as large as watch ‘seals, generally adorn the fingers, and no student in full pf i SL art bleh ered te ae PM ihe Tet 4 ee Mn ee ee aE 234 . GERMANY. dress is without a ruffle of unreasonable length, though many have no shirts. A pipe, four or five feet long, completes the equipment. The moustache is permit- ted:to grow several inches long and is twisted to.a point. The students call themselves “ Burschen”?,or ‘‘ young fellows,” and the town’s people they call Phil- istines... In the north they are great consumers’ of beer; in the south, they drink much wine. In/their evening potations each, one has several tankards, be- fore him, sometimes as many as.eight or nine, so that a line of students on each side of a table may look down upon eighteen rows of tankards. The students unite in clubs called Landsmannschaf: ten, which are composed of individuals of the same county or district, and their club is generally indicated by the color or trimming of the cap. ‘They pay a few dollars on entering, for the expenses of the club, though the money thus raised is generally applied ‘to the purpose of procuring duelling apparatus, and each Landsmannschaft has a, complete armory. Duelling may be said to be‘ universal: of course it is not attend- ed with much peril. It is an example of moderation to have passed several years at a university without fighting. The party challenged has not the privilege of choosing-his weapons; he must fight according to. the established. mode. The. weapon is a. straight sword about three feet in length, with a double. edge near the point. The combats are generally performed in rooms, "quid few of them are fatal... Several friends; and a surgeon are ‘present, with the two. seconds and. an umpire chosen by them. The hands and arms are covered: with thick. gloves, and. a» stuffed. leathern ) ila ae GERMANY. 995 breastplate. completely protects the body; the face only is exposed. .For a trifling offence twelve blows. are struck, and if no blood be drawn, the parties shake hands and separate. [For a greater offence, blood must be drawn. On its:first appearance the umpire orders a cessation of hostilities and the surgeon exam- ines the wound. If it be two inches: in length and opens of itself a quarter of an inch, enough has been done: for glory and the parties are reconciled. . The seconds are dressed like the combatants; they. stand by the side of their principals and are permitted. to ward off the blows. The duellists sometimes lose an eye or a nose; many have scars on their faces; and some are miserably hacked. The Landsmannschaften are the nurseries of duelling, each club being exceéd- ingly. tenacious of its own dignity. Fencing, very improperly, makes a part of the regular university in¢ struction. All the details of the duel are sisi im the Comment or Burschen Pandects. . . The German character, it must be paneer AH is pene various in the different kingdoms and states, and it-has been said that it is as much parcelled out _as the land, though there are certain traits. that run through.the whole. The difference is. greatest between the north and south, and between the literary and the commercial cities. The Germans of the south are, in general, less favorably distinguished for morality: and: imislligence than. those of the north, and much. less hus been done .in the former part. of the country to- wards snlightening the great mass.of the people ; yet’ there are Many excepiions to this remark. - In many quarters of the country, the moral. condition of the A Sipe Jey eka) BRC) Se eee Ae aL ae ah Mrutoas Cees Page Reyer vesg a > a AL SHE Bah AS Pe, CGR. DO ereR > Te ee re ee an De Atte 4 - Lil inh 3 ' “y = : i wet Lt ab ight 75) r ; Me ai ’ gen " | 236 GERMANY. ov f a et peasantry is in the lowest state: ignorant, -supersti- tious, dull, indolent, and dirty in their habits, and slovenly and unthrifty in their mode of cultivation, they still bear the traces of their long servitude. + 0 » With afew exceptions, Germany is not a country remarkable for the elegancies of domestic life. - Its very palaces are of»simple decoration : its luxuries of a home-bred and inartificial kind, and its tastes not*of the most exalted rank. There is still'a shade of the Gothic in the habits and opinions of these people, who seem to cultivate the subtile refinements of the mind in preference to the more obvious and material enjoy- ments which address themselves to.the senses. They are hardy, brave, and attached to their country, and are distinguished for great individual and. personal independence. . Although they are quarrelsome, they seldom come to blows, for a blow is an indignity that nothing but the offender’s blood can atone. for, and a man in common life would appeal to arms to avenge it. Hard words are applied in profusion, and to scold ‘is a common way of quarrelling. : i Many of the amusements, are those wit are common in England and France. The favorite active . sport is the chase of the wild boar, and though the game privileges may be, as in England, distinct from the soil, yet all classes are permitted to attend thew Prince in the chase, but not otherwise to engage in. the amusement. Hares are exceedingly numerous, and they. are hunted, not with greyhounds, but with pea sants; these form a large circle, and with great vocif= eration; close by degrees upon a centre, driving the hares before them. The hunters shoot them down in great auutaeae, and a-random shot : sometimes hits 0 one of those:who act as the pack. . yi eee » Dancing is:a favorite amusement, and it is pursued with more enthusiasm than in France. The waltz is the national dance, and it is introduced into most of the foreign figures that prevail in Germany. | Fathers. and sons are seen in the same set: all classes partici- pate in this amusement, except those which have the dignity of royalty to support. Royal personages only polonaise, in the light, ss step between a dance and a walk. oS | The Germans of both town and nt se the site and laborers, are all. acquainted with music. Almost everywhere upon market days, they have players on wind-instruments placed in the balcony of the town- _ house, which overlooks the public square. The schol- ars walk through the streets singing psalms in chorus. Often when the traveller enters a small cottage black- ened by tobacco-smoke, he finds the master or the mistress playing voluntaries upon a harpsichord. The poor Bohemians, as they wander, followed by their wives and children, carry on their backs ‘a clumsy harp, made of common wood, from which they draw harmo- nious: music. They play upon it while they rest at the foot of'a tree on the high road, or near the post- houses, endeavoring to awaken the attention of’ trav- ellars to the pantie nty concert of the little wandering family. In Austria, the flocks are kept by shepherds, who play charming airs on instruments at once simple and sonorous. “Instrumental music is as generally cultivated eo so og as is voeal 1 mausic in Italy. Pk aha aM, Uwe Tote PV AeA Peete « OEY OLE oan Vs RPP ee 4 NPI? eT a oN ‘ rf HM ‘ is i i 938 GERMANY: _. The love of title is universal. among-the Germans. ’ Their complaisance in addressing each ctherin their billets and letters is to .us extremely ludicrous...°The titles with which an Italian addresses his correspond- ent are sufficiently pompous to a plain republican, but pefore the superscription of a German letter he stands contounded. Net to speak. ofthe interminably long titles. bestowed upon those who have any pretension. to rank, tne picinest citizen is addressed in lofty style. Some mast be called High born, others High-well born, others Wigh-nobly vorn. If you want a suit of clothes, you must write to the tailor, addressing him as the High-nobly vern Mr. Snip, Tailor... Were this title omitted, and Mr. Sxip a iailor of any reputation, it is ten to one, you would not get your clothes of him. In the German language, Siete is & feminine substan= . tive corresponding to every mascuiime titie ; and when they address each other, they not oniy give the hus: band his title, but also.confer it. upon his w ite, as the Lady Generaless, the Lady Professoress, the Lady Counselloress, &c. . The titles and honorary epithets are so numerous, that it takes months to learn them, and this isa very serious embarrassment iene in his intercourse with the German society. . Previous to a marriage, the engagement hissed the parties is published in a newspaper. When a married couple leave the city to reside at a distance, they not only take leave of their friends in person, but -on the day of departure, they publish in, the Gazette an advertisement in the following words, to which they affix their signatures :—‘ On. our. marriage,» which took place this day, we commend ourselves respect- a tal a aie ks ie ae ae a aa ea tae PWT 0) Wee Meaty OL ee? Ar quid bs ERSTE tee ret Ut, TPE tah fk \ ; " 4 Pa Aan 1 ees P's MY? WR Naar fy stg i SOWIE eee ee GERMANY. 999 fully to our friends ‘and relations. ° As we are on the point of departure for Kénigsberg, we wish them, from our hearts, prosperity,” &c. Inthe north of Germany, when a person: is sick, the friends of the family call and ringyat the door. On entering, they find in the parlor a book lying on the table, in’ which, every ‘morning “and evening, is written the state of the patient’s health, with all the particulars which would — interest the inquirers. Under this morning and even- ing bulletin, the visiters write their names, to apprize the family of their sympathy ; they never see the members of it, unless they have some’ other business than inquiring after the state of the patient? ae » The long peace since 1815 has effected wonders in making the nations of Europe better acquainted with each other, and will destroy a thousand petty pre- judices, and awaken generous and useful sympathies. In many ways; this work ‘is silently going on ; prints and engravings, descriptions and anecdotes in news- papers, small articles of cheap. luxury—nay, Warren’ S blacking contributes its’ part : you may bay a bottle, with the label at least, in any large city in Europe. But there is one remarkable triumph which, during this period of tranquillity, has been achieved by genius. Sir Walter Scott has made a moral conquest of Ger- many: There is hardly a bookseller’s shop where you may not find his works for sale, and vast numbers of the people have learned the English language solely for the pleasure of reading the Waverley Hqvels"s in the original. | The coffee-house aspect of Germany is in zeneral idle'and profligate ; but the traveller would be deceived MeN ete ner ACER ir ne COR MURS TERN MRCP TMG HeLa arty ZEN MLE ga od ie A 7 TT HGYE ge a ! ' iG 7 240 GERMANY. who should judge of the private life of i Ger- mans from that peculiar class of persons who form, as it were, a race of themselves, and.are found floating on the surface of society, all over that-extensive coun- try. . Vast numbers of. men in Germany seem to live only among cards and billiard balls, a mark, and one of the worst; which a very long war and long inter- course with the French armies have left behind. A great number of these are unemployed'military men, of originally idle and dissipated habits; others are of a class which made money enough during the war, in their trades and occupations, to put on the coats, with- out the character, of gentlemen, and who live loosely about at hotels and restaurateurs, where they are ‘little known, as to their early history, but iia for what they spend. | ~The attention which has been paid to popular elt cation in Prussia, within the last twenty years, has excited the admiration of Europe, and several of the German universities have acquired great celebrity for their success. in teaching the higher branches of know- ledge.. The intellectual character and history of the great Germanic nation is a subject of the deepest inter= est, especially at the present moment, when every point of Christendom is. beginning to feel and acknow- ledge their power, as displayed in German literatures tf ys se ‘ i 4 } Pia te ae : ‘ oo MOTTA NES ote _ Ir we were to form. our opinions of the, people of this country, who are called Dutch, from the descrip- tions of the English, we should do them injustice ; for the commercial islanders are never just to commercial competitors, and the former have often been their. ssuc- cessful rivals. : The Dutch are distinguished for frugality, néathess and industry. They are of a cold, phlegmatic tem- perament, but when roused. to passion, have as much ardor as any other people. They are grave and heavy in appearance, and even children are sedate. ‘They are quiet and domestic, and enjoy much happiness in their family circles. Generally they prefer gain to am- bition, but in their dealings they are honest, ‘The very soil they till is a monument of their perseverance and industry. ‘They live in«a» country of meadows, reclaimed from the sea, and the acquisition is main- tained only by continual vigilance, toil; and expense. In Holland, neatness is carried to excess. In their kitchens every metallic utensil is as bright as scouring can make it, and hung upon the walls for show;. for neatness here is ostentatious. .The very tongs and shovel are “ hung up for monuments.” The principal utensils are of pewter and copper...One room in the house is held too sacred for common intrusion: and bee 249 HOLLAND. the neatness and arrangement of this, is a peculiar study. In some of the villages, wagons are not per- mitted to pass through the streets ; the front walks are scrubbed, sanded, and marked out in fanciful figures: The doors and porches are burnished, and the trees that shade them, do not escape the brush. Little ad- mittance is-granted at the front door; and even at the back entrance, a shoe not perfectly satisfactory to. the genius of the place, must be laid aside, and a slipper, which is kept for this purpose, worn during the visit. The Dutch are profuse of time, but economical of money. All-their conveyances~ by sea or land, are slow, and “ Dutch speed” has grown into a saying for tardmess. Their economy, however, is not to be dis- covered in the public yh aig which are ona sh scale. ead » The leading peculiar amusements of the Dutch, are. skating, and dancing at the licensed houses, where the most infamous class resort: It is common for staid and respectable people, in family groups, to mingle in the dance, with, those who have neither character nor modesty to lose. Skating is followed by both sexes: it is a graceful and healthful amuse- ment. The females are generally dressed im white, and each one is attended by a man; generally they move with each a hand resting on the other’s shoul- der.” They step simultaneously, as in marching. “It is an interesting spectacle; to see many females with florid complexions, and dressed’ in white, moving swiftly and apparently without effort, like Camilla» When like a passing wos Oca ‘she fled’ 0 Tmdishtpeaway Rie tectige eh Hla «caged * gan is BELGIUM. ho a ye ‘Belgians. are. in part E lemings».' of Chama origin, and in part Walloons, of the Latin race, and closely, allied to the French. The. former. resemble the. Dutch in their character and manners ; the latter are more like the French. The. language. of the higher. classes is Fretich;’ the lower classes ‘speak Flemish, a dialect of, the Low German, or the Wal- loon dialect, a sort of rustic French. _ The. modes of dress, manner of building, b habiie of intercourse, food and drink, generally present little. that is peculiar, but rather exhibit, a mixture of French and, | Dutch customs, A black hooded cloak i is worn b the women in many places, a remnant. of the old ish sway over these provinces. The common people generally. wear wooden shoes, as in many other parts of Europe. Some of the Belgian towns are hardly rivalled i in any country for the neatness and generally pleasing effect of the buildings. As to the character of the Belgians.it may be observed, that, long subject.to a foreign yoke, and in constant intercourse | with foreigners, they seem. to. have lost. in a,.great measure the original Flemish traits, and to present no very distinctive features. A strong national antipathy existed between the Dutch and Belgians while they were under the same crown, and the latter attempted 244 _ BELGIUM. to adopt the French customs and manners ; yet, on the wnole, they have a greater resemblaiice to their north- ern than.their southern neighbors. The amusements are much like those of Holland; the great Flemish kermes or fairs, though no longer subservient to com- merce, exist still as festivals, at which there is a great display of humor and character, such as we find hap- et nist in the works of the Flemish painters. . The fine arts were cultivated with zeal and success in the Belgic provinces, during the days of their opu- lence and prosperity. Wealthy merchants liberally , patronized the arts of design; and the gentry and land-holders, being induced by the constant wars, of which the Low Countries were the theatre, to live much in towns, acquired more refined tastes than could have been formed in a country life. Antwerp, during its prosperous period, became, in some measure, a Belgic Athens. The Flemish school of painting, under its great masters, Rubens and Vandyke, display- ed great splendor of coloring, grandeur of composition, and force of expression, although it never reached that grandeur of design and pure taste which were hia in Italy. The Belgians are mostly Catholics, the’ number, of Protestants not exceeding 10,000.. The Catholic cler- gy have shown an intolerant spirit here, but the great possessions of the church have been forfeited, and thé monasteries suppressed ; only a few nunneries being allowed to exist, * » : > “ it yt site: ibe sitll Rew mig A ae aE a Ei as a $ ce ‘. oe 9 re ‘. wai’ , an dtm, R rel 0 ie A te ti a Bs. tds oge peng Sete MEAT lalielie ves spen anal Tay Danes, like most of the teat ie nations, are fair in’ eoriiplexion, of middle stature, and hardy ‘in constitution. The women have blue eyes, ‘and auburn hait, and many of them are beautiful. There is a nobility, which though reduced from its ancient splen- dor, contains many who live in elegance, if not in ostentation. There are two orders of knighthood. The Germans occupy Holstein, Lubec, and the most of Sleswic, and there are a few Gypsies. = “'The women’ of the middle classes are very fond of show in their dress, which is composed of many colors, red being the most prevalent. In summer many of the people retain their ereat-coats, and in winter they as- sume furs. The French fashions are common in the cities. The Danish language is allied to the Swedish and Norwegian. The Frisish is used in some of the islands, and the German in Holstein, Lubec, and a part of Sleswic. ‘The houses in the cities are gene- rally of brick; inthe country they are of wood with piazzas ; few of them have much pretension to ele- gance. ‘The general food of the lower class is oat- cake, rye-bread, potatoes, fish and cheese. Much beer and spirits, chiefly brandy, are consumed, and the use of tobacco is general, but less so than in Germany. The mode of travelling is not so convenient as further P ae Pl oh elated vite, LAU LU at Pe Wee Ad CPR aye a SRE To PRINS ay US Ka Rect ee USER MELSON MIE CAM a ar FR eee eee eS) ee eS Pe BEN aS > + bs eP * Pe Re | ae ee Se a NN el a + ike ; - # eh nine Bia Py ,* ast) "\ 246 DENMARK. south, and few foreigners visit Denmark. The com- mon post vehicles do not exceed four or five miles‘an hour. : The Danes are brave, but not asantensa They would do more for defence than for glory. They are less cordial than the Germans, and less cheerful than their northern neighbors. They are faithful and honest, but not strongly marked with national pecu- -liarities. They are addicted to the use of spirituous liquors, and the proverbial expression of a “drunken Dane” has some foundation in the national character, Cards and dancing are the most common. amusements, but these are not followed with much ‘Spirit. abe There are several universities, and every town has a primary school; most of these are on the Lancas- terian plan. There is a library of four hundred and ten thousand volumes at Copenhagen, with several learned societies. The arts are not in a flourishing state, though Thorwaldsen, the sculptor, was a native of Dcetiaae: The sciences are cultivated with suic- cess, but the literature is limited. There are some — good popular songs and tolerable dramas. ‘The gov- ernment is despotic in form, but mild: in its adminis- tration. The laws are equitable and well administers ed. The religion is chiefly Lutheran, and the church government partakes of the Episcopal form. —» 4, ipa “SWEDEN. ‘ a e ; % ~THE ede niin the rivistdle size, and few of them ‘are corpulent. They have ruddy complexions; and flaxen hair, though the women often have auburn hair vand blue eyes. The females are distinguished for beauty. There is little diversity of appearance in the ‘Swedes; and they seem. to a foreigner, rather as members of the same family than natives of a large country. All have a very composed demeanor. There are four orders in the state : nobles, clergy, peasants and burghers, or citizens of towns. » The Swedes have a nationaldress, established by law, about sixty years ago. The females, however, have little scruple to break this ordinance. The gen- — eral color is black, but on gala days, itis blue; lined with white. The dress of ladies is somewhat like the | ‘English, except in the sleeves, which are Spanish. — # Veils are common. The coats of the men are short and close. ‘They are fastened around the body with asash. The cloak is black, but lined with gayer colors: Galoches, or outward shoes, are worn in win- ter, and a fur, or. sheep: skin. over dress, is then indis- — pensable and universal. The peasantry in Dalecarlia — are called white or black, as they are dréssed in either color: and almost all wear one or the other.’» They wear huge shoes, with thick liar soles, and a: hat . a 3 ae 948 SWEDEN. like a Quaker’s. Generally, the hats are each decorated with a feather, and no gentleman is in full dress without a sword. ‘The Swedes, for the most part, are comfort- ably and neatly clad. | The dwellings, except at Stockholm, and in Souming are of wood. ‘The peasants have log houses, and fill the interstices with moss.. The roof is .covered with birchen bark and turf... In summer the floors are some- times strewed with odorous twigs. Many of the country-houses are of several stories, and make a) good appearance. Some of them are so constructed, that they may be taken down and removed in a short time. The beds of the common people are placed one above another, on shelves, as in the berths of a ship. : The roads of Sweden are hardly inferior to hae of England, and the facilities for. travelling are better than in the other northern countries. . The roads are kept in repair by the peasants; each family of which has its portion marked with bounds. . The inns. have few comforts, though all have a “traveller’s. room” - with a bed, or at least a berth of boards. The horses are small, but active and sure footed. « They go at full speed down the steepest and largest hills, and are sel- dem known to stumble, though in the as seasons, they are driven by boys or women. | i iil The Swedes: have many amiable traits in, their character, though they do not lack energy. They are ~ kind, cheerful and faithful. They love their country, and are much attached to free institutions,,and prin- ciples of equality. In this and in other respects, they somewhat resemble the. Swiss...The mountains. of : Dalecarlia have always been the-abode of freedom and 1 ee iy oi hae A fy Ae Rie RS BE tesa hs SWEDEN. _ 249 simplicity of character. The Swedes are gentle, though brave and warlike ; and the peasants are uncommonly civil and obliging. ‘The people are hospitable to-a great degree, and the character of a stranger is a ready passport to their houses. When the richer families leave their country residences, a room and attendance are still appropriated to travellers, who receive as much care as if»the master were present. . The Swedes are descended from the hordes that overran the Roman empire, and they are no less brave and adventurous than their ancestors. .In modern times they have been the bulwark of. the Protestant faith; and one of their sovereigns has, with an inconsiderable army, conquered armies as-‘numerous and brave as the north ever sent forth, to pillage the fertile south. The first of May and midsummer day are celebrat- ed with general joy. On the latter occasion the young men and women dance around a pole till morning. Dancing is common, and all classes join in the sport with great animation. Cards. are a general amuse- | ment, though the Swedes are not addicted to gaming. _ All ranks play games at cards, the most common of which is that called. Boston. It is said. (to illustrate the national fondness for play) that a nobleman, when his dinner hour had arrived without the dinner, went into the kitchen to learn the reason of the delay, when he found all the domestics engrossed .in.a game. “He admitted. the characteristic excuse that the game was ~ at its most critical point, and could not therefore be deferred even for dinner ; but he took the cook's hand, and plop it, while that domestic performed his a 2 ‘. ; ‘ - bt " De oo ating Ps . e AA PCS 4 EDs by Sra 5a Re ee ee a Saer eM BES * Ry .” ee P ” NORWAY. aie Tas inhabitants of Norway are hardy and robust, dnd the women, like those of Sweden, are many of them beautiful. -The dress is plain, and generally of , a stone color, with white metal buttons and red but- tonholes. Furs are much worn in winter. The lan- guage has an affinity with the Danish and Swedish. The usual food of the peasants is milk, cheese and fish. Flesh and oat-bread, made hard as in Sweden, are more rare. In times of scarcity the bark of fir trees is mixed with the oatmeal. A common soup is made of oatmeal or barley meal, seasoned with a pickled herring or salted mackerel. The Norwegians, like the Swedes, are. much addicted tothe use of _ spirits, though without. suffermg the injurious effects produced by intemperance in warmer climates. » The use of tobacco is general. The people are far more sprightly than the Danes, and it would not be easy to find a nation more cheerful than the Norwegians. They are brave, energetic, and patriotic. The pea- sants are frank and hospitable, and have great inde- pendence, Their mode of salutation, even to superi- ors, is by shaking hands, and this is the pei in which they return thanks for a favor. The Norwegians have some of the ashen common in Sweden, and they delight also in recount- NORWAY. 251 ing tales of their ancestors, which in their social meet- ings they often do, by turns. Skating upon the snow is a practice very common in this country. The skates are’ made of wood and are very large. The snow is frozen so hard that the skaters pass over it as swiftly as upon ice... At Drontheim is a regiment of soldiers called skate-runners. They carry a rifle, sword and, along climbing staff, shod with iron. They go two or thrée hundred paces apart, and move 80 swiftly that no cavalry can approach them. _ Without a great many establishments for. education, the people névelthicléss are not illiterate, and there are few: peasants who cannot read and write. There are two seminaries for the instruction of teachers. There are many itinerant schoolmasters, who stay in a ham- let about two weeks at a time. There is not much national literature ; mathematics is the favorite study. The religion is Protestant, and there are some ves- tiges of paganism. At funerals a violin is played at the head of the coffin, and questions, as in various other countries, are addressed to the corpse, in the course of which, it is customary to ask pardon for hav- ing injured or offended the deceased during life. Rye a Pan) eS Re Sees ee he a, a ie wy eh Se aC ‘ bai . ; ‘ . Pog i ' ng, i GM » oo}. Sage a a . % ® s * ish a ye ’ 4 ahr Noel Q P te, 4s ‘ ; f Pdi b LAPLAND. , ! ire ot 2, ite . yl any > i, sal ii hil Fi fifa i” APR i Tue Laplanders are generally short in stature, and : they have sharp chins and prominent cheek bones. They differ from the Finns in having dark hair, though their complexions are frequently light. They have a | ~ tolerable share of strength, with great suppleness and ! ' agility, and they endure much hardship with patience. ) _ The materials for dress are generally the skins of ani- mals; though the Laplanders who have permanent habitations, wear in summer, woollen stuffs, and shirts, which the wandering inhabitants have not. The men AM LAPLAND. P "ee ete wear a conical cap,-and, in ae I a hood, Wbveune the breast and shoulders, and with only a small open- ing for the eyes. They. rarely wear any covering round their necks, which are exposed in the severest weather, or defended ‘only by a piece of narrow cloth, going once round. They wear a tunic, or short.coat of sheep-skin, with the wool inwards, and clése- before except on the breast. Over this, which is worn next the skin, is a similar garment of woollen, or skins, with a stiff collar. The Laplander has no pocket, but hangs a small bag at his breast, in which he puts his little implements. The gloves are of skins, and lined with cypress grass... There are no stockings, and the pantaloons do not reach to the ancle. Instead of stockings, straw and rushes. are stuffed into the shoe, around the foot and ancle. . The men wear leathern belts. The dress of the women is not very. dissimilar -to that of the men. At night, even when the cold is most intense, the mountain Laplanders go to bed naked, _and cover themselves ‘with their dress and skins; putting their feet within a bag. The Laplanders live in huts, or, in summer, in tents. The huts are so small, that the. people cannot. stand upright, except in the,centre.. They are built of sods and stone, and covered with. bushes, turf, and earth. The household furniture.,consists of iron or copper kettles, and wooden ‘cups, bowls, and. spoons. Some of the wealthy, have tin, and eyen.silver basins. _ The reindeer supplies: the chief articles of food, nough something is, obtained by fishing and hunting. ~ In summer, the reindeer’s milk is boiled with sorrel to a Rongisience, and is thus preserved ; in winter, it is 254. ) LAPLAND. | ' ates % Ke te er & kept frozen in sage paunch of a reindeer, and mixed with cranberries. “It is broken up with a hatchet. When cheese is made, the milk is mixed with water’; otherwise it is too rich to curdle. Mt The Laplanders travel on sledges, drawn is the reindeer. In descending hills, in winter, long skates are worn. With these the Laplanders glide down the steep mountains so swiftly, that the air whistles in their ears, and their hair becomes erect. with the downward: motion. : Ts men live ina state differing from that of highly € civil ized countries; there are he crimes, and there is a perfect security of property. The settlements are not near to each other ; and whoever erects a hut without the limits of another, becomes ‘possessed of the land for six miles around. There is no temptation to com- mit the crimes of violence or fraud, that are’ so com- mon in other countries, and a lock as.a security’to property is unknown in Lapland. The people are gentle and hospitable, and, like the Esquimaux, they have the greatest aversion to war. A Laplander has never been known as a soldier. They resist all inducements to leave their country. ‘They are not without sensitive feelings, and are known’ to “wee from sympathy and compassion.’ ~The Laplanders. are expert wrestlers, and they’ have’ several athletic sports. They throw javelins at a mark, leap over sticks held by two persons, &c.. They have the game of fii and geese; which is in great request. = The Laplanders have renounced their pagan creed, though some of its rites and° superstitions remain. LAPLAND. 955 Marriages and funerals are not conducted with much ceremony. ‘The family and friends of a young man, go ina body to solicit the lady in behalf of the lover, and presents are made. Should the parents of the female retract their consent, the presents are restored, and even the brandy that was drank, is replaced. The Laplanders make professions of sorcery, and the fe- males sometimes are distinguished as witches. Their mode of divination is with the Runic drum, and by a system. of omens. ‘The pagan superstitions are, how- abe profualy becoming extinct. aes . Fee te ae : Bere ; P Vspgitiy « be ees phat ey 1} “of Set RPV Ly ex oF Dew n'y se Sy eae ; Seer ci Aig ge! % ; ? aS i. oY oe ee A Re ee eRe CN i al ‘ i j Sa VLZLE An observing traveller has remarked that the ap- pearance of the Russians struck him as more singular | than that of any other people which he had seen. In the other countries of Europe, a traveller passing from State to state, remarks comparatively a slight change at each transition; but in Russia ‘he finds everything changed ;—dress, features, manners, pursuits—all are new. ‘The first impression of a stranger in a Russian crowd is that he must be in some city of Asia, so truly oriental is the air of a great part of the population. At la ‘ “RUSSIA, if 257 another time, the long beard, flowing robes and col-. ored girdles which abound, give them a resemblance to a populationof Jews; but their hair and eyes. want the deep dark hue of the children of Israel. The above remarks relate chiefly to the inhabitants of the cities. The great mass of the people, both in town and country, wear a coarse sheep-skin dress, consisting of a short, tight surtout, the wool turned in, and the outside black with filth. Every laborer has a beard: flowing rough and grisly on his bosom. . Instead of the sheep-skin coat, a short frock of red-striped cot- ton, made much in the same shape, is often worn by shop-boys and apprentices. But the most common dress of all who have not the’axe or oar in their hand, is a long, blue, swaddling coat. They add.a long sash about the middle, generally yellow or red... They sel- dom wear anything about the neck, the collar of the coat being very low, and the shirt without acollar. The head projects above a long tract of skin, which, from constant exposure to sun and wind, looks as horny as the hide of a rhinoceros. Instead of shaving the chin, the Russian shaves the back of his head.. Beauty, ac- cording to his notion, consists in having the head raised as far as possible above the body; accordingly, he shaves away a large portion of the hair at the top of theneck, and cuts the remainder so as to: make the head resem- ble a turnip. He generally wears a small low-crowned hat, with a broad brim. If the Russian’s dress be scanty above, it is long enough below. It reaches to the ground, and laps closely over the limbs, so that he has-a long, waving appearance as he moves through the streets with a:solemn pace. The dress below the 258 i RUSSIA. - coat is often very slight; no flannels are worn; their trousers of striped cotton are thrust into long black” boots at the foot, and thus the costume is complete. A stranger would say that one half the people must be freezing, even in summer, so thin and slight are their garments. . Yet there is a singular contradiction in the dress of the other half of the crowd in the street. Even in the warmest days, when the ‘stranger from the south is scarcely able to walk for the heat, he. sees Russians wrapped upas if for winter. While foreign ers are glad to fan themselves with their hats, the na- tives may be seen with large. fur cloaks worn over thick great-coats, with other garments sufficient to load a giant. This custom arises from’ the variable- ness of the climate. In the course of the same day; there are great changes of temperature at St. Peters- burg ; at noon, in summer, the air is burning : before night it is almost freezing. It is affirmed, that out of the sun, it is always cold there; the damps of the river, and. the breezes sweeping from Lake Ladoga, penetrate everywhere; on the sunny side of the street you are comfortably warm or perhaps a on pass to the shade, and you shiver. The females of the higher classes imitate: oe fash- ions of Paris and London, and are said to indulge in the greatest extravagance in ornaments, sometimes lavishing a whole fortune upon a single dressi Throughout. Russia, a house is hardly ever seen standing’ by itself. The peasantry are all collected in small villages, containing from thirty to a: hundred houses, ranged in lines by the highway. » Between the road and the houses is'a space of seven-or eight ‘ig m f sl ghey pty oa min * . we RUSSIA. 209 yards, a perfect quagmire of mud. The gable end of the house faces. the road : the roof is sharp, and cover- ed with boards, fantastical] y carved, or with straw and reeds. One. corner of the gable is usually occupied by. a door, and the upper portion displays six or eight small windows, with folding shutters, gaudily painted. Every house has a bench, sheltered by the projecting roof, where young. and old sit to enjoy the sun on holi- days. Scarcely a cottage is without its large draw- well, with wheel and rope before it. No’ part of a house is painted. except the shutters, consequently, all the villages have | a dingy, decaying appearance. There i is no want of comfort, however, that is, of Rus« sian’ comfort, which never includes cleanliness. Such is the genuine Russian domestic architecture. Of the great cities, we may give a different account. Moscow, whose terrible catastrophe in 1812 is known" to every one, has risen from its ashes.in greater splen- dor than ever 5; ‘scarcely a trace of the great conflagra- tion is now to be seen, and it would seem to have suf- fered | on. that occasion only. to make way for improye- ments. bi T he Russians were always:proud of Moscow, and its destruction being, connected with the overthrow of a hated. invader, made them still more proud of it; every one bearing the name of Russian, from the Bin. peror to. the lowest peasant, felt honored in contribut- ing to the patriotic work of its restoration. The view of this city ata distance has excited the admiration of all travellers. The countless number of towers, some with cupolas, either gilt or painted green, and others rising in. the form of minarets, and the many g cardens “and trees intermixed with the ‘houses, g sive the city a oa P+ CE IGE: i, eS Ae —= e —— i ie ie ‘& ‘> as — Sa — = = <= = ——— iS $ s SS “> w ‘ J ial ) 4&3 DB i i=) > = a Bo 3 iS © Lad ~ > wd Ss) S ~ oe .S) 3 Ss o = S : Me _ = = —_ = ft) aS a= ri ~ ah =i , ae a eee ee ey en Yh Pa eee ary me ee Bette OR eS Lee lu) tee We WS AOE Ri ii Gres Sia cle ocala al , Taree Ne fy jah Sef Vaal Ty SURE) RN Ve Wee a te ere RUSSIA. 961 perfectly oriental appearance. The towers are said to amount to six hundred, nearly every church having several besides the steeple. The cupolas or denits are in the form of a bulb or onion, surmounted by a erescent, with the cross above it. The towers vary considerably in form and color, and give the city its characteristic appearance ; ‘they are all built of stone, and most of them are situated in open squares, in con- sequence of which they escaped the fire of 1812. Hence Moscow has lost little or nothing of its original aspect. In the palaces and public buildings, almost every style of architecture has been copied.* The Kremlin is the most famous building in the city—it is a fortified palace of vast extent, adorned with numer- ous towers and minarets, and is a most singular and magnificent pile of architecture. ‘ 3 St. Petersburg strikes every visiter ri astral ment by the. splendor of its architecture. Its long lines of houses and palaces are generally of a uniform plan, and have a freshness of appearance that indi- cates the recent origin of the city. ‘The united mag- nificence of all the cities of Europe,” says Dr. Clarke, since whose time it has been very much improved, “could but equal St. Petersburg.” There is nothing mean or little to offend the eye; all is grand, exten- sive, large and open; the streets seem to consist en-— tirely of palaces ; the structures are lofty and elegant. The public buildings, quays, piers, ramparts, &e. are composed of masses of solid granite; -and our ad- miration is increased, when we reflect that not two centuries have elapsed since ‘the: foundation of the city. Palaces, cathedrals, triumphal arches and monu- Q fi a 7 7 a IH Re re Ki git fa fe ba wy uv) ere bha | ba eS ART lesb 7 TT ees ay ake A LT me rip oil At 262 RUSSIA. i. mental statues, all of most tasteful design and cost- ly. workmanship, stand in thick and fait array on a _ spot which was recently covered with marshes and forests. The plasterer’s trowel and the painter’s - brush are kept in constant activity throughout the city, so that there is no appearance of decay in any quarter. Repairs are not left to the-caprice or indo- _ lence of the owners of houses; the government imme- diately steps in and orders them to be made. It can créate also as well as preserve, for much of St.:Peters- burg has been built by compulsion; it would never have attained to half its present magnitude but for the interference of the authorities, who were accustomed to say to a man in very plain terms, “ You who have this income or that, or this or that number of houses, are hereby called upon to build forthwith so many more.” : In spite, oe of the magnificence of this city, there are deficiencies which deprive it of the charac- ter of a great capital, and cause it to rank no higher than an enormous country village. Of mere bulk, wealth and population, it has enough, but this splen- did city, “ built to order” by the eoriinands of a des- pot, wants the indescribable something which makes the capitals of France and England the sbaipilidls also of ~ the intellect and fashion of Europe. The Russian metropolis has filled the nations with wonder by its sudden rise, and it may fill them with greater wonder by its yet more sudden fall. The proud monarch of the north may have it said of that stately city as was said of Jonah’s gourd, that it came up in a night and paper in a night. Such a calamity, if we may be- yitiene * i. po RUSSIA. 263 lieve. those who have: long resided there; is by, no means improbable. The ground is so low, that the Neva at times sweeps irresistibly over a great part of the city ; and the inundations have often risen so high » as to threaten the complete subversion of the finest quarters. Should a rise of the river happen simul- taneously with a strong wind blowing up the Gulf of Finland, nothing can save the yet a! total’ destruc- tion. The Russian peasant is atianed with the oo food. No people in Europe are so coarsely fed.. Their diet consists of all the sour things that can be procured ; pickled cucumbers, pickled cabbage, or pickled mush- rooms, with a piece of black bread, are their daily fare. At rare intervals they may taste a little fish, or even butcher’s meat, but these also, the fish at all events, are likely to be excessively acrid. To- gratify this taste for sours, cucumbers are wats in amazing quan- tities ; every market-place in the empire displays heaps of them on the right hand and on the left. Th the country towns, a hundred good ones may be bought for six cents. At the tables of the middle classes, they are seen almost every day. The pickled cabbage of the Russians is not.unlike the German sour krout. The pickled mushrooms are beyond all endut- able sourness. In short, the Russian peasant lives ~ upon acids, and unless his food burn his palate it has no relish for him. As may easily be inferred, it is also very unwholesome., The Russians are undoubt- edly more liable to scorbutic discases than nation in Europe. a Nea : The wey classes. a ais the French ‘style of Se ey ee ee 264 =, cookery, yet they preserve some of the national dishes. One of these the Russians consider as the most exquis- ite of luxuries. Itisa soup called datinia, which, to » the palate of a stranger, is the most horrible compound of burning poisons, ever.invented. The use of mush- rooms is universal, from the Emperor.to the beggar ; and it is remarkable that the very kinds which are poisonous in the west of Europe, are eaten’ by the Russians with perfect impunity. All classes have a great fondness for raw turnips. . The extravagance of the Russians with regard to wine is worthy ofremark. Their own country produces this, but a Russian affects to care for nothing that can be got at home ; you almost insult him by asking for a bottle of the wine of the Crimea, if it be only to say that you had drank Russian wine in Russia. The government has been at great pains to.promote the cultivation. of ‘the vine in the south, but as yet with no very decided success. Some of the wines of the Crimea are toler- able, but the greater part of them are little better than red ink with sugar in it.. French wines are chiefly used, and these of the most expensive quality. Cham- pagne is the favorite; at home or abroad the Russian is steady in his‘affection for this beverage, and it is -almost the only one which he thinks fit for rational : "beings ; ; 400,000 bottles of it .are consumed annually in the country. With all the partiality of the Pala, however, for imported luxuries, there is a home-made liquor, their love for which nothing can shake, and that is Aywass. In vain have the English tempted them by establishing brewerles ‘of ale; they | keep. by, ies is ® s 4 RUSSIA. ‘ 265 drink. It is a thin and very sour beverage, yet the people think they cannot live without it, and it is pat- ronized by all ranks and denominations. There is a vessel of it in every peasant’s hut, from which .the family are sipping the whole day long, and you find it in bottles on the same table with champagne. It is made of rye, boiled in a large quantity of water, which being afterwards fermented, acquires a sourish and not disagreeable taste, and is most effectual in allaying thirst. The vodki or brandy in which the poor Rus- sian indulges to a most debasing excess, is a harsh and fiery liquor, distilled from rye, oats and barley. None but the lower classes use this drink freely, but these consume it to an incredible extent, and with the most pernicious effects. There is something remark- _ able in a Russian’s way of getting intoxicated. Some nations drink for amusement, and for sociality, but the Russian drinks for drunkenness. A Frenchman spends . his holiday at the guinguette, over a pint of wine, and even if it be a quart, he walks home very decently at night. He went there to talk, to dance, or to see his friend; the wine was a mere secondary consideration, a means, not the énd of his amusement. The Englishman goes to the tavern or alehouse to read the newspaper, smqke his pipe and abuse the ministry ; he may come away merry, but it was for the company and ‘the talk that he went thither, and not mainly for the liquor. Even when a Frenchman or an Englishman does get intoxicated, he spends hours in reaching that state; but the Russian gets drunk in a moment. He enters a brandy-shop; counts down his copecs, seizes. the measure, and at one draught swallows enough to make him a beast. és 266 be RUSSIA. Travelling is attended with peculiar inconveniences in Russia. Every person about to leave the capital _for a foreign country is under the necessity of adver- ~ tising his intention in the newspapers at least three different times. The professed object of this recula- tion is to prevent people from running away without paying their debts; but the real object is to give the police time to ascertain privately whether the traveller may have any motives of a political nature. Owing to this arrangement, the stated time required for get- ting a passport ready is about a fortnight; so that travellers who go to St. Petersburg on a flying visit must begin advertising themselves as soon as they ar- rive. For a merchant or other person who has been long settled in the country, the process is more protract- ed, and indeed the formalities in this case are so trouble- some, that it is difficult to get away atall. Strangers leaving St. Petersburg for the interior, designing to leave Russia without returning to the capital, must also advertise themselves. The expense of advertis- ing and passports is a heavy tax upon travelling. A few years since, no kind of public conveyance was known in Russia; at present, there are diligences running between Moscow and St. Petersburg, and ' there is in other parts of the empire a posting system called the padoroshna. The Russian diligence has a general resemblance to its French namesake, but is much more comfortable. It is ‘drawn: by four horses yoked abreast. The driver and the postilion sit im front, the one over the other. The hinder part of the diligence is occupied by a covered bench, closed in with leather cushions, lines three Sian: The body RUSSIA. 267 is divided into two*compartments for two persons — each; this is much the most comfortable part of the machine; each passenger has a seat fenced off for himself, where he sits as in an arm-chair, conversing with his neighbor at his elbow, but never mconiitibd- ing him. Each has a small looking-glass before him, very convenient to a Russian, who is always trimming his beard. There is also a small folding table’in front of each person, not without its use in a country where the natives always lay in stores for a journey, that they may be independent of taverns by the way. Their meals of sausage and bread are eaten from this table as the horses move on. The road from St. Pe- tersburg to Moscow is one of the finest in the world. It is a work of recent construction, very. broad, with gutters on each side, and embellished by rows of trees for a considerable distance.. The Emperor takes a pride in keeping it as neat as a garden walk: ‘Beyond Moscow there is nothing ‘properly de- serving the name of a road in any direction; nothing but irregular tracks through fields and forests, some- times tolerably good, but whiey rain ‘has fallen, almost impassable. Beside bad roads, the traveller must en- counter bad inns, without cooks, without beds, and destitute of comforts of any kind. ‘The natives almost always employ the telega on long journeys, from its being almost the only vehicle of Russian construction which can stand the obstructions of the roads. “With an open front to’ let the traveller see the country by day, and bed and blankets for the night, it is, perhaps, the best, and certainly the cheapest vehicle of all. Ithas no springs, but the wood which it rests S upon i is so elastic * 4 BO Pers, ogee Aca ee BE ae a aa 968 RUSSIA. “that the jolting is not much worse than in a carriages -and it has the advantage of being strong and clumsy enough to bowl. safely thing! the ruts, which few - carriages could do. The padoroshna is an order from a magistrate on . the postmasters along the intended route of the trav- eller, by which he may always obtain a specified num- ber of horses. ‘The fee for this document is pretty heavy, but there is nothing lost by it, as a portion of the sum is deducted rails every charge for horses. The podoroshna is exhibited at every stage, and the postmaster is compelled to furnish the number of horses ordered in it, and he is at liberty to give more — if necessary from the state of the highways. Every Russian is taxed 25 copecs a-year for the maintenance . of the roads: but it would seem that this money is not wholly appropriated to its right object.. A Russian postilion is a singular creature. In his greasy sheepskin, faded sash, and low round hat, with bright buckles or a few peacock’s feathers twisted in the band, he flies off the moment he has mounted the ; vehicle, at the rate of ‘eight miles an hour, whistling, singing, shouting and taline to his horses, making as mel noise as an Irishman at a fair, his whip, like the shillalah, flourishing fiercely round his head, but sel- dom coming down with the same fatal violence. In fact, it.is by his tongue more than by his whip, that he impels his horses. He reasons with them, remon- strates, conjures and upbraids, all the time. If you tell him that your head aches with his noise, he shrugs his. ‘shoulders, raises his. eyebrows, and gives you to understand that the horses, which he. fondly terms his RUSSIA. 969 , pigeons, his rabbits, his*darlings, and his turtle-doves, are so fond of talk and+so well accustomed t6 his voice, that they would never move if he were silent.’ The Russian drosky is described by travellers as one of the most absurd vehicles ever invented. It consists of a low, narrow seat; covered with black lea- ther, not much larger than a dragoon saddle, and sup- ported on four small wheels, between the two foremost -of which is a box forthe driver. It is something like a velocipede; and the passenger sits astride with his feet touching the ground on each side, or resting in a sort of stirrups, which brush the mud below. There is room for two passengers, but they must sit face to face, as comfortable as a pair who should, mount a horse together in that style. Sometimes, however, the passengers sit sideways, or one in the other’s lap, but always most awkwardly. It is difficult to under- stand why the Russians make use of so ill- contrived a machine. The temptations to journey in Russia must be few: Actording to thé testimony of travellers, this great empire covers’ the least beautiful portion of the habit- able globe. With the exception of the eidaak which may be called the Russian Italy, there is hardly a spot in it that can be deemed picturesque. One may travel five hundred miles’ without having the sight ever attracted by a romantic landscape,—not a single beau- tiful mountain, beetling cliff, brawling stream, or fresh green dell, will arrest his attention. He finds nothing but. the dead, rade ane ceaseless sae | of — and forest. ‘ ‘The Russians have reriarkable ‘imitative powers, 2 270 RUSSIA. and these are very strikingly exhibited im their national amusements and pastimes. The fun and drollery which they display when two or three persons chance to meet upon an idle holiday, are inexhaustible. On such occasions, dancing is a favorite amusement: and they sing constantly, rales it be a holiday or not: the singing is generally bad, but when taught, the Russians make excellent musicians... So strong is their. natural turn for music that a lad taken from the plough will, at the end of six months, play the most difficult pieces on any instrument that may be selected for him. These qualities of imitation and liveliness make them excellent actors: they are born comedians; even those of the lowest rank show. a strong passion for everything dramatic. On the stage, consequently, they are extreniely natural, and keep the audience in constant laughter. The national] dance is described by travellers as very pretty. * The genuine cignophisticatelt Russian exhibits no- where a more strongly marked character than in his deyotions. Follow him into the church and you find him on his knees repeating his prayers after the priests with a fluency which nothing can arrest, and a devo- tion which nothing can distract. Pass him or. jostle him as you may, he is too deeply engaged in his pious work to take the least notice of you. | On entering the church he kisses the sacred picture near the door, or tries to reach that hanging on the wall, to which, as it is of more than A ewe sanctity, you may see the parents raismg their little infants, that:they too may touch it with their lips. This salutation. over, ‘he selects a place for himself ..on the floor, as near the RUSSIA. 271. priest as possible. ‘There is a woman in one of the aisles with a small table or basket before her, selling. long slender tapers; from her the more devout make a purchase, and lighting it, set their offermg on one of the little triangular frames of wood plauled among the pillars, and stuck all over with nails to receive these gifts. The mutterings and prostrations of the worshippers are most sia ouldas Some on the outskirts of the assembly may remain standing, but the greater part have their knees bent to the naked floor; at cer- tain words, however, both those who are standing, and- those who kneel, strike their foreheads on the pavement'with great vehemence, uttering at the same time, some words after the priest: this is repeated several times before the service is finished. Some poor-old women are always most conspicuous in these violent agitations ; ; but all ages and classes, and both sexes, join with more or less ardor. In short, the mummery of the Russian worship surpasses every- thing of the kind in Catholic countries, and can be compared only to the violence of some of the Hindoos. The ignorance of the Russian boor is extreme; his religion is little better than superstition. Of a Su- preme Being he has the most imperfect notions: he imagines God to be only something’a little higher than the emperor, regarding him not as an omnipotent spiritual being, but as one residing he knows not where, who will punish him for neglecting church nearly in the same way as the’ emperor would roa him for disobeying a mandate: In short, as has been often said, the Russian’s reli- gion consists in being ablé to make the sign of the a ee ee eee: . 972 RUSSIA. cross. He is crossing himself all day long. When he first comes abroad in the morning, if no church be in sight from his own door, he Hise for the first sound of some tell, then turning towards it, crosses himself with great-fervor to insure a blessing on the undertakings of the day. He crosses himself before and after,each meal. When you make a bargain with him he crosses himself that it may prosper. When his countryman spits upon him, by way of anathema, he meekly crosses himself to avert the curse. When the peasant, who is to drive your carriage, takes the reins, he crosses himself to keep away accidents, and every steeple on the road gets the same mark of re- spect. Sometimes the bider thus saluted is so-far off that the stranger wonders at the quickness shown m discovering it, and is often at a loss to spy the distant hamlet, where it stands. The passenger crosses him- self every time he starts with new horses. What the old do thus frequently, the young, of course, imitate. If you give a child a piece of money, its little hand is up in a moment to make the sign of the cross, by way of blessing and thanks. . Another very remarkable part of the religion of the Russians is their respect for ded/s. The air resounds with them from morning to night. Every church is furnished with several, and many are very expensive. They have not the deep, solemn sound of English and American bells, but a rich and indescribable sweetness, never heard but in Russia, and’ said by some to be eaused by the predominance of silver in their compo- sition. ‘They are not swung as with us, but only the tongue is moved. The reverence of the Russian for me RUSSIA. 273: bells begins even when they,are in the hands of the ‘founder. The child casts its mite into the melting mass, and the beggar his alms; the bride gives -her SON Sy. Zee : ornaments, and the princess her jewels: all are eager to aid the pious work. Gold and silver are, in conse- quence, so profusely contributed on these occasions, that some of these bells are the monarchs of ‘their tribe. Russia boasts of having the largest bells in the world. The day on which a bell is consecrated is © always marked with great solemnity and rejoicing. We need not wonder that these objects are so much beloved, for perhaps the happiest and most romantic associations of the Russian are linked with the history of his village bell. In a country where there is sO little bordering on romance, this trait of national cha- racter is not unwelcome. But if we attempt to ascer- lee Sore the 274 RUSSIA. tain whatitis which the Russians worship intheir bells, the result will be far from distinct. Travellers have» been unable to learn whether the salute in passing a church is made to the building or to the metal. Easter eve in Russia is ielobrdtad with great rejoic- ing. The steps of the churches are loaded with eat- ables of every kind, which are brought to be blessed by the priest, before the people can break their long fast. The poor people bring large quantities of eggs boiled hard, and painted on the shell with different colors. Some of them are gilt, and painted with figures of saints and other devices. Every one who goes into the street takes a few of these in his pocket, to keep up the following singular custom. Ivan‘and Alexis meet in the street; the two faends stop, and each pulls out anegg. These are arranged so that only the end is allowed to be seen, the hand being closed over the rest. After some maneuvring, the two egos are knocked together; the one whose egg is broken loses; the victor pockets both, and says, “ Christ is risen;” the other replies, “He is indeed risen,” They then take off, their hats, kiss three times, make a most profound bow, and part, to repeat the same ceremony at the corner of the next street ‘ with some other person. ‘ The Russians place great reliance on fortune tellers. Gypsies are consequently a privileged race, and.carry ona thriving trade inthe land. In short, the instances of credulity and weakness met with among the lower Classes, and not unknown even. among the higher ranks, are most melancholy. The belief in lucky and unlucky days for. setting out on a journey, or com- Ne hi ieee aay ee Dey RE OM ray). SA Mey te Coe amare. AY AY oF serie My FAT MIE APT SAD cn Vee eS, err a ve RUSSIA. 245 mencing an undertaking,—the evil consequences of meeting certain kinds of people, such as a monk,—the danger of haying thirteen at dinner, or of spilling salt— in fact all the absurdities which were formerly preva- — lent in many parts of Western Europe, still reign among the Russians with undiminished authority. * They have also a reluctance to insure houses, or pro- perty of any description. It is long since attempts were made to establish insurance companies, but, until very lately, such schemes never met with encourage- ment, In fact, they are half Turks in their practice, if not in their faith, and act as if it were impious to struggle against fate. The Russian peasant seems to bé at the mercy of all who choose to lift their arm against him. . His lord orders him stripes as many and as often as he pleases. The poor creature is made to stoop on his hands and knees while a man smites him with a rod the prescribed number of times. Though degrading however, this chastisement is not often severe ; it is quite distinct from the terrible knout, which is inflicted only by the sentence of a judge, and lacerates the suf- ferer so dreadfully that it is long before he recoyers, if at all. Nobles and military men, all who wear a government uniform of any kind, seem to possess the privilege of beating the people of the lower orders whenever they feel offended with any of them. Even the servants:of the latter classes claim the privilege of beating those beneath them; but it is only to be themselves beaten in their turn by the master himself, or by his executioner, who, though he may not bear this name, is an indispensable appendage to every pe ONG Sa ae by al aK 276 RUSSIA. great, establishment. Generally speaking, nothing can be more brutal than the conduct of every man _ wearing an uniform, whenever he has it in his power; it isin this way that the underling revenges himself for the contumelious treatment he is doomed to endure from those above him. The politeness and pacific temper of the Russian“ lower orders are remarkable ; fighting is hardly known, but scenes of hugging and kissing are wonderfully Bae quent among the long-bearded populace. - Two fellows in sheepskins, when they happen to be friends, bow to each other in passing as profoundly as a couple of French Academicians. This. bowing propensity, however, is not so indiscriminate as among the French, who bow to all, friend and foe, but more especially to their superiors. ‘The Russian, on the contrary, seldom takes notice of those he does not know: it is only to his woolly friend that his ragged hat comes off in passing along the road. To the stranger who asks his assistance, he is most polite and friendly. Duplicity and treachery seem to be ex- tremely rare among them. In short, there is every reason to look upon the great mass of the Russian people as of an excellent natural disposition, patient under wrongs and sufferings, amiable and warm- hearted, and grateful to those who treat them well. Could the emperor Nicholas but cure them of. their besotting vice, of the love of drink, he would do more for his empire than by the capture of Constantinople. 0 ie) PEE UU eee ea Otay vey PAO ah gry tc AO Be MBE AUS TENNRY RUIN MUR Bg te aie MN At ay ea i Re Oe: a (te ae th ee POLAND. % Maiamouat thé Whole of Poland, ‘ah the exception of the small territory of Cracow, has been divided be- tween Russia, Prussia, and Austria, and become politi- cally incorporated into those monarchies, yet the national spirit and the national manners still remain, and we have witnessed with what eagerness and enthusiasm they have grasped at every chance, how- ever small or desperate, of regaining their national independence; such a result, however, is now far dis- tant, if indeed it can be deemed within bn bounds of possibility. ~The Poles are a Realy people, and use much atiihn in their common discourse. When they salute.cach ‘vil other they usually incline the head and strike ‘the breast with one hand, while they stretch the other towards the ground; but when a common person -méets a superior, he bows his head almost to the earth, at the same time waving his hand, with which he touches the leg near the heel of the person ‘to whom he pays obeisance. The men of all ranks generally wear whiskers and shave their heads, leaving only a circle of hair near the crown, The summer dress of the peasants consists of a shirt and drawers of coarse linen, without shoes or stockings, and round caps or ats. ‘The women of the lower class wear upon their R ‘¢ *» 278 POLAND. heads a wrapper of white linen, under which, their hair is braided, hanging down to the middle. The » dress of the higher .orders, both men and women, is very elegant. That of the gentlemen is ‘a waistcoat without sleeves, with an upper robe of a different color, which reaches below the knee, and is fastened round the waist with a sash or girdle. ‘The sleeves, in warm weather, are tied behind the shoulders.. In summer, the robe is of sill ; in. winter, of woollen. or velvet, edged with fur. A sabre is a negessayy, appendage of the dress, as a mark of nobility.’ Fur caps or bonnets are worn, and buskins of yellow leather, the heels ‘of which are plated with iron or steel. The dress of the ladies 1s a Pare polonaise, or long robe, edged with fur. j | . The Poles, in Fei features, act, customs, dress, and general. appearance; resemble Asiatics rather than Europeans, and are unquestionably descended from Tartar ancestors... The manner in which they. wear their hair i Is a. striking token of their origin. .. As early as the fifth century, some nations, came leutica! under the name of Scythians, had a similar practice. ~~ ) All the nobles or gentry are, in the. strict letter 0: the law, equal by birth, so that honors and blag re supposed. to add nothing to their real dignity. The Polish nobility. display great. elegance. and Toxin Ls their houses and villas. In their decorations and ‘fur- : niture, they seem to have happily blended the Fren ch. and English modes. In their entertainments they are highly refined, and as they spare no expense, and Dee. a good taste, the effect upon, a. _stranger is, both prising and captivating, - The. ‘Po lish Sidi are said to be the most fascinating i in the world POLAND. 979 Jews abound in Poland, particularly in the province of Lithuania. If you ask for an interpreter, they bring you a Jew; if you come to an inn, the landlord is a Jew ; if you want post-horses, a Jew procures them, and a Jew drives them ; if you wish to make a pur- chase, a Jew is your agent; and this is perhaps the only country in Europe where the Jews cultivate the ground. The peasantry in Poland, generally speak- ing, are in a wretched state, with little of the improve- ment of civilization and the arts. Their carts are put together without iron; their bridles and traces are generally braided from the bark of trees, or composed of twisted’ branches. They have no other tool than a hatchet to construct their huts, their furniture, and their carts. Their dress is a thick linen shirt and drawers, a long coarse drugget coat, or a sheepskin cloak, a round black felt hat lined with wool, and shoes made from the bark’of trees. ‘Their huts are built -with trunks of trees heaped on each other, and look id, mere wood-piles. AFRICA... ‘Tae quarter of the globe contains 11,500,000 square miles, and a population of 60,000,000. The* Arabs and Moors, who chiefly occupy the northern parts, are of Asiatic origin; but there are four great families of nations, strongly marked by physical characteristics, who appear to be indigenous to this quarter of the globe. ‘These are the Ber bers, who are mixed with the Arabs and Moors ; the Negroes, who pervade Central Africa ; and the Hottentots, and the Caffres, of the south. Although the northeastern part of Africa, or the valley of the Nile, was once inhabited by civilized nations, who had carried the arts and sciences toa high degree of improvement, and the northern coasts were at subsequent periods settled by numerous Pheenician, Greek and Roman colonies, and still later have been the seat of refined and polished Arab states, yet the great mass of this continent has remained a stranger to the arts of improved life. The natives nowhere have the art of writing ; no. alphabet is found among them, and there is nothing to indicate that they have reached beyond some of the simplest useful arts. To the Berber race belong the Shilloos, Kabyls, Tuaries, Suthas, Tibboos, &c., of the Atlas mountains and the regions to the south and east. There isa great diversity, however, among the nations referred AFRICA. - 981 to this race. The light colored nations in the upper ' valley of the Nile are, by some, referred to this, and by others to a distinct race ; the Nubians, Abyssinians, Gallas, Ababdehs, Shihas, &c.,. are of this number. The Foulahs, Fellatahs, or Pouls, are by some in- cluded among the negro races, and by some considered as quite distinct, both from them and. from the Berbers. The negroes are physically characterized by woolly hair, black skin, projecting lips, flattened nose, low and “retreating forehead, and the peculiar form of the legs. Morally, they are indolent, harmless, easy, and friend- ly in their disposition ; but even in their more civilized states, many barbarous usages and savage customs prevail. For ages,the blacks have been sought for as slaves in the other parts of the werld, and even at home, the greater part of the population is the property of the rest. Many.of the negroes live in the most degraded state, without government, without any re- ligion but the most absurd superstitions, without the decencies and proprieties of life, naked and without habitations. Others are wandering shepherds, and still others have organized regular governments, built towns, and. cultivated the arts. hoe if Pe er sah a ‘ 4 wate a GY as Dhar oO he re ae 8 cage oxy Rae 7 ‘aly, cai: al Pe ae a ltiy rr aa zy ait eke : ‘ ‘a ve eee * gies ic her ts, Se rime y ean a . a ie lon Uh iil | | —— chief or sche Py Amone the inhabitants of Africa, the Moors hold a_ prominent place. The import of the name, hoi though so widely diffused throughout Africa, is ex- ceedingly vague. ‘During the middle ages, the profes- 7 sors of the ‘Mahoinbta faith were divided into Turks — : » ha ae iphiuas AND ARABS OF AFRICA. 283 and Mdortyy At present the latter title, seems: chiefly confined to the inhabitants of the cities of Barbary. Fee ies Mall na towns exhibit an extreme similarity. They present the same exterior of gravity, stillness and decorum ; the same absence of all assemblages for purposes of gaiety or social intercourse; and the gloom — which necessarily arises from the entire exclusion of female society. Habitual indolence is here mnterrupt- ed by the mechanical round of religious. ceremonies. A. total want ofall knowledge and curiosity respecting the arts and’sciences characterizes the» whole of this once enlightened region. The outward aspect of the streets is. as gloomy as that of the persons by whom _ they are tenanted. ‘They are narrow and dirty: the walls of the houses are of earth, and destitute of -win- dows: gloom and nakedness are without, and a bar- barous splendor is within. In general, the Moors when compared with the Turks, appear an inferior race. ‘They have the same rudeness and austerity, while former piratical habits, and an unsettled govern- ment; have rendered thet more mean, tuebuvont and treacherous. "The Arabs anbavie Knits all the great Desatt of Diidhsiis They are divided into various tribes, who live almost entirely on the milk of their camels, and wander from valley to valley, travelling nearly every day*in search of food for their beasts, and also-for themselves. They live in tents, formed of coarse cloth of camel’s hair, which they pull off from: the animals, and “spin with a hand spindle. . The richer Arabs have’ one, two; and three slaves a a-piece, who. are ‘allowed to sleep on the'same mat with their masters a ae ee ae IE ae ae i Hes IN AR a aL ad Kaui at rm Es ost Gy MMe eee Ma oe ee 284 THE MOORS AND ARABS OF AFRICA; e and mistresses, and are treated in all-respects like the children of the family as to dress, &c. They are’not permitted, however, to marry with the Arab women, and. are obliged to tend the camels and do. other drudgery. After a slave has served his master for a long time, or has done him some essential service, he is matte free, and enters into all the privileges of wn condition. pay The Arabs of the desert are a ae and bony race. They have coarse, thick, black hair, which the men cut off with knives, and leave sticking out in every di- rection from the head. Their beard is worn long; their _ limbs are straight, and they can endure hunger, thirst, and. fatigue better, perhaps, than any other people in the world. Their dress is, in general, nothing more than a piece of coarse camel’s hair cloth tied round: the waist, and hanging down to the knees: sometimes they wear nothing but a goatskin apron. Some of the more opulent wear a linen or cotton cloth over their - shoulders, hanging round them something like a shirt without sleeves. Others have besides, a haick, or woollen blanket, four feet wide and four yards long, which they wrap round them. The women wear a dress of camel’s hair cloth without sleeves : this dréss contains-a sack or large pocket, in which they carry their little children: Both men and women go. bare- foot... « a ae _ Of government wid laws, theta can hardly be said to. possesssany. . The father of the family is its abso- lute chief in all respects: his wives and daughters are considered mere slaves. He deals out the milk to each of them, nor dare any one touch it until it is thus . 2 ‘THE MOORS AND ARABS OF AFRICA. 285 divided. He assists in milking the camels, and _ then puts the milk into a large wooden bowl, which has probably been in the family for ages. When there is sufficient for a good drink all round, he takes the small bowls, of which they generally have two or three, and distributes the milk to the family. These vessels, with a rat, comprise nearly the whole amount of furniture belonging to a household. The Arabs are Mahometans, and are very strict ob- servers of the precepts of the Koran. Their ablutions, for want of water, are performed | with sand. While - pursuing their journeys, and going in the greatest haste, when the hour of prayer arrives, they halt, make _ the camels lie down, take up sand in both their hands and rub themselves all over; then facing toward the east and bowing their heads, they repeat fis customary invocations, ‘This is performed five times a-day ; nor does any business cause them to neglect it. 3 The life of the Arab, although spent in wandering 1 place. to place, is exceedingly monotonous, and almost destitute of everything deserving the name of _ amusement, unless we can so call habitual idleness. The recitation of tales and poetic compositions, during the periods of leisure, in which many of them excel, furnishes one of their chief sources of recreation. rly Wey : _ When we pass to the south of the Great Desert, we” «4 find Central Africa filled with a population peculiarly ~ | African. Among the tribes belonging to the negro © a race, a few are found who have been converted to the © Mahometan faith: this new profession, however, is — always qualified with a large mixture of their ancient — THE NEGROES. QO Tinie superstitions. ies — it 1s never accompanied. with those recluse and austere. habits which form the essence, as it were, of a genuine Mussulman. In- providence, gentleness, and thoughtless gaiety, appear to compose the leading features of the negro charac- ter. In a fertile soil which supplies the necessaries of life with little labor; with few natural wants, and strangers to artificial. ones, they devote themselves wholly to pleasure. Music and dancing are amuse- ments that are pursued with passion throughout all Africa. “From. the satin of sunset,” says Golbery, “ all Africa dances.” . Polygamy is still more characteristic af Pagan dion of Mahometan Africa ; but it is not accompanied » with that jealous. and immuring system which prevails among the Moors. In most parts of Africa, according. . to the best. informed travellers, the sex possess nearly the same degree of liberty as in Europe, without, in general, abusing it. That exemption from labor in- — deed, which. is enjoyed by the inmates of Moorish harems, i 1s unknown here. All the laborious tasks are devolved upon the females, as upon slaves. Each, however, has a house, that is, a small cottage of her own, and all: which it contains, being. the fruit of her, industry, is considered as her property. a Architecture, as.an art, may be se to ne wikis unknown im this part of Africa. The. habitations con- sist merely of huts, with walls of earth, and roofs com- posed of leaves and twigs interwoven. If more. ac- cemmodation is wanted, more huts. are built, and. a circular enclosure is drawn round them.. The palaces « of - African monarchs consist eorolay of large collections of a Ee 988 THE NEGROES. such cottages, forming a species of village, and enclosed with a mud wall. A residence composed of such slight materials is easily moved. A week builds am African city, and an hour destroys it. Hence, the slightest motives of caprice, the dread of an enemy, or ane exhaustion of the surrounding country, are suf-, ficient to transfer their largest towns from one: spot to another. Agriculture forms another art by which the pros gress of a people in civilization may be very accurately measured. The negroes, with very few exceptions; cultivate the ground to a certain extent; they are not, . however, acquainted with the plough, nor have they skill sufficient to draw any service from the lower an- imals. The human hand, aided by some rude imple- ‘ment, forms the only power employed in cultivation. Generally speaking, only a certain spot round every town or village is elbinen? the rest belongs to the do- main of the forest. There are few districts which do “not afford large tracts of ‘unoccupied land that are considered the property of the sovereign or community, and are readily g sranted to those who will undertake the labor of clearing and cultivating them. The negroes appear to entertain some vague notions of the principles of natural religion; but in general, their sole reliance is placed upon fetiches or charms, and the use of inanimate and insignificant objects asa panoply against all the evils to which human nature is liable. An impression so deeply rooted in the hu- man mind as that of supernatural agency, joined to the i ignorance which prevails in this state of society, leaves open a wide field for imposture. Accordingly, ‘we’ find that’ individuals’ of that class are numerous 7" THE NEGROES. _ 289 who, by. a pretence to superhuman powers, maintain a high influence, and extort ample gifs: from their un- | enlightened countrymen. The natives of Guinea live tent iby a sort of federal republic, in which a secret association, resembling the Black Tribunal of the middle ages, maintains order and dispenses justice. ‘This is called the poorrah. The principal members of the inferior poorrahs, above fifty years of age, form the supreme poorrah. The mysteries of initiation, accompanied with some dreadful _ test of merit, are celebrated in the midst of a sacred forest. . All the elements are put in requisition to try the courage of the candidate. It is said that he finds himself assaulted by roaring lions, who are restrained by concealed chains; while a dreadful howling is kept ‘up over the whole forest, and a devouring fire flames around the inclosure. Any member who has commit- ted a crjme, or betrays the secrets of the body, finds Ahimself visited by armed and masked emissaries. On the utterance of the ominous words, “The poorrah sends thee death,” his relations and friends desert him, and he is left to the avenging sword. Even entire tribes which make war in contempt of the orders of the great poorrah, are laid under the ban, and oppressed by the united attacks of aeeie deputations from. all the neutral tribes. The Papels are a nation on the eat of Guinea, who are pagans, worshipping trees, cows, horses, and many other visible objects. When their king dies, ac- cording to the report of a traveller, the. giandues range themselves round his coffin, which is tossed high up in the air by some sturdy negroes, and the individual . habits of life. are slovenly and filthy. When a shee SOMEONES EEE Te MOREE RSET ET CL ae OBR BN Cee asi | SPST Ie or ee tn a ee a SS hs 290 TEE BER ORS: on whom the coffin falls, if not killed by the weight of it, ‘succeeds. to hOthtones mous. eo Renee 2a According to. Oldendorp, the kingdom» of Loango eontains black Jews scattered throughout the country. ‘They are despised by the negroes, who do- not deign even to eat with them. They are occupied in trade, and keep the Sabbath so strictly that they do not even talk on that day. They have a separate burying- ground very far from any habitation. The tombs are constructed with masonry, and ornamented with He- brew inscriptions, the singularity of which excites the laughter of the negroes, who ‘discern in them only serpents, lizards and other reptiles: In the kingdom of Congo is an order of magicians, who pretend to the power of raising the dead; and their juggles, practised upon a dead corpse, in the presence: of the Christian missionaries, so. far imposed upon them, that. they imagined they saw the dead move, and heard in- ebiic lene sounds proceeding from the mouth of the corpse. It has been Ales that me was a gal- vanic operation. =» Rae ORL eat Raa ~The Hottentots dress in’ cheat withy ied wool on.» ‘They smear themselves with fat. and soot, , and. are so used to it, that when washed, a. Hottentot feels thatshe has lost his clothes. Yet this: coating is said to be really. useful, in defending them from the solar rays, and preventing cutaneous disorders. “All their eN yg Ox “is Paliiy yiain se aa in ne SNe aluttony, ‘dates llr tee eres eae eee, ete RAE Vege ae VAN ep em BAG \THESNEGROES: 291 compose a labyrinth of little conical hovels, formed of twigs and earth; and so low that the inmates cannot stand, upright... They have an,aspect of sluggish stu-: pidity which seems, in a great measure, caused by the degrading bondage-in which they. are held. They pursue’ wild animals with swiftness and deans di- recting with a‘sure aim their darts and arrows: ’ They carry on various little manufactures, tanning and dress- ing skins, forming mats of flags and bulrushes, bow- strings from the simews of animals, and even mould- ing iron into Eyes i fia hh, Naik thn gad y,, Pi rdagen 5 Wy eh age nhs SORES Fe jot ae i <3 ers r if hs Tae Ge oe of ee Say i nie my y oe 5 ae Bor or “a ae i 4 ‘% j be ie ta “The Baenthit oa Bet rT siete appear to belong to: the same Rover. public bath—a. canopy of silk being borne over her head by four men. On returning, ‘she takes: a lump of henna, and going round to her guests solicits a contri- bution of money. Each person generally sticks a small piece of sold in this, which she appropriates, and then applies the henna to her feet. The evening of this ceremony is called the night of the hennay The next day she proceeds to the harem of- hier lord; being escorted by her friends... - pee - When a person dies, the Egyptians enol th den? hody with rosewater, camphor, and other perfumes ; 4 stuff the ears and nostrils. with cotton, bind the ankles; and lay the hands on the breast. Being placed on a bier, it is borne to the burial ground by a procession of choristers, with the relations and domestics of the deceased. “Passages wea the hasues ‘sia a dirge; are recited during the way. The bier is first carried PU MR Pale Ml Si UTS it ty aed EGYPT. 307° to the mosques, where prayers 2 are repeated. over it, After a few minor rites, the funeral train Mgnebsaite and deposits the body in the tomb. 4. >> din ‘One of the ‘most remarkable traits in the vars Egyptian superstition is the belief in written charms. The composition of most of these amulets is founded upon magic, and occasionally employs, the pen. of almost every village schoolmaster in the country. A person of this profession, however, seldom pursues the’ study of magic further than to acquire the formule of a few charms, most commonly consisting of passages of the Koran, and names of God, statins with those of spirits, genii, prophets, or eminent saints, intermixed’ with combmations of numerals, and with diagrams, all of which are supposed to have great secret virtues. The ninety-nine names or epithets of God, comprising all the divine attributes, written on paper, frequently repeated, and worn on the person, are*supposed to make the wearer a particular object for the exercise of divine beneficence. In like manner, it is believed that the ninety-nine names or titles, &c. of the Prophet, written upon anything, compose a charm which, if placed in a house, and. frequently read from beginning to end, will keep. away every: misfortune, all diseases, infirmity, the evil eye, enchantment, burning, anxiety, grief and trouble. Similar virtues are ascribed to a charm composed of the names of the Seven Sleepers or companions of the cave, together with the name of their dog, whose history has figured under. different shapes in various agreeable fictions, from the age of Epimenides the Cretan to that of Rip, Van Winkle. These names are’ sometimes engraved | on the round 308 nino, tray of tinned copper, which, placed on a. stool, forms, the table for dinner and supper. Another charm sup- posed to have similar efficacy, is composed. of the, names of those paltry articles of property. which the Prophet left at his. decease, namely. his rosaries, his staff, toothpick, sandals, ‘coat, mptponed , white pay camel, &c. - ‘ The belief of the Bgyptians i in the evil eye, is: an ei lichad superstition, » It is a» custom among ‘the higher and middle classes in Cairo,.on the occasion of a marriage, to hang a chandelier in the street before the bridegroom’s house; and. it often happens that a crowd is collated to see this suspended. In such a case it is a common practice to divert the attention of spectators by throwing down and breaking a large jar, or by some other artifice, lest an “‘ envious eye,” ma- lisnantly exercised; should cause the chandelier to fall. Mr. Lane relates an anecdote to the following effect. A friend of his told him one day, that just before, he saw a camel carrying two very large jars of oil: a woman stopped before it and exclaimed, “ God preserve us ! what big jars!” The driver of the camel did not tell her to bless the Prophet, as he should have done; and the camel, a few minutes after, fell down and. broke both the jars and one of its own legs. _ Most of the respectable Moslem Egyptians, hothye at Cairo and Alexandria, approach pretty near to Eu- ropean manners in the externals of behavior, such as sitting on chairs, eating with knives and forks, making use of porcelain, glass, &c. Ibrahim Pacha has; or had, a French cook. ‘ oT One of the principal Egyptian pietaieia ali consists EGYPT. 309 in firing at a target; they are good marksmen, but take a long time in aiming. Mehemet Ali himself can strike an earthen pot a hundred paces out at sea, and Ibrahim has been known to lounge on a cushion in the upper apartments of his palace, and amuse him- self by firing with a rifle at the water-skins carried by the sakas, or water-bearers. If he pierced the skin and let out all the water, he enjoyed the surprise and vexation of the poor saka; but if he happened to wound the man, he would promise, with apparent con- trition, that the sufferer should never want bread while he himself had any to eat, though it is said he never was known to keep his word. The pastimes of des- potism sometimes bear a strange resemblance in dif- ferent countries. The Duke of Charolois amused himself with bringing down plumbers and tilers from the roofs of houses in a similar way. The man- ners of the Egyptian princes, however, are said to have lately improved in this respect. At Cairo, as in all other capital cities, the inhabit- ants, engaged in a great variety of occupations, com- pelled to exercise a superior degree of ingenuity, and brought into frequent contact with strangers, display considerable sociability and politeness; and the arti- zans and shopkecpers are distinguished for their indus- try and attention to business. When not engaged in the exercise of their professions, or in their religious duties, they are generally found in the coffee-houses listening to the relation of the story-teller, or at the public places, where mountebanks, jugglers and danc- ing girls exhibit their performances. The public recitation of romances affords a favorite T 310 EGYPT. amusement to the Egyptian idler. ‘The reciter sits on a raised seat in the coffee-house, and his auditors on stools around him, sipping their coffee, smoking their pipes, listening to the story, and all highly amused, not only with the tale, but also with the lively and dramatic manner of the narrator. He receives a small sum of money from the keeper of the coffee-house for attracting customers: his hearers are not obliged to contribute anything, though some of them give him a trifle. A favorite romance is the Life of Abu Zeyd, a tale said to be founded upon events which happened in the third century of the Hejira; and is believed to have been written not long after that period, though it has been subsequently much altered. It is a long story, half prose and half poetry, partly narrative, and partly dramatic. Asa literary work it is thought to have little merit by Europeans, but from its being so general a favorite, it must certainly possess strong at- tractions. It also has considerable value and interest as illustrative of the manners and customs of the Beduin Arabs. The narrator always commits his subject to memory, and recites without a book. The poetry he chants, and after each verse he plays a few notes on a viol with a single chord, which is called the Abu Zeydee viol, from its being used only in these recitations. There are about fifty of the professed Abu Zeydee rhapsodists in Cairo. Asia was the cradle of the human family, and to this quarter we must look for the origin of the various tribes which now inhabit the earth; yet two of the great races of mankind—the Negro and the American Indian—are not now to be found within its limits. Still, there is no quarter of the globe where human society presents such a diversity of aspects as here. Amid its population of five hundred millions, we find every form and shade of superstition ; every sys- tem and degree of despotism; and every stage of civi- lization from the barbaric pomp of the Indian and Chinese courts to the skin-clad Samoide of the arctic shores. As compared with the standing of Christen- 312 ASIA. dom, Asia presents a gloomy picture of moral, mental, and social darkness, where ideas of civil liberty are unknown, where true religion casts only here and there a strip of sunlight, and where science has scarcely begun its dawn. 3 Asia contains nearly one third part of the land sur- face of the earth; the following table exhibits its gene- ral divisions, with the population of each. Russia in Asia, - - - > - 7,000,000 Turkey in Asia, -. = - - - 12,000,000 Arabia, : oe. oe |e - 10,000,000 Persia, - - - - - - 12,000,000 Afghanistan and Beloochistan, - - 10,000,000 Independent Tartary, - - - - 7,000,000 Chinese Empire, - - - - - 340,000,000 Japan, - - - - - 12,000,000 Hindostan, - - - - - - 140,000,000 Farther India, - - - -. = 20,000,000 Total, - i= Se - 970,000,000 It may be proper to state that there is great diversity in the estimates of Chinese population, some authors rating it as low as 200,000,000. Several recent writers, however, of high authority, give it as in the preceding table. | It may be remarked in general that the manners and customs of Asia are transmitted from one age to another with little change. All over Western Asia the beard is worn long, and is treated with a kind of reverence. The dress is loose and flowing—turbans - take the place of hats, and sandals of shoes. They are fond of external pomp, which is displayed in their dress and military costumes. In writing they are addicted to a figurative style and extravagant hyper- bole. Polygamy is general, and the female sex are in a degraded state. RUSSIA IN ASIA. Y, SS3n SS Circassians. THis immense region, stretching from the Ural mountains on the west, to Behring’s Straits on the east, and embracing about one third part of this quar- ter of the globe, though generally cold and barren, presents at least one spot of great fertility. To the east of, and bordering on, European Russia are the Cau- casian mountains, whose bosoms enclose territories peculiarly gifted with richness and beauty. The highest peaks are clad in perpetual snow ; beneath is 314 RUSSIA IN ASIA. the black region of rocks and precipices; while the lower declivities contain a number of well-watered valleys, forming fine pastoral districts; and, though not capable of high culture, yielding plentifully the inferior products, maize and millet. In these moun- tain valleys dwell the Circassians. This race have been long celebrated for their physical qualities. The men, though spare, are tall, handsome, and athletic. But it is the fine form and delicate complexion of the female Circassians, which constitute so wide a theme of Eastern panegyric. In these high valleys, with a northern exposure, they do not suffer that intense heat of the sun, which produces, generally, the dark tints of Asia. The daughters of all above the rank of slaves are exempted from oppressive or degrading labor, and merely occupy themselves in sewing, em- broidery, and the plaiting of straw. Their beauty seems to be in part the result of a careful study of all the circumstances which tend to produce or preserve female charms. The face is carefully shaded from the sun; they are fed moderately on milk and pastry; their feet are protected from injury by a species of wooden shoe; and their hands by the use of gloves. Some even make use of paint, but this is considered discreditable. The distinctions of rank and birth are observed in Circassia with all the strictness of highland pride. Under the prince, or sovereign, are the uzdens, or nobles, who attend him in war or foray, but exercise a sway almost absolute over their own immediate vas- sals. They are of two kinds,—bondsmen, who culti- vate the glebe, and armed retainers, who attend him RUSSIA IN ASIA, 315 to the field ; which last have often been raised, on this condition, from the inferior ranks. The arrangements for marriage and education are of a most peculiar character, founded on a sort of Spartan apathy, which tramples upon every tender and domestic tie. Until after the birth of the first child, the husband and wife live ostensibly separate, and never see each other, unless by stealth ; the husband considers it an insult if the wife be even named in his presence. The child, when born, is never reared in the house, or under the eye of its parents. At the age of three or four, some friendly nobleman receives it, and undertakes the sole task of educating and rearing it. Under him the sons are trained in all manly exercises, and the females in those which belong to their sex, until the former is ready to take the field, and the latter to receive a husband, which this foster father is bound to provide. On the southern declivity of the Caucasus extends the famous and once powerful kingdom of Georgia. The world, perhaps, does not contain a region more profusely gifted both with richness and beauty. Num- berless streams, flowing from the central and loftiest parts of the chain, irrigate and fertilize all its borders. On the sides of the mountains hang magnificent forests of beech, ash, chestnut, oak, and pine; and the ground is covered with vines growing wild in vast profusion. On its successive stages are raised all the varieties of ‘fruit and grain, both of the temperate and tropical cli- mates. The woods abound with game; and the mountains contain in their bosom mines of considera- ble value. 316 "RUSSIA IN ASIA. The human race flourishes in an equal degree; the men are distinguished for vigor;: and the females, with the single exception of a darker complexion, are as famed for beauty as those of Circassia. All these bounties of nature, however, have been rendered un- availing by the oppressions of a feudal government, and by the continual wars which have desolated Geor- gia for more than acentury. ‘The nobles, who have reduced the prerogative of the king within very narrow limits, possess over their vassals the power of life and death, and extract from them the whole produce of their lands beyond what may afford the most scanty subsistence. The unfortunate husbandman is mores over exposed to the continual inroad of the Losghians and other tribes from the upper heights of Caucasus, and is often obliged to plough with arms in his hands. Siberia is thinly peopled, yet it possesses a great diversity of inhabitants, The Russian inhabitants consist, for the most part, of exiles who have fallen under the displeasure of the Czar. The two great capi- tals, Tobolsk and Irkoutsk, have somewhat the aspects of European cities. Hospitality, the virtue of recluse regions, is said to prevail among the Russians. of Siberia, and their love of liquor has also followed them to this region of penance. ‘The accompanying vices of indolence and improvidence, are said to prevail to a lamentable extent. Of the native tribes of Siberia we may notice the Tartars, who live a wandering life, beimg almost en- tirely occupied im rearing horses. Their great luxuries are horse’s flesh and fermented mare’s milk. In reli- 317 RUSSIA IN ASIA.. they are divided between Mahomedanism and gion the worship of the Grand Lama. it. NY Ra SAWS AQUA > ~~ s rae * Ss S “2. AE BSS AKER \ they possess no herds, Unlike the Tartars, except those of rein-deer ; and their sole employments are hunting and fishing alon MAL) (i mh Ny Tartars The Tunguses are found in the extensive region watered by the Yenisei and its tributary the Toun- Kl gouska. They As it is very o the frozen plains and use no arms in the chase except the bow and arrow, in which they are so skilful, that they fear not to at- tack the strongest and fiercest animals. desirable, however, not to injure the precious skins of the fur-bearing species, -they are rather desirous to the bleak shores of the great Siberian rivers. 318 RUSSIA IN ASIA. take them by art or stratagem, and show wonderful ingenuity in the contrivances which they employ for that purpose. They are not less skilful in tracing out by scent, or by the faintest track, the animals which they pursue. In fishing, they use little boats composed of the rind of the birch or of the larch tree. They have no settled abodes, but wander from place to place, guided by the abundance of fish and game, or by the mere love of change. i It costs them very little trouble to construct tem- porary abodes. The yowrt, or summer hut, is formed merely by arranging in a circular shape a number of wooden poles, and giving them.a conical roof of the bark of the birch tree. Their winter abodes also consist of a .single apartment, the wooden walls of which are more strongly put together, and the win- dows are formed of expanded bladder. The oven which heats the apartment and cooks the victuals is placed in a corner; and round the room are benches, on which the family sit, eat, and sleep; and which, being hollow, contain their stores and provisions. The smoke makes its way through an aperture in the roof stuffed with dry grass to exclude the cold; in its way thither it fills the entire hut, but, its own light- ness causing it to ascend, there is left a space near the floor not absolutely enveloped. The Tunguses are of a brownish tint, derived, perhaps, from the atmosphere of smoky huts; their features are flat, and their, eyes small; though neither of these characters occurs to nearly the same extent as in the Mongol race, nor have they its peculiar physiognomy. ‘They are de- scribed, by those who have held intercourse with them, RUSSIA IN ASIA. 319 in terms of praise, as frank, stout, honest, and brave. Though professed votaries of the Shaman creed, they combine it with magical observances and other native - superstitions. The Ostiaks are a numerous Siberian tribe, occupy- ing the banks of the Lower Obi with its tributaries, and the plains which extend far on each side of it. Their size is somewhat diminutive; their hair, of a yellow or reddish tint, floats on their shoulders ; and their features are destitute of all beauty. Their habi- ‘tations, both of summer and winter, are nearly similar to those of the Tunguses, except that the latter fre- quently contain two or three families, divided by slight partitions, and having one common fireplace. They depend for subsistence chiefly on fishing, though they give chase to the bear and various fur-bearing animals ; the finest of which, however, are now found only in the eastern regions. In these pursuits they display indefatigable activity. ‘They are said to be distinguished by great simplicity of manners, good- ness of heart, and open hospitality. Their supersti- tion is entirely that of the old rude paganism, without any Hindoo or Mahometan admixture. In their tents they have many little images, before which they place a table, and lay upon it snuff, willow bark, fish oil, and whatever commodities they themselves consider most valuable. In return for these gifts, they consid- er as due a prosperous fishing and hunting; and when, in spite of lavish donation, these fail, their wrath is sometimes kindled against their divinities, whom they even dash on the floor, and break in pieces. ‘The bear is the object of a sort of fearful 320 RUSSIA IN ASIA. worship ; and, in their oath of allegiance to the Rus- sian government, they wish that, if it be not fulfilled, they may be devoured by that formidable anizal. Their favorite amusement consists’in a species of dance, in which they imitate to the life the motions and cries of the beasts, birds, and fishes with which they are daily conversant. To the north, on the extreme shores of the Arctic Ocean, wander the Samoides, whom the poet deno- minates “the last of men.” They present nearly the same original form as the Tunguses, but want and hardship have sunk them into a meagre and stunted race. ‘They have a flat, round, and broad face, large, thick lips, a wide and open nose, little beard, black and rough hair in small quantity. Their territory, alone these dreary shores, extends for nearly 2000 miles, from the European frontier to the Olensk, and almost to the Lena. Placed in the same situation with the Laplanders, their habits and modes of life are almost entirely the same. All their wants are similarly supplied by the rein-deer; but the herds which they have tamed are employed solely for the purpose of conveyance; those only which are caught in the chase are used as food, and their skins convert- ed into clothing. On the sea-coast they attack the bear, and feed on his flesh, as well as on that of the whales which are cast ashore. Fishing on the rivers is considered by them an easy and luxurious occupation. In autumn they are chiefly employed in hunting the white fox, the fur of which affords the only medium by which they can obtain tortey lux- uries. RUSSIA IN ASIA. 32] There are still other tribes in Siberia, but we can- not notice them in detail; yet we must say a few words of Kamtchatka, which forms the eastern limit of Asia. Though a cold and tempestuous region, it seems to abound in animal life. A sportsman who should be willing to sacrifice to his favorite amuse- . ment the pleasures of civilized life would find Kamt- chatka a paradise. The land animals afford a val- uable prize, being all covered with rich furs, and very abundant. Though not quite so fine as those of Siberia, they form the basis of a considerable trade. The coasts swarm with seals and other ma- rine animals; the rocks are coated with shellfish; the bays are almost choked with herrings, and the rivers with salmon. Flocks of grouse, wood-cocks, wild geese, and ducks darken the air. Thus the inhabitants obtain in abundance not only food, but full materials for that gluttonous indulgence to which they are addicted. They form a peculiar race, with flat features, small eyes, thin lips, and scarcely any beard. Their stature is diminutive, with large head and short legs. Since the Russian sway put an end to the wars which they were wont to wage with con- siderable fury, they have passed into a peaceable, honest, lazy, drunken, servile race, careless of the future, and addicted to coarse sensuality. They have houses both for winter and summer. The former, composed of branches of trees, plastered with clay, or half sunk in the ground; and in the in- terior one lamp, fed with train oil, lights, warms, and cooks the victuals of two families. The summer- house has a peculiar structure, its floor being raised S22 RUSSIA IN ASIA. by posts, twelve or thirteen feet from the ground, and leaving beneath an empty space, in which the fish is hung up to dry. In their domestic habits, the most remarkable peculiarity is the use of dogs harnessed to the sledges and employed to dtaw them. These dogs are of no peculiar size or strength, but resemble mountain or shepherd dogs. They are fed on the offal of fish, and in summer are turned out to find their own food; their return being certain at the ap- proach of the inclement season. In travelling, the driver yokes them two and two abreast, and from four to ten in one vehicle, according to the weight to be drawn. He then places himself in the sledge, which is in the form of a basket, with two ends turned up ; but no ordinary skill is required to prevent both rider and carriage from being overturned on the ragged ground over which it is frequently dragged. At their high festivals, the Kamtchadales give them- selves up to an almost frantic mirth, which astonishes those who have viewed the sluggishness of their ordi- nary deportment. ‘Their favorite dance is one in which all the actions and motions of the bear are re- presented to the life; and the violent and uncouth at- titudes assumed for this purpose excite in the specta- tors rapturous admiration. In closing our view of the Polar regions, it may be remarked that a short and feeble race, bearing through- out a strong resemblance, seems to occupy this frigid portion of both continents. The sterile soil and the repulsive climate, allow but a stinted vegetation, and deny to man, both the means of improvement and the inducements to exertion, which operate with such force to civilize society in the temperate zones. TURKEY, ARABIA, PERSIA, ETC. LZ “iG ae DP al i) Ce Tuts region contains several remarkable tribes, such as the Druses, a warlike people, who occupy the northern slopes of Mount Lebanon; the Marionites, asect of Christians who dwell upon the southern sides of Mount Lebanon; the Armenians, who profess Christianity, and are the chief merchants in many of the large towns; the Koords, inhabiting the moun- o24 TURKEY, ARABIA, PERSIA, ETC. tainous districts of Koordistan, and often descending from their strongholds to make incursions upon the fertile plains below; and the Turcomans, who are a pastoral tribe of nomades, in the interior of Asia Minor. It is impossible, in the brief compass of this volume, to enter into detailed descriptions of the customs of these various nations. It may be remarked, generally, that the Turkish manners prevail, though each eee has its peculiarities. The Turks of Asia Minor and Syria are scarcely to be distinguished from those of Europe, whom we have already described. In dress, religion, and modes of life they are everywhere the same. 4 Within the territory which we are now considering is the most celebrated spot on the face of the globe— the Holy Land—whose capital is Jerusalem. If we TURKEY, ARABIA, PERSIA, ETC. 325 were now’to visit that city we should find it inhabited chiefly by Turks, among whom there are numerous . monks, Greeks, Abyssinians, Copts, Armenians, Ma- rionites, &c. It has been said that in the church of the holy sepulchre, “from the arches above, where they nestle like pigeons, from the chapel below, and - subterranean vaults, their songs are heard at all hours, both of day and night. The organ of the. Latin monks, the cymbals of the Abyssinian, the voice of the Greek, caloyer, the prayer of the solitary Armenian, the plain- tive accents of the Coptic priest, alternately, or all at once, assail your ears; you know not whence these’ concerts proceed ; you inhale the perfume of incense without perceiving the hand that burns it; you merely perceive the pontiff who is going to edlabrate the most awful of mysteries on the very spot where they were accomplished.” -The general aspect and ieviiae traits of the Arabs’ have been described under the bend of Africa. They have black eyes and hair, a sallow complexion, straight limbs, and. great activity. The Bedoweens are pas- toral, and wander from place to place im search of pas- | turage for their flocks. The great deserts of Arabia are peopled by these uid evita: tribes, who are gene- rally robbers, and often hapie such travellers as dat in their way. | ane The Arabs who. live in’ cities adopt the manners of — the Turks. Little animal food is eaten; dates, milk, butter, oil and coffee are the common articles of con- sumption. ' Lizards and locusts are sometimes eaten. Education seldom goes beyond. the reading of the : Koran. In religion these people are bigoted Mahome- | U # 326 iain alates p PERSIA, ETC. ye Caravan i in the Desert. ve nae , by tod ie : companies ‘ddiiedbe caravans. “The nee dightsdapalat the Arabs is founded upon that: of Ishmael; it is. said that “in the: desert they are robbers, and in cities cheating i is\a substitute for robbery.” They ¢ are, how- ‘ever, courteous, polite and hospitable to ‘a proverb. | ~The Persian nation isa mingled population 3 the Parsees, or original inhabitants, heing a small part of the people. The Turkish is the spoken language, the Persian eed used in books. “The dress has been A Te AL di TURKEY, ARABIA, PERSIA, ETC. o27 considered effeminate. ‘The men wear a long robe reaching nearly to the feet, and under this.a vest tight to the hips, and then flowing like-a petticoat. They wear wide trowsers and silk or calico shirts. Robes of various kinds are common, and a long muslin sash is worn over the whole dress. In this is stuck a dag- ger, and-no Persian considers himself fully dressed without his sword. All classes wear a black lambskin cap, about a foot in height.. The head is shaved except a tuft on the head and behind the ears. The beard is dyed black. The dress of the females is simple. — In winter a close-bodied robe, reaching to — the knees and buttoned in front, is worn over the rest.’ In summer, a silk or muslin shift is worn, loose velvet trowsers, and a vest. The head is covered with a black saa over which a cashmere shawl is thrown as a veil. 4 The puinl 8 food of the Persians is a ite Coffee is general, and tobacco is smoked. by all classes, The delicious wines of Persia are much used in spite of | the prohibition of the Koran. The Persians have been - called, probably by a Frenchman, the Parisians of the East, but they have more resemblance to the Greeks. They are volatile, cheerful, cunning, lying and dis- honest, but eminently social. They show great re- spect for age. They abound in complimentary phrases, and their politeness, like that of the other Asiatics, is formal, though less grave than that of the Turks. They are affable and fond of conversation, in which fables and apologues abound. Their manner of salu- tation is to touch the hands and then raise them to the forehead. ‘The king, however, and great officers are 3 328 TURKEY, ARABIA, PERSIA, ETC. saluted by thrice bowing ‘to the ground. | ‘There is much difference between. the manner of life and cha- racter of the inhabitants of the towns and the country, ‘The latter are brave and. hardy, while the former are timid and effeminate. The females are generally instructed in reading, embroidery, and household. af his fairs, of which they have the sole management. The Persian amusements are hunting, which they Fallare with great. zeal, and various exlivbeibeias of dancing, juggling, and story telling, &. _ Antelopes are hunted with hawks and greyhounds. The hawk alights upon the head, disordering the motions of the antelope, which the hound is therefore able to overtake. Education is generally diffused, and most children are taught to read and write, but there is little instruction in the higher branches. ‘The arts and sciences. have hardly an existence. The most general and popular literature is comprised. in poems, and romantic tales. Firdusi, Hafiz, and Saadi, are poets admired i in. Euro- pean translations, and the two former are as well known to the common people, as Burns to the same class in Scotland. The religion is Biahonpiee of the sect of Ali, . ae » The inhabitants. of A iouleaanls are ide up of Basan, Indians, and descendants of the native races. The latter are addicted to war, the chase, and rearing cattle. They ; are rude, rapacious and vindictive, but brave, open and faithful. . Their religion is Mahome danism, but they are not bigoted... Education ‘is care fall provided for, there being a school in every village Beloochistan is occupied by several confederated bien, who chiefly lead a. vialmaae and feudatory TURKEY, ARABIA, PERSIA, ETC. 329 life. In the chase, or in their plundering expeditions, they are active and energetic, but at other times, they are indolent and dissipated. Independent Tartary is an extensive region, west of Chinese Tartary. The inhabitants are chiefly a pas- _ toral people, living in tents, and wandering from place to place with their flocks and herds. The common dress is a cotton robe, and drawers; red is the favorite color, Garments of skins are often worn. Horse flesh, and kowmiss, a liquor made from mare’s milk, are favorites. ‘The people have, generally, neither regu- lar government, nor settled habitations. Many of the tribes live by robbery and plunder, and others delight in the chase. The religion is Mahometan, and the Jaws are chiefly drawn from the Koran. The chiefs ‘are called Khans, and these acknowledge a great Khan, who styles himself king of kings. i ar wy ee B a wae : ’ Move de nh oe te HINDOSTAN.* sical Hint vain rennin sa rm i i Mi ani STAT Mt ATTN Hindoo pagoda. fini ; ices extensive and odpuléeg fsideaate though chiefly ander ‘British sway, retains its peculiar’ manners, -* For more ‘ample notices of the Hindoos, se see “Lights and Shadows, of Asiatic History.” HINDOSTAN. 332 which have’ stamped’ the people as a peculiar race, from the earliest periods of history... In person they are dark, slender and graceful, and their expression is soft and retiring. The common.dress consists of a turban, drawers, and a long robe tied with a scarf. The poorer classes. have often but a piece of cotton tied, around the loins. The head is usually shaved, leaving a lock behind. The dress of the females is a light jacket with half sleeves, and a piece of silk or cotton wrapped gracefully around the middle, and falling so as to display a part of one of the ankles. The common dwellings consist of slight fabrics of split bamboo, covered with mats. The walls of some are of mud, hardened like bricks. In towns the architecture is Moorish, and some of the nobles have magnificent palaces. The English residents adopt a mixed style, partaking of the Asiatic and European architecture. In’ the cities of Calcutta, Madras, and Delhi, there is much splendor 1 in the edifices. ps ..The food is simple, rice and other vegetables con- ° aiiinehiie the chief articles of consumption. The infe- rior castes only, eat all kinds of animal food, and ‘usé intoxicating drinks, Travelling is generally by palan- quins, though the rich sometimes’ perform journeys on elephants. The religion is Bramanism, the chief doc- trine of which is that of the metempsychosis, or trans- migration of souls. It is a part of their ecclesiastical - as well as civil system, to divide the people into castes, which are hereditary.. These are the Bramins, or priests; the Rajah-pootras, or. soldiers; Vaisyas, or merchants and farmers, and the Swdras, or laborers. These do not eat or drink together or imtermarry. 332 ve HINDOSTAN. Though many of the Rochas of the Hisaee ~ es ed pure, yet their system practically runs into the most de- grading superstition, and the priests take advantage of their superior dignity, to practise every species of impo- sition upon the people. Some of the diabolical practices inculcated by the priests, such as drowning children in ‘the Ganges, burning the widow upon ihe funeral a of the husband, &c., are universally known. The amusements of the Hindoos are found, toa large extent, in the multitudinous ceremonies imposed by religion ; in the dancing of girls trained to the art ; in jugglery, which their adepts have carried to a wonderful. degree of perfection; in wrestling, and in the performances of the cockpit, where they exhibit . spiders, bugs and quails, trained to fighting. Not- withstanding their oppressed condition, and the gloomy traits which belong to their religion, the Hindoos ap- pear to be a happy, or at least a cheerful and contented people. ! . a The general manners and customs of the Hindoos have been rendered familiar to most readers, but the Thugs are less known,.and from their extraordinary character, deserve a more particular. description. These consist of an extensive and organized fraternity of murderers, which has spread itself over the whole country from Cape Comorin to the Himmaleh moun- ' tains, and has subsisted for ages, defying the muta- tions: which swept away thrones and dynasties. — ~ This extraordinary people are divided into Burkas, # persons fully instructed in the art, and Kuboolas, or novices. These are by no means nominal distinc- tions. No Thug is allowed to take his degree as a # HINDOSTAN. ee 333 Sitlhned or to assume’ the. need of a strangler, Gant he has been on many expeditions, and acquired the re- _quisite: courage and insensibility,-by slow degrees. They are first employed as scouts, then as sextons,, then as shumseeas or holders of hands, and lastly as Bhurtotes or stranglers. When a man feels that he- has sufficient courage and insensibility for the purpose, he solicits the oldest and most renowned Thug to make him his disciple. The Thug agrees to become his gooroo or spiritual interpreter; and when the gang falls in with a man of ‘respectability and moderate strength, fitted for the purpose, he tells the gooroo that he is prepared, with his permission, to try his hands upon him. While the traveller is asleep, with the gang, at their quarters, the gooroo takes his disciple into a neighboring field, followed by three or four old mem- bers of the society. On reaching the spot chosen, they all face to the direction in which the gang intend to move, and the gooroo says, “ Oh, khalee, kunkalee,”. &c. é&c., if it seemeth to thee fit that the traveller now at our lodging, should die by the hands of this thy slave, youchsafe us the Thibaoo.” If they get the auspices on the right side within half an hour, it signifies the sanction of the deity; but if they have no sign, or it comes on the left, some other Thug must put the traveller to death, and the candidate for ei must wait for another time. 9) If the sign is auspicious they return ny shed quar- ters; the gooroo takes a handkerchief, and facing to the west, ties a knot at one end, with a rupee or other ‘ piece of silver inserted. This knot. they call the goor- knat, or classic knot; and no man who has not. aac ¥ a4 “ay a ‘HINDOSTAN. thus achies by, the fist priest, is” permitted:t ue AIS it. The disciple receives it.respectfully from the sacred r officer, in his right hand, and stands over the victim . with a. tee a or holder of hands, by his» side. ‘ The traveller i is roused on some pretence or other, and the disciple passes, the handkerchief over his neck at the signal given by the leader of the- gang," and strangles him with the aid of the shumseea. Having finished his work, he bows down before his gooroo and touches his ‘feet with both hands, and does the. same to-all his relatives and friends present, in grati- tude for the honer he has attained. He opens the knot, takes out the rupee and gives it. with all. the other silver he has, to: his gooroo, who lays it out in materials for a sacrifice.. .On the return of the novice after his expedition, he gives a feast to his gooroo and his family, and. if he has the means, to all his. rela- tions ; and he presents to the gooroo a new suit of clothes, another to his wife, and if he can afford it, to his other relations... The gooroo, after a certain inter- val, returns the compliment to him and his family; and. the relation between:them is ever after respected as the most sacred that can subsist. A. Thug will often rather betray his father than the. ensone his whom he has, been thasknighited.:7 3/2" cays ee _ The Thugs travel along the roads viene various assumed. characters, in. parties varying from ten or | twelve to several hundreds... They appear as tiple vice ; ae sometimes one. of. ual ana > sah pee Rajah or prince, with all the appropriate equipments of tents, carriage, &e. ; Q and the rest. act. the part of his Pe pie y HINDOSTAN. , 835 -obsequious followers. If the gang 1s numerous they are divided into separate parties, who follow each other at some distance, or, taking ‘different routes, rendez- vous at some appointed place in advance. Their vic- tims are almost always travellers. The most expert members of the gang are employed to collect informa- tion, and insinuate themselves into the confidence of strangers whom they find at the resting-places, or overtake on the road. They usually propose to them to join company for mutual safety ; and if the travel- ler suspects one party, he soon falls: in with another, who pretend to enter into his feelings of distrust. A person is sent before to select a proper place for the mur- der, and scouts are employed to prevent interruption. The travellers are generally induced to sit down under “pretence of resting themselves, and they are strangled at once ona given’ signal. The bodies are then buried, after having been mangled to expedite dissolu-— tion, and to prevent their swelling and causing’ cracks . in the ground... Two Thugs are employed in the murder of each individual, one of whom holds: his legs or hands while the other applies the noose. If the traveller have a dog, he is also killed, vent he might cause the discovery of the murdered body. In Bengal, which is much intersected by rivers, the plam is modified to suit the country. The practice there is to inveigle travellers on board pretended passage-~ boats, which are manned: entirely by Thugs, and, then to strangle them and throw their bodies into the river. Several of these boats follow each other at short inter- vals, so that‘if the: traveller escapes one snare sa i fall imto another. athe pa Ms EE: ance at, rm igh ‘ 336 HINDOSTAN. “A pickaxe is consecrated by each gang before set- ting out on an expedition, and is regarded by a Thug. in much the same light as is his sword by a soldier. It is the mark of his sveietioa | he swears by it, under the firm belief that if he forswear himself; he will, with- in two or three days, die a horrid death; that his head will turn round, his face towards his back, and he will writhe in tortures till he expires. The sound of the con- secrated pickaxe is never heard in digging a grave, by any one except a Thug. It is carried by the shrewd- est, cleverest, and most sober and careful man of the party, in his waist-belt. While in camp he buries it in a secure place, with its point in the direction they intend to march; and if another direction will be better, it is believed that its point. will be found changed. Formerly it used to be thrown into a well, whence it was said to come up of itself when summoned with the appropriate ceremonies ; but since the northern Thugs have begun: to do what is forbidden, and neglect what is enjoined, it has, with them, lost its imputed virtue. In the Deccan, where the primitive spirit of Thuggee’ has not. been departed. from. this is believed to be stillthe case. “ During a whole expedi: tion that I made with them,” says a northern Thug; who served a campaign with the people of his own profession in the south, “ Imam Khan and his brother earried the pickaxes, and I heard them repeatedly in the morning call them from the well into which they had thrown them overnight, and saw the pickaxes come of themselves from the well and fall into their aprons.” - The most ordinary and effectual mode in which the tutelary goddess of the Thugs interferes in behalf of wast oad 337 . her votaries, is by omens. ‘These are considered by them as signs ‘expressly appointed to guide them to their prey, or to warn them of approaching danger ; and no member of the fraternity doubts, that if these omens*had been attended to, and the other prescribed rules. observed, the system of Thuggee must have flourished under the auspices of its divine patroness in spite of all the efforts of the British for its suppression, The coincidence between the rules of augury ob- -served by the Thugs and those of ‘ancient Greece and Rome must strike every one. ‘These omens are the sounds or the voices.of animals on the right or left; wolves crossing the road, or howling at certain hours of the day or night; the hooting of the owl; the cry of the hare ; the braying of the ass, &c. The Thugs are not wanting in gratitude to the divine patroness for her favors. A chosen portion of each spoil is set aside for her, and numerous rites are ob- served in her honor. ‘To the Thugs, murder is an act of religion, just as much as the practice of charity, to a Christian. ‘When by favorable omens, their. patron- ess is supposed to have revealed her will for the sacri- fice of travellers, those of the stricter sort dare not | disobey. As the Thugs have a religion of their own, they are regarded among themselves as religious, or otherwise, according to. the degree of strictness with which they observe the rules of their peculiar faith. In our eyes all killing is wrong which is not sanctioned by the laws of the country; in ‘theirs it is wrong not to kill, when enjoined mt the bg law of their patronesa’Kaleey ia) oR Sar aA The Thugs. are: footed, ity sty es to Siig women of any description, and either men or women 338 / -HINDOSTAN. of the following classes :—fakirs, bards, musicians, dancers, washerwomen, sweepers, oil-venders, black- smiths, and carpenters, maimed or leprous persons, men with cows, and Ganges Wits aap ee when their pots are empty. — | ' The whole system of Thuggee is made ise secrecy. Acting upon the maxim that “‘ dead men tell no tales,” they never rob without first murdering. ‘They hardly eyer shed blood. The bodies of flee victims are buried with the utmost care, and fires are made over the graves that it may be supposed travellers have been cooking victuals there, and no appearance be left to excite suspicion. They never put them to death till they have a safe opportunity, even if it should be necessary to follow them hundreds of miles." In speaking of matters relating to their profession, they use a slang, understood stil by themselves. There - are circumstances peculiar to India which. enable them to carry on the practice with much greater facility than would be the case in ‘most other places. These are, the usage all over the country, of sending remit- tances in the precious metals and jewels, by men on ‘foot without any guard or arms to defend them ; the unreserved manner in which travellers mix and com- municate ; the long tracts of grass ‘and wood-jurigle through which the roads pass, &c. Moreover, the same religious feeling which leads the Thugs to be- lieve that they are “performing a laudable action in murdering travellers who are thrown in their way, while the auspices are favorable, causes them to be regarded without horror by the other Hindoos. They are supposed to be only doing their duty in that state of life to which God has éalled them. me ma? ae Baie! yf 4 OR; a Bad bi ea : eH ‘ wy , } Ta my. FE Pa = pts ee) TL Wp m igs Pee: of Rangoon. ae ‘ ee te To the sdailt oe China and Hindostan, i is a region whith: passes under the titles of Farther India, India beyond the. Ganges, or Chin India. This region | embraces the modern. empires of Birmah and Anam, the kingdom of. ‘Siar, and the States. of. Malacca. The tahabieanis of this fertile and. ‘populous region exhibit. all the degrees of, barbarism in the state of society. Their religion is. that of “Buddha, and dis- plays itself in sphenits and gotgeons temples or pagodas, Ph 340 FARTHER INDIA. © rt The governments are stern sdteotemns in which the lives and fortunes of the ree are subject to the caprices of their rulers, The Burmese are divided into seven castes, and the women are shut up as in Mahomedan countries. The houses are slight, and the dress of the poorer classes very scanty. The wealthy indulge in rich and splendid robes. The principal food is rice, roots, leaves, seeds | and blossoms, though. entrails, reptiles and fish, are. eaten. The nobles’ aré fond of display, and the em-— peror, in his processions, exhibits: a white Pica, ised which i is held sacred. . “S od ‘The empire of Anam, has risen aan is present i is century, and comprises Tonquin, Cochin ‘China, and | Cambodia. The late emperor, Chang Shung, orga: i nized a powerful army and -havy,: and: constructed ! strong: military works on the European plan. Hue, < the capital, is a place of creat strength. The people — _ resemble the Chinese, in. person, and many of their | manners and customs. Morals are at a low ebb, and ‘the women are hardly better than slaves, being obliged to perform nearly all the common drudgery of life. The people of Siam resemble, the Burmese; they are described as sluggish, bodistfal; arrogant and false. The most abject submission is required by the supe- riors of those beneath them. .We are told that Laku, : one of the former sovereigns, being awakened. from sleep and saved from’ assassination by the braying of an ass, commanded, in the ardor of his gratitude, that all mankind should ‘be called asses. We are. fur- ther: “informed that’ whenever an’ ambassador frot China came: to the Siamese court, the master of the SRR Th ak te a ala ts ei Yon RN ates” ON pe ie chara tan ae ) ae Ris ie) VOOM 4 4 el Ane v At i ee ye . bak : A aes FARTHER INDIA. 341 ceremonies proclaimed the fact in these words, “ Most potent Laku, absolute Lord of the Universe, King of the White Elephants, and Keeper of the Sacred Tooth! a great jackass from China has come to e Seeat with your majesty !” The peninsula of Malacca, is inhabited by several independent tribes, who belong to the race of Malays. They are a barbarous people, of the Mahomedan faith, following the various professions of robbers, merchants and pirates. In person they are short, squat and ro- bust. Their legs and arms are stout; the face round, the mouth wide, the teeth remarkably white. The cheek bones are high, the nose short, the nostrils wide; the eyes small and black ; the hair black, lank and straight. Their color is aust and varies not in different iristes. The Malays have great mental activity, and have made some progress in civilization in the islands of Java and Sumatra, but not in Malacca. ‘They are Mahomedans, but the women are not doomed to se- clusion in the harem. Their revenge is terrible. Such are the Malays in their native land—a race which has spread itself over the Oceanic isles, and constitutes one of the five great divisions of the human family. tyreae Lit DD ZZ Tuoven the Chinese have systematically excluded foreigners from their country, the prying eye of curi- osity has discovered most of their peculiarities, and with these the world at large have been made ac- Every one is familiar with their dress, quainted. CHINA. 343 personal appearance, and aspect of their houses, from the drawings on their porcelain. Their complexion is olive, their hair black and straight, and their eyes small, and like all of the Mongolian family, set obliquely to the nose. The dress consists of short full trowsers, a short shirt, and over all a loose flowing robe. The materials are silk or cotton, according to the condition of the wearer. The hair of the men is shaven, except behind, where it is braided into two long cues. A fan is a necessary article in the hand of male and female. : : The dress of the Chinese dandy is composed of erapes and silks of great price; his feet are covered with high-heeled boots of the most beautiful nankin satin, and his legs are encased in gaiters, richly em- broidered and reaching to the knee. Add to this, an acorn-shaped cap of the latest taste, an elegant pipe, richly ornamented, in which burns the purest tobacco of the Fokien, an English. watch, a toothpick suspended to a button by a string of pearls, a nankin fan, exhaling the perfume of the tcholane—a Chinese flower—and you will have an exact idea of a fashionable Chinese. This being, like dandies of all times and all coun- tries, is seriously occupied with trifles. He belongs either to the Snail Club, or the Cricket Club. Like the ancient Romans, the Chinese train quails, which are quarrelsome birds, to be intrepid duellists; and thei combats form a source of great amusement. In imitation of the rich, the poorer Chinese place at the bottom of an earthen basin, two field crickets ; these insects are excited and provoked until they grow angry, attack each other, and the narrow field of battle 344 CHINA. is soon strewed with their claws, antenne and corslets, the spectators seeming to experience the most lively sensations of delight. The general amusements of the Chinese are greatly diversified, and their arts-are numerous and ingenious. The government is despotic, and rules by fear. Pa- rents exercise the most unlimited sway over their chil- dren, and a son is a minor during the life of the father. The husband does not see his wife till she is sent to his harem in a palanquin; if she does not please him, — he may send her back. Divorces are easily obtained, and loquacity is sufficient to cause a wife to be sent home to her parents. The chief beauty of a woman is small feet, and these are bandaged from childhood to ensure this desirable charm. The national character of the Chinese has been very differently regarded, and perhaps there ha’ prevailed a disposition to rate it too low. Quietness, industry, order and regularity, qualities which a despotic go- vernment seeks always to foster, seem to be peculiarly conspicuous. A general good humor and courtesy reign in their aspect and behavior. Even when they jostle and come into collision with each other, the extrication is effected without any of that noise and exchange of turbulent and abusive language which are commonly witnessed on such occasions in European cities. . Flagrant crimes and open violations of the laws are by no means common. ‘The attachments of kindred are exchanged and cherished with peculiar force, particularly towards parents and ancestry in general, The support of the aged and infirm is incul- cated as a sacred duty, which appears to be very CHINA. 345 strictly fulfilled. It is surely a phenomenon in na- tional economy that in a nation so eminently populous, and so straitened for food, there should be neither begging nor pauperism. The wants of the most des- titute are relieved within the circle of their family and kindred. It is said to be customary that a whole family for several generations, with all its members, married and unmarried, live under one roof, and with only two apartments, one for sleeping, and the other for eating, a fact which implies a great degree of tran- ~quillity and harmony of temper. In regard to religion, China is peculiar in having none connected with, or supported by, the government. No creed is made a matter of state except the abstract belief of the existence of a supreme being, and of the emperor as his sole vicegerent on earth. As to every other creed and rite, the people adopt any or none, as they may judge expedient. The learned, indeed, gen- erally affect indifference upon the subject, and limit themselves to the above simple belief, joined to a superstitious reverence for ancestry, and for the ancient sages of the empire. The people, however, require some more sensible objects of worship, and the vacant place has been chiefly occupied by the sect of Fo, essentially the same with that of Budh, which rules in Thibet, and has spread thence through all the neigh- boring regions of Tartary, It appears there with its doctrine of transmigration, its numerous images, its monastic institutions, its bells and beads, its noisy music, and its peculiar dress ; all giving it such a re- semblance to the Catholic worship that the mission- aries of the church of Rome fill their journals with