In the travelogue penned by Baron Charles Hugel of his tortuous, circuitous
and labyrinthine route ascending the eclivities and descending the declivities
in a hot and humid and elsewhere extremely cold climate has been poignantly and
painstakingly narrated as follows:
Shujanpoor is seen at a great distance, and is remarkable for the 'six
date-trees in its cemetery, where I took up my quarters. I ordered my bed to be
put into a mosque most conveniently near, while my dinner was being cooked in
another. This caused a violent altercation, for it turned out that the spot we
had chosen belonged to the fakir of the town, one of those mendicants who
subsist on the bounty of the simple natives. He had just made preparation to
feed ‘his falcons on some tame fowls, and was looking forward to the
gratification of witnessing the ease with which his birds of prey would kill and
tear the poor fowls, when he caught sight of my people kindling a fire with his
wood, which the coldness of the evening compelled us to have recourse to. Backed
by a number of the inhabitants, who had armed themselves with spears and sticks,
the fakir assailed my servants with a volley of imprecations, and soon put them
all to flight. I had the greatest difficulty to make myself heard amid this
uproar. At length, the fakir came up to me, and complained bitterly of the
depredation committed on the store of wood he had Jaid up for the winter’s
consumption. I told him that we could not possibly remain there all night
without a fire, but that he should be amply repaid for what we had consumed. ‘To
this arrangement, however, he would not accede, but said he wanted his wood, and
remained immovable in his purpose to keep his property to himself; at length,
seeing that words were unavailing, I directed the men to follow me, and
proceeded without further to do, to the stack of contested fuel; the fakir
standing by and uttering not a word, while we were helping ourselves to the
quantity we stood in need of the dilemma in which the traveller often finds
himself in India, under similar circumstances, would perhaps demand a larger
charity than some might be disposed to allow for this mode of procedure.
We could get nothing to eat until night, and then partook of our Christmas
dinner dismally enough; the cold in the mosque was most intense. For ten days
past we had subsisted on rice, mutton, and occasionally a fowl; all other
provisions, including wine, being entirely expended.
Saturday, December 26.-The complete subjection of the Mohammedans‘in this
country may be readily inferred. from the circumstance of an unbeliever like
myself being suffered to sleep in one mosque and use another as a kitchen. Not
that I once closed my eyes in reality, for the dreadful howlings of the village
dogs altogether prevented my getting a wink of sleep. In Mohammedan countries
these animals have no owner; neither have they in the Panjaéb. Superstition,
therefore, has nothing to do with their preservation; but it would be thought
very cruel to injure these inoffensive, watchful brutes; no native could be
persuaded to kill one; he would merely content himself with taking up a stone,
or possibly stooping in a menacing attitude, when the animal approached too near
him. These dogs never become attached to any person or house, however young they
may be taken, but associate themselves in a wonderful manner to each other. Woe
to the stranger who should attempt to obtrude into the village compact of this
species.
With the wolves and jackals, they live on a footing of toleration; but the
former usually abide in deserted villages or solitary ruins, while the latter
prefer the old tenements of inhabited places. The instinct peculiar to dogs
which are the companions and friends of men, distinguishes them in every respect
from these treacherous and dastardly animals, who can neither defend themselves
nor their young; the only quality they possess in common with the domestic dog,
is that of watchfulness. As soon as a traveller arrives in a village, half a
dozen of them wil] seat themselves a little way off, and keep up an incessant
howl from their mangy wasted skeletons, the prototype of famine and desolation.
The distance from Shujanpoor to Atok is reckoned five kos. We broke up early to
gain time enough to visit the latter place and return before nightfall. The
plain of Shush (for so they call the plain of the Atok here) is intersected by
some small streams, one of which has been better known since the battle between
Ranjit Singh’s general, Mokham Chand, and Fatih Khan. By following its course,
the Sikhs were enabled to recruit themselves constantly throughout the heat of
the day, by which great advantage the contest was decided in their favour, © As
we drew nearer to the Indus, we met with large blocks of granite, thrown up and
left on the plain by the waters, at the period of its inundations. I longed to
behold this great stream, and looked out impatiently from the jampan in which 1
had remained, in order to have my sextants and other instruments ready for
observation, pressing the bearers now and then to hurry on, that I might reach
it before noon. One mile and a half from the city we came to the height on which
Atok is situated, and soon after to a small valley, where the Hindis usually
burn they are dead. According to Hindu law, this person are not permitted to
reside beyond the Atok, but many Hindu families, nevertheless, are to be found
residing both in Peshawur and Kabil, and there can be no doubt of the existence,
in former times, of a great Hindé empire on the western shore of the Atok.
There is a remarkable Mohammedan mausoleum with a lofty dome about a mile west
of the city, where I took my last observation with the sextant. The map taken by
the English officers in Mr. Elphinstone’s suite is complete as far as Atok; I
was delighted to put away my own chart, which occupied me two hours every
evening, besides much time spent on it on the journey itself.
The suburbs of the city extend as far as this building, though recent wars have
laid everything waste to the very walls of the fort. The Indus at this spot is a
clear, rapid, but unimportant stream, seven-eighths of its sandy bed being quite
dry at this season of the year. Both banks are steep; on the north, they soon
become nearly level, but on the southern side, on the contrary, they increase in
steepness, and lofty hills arise, to all appearance, from the river itself.
At the distance of half a mile north the point is visible where the L&nder, or
Kabdl river, flows into the Atok, in the plain of Shush; while, on the left
shore of the Lander, another plain stretches towards the west, where the fort is
situated; the bed of the river is strictly confined between mountains of black
clay-slate, and at a little distance beyond the fort is the bridge of boats,
formed of nineteen immense vessels, built singularly enough, with fine carved
work both fore and aft, in imitation of what we might fancy the ships of the
Argonauts to have been when they sailed towards Colchis.
I was greatly surprised indeed at the scene which presented itself, In order to
enjoy the view more leisurely, I had mounted the stony bank, raised against the
wall of the fortress, where some Sikh soldiers had drawn up respectfully to make
room for me. My attention was at first more particularly attracted by the
fantastic richly-ornamented entrance to the fort, where I stood for some time,
waiting for permission to enter. I was stepping forward to get a better idea of
the whole, when the officer on duty advanced towards me, and requested I would
not attempt to go further; “And why not?” I inquired. “Because Ranjit Singh has
given the Diwan orders to introduce you with all due ceremony to the interior.”
I was therefore content to look leisurely around me.
Very near the fort was a ruin on some high ground; it was a Serai built by Akbar
the Great, which Elphinstone calls a fort; a broad paved road, for cattle, leads
down to the Indus between this and the fort, which was also the work of that
emperor. From its position on precipitous rocks, it commands a view of the river
below; the rapidity of the stream has polished the surface of these rocks like
marble. The clear stream itself, its broad bed, with the two huge masses of rock
called Jellalia and Kerhellia, now standing up dry, and presenting all their
dangers, which render the passage of the Indus so perilous when the waters are
high, on account of the terrible whirlpools about them; the bridge of boats; the
small plain on the right shore, on which stands the fort of Kairabad; the
mountains forming a half-circle beyond, with their watch-towers on the highest
summits; and finally, the strange medley of Hindi and Persian costume and
features of the various parties bathing, the very lowest degree of Hinddé
wretchedness, to the highly polished and richly dressed Persian horsemen with
their long lances; composed altogether a very animated and striking scene. But I
wished to get down to the brink of this holy stream, the limit of my journey, as
it is of many a Hindu pilgrim.
Well, here was I, the first European who had hitherto wandered through this vast
empire, from its most southern point at Cape Comorin, to its northern boundary
at Atok. I was at the farthest extremity of India, and yet at the nearest point
to my own land, had I been but blessed with the wings of a bird to direct my
flight thither. Arrived on the shore of the Indus, I looked across to the
mountains in the west, and thought of the country hidden beyond them, and of the
dangers which attended my homeward return. This feeling of despondency, however,
soon left me, and gave place to my customary equanimity as to coming events, the
tears which had started unconsciously to my eyes, were dried up, and [ hastily
crossed the river. The banks, which rise abruptly on both sides from the sandy
bed, are about eighty feet high above the level of the water. The bridge and the
river in its present state, may be from forty to forty-five fathoms across, and
the stream in the middle about three deep, but the breadth between the two
shores must be at least 300. . During the rainy season, this river is filled up
from bank to bank, the waters at this time rise as much as fifty feet, when the
bridge, which is admirably contrived, and made of the very best timber, is taken
to pieces, the boats being employed in navigating the stream; the lower classes
sometimes make use of the distended ox-hides, which I have already mentioned,
but not frequently, because the passage from one shore to the other in the
regular boats costs nothing. They have ropes formed out of leaves of some
species of the palm-tree, unknown to me, twisted together. They told me that
this palm grows near Atok. I took away one leaf with me, promising five rupees
to anyone who would bring me a flower or some of the seeds. Mr. Vigne had taken
his post and was sketching on the Kabil side of the Indus, when presently we
both saw a showy troop of horsemen ride down the opposite shore, cross the
bridge, and approach the spot where we stood. It was Khan Singh, who was deputed
by Ranjit Singh; he came with the Thanadar, in the name of Kashmir Singh,
Ranjit’s’ son, who was then governor, to request me to visit the fort. He had
ridden forth in another direction in search of me. I accepted the invitation,
and quitted Afghanistan, where I had been some five minutes only, and with Mr.
Vigne returned to India. The fortress is built on the declivity of a mountain,
and is very spacious, forming a parallelogram, or rather a polygon, on most
uneven ground, in some places reduced to a rectilinear shape, one side of it
stretching along the river from north to south. The principal gate is on the
north; the walls are high and strong, and surmounted with battlements, but there
are no advanced works. In the interior, a third part is rendered habitable for
four thousand people, and contains a bazar.
I was received by the prince’s Diwan, a Brahmin from Dehli, who came forth on an
elephant, from which he dismounted when near to me and in the name of the Maha
Raja proffered me a bag of rupees; in his own, a branch with honey from the wild
bees. He was an old man, advanced in years, and could not stand upright without
the assistance of two persons. I could not bring myself to give utterance to the
usual salutation of “are you well,” it seemed so like mockery rather than any
compliment. I requested permission to see the building more minutely, and the
Diwan declared that he would conduct me wherever I wished to go, but as the day
was much too short to admit of such a mode of observation, I begged him to
resume his seat on the elephant, while I proceeded on foot.
The reservoir belonging to this fort is well worthy of remark. Its depth is from
forty to fifty feet, its circumference about twenty-five feet, and the river
fills it as it flows. On the side of the river, the walls are only eight feet
above high water; at present they are as much as fifty-eight above the dry bed.
I wished to see the largest guns of the place, as in all Mohamiiedan strong
places they are of great beauty; those in position at present were of brass,
cast in Lahor, and answering, as I should judge, to the French sixteen-pounders;
they are without ornament, but their construction, and the carriages on which
they are mounted, seem both very skilfully designed; they are kept under
shelter, a necessary precaution where the heat of the sun would otherwise split
the wood. I at last completed my survey of this now partly dismantled fort, and
not without considerable fatigue. The day was drawing to a close, and Kashmir
Singh had not yet returned, but resolving to pursue my original plan, I had
declined the invitation of the Diwan to pass a day in Atok, or even to delay my
journey for an hour, from the same impatience which had made me refuse the
invitation of Ranjit Singh to go on as far as Peshawar.
There was a crush of men and beasts in the bazar, camels terrified, asses
kicking, horses prancing, and all this in a place where the closely built stalls
scarcely permitted three men to walk abreast. The first sight of the Diwan’s
elephant put all the other animals to flight, and the boards on which the
merchants had displayed their wares were all overset in the tumult; among them
were many things which I particularly coveted, and ordered my people to buy for
me. The bazar of Atok is excellently furnished with the productions of Peshawur,
Kabul, and Persia, and those of India are to be had in great abundance. My
Munshi, Thakir-das, a Brahmin from Dehli, found in the Diwan a countryman of the
same sect as himself, and he requested my leave to eat with him. The longer I
travelled in. India, the more I was conscious of the great advantage of having a
high-caste Hinda in my suite. Almost every business and occupation in the
service of the higher orders, being transacted by the agency of Brahmins, the
stranger will succeed in whatever he wishes or requires much more readily,
should the Munshi be a Brahmin, especially in all communications with other
Brahmins, notwithstanding the difference of rank, than if the servant were of
any other class.
I had scarcely passed the fort in my jampan, when a man rode up to tell me that
Kashmir Singh was approaching, and we met near the field where the Hindus burn
their dead to which I before alluded. He was a youth of fifteen or sixteen, with
a very clever and animated expression; he was mounted on a white charger very
richly caparisoned, and dressed in along ‘jacket’ of pink silk, with a belt, in
which he carried a pair of English pistols, and a dagger; a loose robe wadded,
and made also of pink silk, gave him an appearance of extreme comfort; his
trousers were of blue and white, fitted tight to the leg; his shoes embroidered;
his head dress was a low red turban. The complexion of this youth was olive, and
the dark beard was just beginning to adorn his chin; a pink umbrella was carried
over his head. “You would do well to remain here,” he said; I answered, that had
I been aware of his presence in the city, I should have asked permission to come
with all my people, and brought my tents. “They can be sent for; where are
they?” “In Shujanpoor,” answered I, “and though grateful for the invitation to
remain, I must proceed on my way. “I entreat you to stay, the Mah4 Raja has
commanded me to do everything to make Atok agreeable to you, and I wish to be
able to do it.” Still, I persisted. ‘“You should stay with me two days, then go
to Peshawur, and make acquaintance with Avitabile Sahib; after that, the Maha
Raja has written to me that you will certainly stop at Akora to visit Court
Sahib, who is stationed there with the French legion, and if you do not like to
go as far as Peshawur, you can travel easily to Akira and back in one day*.”
I exhausted myself in thanks but took my leave. Kashmir Singh is the only Indian
I ever heard speak in short sentences, and he seems to possess more talent than
it has hitherto been my good fortune to meet with.
I very soon alighted from my jampan, mounted my ghunt, and attended only by
Mohan, galloped over the plain in order to reach Shujanpoor before night-fall.
Unluckily, one village is here so exactly like another, that I missed my way,
the six palms which distinguish Shujanpoor, being only discernible from this
side when one is very near to them. The sun went down while we were crossing the
plain, but I had far outridden Mohan, and not another human creature was to be
seen. In the distance, some villages crowned the small eminences which rise from
the level surface at intervals, and I decided on making for one of these and
asking my way. While I was considering what I had best do, Mohan came up and
assured me we were all right, but I felt equally sure to the contrary, we rode
on a little way until the much-longed-for palms started up before our eyes. The
darkness soon hid them from us, and we reached: Shujanpoor after every ray of
light had disappeared. I waited three hours for Mr. Vigne before I began my
supper. Just as I had commenced he came in dreadfully fatigued. He had stayed
behind to sketch, and like me, had lost his way; after many attempts to set
himself right, he had been obliged at last to take a guide from one of the
villages, which occasioned this long delay.
The plain of Shush produces a species of the goat, which grows to a great size:
they have long tails, which they carry horizontally, and no horns: they have a
Roman nose, and eyes of an uncommon size: their hair is quite black. I purchased
the largest male I could meet with, and amused myself, while waiting for Vigne,
with watching the motions of this strange caricature of nature by torch light.
An old donkey, belonging to the fakir, stood near him, but my goat over-topped
him-by at least two hands, and the creature at length appeared in my sight like
something mysterious. I fancied some Mephistopheles shining out of his great
eyes, and turned round to my writing again, the labours of the Dauaides to me.
For will it ever attain the object I desire? It is true, that is not the meanest
design, which expects neither thanks nor reward, Too many, a labour of any kind
is the creative and spiritual life working within them, or the light play of
their fancy, assuming form and reality; to others, it is the dull heaving of the
heart, in which fate has laid a painful burthen, but which still heaves on for
mere existence, which is not infrequently laid down in this struggle. But after
the grave and forgetfulness have long been our portion, when other people are
ploughing the field under which we lie mouldering, if no remembrance of
ourselves or our actions be left behind, yet will something remain of our
labours, if they have been exercised on the realities of life. Such works,
however unimportant, contribute to the formation of the minds which succeed
their author. Under the most favourable circumstances, mine will repose in my
chest, and no kindred spirit will learn a lesson from the sharp experience of
these pages.
More than 2000 years ago, Alexander the Great crossed this plain with his
splendid army, and will not this grand idea raise the mind and withdraw it from
the every-day repetition of life’s toil? Surely it would, if any loftier thought
than that of conquest had moved the heart of Alexander, if he had marched to
spread benefit instead of ruining over his path. Even then it is not the will
that ennobles the deed, but the accomplishment of that will; and what was the
great result of Alexander’s campaign in India? The death of thousands, the
misery of the inoffensive inhabitants, and in the place of tranquillity and
order, the unmitigated calamities of war. To me, the idea that brave and
adventurous men carried the productions of India over this plain to the west,
long before Alexander lived, is far grander than all the brilliant victories of
this conqueror of worlds. Their journeys bound nations together in amity,
softened the rude manners of the west, and improved all things. Sad is it to
think that this same plain has been for the last 800 years the territory where
fanatical and furious barbarians, whose faith is a cloak for every crime, have
held uncontrolled sway. But these days are now almost at an end, and we may look
hopefully forward to the time when expeditions from the east to the west will
finally subdue the remains of so baneful a power. To the Sikhs now stretching to
the Indus, will succeed the hosts of England, who will unite this country to
their enormous empire.
Sunday, December 27.-We started at eight in the morning. I was benumbed with the
cold, which had kept me awake all night in an open mosque; and in spite of the
fakir’s wood, I shivered in every limb. I expectéd. that he would demand some
large compensation for his loss, but his pride was too great for this; I,
therefore, told the people to give him five rupees, a sum which would have
purchased for me either in London or Paris, a warmest and comfortable apartment.
I began by making use of my feet to bring some warmth into them; but yesterday’s
journey had so fatigued me, that I soon had recourse to me ghunt, and cantered
onward to Hussein Abdal, thinking the day’s march would never come ‘to an end.
The road itself is altogether uninteresting, and I was obliged to stop in many
places and wait for the guide, the path through the ravines being very
difficult.
I had no sooner arrived at Hussein Abdal, but I set off at once to visit the
ancient palace and garden built by Jehangir, which is one mile and a half from
the town; it is called Wah, the Indian ery of astonishment, It was not a serai,
but a regular palace, situated in the best part of the country around, and is
now an extensive and imposing ruin. No doubt the great inducement to build a
palace here arose from the presence of three beautiful springs, which gush out
from the earth, and are encircled by slabs of stone: they spread into large
sheets of water, which are full of fish of various kinds. I wandered long about
these once splendid rooms, some adorned with specimens of the finest stones,
others with rich carvings, but now abandoned to the most perfect solitude. The
entrance is still worthy of the residence of an Emperor. At the bottom of the
garden stands a little building, the use of which I could not understand; having
a beautiful spring issuing from within, and flowing all round it. It is the most
richly ornamented part of the grounds, but I looked in vain for some way to
enter, and as usually happens, my imagination became vivid in proportion as it
remained unsatisfied, I peered into the bushes which surrounded it, and even
climbed to the height above, to look for the entrance, but neither door nor
window, nor any aperture whatever was visible; and with curiosity ungratified, I
was forced to retrace my steps. On my return, I was overjoyed to hear that the
long-looked-for stock of provisions from Ludhianahadarrived: they had been sent
round by Lahore, Jammu, Kashmir, and Mazafferabad. It was with no little
pleasure that I received a supply of wine and brandy, after twelve days’
deprivation, replaced my wretched tea and sugar with something far better, and
chapatis with a biscuit. Instead of the tallow candles of Kashmir, always
covered with black grease, I welcomed some wax lights; even the preserved soups
and meats had come safe to hand, allowing us a brief respite from the eternal
mutton and fowl to which we were latterly restricted.
Near Hussein Abdal stands the ruined Serai of Akbar, in one end of which a Sikh
Guru has established himself. Hussein Abdal owes its name to the grave of a Pir
or devotee, who lived in the eminence where the place now stands, and his tomb
is still to be seen. This Pir was called Shekh Hussein Abdal; Abda/ means
fanatic, and is applied toa particular tribe among the Afghans. This individual
is a very celebrated person at Kandahar, where he was known as Baba Wali. He
chose the place of his abode because a spring comes forth from its summit, and
was the resort of pious pilgrims of many creeds. After his death, a fakir took
up his place, as is usual, in the case of all the Mohammedan saints. Guru Nanak,
the founder of the Sikh religion, coming one day to the hill as a pilgrim, much
heated and tired, requested some water of the fakir. The unbeliever’s demand was
refused; and Nanak, laying his hand on the rock whence the spring issued, it
ceased to flow, and on the very spot was a bas-relief of that hand in stone,
which as soon as the Sikhs became lords of the country, was taken away from the
mountain, and placed in the building erected in the middle of the Serai, and
there raised as an object of veneration opposite the entrance. The Guru sings
some passages out of the Granth, or holy volume of the Sikhs, every morning
before it.
A tomb, now almost destroyed, stands near this Serai, overshadowed by two large
cypresses which, as is frequently the case in Mohammedan countries, grow in a
place quite surrounded with massive stone walls. Every account agrees that this
is the last resting-place of the well-known Nar Jeh4n, the wife of Jehangir. The
frame-work of the door retains some vestiges of former grandeur: it is of black
marble, as was the door itself, which has been carried off.
Monday, December 28.-The nights were now extremely cold; the water froze in the
bottles, and the ground was covered every morning With hard frost. At noon,
however, we had our Indian sun. I had appointed the morning for my visit to the
Sikh Guru, at which ceremony the whole: population of Hussein Abdal was present.
When I came to the marble steps leading to his Durbar, which was held before the
celebrated stone, and saw him there seated on carpets, I took off my shoes, a
courtesy which gained for me the loud praises of all present. The Guru received
me with every mark of dignity, and accepted q present, which was certainly well
bestowed, if only for the sight of the stone, on which the above-named marvel
still remains imprinted.
The great imperial route formerly leading from Hindusthan to Kabul passes from
Hussein Abdal to Lahore, and Serais were built along with it at intervals of
every six kos from each other. There were three between the former town and
Rawalpindi, but I purposed making the journey in two days, and started at once
therefore from the Guru’s Durbar. Near the first Serai is a small eminence,
which has the advantage of a paved road, not remarkable in any way; indeed, why
it is there at all is the only singularity, as there are many places where it
would be far more useful than here. Perhaps it is owing to its being the only
rocky hill between Atok and Lahor, that the honour of a paved road has been
given to it; at all events, it is called Mulgala, and an inscription, not very
intelligible, ascribes it to Akbar. Just previous to this, I saw a stone bridge
in ruins, which is evidence of the changeableness of the soil in the Panjab.
This bridge spans a rivulet, and is constructed against a hill from sixty to
eighty feet high, the formation of which must have originated from the water
beneath it. There is another bridge very close to this, which is also nearly
destroyed; the traveller is now left to find his way through the ravines and the
stream, as he best can. My camels, however, had not learned the secret,
consequently, their burdens were all cast on the ground. Janikasang, where we
halted, is a wretched place, nine kos from Hussein Abdal.
Tuesday, December 29.-The way continued through the plain, where there is very
little cultivation, though the soil seems excellent, and must be of a most
extraordinary depth, of which I could judge from several parts where it has been
torn up by occasional wild torrents. The absence of cultivation is attributable
perhaps to the very superiority of the soil; for in this part of Asia, where
rain so seldom falls, agriculture depends almost exclusively on irrigation. The
country is intersected throughout by numerous streams, which flow from the high
mountains, and are so deeply embedded in the earth, that the water cannot be
conducted along the plain; hence the country is in many parts a wilderness,
producing nothing except stunted acacias and the Ziziphus. When the rainy season
sets in, the numerous deep ravines must put a stop to all travelling. There is
no bridge near at hand, and the water in many places stands sometimes from
twenty to thirty feet deep, there is, therefore, no remedy that I know of but
patiently to await a change of weather. The ravines being formed by the streams,
many of them are well supplied with water in the very driest season.
Just before Rawalpindi, there is a river called Sawan, the Swan of the maps,
whence a small plain extends to the town ‘itself. By this river I found the
Thanadar, with the Stirnt, (Persian,) or Mithdi, (Hindusthani,) the present of
welcome, consisting of twenty-one pots of sweetmeats, each enough for one man to
carry, a basket of eggs, one of the fowls, two sheep, and a bag of rupees.
I went to look about me in the adjacent parts, and then to my tent, which was
pitched by the only well in the town, and about a musket shot from the nearest
houses. Rawalpindi is called a fort, but it has not even a wall of defence. The
place is very populous, and has a large bazar. Not far from my tent stood a
little building, the environs of which were ornamented with a few acacias, the
only trees near. On one of these I observed a bird, which was quite new to me,
sitting quietly; and sending for the huntsman, Jonki, I desired him to shoot it;
but the natives would not permit it, because the house was the residence of the
Guri. On hearing this, I ordered the people to get ready instantly to depart,
not because, as I told them, my servants were not permitted to shoot, but
because they had entered into a dispute with religious personages. As soon as
these last heard my reasons, they came out ina body, and begged me to remain
where I was, and shoot whatever I liked. I did remain, therefore, but prohibited
the shooting.
The same evening I received a letter from General Ventura, and two baskets
filled with choice European dainties, attention not to be forgotten. They were
escorted by a Jemidar, who was directed to follow me. I had also to thank the
General for some English powder, which he sent me by a Sowér, and for which I
had written to him from Baramulla. The man had travelled on a dromedary
ninety-six kos from Lahore in three days.
Wednesday, December 30.-It often happens that recent occurrences, however
unimportant in themselves, will elucidate questions long put aside from history
as something inexplicable. This has more particularly happened in modern days,
and perhaps the most striking proof has been afforded by the discovery of the
famed Damietta stone, which solved the long-existing enigma of hieroglyphics.
Something similar may be found in the journeys of Europeans to the part of Asia
where I now am, which have cleared up much difficulty concerning Alexander’s
Indian expedition, and thrown a broad light on many shadowy paths of history.
It happened one day that an Englishman being in the bazar at Delhi, received in
change some of the copper coin called pais, a circumstance only singular in
this, that however small the purchase may be, a native always makes the bargain
for these lords of India, and is usually paid in larger amounts. It was still
more curious, that the Englishman took notice of these small coins, thinking
there was something uncommon in their appearance; and I mention the circumstance
without any idea of covertly reproving the indolence usually seen in India.
Every new comer gazes with more or less curiosity, but always with curiosity, on
objects which have all the charm of novelty to him; but this, at last, wears
out, and generally long before the presidency of Bengal is quitted for the upper
provinces. I can vouch for the truth of this sensation. Many things on which
years ago I should have made an infinity of inquiries, have ceased to awaken the
least interest in my mind, and if I, as a traveller, feel thus in matters of
immediate inquiry, how much more those whose pursuit is the pleasure to be
attained by their large income, or the readiest means of acquiring one. The
little copper coins I have alluded to differed from those of India: instead of
some legend, as on the Mohammedan; some idol, as on the Hind coins, they more
resembled the money of the West, bearing a bust, a whole figure, and sometimes
an inscription engraved round them. A superficial examination pointed them out
as Greek coins, or as exact imitations; and a more rigid scrutiny proved them to
be either Bactrian or something nearly related to that country. The discovery
was no sooner made known than many Englishmen in Upper India hastened to collect
as many of the coins as possible, and an immense number were brought in, and at
the same time others of silver and gold: the fact was simply this; the workers
in those metals had been hitherto in the habit of melting them down, they now
kept them to sell to the English. In a short time these ancient coins were all
classified, and divided into the ancient Hindu, or Buddhist; the Bactrian, which
have been most valuable in illustrating the history of Central Asia; and the
Indo-Scythian, which are as precious as the rarest documents. The last two might
be subdivided into dynasties, showing that Alexander’s generals, who shared
among them the mighty empire he had conquered, had retained possession of the
country of the Indus much longer than history supposes, nay, that it is very
possible that some of the dynasties survived to the appearance of the victorious
Mohammedans. The last division, forming the transition from the Bactrian to the
Hindu, is by far the most. remarkable. Like the coins of the West, which during
the sway of the Christian Emperors of Constantinople, departed from the noble
Greek form to assume the likeness of 80 many tasteless caricatures; so these
degenerate still more, and the beautiful proportions of the original coin are
lost in an unconnected jumble of points and lines. In the same way, we find,
first the Greek Basileos, then the same with Sanscrit letters, then Basileos
Raja, then the last only, until, finally, both name and title disappear. This
part of India, before the invasion of the Mohammedans, like Italy in the middle
ages, had survived all the beauty of the arts.
The strip of country in which the gold and silver coins of Bactria are found is
not extensive. It runs down from the bank of the Sawan at Rawalpindi as far as
the Indus, and from the description, as given by the ancient Greek writers, I
conclude that Rawalpindi may be built on, or near, the site of Taxila. The coins
which form the link between the Bactrian and Hindu are found there, and in
greater numbers still at Kanoj on the Ganges; the copper money is found from
Delhi to Agra. I postpone the inquiry whether there was an IndoBactrian kingdom
existing in the Panj4b and in a part of Northern India, or whether the coins
discovered there were brought by the conquerors, and exchanged for gold and
precious stones. I purchased a great many of the Bactrian coins while in
Rawalpindi, which is called Sitaram Pais, from Sita and Rama, the first being
the name of a goddess, the second that of her celestial lover.
The well-known truth that no place is more unpleasant to a European traveller
than one of importance, was quite substantiated here. The bearers refused to go
any further; those who carried the jampan left me, the camel drivers demanded
their Raza, discharge, and I was all impatience to getaway. I sent therefore for
the Thanadar to provide me with the means of proceeding on my journey, even
should he have recourse to compulsory measures, menacing him with the anger of
Ranjit Singh, if I found myself necessitated to pass another night in Rawalpindi.
Happily, Ranjit has given European travellers prodigious power over his
functionaries, from the governor of a province down to the village justice.
Every man of them was obliged to send in a certificate of my satisfaction to the
Maha Raja, and for this, if necessary, they would have given large presents. The
consequence was visible in my preparations being completed to-day at 12 o'clock.
I was in too great haste to wait for the whole party, and therefore left the
Munshi behind to look after the baggage, while I myself journeyed on as far as a
ruinous Serai, seven kos distant from Rawalpindi, where I halted to give the
bearers time to join me before night. A good many travellers were already
assembled there. Nothing is left of ancient splendour in this serai, except some
portions of the outer walls; but in earlier times there were here, as in most
other serais, shaded walks in which persons of the lower ranks found shelter,
but the smallest of them, which still afforded some trifling protection against
the cold, were all occupied. Although there was room enough to spread my tent in
the inner court, the wind whistled round it in every direction, and the walls
afforded no defence against the weather: the filthiness of the court-yard was
disgusting. I, therefore, preferred occupying my small tent, which made its
appearance towards evening, and pitched it before the entrance to the building,
where it was screened from the strong north-west wind; while my servants all
lodged near me, in the only unoccupied apartment.
The view from this point was very delightful. Before it lay a large Mohammedan
mausoleum, surmounted by a lofty cupola, and surrounded on every side by.a
multitude of other tombs. The square in which they were erected contained also a
mosque and an asylum for pilgrims, The large building was already falling to
decay; the cupola admitted the light of heaven through many a rent, and the
whole structure had a threatening aspect. Surrounded by rocks of remarkable
form, some towering one above the other, some standing out singly and dark from
the horizon, this funeral monument is the highest point in the vicinity. In the
far distance,’ and over the lofty mountains, above all these objects, rose the
snow-capped chain of which the PirPanjal is the monarch. The rocks are of
sandstone; the direction N.W. and S.E., the strata vertical,
From this elevation, there is but one solitary mountain discernible in the
south-west, the plain of the Panjab seeming to extend uninterruptedly in that
direction. This appearance, however, is deceptive, for on & nearer examination
the surface is found deeply intersected with ravines and water-courses. Before
dinner, Vigne and J wandered about the neighbourhood, and soon came to a large
tank, around which were some fragments of rock. Here we did our best to furnish
ourselves with an extra dish, in the shape of some wild fowl, which were
swimming about the water very temptingly. But we were unsuccessful, and on our
return, I footing the Munshi had arrived, with information that my baggage had
left Rawalpindi on the backs of coolies, in default of proper carriage; that he
had seen the large tent poles, usually carried by four men, lying down on the
road, and half a dozen other packages belonging to me also strewed about, the
bearers having, of course, run away. I immediately dispatched people for the
packages, but the tent poles were too far off and much too heavy for the men to
fetch them this day; the bearers of the Panjab, like their fellows in Kashmir,
being immoveable at any price after nightfall. The Shah had arrived also, and
pitched his tent near mine.
As the sun went down, I saw symptoms in the sky which made me anticipate rain,
although I hoped that it might prove only a passing shower. As a precautionary
measure, however, I had those things most likely to be injured by wet, brought
within the small tent where I was lodged. In the evening I visited the Shah, and
seeing that his tent was pitched in a piece of low ground, I warned him of the
likelihood of rain; but he did not think there would be much, and so left the
tent where it was.
Thursday, December 31.-I had erred in my reckoning as to the time when I made
sure of reaching Lahore. A violent sirocco came on last night, accompanied by
storms of rain; the wind shifted, and my tent now suffered the fiercest attacks
of the tempest. I heard the rain pouring down during the night, and when I left
my bed after lying awake for hours, everything in my tent was swimming. My
clothes were all saturated with water, and my only comfort in putting them on,
in this state, arose from the feeling that it was only an anticipation of what
they must be very shortly, at all events. I looked out upon a deluge. The whole
country had become one interminable swamp, and the things which had been let
outside the tent were scarcely distinguishable. A fire to make our breakfast
seemed quite out of the question, and some change of situation absolutely
requisite; but where were we to find a better? The ruinous old Serai was filled
with a motley assemblage of travellers; and though in my capacity of White Lord,
I might have turned them all out of their quarters, without the smallest
apprehension that they, though many hundreds in number, would think of disputing
my right to rob them of their shelter, backed as I should have been by the
Munshi and Khan Singh’s authority, humanity prevailed with me, to waive any such
method of bettering my own situation.
Whereupon I sallied forth to look about me, and about a quarter of a mile in the
direction of the cemetery, I found out a place where we could remain for a day
defended from the weather, the ruins being surrounded by walls, and having
several small vaulted niches, which are still in tolerable repair, the
destructive fury of the Sikhs having exhausted itself on the larger tombs and
the mosque. Into these niches, therefore, I had all my goods conveyed, and
selected a corner cell for myself, very like a dungeon of the age of chivalry,
without any window. The entrance was narrow, dark, and very hard to find. There
I established myself for the day with my carpet, kanat, and a few immediate
necessaries; it was so dark that candles were indispensable, but my greatest
discomfort arose from the loss of an entire day, or perhaps many days while this
rain lasted. In truth, I could not make sure that I might not be detained in
this part of India so long as even to miss the steamer which left Bombay for
Egypt, and in this case, it was a question not only of days but of months. So
little had I thought of these rains, that I had announced to General Ventura my
intention of being in Wazirabad on the 4th of January; an additional proof, if
any were needed, of the extreme folly of laying down any definite plan for the
future, particularly in a country like this, where a man travelling alone on
horseback may get on well enough, but when obliged to have a number of people
with him, he is dependent on a thousand contingencies.
After making my own arrangements, I sallied out again to look after my
companions in misfortune. I found Vigne in bed, with water all about him, and
rain pouring in on all sides. I could not help laughing at his philosophy, and
with some trouble persuaded him to get up and share my strange lodging. As for
the poor Shah, he was sitting amidst his twenty-five attendants, drenched
through; he had lost all his energies, and declined even the trouble of moving
when I invited him to share my dry prison-house.
And thus passed the last day of a year which I had purposed to spend on the
broad sea. On looking back, I confess that more extraordinary to me than even
the wondrous scenes of nature, was the great diversity existing in manners and
habits among the various people with whom my travels had brought. me acquainted.
The last day of the year 1834, I passed on my voyage from Manilla to Canton,
upon the stormy waters of the Yellow Sea; and during the succeeding twelve
months, how much had I been allowed to see! China and India; the most extensive
empires in Asia, the most beautiful by nature, offering new shreds of evidence
of the majesty of creation, and of the high refinement of an ancient
civilization. From China in the East, where the vast ocean is the only boundary
of this mighty continent, to China in the West, or Tibet, I travelled in a very
wide and devious course. I had visited the flourishing settlement of Singapore;
the Muluccds now declining; the rich island of Penang; Madras, the theatre of
many a European contest; Calcutta, the famous city of palaces; the ancient
Brahminical retreat. of Benares; Allahabad, Oude, Agra, Gwalior, and Delhi,
still magnificent in its fallen greatness; the Himalaya, those giants of our
earth; the beautiful but melancholy valley, not impossibly the cradle of the
human race; finally, I had had a glimpse of Tibet, finishing with a toilsome
journey to the ancient Taxila and the modern Atok. The whole year was fraught
with events well-deserving my remembrance; and though I had at times experienced
a deep sense of loneliness, I had many days to dream of, full of peace,
tranquillity, and friendly intercourse; my strength of mind and of the body were
unimpaired; yet fatigue and occupation generally silenced every half-suppressed
wish for more comforts than I could procure.
And thus, also, ended my fortieth year, without a wish to live over again one of
its days, or even hours; that year which, beginning with a storm, and ending in
a tomb, presented a true image of our life on earth.
Friday, 1st January, 1836.-Floods of rain ushered in the first day of the New
Year. I was left alone to welcome it; Vigne had gone early to bed, overcome with
fatigue. Some future traveller will perhaps habit this same little nook, and
should curiosity lead him to creep about it, he will wonder whether he has got
into the den of a hyena or g wolf, or if serpents ever made it their abode. But
when his researches pave led him from the narrow entrance to the dark round
tower, and the light of his torch discovers to him the murky walls, and his own
laboured preaching tells him of the heavy damp air within, he may with
difficulty comprehend how it was possible for a European travelling with a large
suite of natives, ever to dream of remaining in such a place for two whole days.
The unfortunate conjuncture of circumstances, which brought my tent poles into
the power of bearers who were pressed into my service without wages, contrary to
my express orders; the folly of leaving them without any one to look after them,
solves the riddle but too plainly of their flight and throwing down their burden
at four miles distance.
The sky cleared in the afternoon, and I desired them instantly to get ready for
a move; the old Serai had not proved a very desirable residence for any of us,
for there was no bazar for the natives, and no wood procurable; as for the
bearers and camel drivers, they had all taken to flight. Luckily, six camels
that my Munshi had picked up somewhere in Rawalpindi, arrived about noon; very
suspiciously answering to the beasts that had been driven away, and wanting
drivers into the bargain; I was anxious, if possible, to get on to Manikyéla
to-day, to bring all our affairs into a due train once more, and give the
natives the opportunity of thoroughly drying themselves; for this short journey,
we had yet abundant time.
My first visit, on emerging from my cell, was to the Shah, whom I found in a
miserable plight, shivering like a patient in an ague fit, while his servants
were so completely soaked with the rain, that I looked forward to nothing else
than their serious illness. I offered to administer some brandy to them all, but
as staunch Mohammedans, they would not listen to such a proposal. The Shah was
quite amazed at first When he heard of my intention to recommence our journey
to-day, but he soon found himself able to follow my example and get ready, and
this being done we started, and after a short progress through a flag country,
reached the end of our day’s march, a grand monument of ancient times, called by
the natives Manikydla Top, or Burj. According to Elphinstone, this Dhagoba* is
72 feet high, and 450 in circumference. While in Ceylon, where these Dhagobas
are frequently seen, I took many pains to find some way of admission into them.
They are always strongly built, the exterior being in the form of the cupola,
but there is nothing else but this; the Dhagoba being, in fact, an edifice
raised over some relic, a tooth, a lock of hair, &c., considered sacred, in the
Buddhist faith. Near it is generally some Vihara or Temple, and in the
neighbourhood of this ManikaylaDhagoba, I observed, towards the west, the
foundation walls built in the form of a Jarge square, all that remained of a
former Vihara. Compared with others which I have seen, this Dhagoba is the
smallest in proportion-to its elevation that I have ever met with, and the
drawing in Elphinstone’s work does not give any correct idea of its proportions.
It is built of Kankar stone, which is the product of water, and the softest
stone is known; the base is constructed of coarse sand-stone, and about six or
eight feet high, ornamented with pilasters four feet high, and with decorative
capitals. These pilasters are six feet apart. Above this, and about fourteen
feet higher than the ground, runs a projecting cornice whence the cupola rises.
The building was first opened by General Ventura. From the highest point which I
reached, a well descends, twelve feet square and eighteen feet deep, but as the
work of opening proceeded, this was soon filled up with stones, and another
attempt to penetrate by the lower part of the building was found impracticable.
He, therefore, ordered the workmen to begin at the upper part. In a short time,
they arrived at the middle of the shaft, where they met large masses of stones;
these were broken through, and near the foundation appeared a small vaulted
recess containing a gold cylinder, with some fluid in it, arid some Buddhist
coins. Mr. James Prinsep has given a description of these in the Asiatic
Journal. According to the natives, 500 men worked for a whole month at the
opening of this monument.
Whether owing to their increased weight by boing wet, or to the slipperiness of
the ground, which always distresses these animals, the camels had carried the
tents as far as Méniky4la with the utmost difficulty; they were still too damp
to be pitched, and I was obliged to look out for a lodging in the wretched
village. The Hindu and Sikh have always their temple to resort to, and the
Mohammedan his mosque, the first had often been my refuge, the last but seldom,
owing to my unwillingness to shock the Mohammedan prejudices, but on the present
occasion, it happened that the mosque was the only place large enough to hold my
bed. I was, therefore, obliged to take possession of it. Manikyadla is ten kos
from R&walPindi, and two and a half kos from the Serai.
Saturday, January 2.-I purposed making the journey to Rotas, twenty-five kos, in
two days, Tamak being about half-way. But the poor camels had arrived at
Manikydla very much fatigued, and though J expected that the road would be
somewhat drier to-day, yet I feared for the success of my plan. Tamak,
therefore, was fixed upon for the end of this day’s journey, and after waiting
at the 7p until my people had all departed, I followed. The first glance at the
unfortunate camels, slipping along the ground, and tumbling down with their
burdens, while nothing but heavy blows could induce them to rise or move at all,
satisfied me that no baggage would reach Tamak that night, and that if I wanted
to keep my people along with me, I must shorten the march. Bisentaur was
therefore appointed as the night station, about three kos nearer than Tamék, but
this new order only reached a small number of the suite.
About half-way to Bisent4ur stands a Serai of large dimensions. T have already
said that these buildings were erected at certain distances, and served as
lodging places for the Moghul Emperors when they travelled from Delhi to Kabaél.
They are not always on the modern traveller’s route, nor must the reader even
supposes, when I speak of aroad, that this is always a broad path kept in
constant repair; it is, on the contrary, a mere beaten track, usually found with
much trouble, altered by every accident of nature, and, in this part of the
Panjab, constantly broken up by the ravines and hurried waters, and compelling
the traveller, no longer invited to shelter himself in the Serai, to swerve very
far from the original line. I never passed through a country so devoid of any
pretension to beauty. The water has ploughed deep furrows in every direction,
and probably owing to the summer droughts, the ground is left without
cultivation. Our march was so toilsome that I almost despaired of seeing
Bisentéur at all this night, the last hour being consumed in labouring through
the deep sandy bed. of the Kahan, with precipitous banks on either side of us.
Bisentéur lies on one of the highest points, but whether of the right or left
bank I cannot say, for the now dry river winds in a thousand directions, and I
was so entirely exhausted, that it was with difficulty that I climbed the bank
which led us to the miserable dirty village, where the only decent house was the
Zenana of the Thanadar. He offered to send his wives elsewhere if I would take
up my quarters in it, but this felt bound to decline. It was in vain to think of
waiting for my tent, and I was really at a loss where to go, for neither bearers
nor servants were there to assist me.
The wretched huts were full of vermin, the whole place seemed underwater, in the
so-called street, the mud was over my feet; and without warm coverings, or
cloak, to pass the night in the open air would have been death. At last, I found
shelter in the Dharamsala, the house of the Sikh Guru, who, seeing me seat
myself quite worn out at the threshold of one of the huts, invited me in, on the
condition that none of my Musselman servants should enter; to this, however, I
refused to accede, and the Brahmin, who joined me at the moment, was eminently
useful to me, as the Sikhs hold them in great veneration. He told the Gurd that
if he put up with the contamination of the unclean Musselman out of affection to
me, a Sikh might safely do the same, and the other being reassured by his tone,
opened his dwelling to me, which consisted of one apartment, inclosed on three
sides, the other left open. I had neither bed nor chair, and was forced to lie
on the ground, so weary and heartsick that life itself seemed a burden. Some of
the servants arrived at eight in the evening. For the first time since our
companionship, I left the care of providing food to Vigne, but neither khansaman
nor bawarchi had arrived. Nazim Khan, Ahmed Shah's deputy from Iskardu, prepared
for us a dish much eaten at Kabul, and which they called kubebi.
It consisted of mutton cut into small pieces and roasted; Mohammed Shah sent us
a mess of rewash, rhubarb, the Brahmin baked some chapatis, and when a bottle of
Bordeaux was discovered, though I could not touch a morsel, Vigne’s hunger was
quite satisfied. The night was cold and rainy, and as the bearers, who had the
very things I wanted to protect myself against the weather, were still absent,
it passed uncomfortably enough with me. The men who had come, pressed me to take
whatever warm covering they had, but I could not deprive them of it, and only
entreated to be left undisturbed. Trembling with cold, I watched through the
greater | part of that wearisome night.
Sunday, January 3.-Long before daybreak I was awakened by the chanting of the
Gur; and suffering from severe headache and cough, I wanted to start, but it was
no easy matter to rouse up the poor tired creatures, and I felt how much it
costs to put one’s self in motion. I had not the least idea what had become of
the bearers, the camels, or two-thirds of my attendants. The Brahmin fulfilled
his duty of presenting a handsome present to the Guri, on my part, which he
acknowledged with the most profound gratitude, in words and gestures, blessing
me in God’s name, and wishing me a happy journey.
We were passing through the filthy streets, when the confidential servant of the
Shah met us with the news that his master was very ill. I reproached myself for
having quite forgotten him, since it was to be expected that the cold and damp
together would be attended with ‘some injurious consequences to his health. I
now dismounted quickly, and went on to see how he really was.
I found him very feverish; and after giving him my usual prescription-calomel,
advised him to wrap himself well up in his arm-chair, and keep as much warmth in
him as possible, until we reached Makreli, eight kos from hence, which place I
had fixed on as the station for the night.
As soon as we were finally out of Bisentaur, we entered a country entirely
composed of hills, running for a long time in every possible direction; and as
if to put negative at once un the Guru's friendly wishes, s storm came rolling
onwards from the southeast, the direction we were taking, and whence, for the
last two days, we had heard occasional claps of loud thunder resounding. The
hail storm now came on in good earnest, accompanied by repeated and terrific
peals, which reverberating from bill to hill, made the noise quite deafening.
Not a tree was visible, and my sedan being uncovered, 1 was wetted to the very
skin.
The bearers ran as fast as they could toa building at some distance, where the
coolies had already taken refuge; but I did not allow them to remain there long,
for the place was too small to admit my jampan, and I was consequently exposed
all the time to the incessant rain. Our progress now became truly difficult, for
the way was 80 slippery, that the bearers could scarcely keep on their feet; the
ravines were all filled with water, foaming and tearing along, and there was not
a spot on level ground. I: maybe guessed that we were by no means in a state to
be envied, nor did the piercing wind and rain improve my cold or cough. At
Length, the road became so bad, that I was obliged to get out and walk.
The bearers had chosen to take a bye-way which shortened the distance by three
kos, but which was only practicable for pedestrians and horses without any
burden, and does not lead by Tamaki. Before we reached this place, it was
necessary to descend into the bed of the Kahan; and after this, we found
ourselves more than once in the midst of some swollen mountain torrent, and I
was constantly slipping down the deep and insecure paths which skirted the
banks. The formation of these is sandstone, of a light grey, very brittle,
covered with a red ferruginous earth; the stratum of the sandstone is
perpendicular; and on the summit of the hills insulated rocks projected in the
most remarkable shapes, the intervening spaces being filled up with the earth
above alluded to, which is frequently indurated to stone, and covered with
another surface four or five inches thick.
Pieces of chalcedony, measuring a quarter of an inch in thickness, are embedded
in it; quartz in small crystals, and a whitish substance, unknown to me, is also
found in the sandstone. Before we arrived at Makreli, we entered the bed of the
Kahan, where the red, yellow, and grey formations towering above each other in
masses, were most remarkable. The place is miserable, and very small. 1 was
surprised to see the people and baggage coming in during the evening, but the
poor camels were not to be driven so fast.
I slept in my little tent, which they pitched in the Mohammedan cemetery,
although it was not yet quite dry. For the first time for several days I enjoyed
the genial warmth of a fire. Towards evening the Shah arrived: he was much
better than when we parted, at least so he assured me; but I think his
politeness to his physician carried him a little too far, for he still had a
good deal of fever.
Monday, January 4.-I feel as if I ought to be nearer home; for my late exposure
to bad weather has given me such a catarrh as I never had before, and my health
is evidently affected. A fine sunshiny morning succeeded the stormy weather of
yesterday; and before starting, I sent to inquire after my patient, who came to
thank me in person, and to assure me that he was quite cured. I was as much
astonished as many other doctors are occasionally at the success of their own
prescriptions, though I had not quite so many scruples in testifying my
surprise.
Our road, in point of hillocks and ravines, was little better than that of
yesterday. We had gone about three kos, when we fell in with two Sikh battalions
marching towards Peshawar, fine well-dressed men, with long blue coats and
turbans. They were irregular troops, and formed no part of the French legion.
They marched in good order, and were followed by a body of camp-followers with
their tents, also in the close column; but I did not think it at all agreeable
nevertheless, to be stopped by half a hundred camels in this narrow pass, where
it was quite impossible to get out of their way.
It was really a pitiable thing to watch these poor beasts trembling with
fatigue, toiling up the steep way with their heavy burdens, which threatened
every instant to oversee them. About a dozen women followed the troops, and one
group, consisting of a little woman riding a small pony, with a young girl in
front, and a taller one behind her, struck me as quite original. The fort of
Rotas, one of the most extensive in the north of India, is visible from a high
point at four kos’ distance, and encircles, as it were, an isolated hill between
200 and 300 feet high. It is separated into two by a deep cleft in the rock. The
fort has an imposing appearance at the end of a fruitful plain, one of the first
seen in this part of the Panjab, with the further advantage of being able to
protect the harvest; and it is bathed by the waters of the Kahan, which winds
around Bisentaur and Makreli; that is, when it has any water.
The Mohammedans have sunk deep wells to supply the plain during the summer
season, when the river is always dry; one of these, about two kos on this side
of Rota's, is really an immense work. The fortress has long been abandoned as
too extensive, and is now all but in ruins, one large portion of the walls have
fallen into the depths below. The house of a fakir near the river, was fixed on
as my resting-place, but on one side it lay entirely exposed to the wind, which
at this season is piercingly cold throughout the Panjab; I wished, moreover, to
visit the fortress, and therefore desired to be conducted to the lodging which
Khan Singh told me had been got ready for my accommodation within it.
The walls rise in the most singular forms above the river; the entrance gate,
200 feet high, seems to be quite lifted up in the air, so gigantic are its
proportions. Other divisions of these immense works, are on a scale equally
vast. There are but three gates in the whole fortress: two are almost concealed
from view by the ravines and steep eminences close to them.
The way to the third is more open towards the river, but still well defended by
large towers, which protect the chief entrance, formed. By two gates, one within
the other. On the second, which is reached by a winding path 100 or 130 feet
higher than the first, is an Arabic inscription, which makes known the year of
the Hejira, and that of the builder, Shir Shah Lodi Patan, who for five years,
until his death in 1545, sat on the defeated Humayun’s throne of Delhi.
When Humayun fled to Afghanistan and Persia, in order to levy forces to recover
his kingdom, Shir Shah raised this formidable obstacle in his way. The interior
is highly interesting. The ruins of buildings are scattered in every direction.
The angular pillars yet standing; the one window in each direction, still traced
in the solitary fragment of the ruined palace, struck me forcibly. It seemed
unaccountable how it could have survived the ravages which have laid all waste
beside it.
But northern India is more fortunate in this respect than the southern parts,
where nature soon destroys the most substantial edifices. Here the vegetation is
feebler, and they have not the Ficusreligiosa in such luxuriance, as in the more
tropical regions, where it frequently takes root in the crevices of the walls. I
did, indeed, see one tree of this species growing in Roads, at the door of a
fakir, near the bridge which leads over the ravine to the interior of the town,
but this was among the earliest symptoms of my approach to India, and during the
cold months of winter the tree is always sickly. The portion of the wall above
noticed, now standing has been rendered really habitable.
Where the deep chasm has parted the mountain in two, a gate and bridge have been
erected, which connect the two divisions of the fortress; and on the southern
side of the gate, a large Indian fig has flourished nearly long enough to
overshadow the whole of the entrance in the most picturesque manner. Here the
Jemidar deputed by General Ventura to provide for me, had prepared a very
convenient little dwelling, and a stock of wood for our use; a necessary article
which it occasioned us considerable time and trouble to procure at every
station.
As I was about stepping in, I was saluted by a puff of smoke, and presently saw
three dirty girls squatting around the fire, and warming some bread by it The
poor Thanadar, who was expecting a great many eulogiums on the excellent state
of the house, was struck dumb on seeing the children, who had taken the liberty
of appropriating to their own use both the wood and the house, calculating that
I should not make my appearance for some days to come. He gave the first who
came within his reach. a slap, which sent her squalling away in a moment, but
the others who echoed her screams, did not attempt to move, or to desist from
their occupation, in spite of all I could say or do. I really could not help
laughing at their horrid noises, and this seemed to have more effect than
scolding, for as soon as their bread was done. to their liking, they took
themselves off.
According to the Thanadar, the detached building which I had been observing with
so much interest, is called the palace; Raja Mehan Singh ka Mahal; the people
called it Mali Taj or Mali Burj, the Gardener’s Tower, and ascribe its
construction to Mehan Singh, ShirShah’s wazir. The Thanadar told me that the
fortress, as it now stands, was built in three years, and cost 150 lakhs of
rupees. I could believe the last account more easily than the first; but as Shir
Shah did not occupy the throne of India more than five years, meeting his death
at Kalingarh by the bursting of a bomb from one of his own guns, which rebounded
from the walls of the fortress, it is not probable the construction of this
great work could have taken a much longer time.
It was not until the reign of the third prince in succession to Shir Shah that
Humayun led an army into India to reconquer the throne of his father. The
governor of this fortress, Tatai Khan, evacuated it without striking a blow, and
gave Namayun a good opportunity of seeing to advantage what his enemies had done
for him. This fortress has never been well defended. We read in Ferishta’s
History of India, that there was at Rotas an impregnable fortress four centuries
before the Christian era, a proof of the high antiquity of the place.
This day General Ventura sent me two packages, one containing some excellent
claret, the other some beer, a kindness which I felt most gratefully, and which
I quickly acknowledged; for I had caught a severe cold in the late hail-storm,
and my poor Brahmin was worse than myself. For his fever, I recommended a strong
dose of calomel, and I got to his lodging to see him, but no further; for I had
no strength left me. In the room where I had to sleep there was no window, and
the walls were blackened with smoke, so that as I looked at the bed, and the
lights burning near it, the whole had a most funereal aspect.
Tuesday, January 5.-I was very glad when the night was fairly gone. In the
morning several sick persons came to ask my advice and aid as usual; among these
were two sepoys belonging to the corps we had met yesterday on their march. One
who was borne along by two comrades was past all human help, and as my store of
medicines was exhausted, I could do little or nothing for any of them, however
compassionately disposed towards them. During my journey to Kashmir, I was so
frequently called upon to act the part of a physician, that I had abundant
opportunity of observing the benefits arising from the use of calomel, and in
this country, I should consider it tho only medicine of any service.
We passed through a variety of climates in our long marches; sometimes we
travelled in companies of some hundreds of persons together, and scarcely a day
passed without one or more cases of sickness, and yet, with two solitary
exceptions, (where jaundice had preceded the attack of fever,) none of them
lasted more than a single day, nor did I lose so much as one of my followers
during the whole five months of my travels, neither was I obliged to leave any
of them behind me.
The whole company now started for Wazirabad, where a vehicle and four horses,
sent by Ventura, awaited my arrival. The distance is thirty-one kos, and we
learnt from Ranjit Singh’s guides that it was not an easy matter to divide the
journey; for, except near the Jelam, there was no house to be met within those
parts, and if I had my tent pitched, it would be necessary to make very short
marches. Every six kos there had been serais, and to these Khan Singh proposed
to direct me, dividing the journey into five days. To this, however, I objected,
determining to put up with any inconvenience rather than thus linger by the way;
and for the same reason I declined to take the other but longer route by
Jaldlpoor, though the country was much better peopled.
I was induced afterwards to let Khan Singh do as he pleased to-day; for I
anticipated great delay at the Jelam. He assured me that we could only march six
kos. Our first essay brought us into a deep ravine, ending in the bed of the
Kahan, through the heavy sand of which we struggled for some considerable
distance. After marching four miles, we turned our backs on the high lands, and
the plain of India lay stretched before us, without the faintest perceptible
swelling in that broad and interminable vista; while behind us lay the grand
mountains of Kashmir.
The lofty passes of the ToseMaidan and PirPanjal glistened and towered upward,
like so many giant forms, their snowy mantles contrasting with the dark
mountains in the vicinity of the plain. While the eye of the weary traveller
rests with satisfaction on this play, the surface seeming to threaten no further
impediment to his onward course, he glances with some surprise in the direction
he has just been following, and sees none of those obstacles which made the
latter part of his journey so tedious. Scarcely an eminence diversifies the
uniformity of the general surface. The salt hills, which occupy much of the
distance between this and the Atok, are here lost to the eye towards the
south-west, the place where the mineral is found in the greatest abundance. -DadanPindi
Khan is about six kos distant, the natives saying that no salt is found further
east. The last hilly ground in this direction is a detached group south-west of
Rotas, which is not visible for any distance on the other side of the Jelam.
The town called Jelam is five kos from Rotas, and there we quitted the
Doab-i-SindiSagur, which lies between the rivers Atok and Jelam, and is here
about ninety kos, or from 135 to 140 miles in breadth: a few words on this
country in its earlier days before I leave it. Arrian and Strabo call the region
between these two rivers;-Taxila, the chief town of which bore the same name.
This capital might have been where Rawalpindi now stands, in a fruitful plain,
no other town being met with further east until we come to Rotds, nor further
west until we reach the plain of Atok. Maniky4la, with its vast ruins, which
will be more fully dwelt on elsewhere, was fixed on by Burnes as the site of
Taxila, but this lies in a poorly watered and unproductive country; whereas the
Sawan, which flows by Rawalpindi, has some water, even in the driest season.
After all, it is not very easy to decide where the course of a river may have
been two thousand years ago, in a country where everything shows such amazing
changes to have taken place in the soil. But the variety of ruins found in the
neighbourhood of Rawalpindi is an evidence of the former existence of some large
city in its vicinity. In the time of Alexander, Taxiles was the sovereign of
Taxila, and when the conqueror passed the Indus, he sent an embassy
consisting-of 700 persons, all horsemen, to meet him, and attend him to his
city, which he surrendered at once, Alexander loading this peacelovingHindG
monarch with presents and favours. Above Taxila in the mountains, Arrian places
the kingdom of Abisarus, but whether this stretched to Kashmir we know not. From
the accounts given us of Alexander’s march, we should believe that he penetrated
further into the mountains calledEmoda, since we read that, having passed the
Jelam, he bad the trees of the pine forests cut down to supply the river with
shipping: these forests never extended to the plains. His fleet was composed, in
part of the vessels which he had transported from the Indus, in part of those
ships built at that city which he founded on either side of the Hydaspes or
Jelam, and called Bucephalia, after his horse, and Naikia (victory), from his
victory over Porus. Burnes believed Jal4lpoor to be the most probable site of
these cities.
At least, there is no doubt of one fact, that when Alexander was in this country
of Taxila, the people belonged neither to the Brahminical nor to the Buddhist
faith; for the priests ate at his table, and did not burn their dead, giving
them to be devoured by vultures: who would not at once decide from this to what
religious community they belonged? I purpose resuming the subject when I have
traversed the whole country of Alexander's conquest.
Jelam is a town of some importance, and the streets are clean, though narrow. At
the entrance stands a group of trees and a fakir’s dwelling. The whole reminded
me of the Delta of the Nile, the Phoenix farinosa, which grows as tall here as
the date palms, and the acacias, being of the same species as in Egypt. The
boiling point was 21] (2094 = 1620 feet above the level of the sea). The
inhabitants met me in a body, with an invitation to take up my abode there for
the night, while the shopkeepers requested that I would take everything that I
wanted, without thinking of any payment. But for no consideration would I have
prolonged my stay in the Panjab for a single day longer than was necessary.
Twenty large boats, excellently built and managed, convey travellers gratis
across the river. ‘This river is much wider than the Atok by its town of the
same name, but less deep and rapid. The right bank is rather high, the left is
flat, and in the rainy season, no doubt, the water overflows it toa a
considerable extent. One kos from the Jelam lies the ruinous Serai called
Narangabad, the outer walls of which are yet standing, and within them a
population of filthy people in still filthier huts, I could not find any place
to put up, and though the Guru of the Dharamsdla was ready to receive me, his
house was so small, that there was no standing room for my bed. I had,
therefore, to choose, my tent being too wet to be put up, whether I would sleep
in the open air, or on the ground. On account of the season, I preferred the
latter; but the loss of my tent entailed on me so much inconvenience, that I
ordered the people, even at the risk of tearing it, to spread it out somewhere,
that it might dry the sooner.
The Guru and his wife reminded me of Philemon and Baucis. They could not have
numbered much less than two hundred years between them, and their feebleness
prevented either of them from standing on their feet. I confess that envied the
man, not the length of life, for a long life, is not always a happy one, but
that, having witnessed the humiliation of his countrymen, he now lived to see
them amply revenged.
The authorities of Jelam came to request that they might be allowed to supply my
people with everything needful, to which I most willingly agreed, well assured
that there was frothing to be purchased for any money in the Sarai.
Wednesday, January 6.-Having risen from my comfortless sleeping place, and
reached the open square, where I had ordered my tent to be spread out, the first
thing I saw was my unfortunate tent lying on the ground, and the Kalashis all
fast asleep. It was evident that their laziness had lost me another night’s
rest, besides increasing the chances that the tent would be entirely spoiled;
and more vexed at their neglect of my orders than I ought to have been in
reason, I desired them instantly to get up, pitch the tent properly in my
presence, and then wait until the heat of the sun had thoroughly dried it, after
which they were to pack it properly and follow me. This naturally caused so much
delay that I knew I must not expect to be able to sleep under it this night;.but
it was, at all events, quite useless to me while so wet. Besides, 1 did not
think it was likely that I should have any occasion to pitch the tents again
after to-night, and felt anxious to take a farewell: look at them as companions
with whom I had passed many solitary hours. Although Khawés Khan is not more
than twelve miles, we had a Jong march, and some ravines which I had not at all
expected. The country is indifferently cultivated, but it seems to support a
vast number of horned cattle. The flocks of sheep and goats also were numerous,
the last growing to an enormous size. We can now perfectly understand a remark
of Ctesias, that the Indian goats are as large as asses, an assertion which is
quite correct, taken in the sense of Strabo, who by the term India means the
Panjab. The SeraiKhawas Khan, which we did not reach till nightfall, was
surrounded by high walls smeared with up, or cow dung, which also is the only
fuel used by the natives. The town on the plain is built in the form of a fort.
It is populous, but has a singular appearance, all the walls and roofs of the
houses being covered with upla drying in the sun: stores of the same are also
heaped up in the open square in large quantities.
The only resting-place to be found, was an open mosque; and with much
difficulty, I had obtained a supply of fuel, which I knew would be indispensable
during the long cold night. For a rupee each, I had also hired two men to keep
it alive while I slept. The cold, however, soon awoke me; nor was I much
surprised to find the fire all but out, and the men fast asleep. This would not
have happened had they been Hind&s. I made them get up, went with them to the
nearest houses in search of more wood, got a small supply, and again kindled a
fire, by which I remained sitting all the rest of the night, finding it
impossible to keep myself warm.
Thursday, January 7.-From SeraiKhawas Khan to Wazirabad is twelve kos, through
an open, level country, with a fertile though little cultivated soil. Gujrat, a
town enclosed by mud walls, in about halfway, and is a place of importance to
the family of Ranjit Singh. His father, Maha Singh, whose fortune it was to lay
the foundation of that power, which his son afterwards extended over the whole
Panjab, was, in his twenty-seventh year, engaged in an attempt to gain
possession of this Gujrat, being at the time in the neighbouring and opulent
city of Sohdera. Ranjit Singh possessed himself of it in a manner which I shall
refer to elsewhere, but certainly not much to the increase of his honour.
Indeed, it was always the policy of this wily chief to press his demand on those
who had no power to resist his claims; the helpless, the orphan, and the widow,
have ever been the objects he has more peculiarly oppressed.
Between the Jelam and Chendb, is the JinhatDofb, twenty-six kos broad in the
direction I took across it. The Chenab is shallow and rather sluggish, but
nowhere fordable; the low bank is no obstacle to its overflowing, and at
present, it is a good half-mile broad, though the waters are not at their usual
level. From the left bank, it is about an hour's march to Wazirabad; and shortly
before our arrival at that place, the authorities made their appearance, with a
party of horse sent by Ranjit Singh, and with a carriage and four, for which I
was indebted to the kindness of General Ventura. I felt infinitely happy to
think that I was at the end of a tedious journey, which requires at this season
more strength than I could boast; and had I halted even for one day, so excited
was my nervous system, that I doubt not I should have been quite laid up. It
seemed like a dream when I found myself really seated in this vehicle, and drawn
by four horses to Wazirabad. There the Mah& Raja has built a palace in the midst
of a lovely garden, which is a singular edifice, both in its exterior form and
its internal decorations. It has two stories, and in the centre is a sort of
tower which divides the wings, while the outside walls, as well as the
apartments within, are adorned with fresco paintings illustrative of the
religion of the Sikhs. Among them are the portraits of the ten Gurfs from Nanak
the first to Govind the last, the size of life; the chief painter of Ranjit’s
court is certainly not a Raphael. I preferred taking up my quarters for the
night in a small pavilion, containing one large and four small rooms, which
appeared to me more comfortable than the stately palace. We had to wait for our
dinner a long while, for the bearers, who were far in. the rear, had all the
cooking apparatus and provisions with them. In truth, the distance was too great
for them; henceforward, as I had little need of their services, they travelled
as leisurely as they pleased.
Available, an officer high in Ranjit Singh’s favour, and now commanding in
Peshawar under Shir Singh, was for some time Governor of Wazirabad; while he
resided here he almost rebuilt the town in the European style, and pulled down
the old bazar, making the streets wide enough to admit a carriage and four
horses, to the astonishment of the natives, the streets being so excessively
narrow in most Indian towns, that a pedestrian can hardly force his way through
the bazar. The people are enraptured with the present beauty of the bazar of
Wazirabad, and its charms were boastingly represented to me long before I gawk
it.
Friday, January 8.-I was so apprehensive of coming clouds, that yesterday I took
the direction of the mountains with the magnetic needle, for the proper
completion of my map. There is no place on the plain whence the form and
position of the mountains can be so well ascertained as this; the snow which
covered a large portion of them, rendered the task of fixing their relative
heights much easier; this, together with my knowledge of the distances between
each of the most prominent, combined to make the present a very interesting
attempt. My fears concerning the weather proved groundless, the mountains
standing forth in all their majesty to-day, though not appearing to the eye so
towering as by the twilight of last evening. The prospect from the terrace
around the pavilion is a very lovely one. Below lies a soft meadow, covered with
the verdant green of the early year; the Chenab winds along the plain to an
immense distance, bathing the feet of the mountain chain, which, with the gentle
undulations of the nearest ridge, softened by distance, now forms the misty
limits of the plain. From there, the eye is attracted to the mountains rising
high behind each other, covered with snow, and seemingly very much nearer than
in reality. The plain, without tree or village on that side, stretches out to an
interminable extent, contrasting very powerfully with the diversity of form so
remarkable in these mountains. I could plainly recognise the double pyramid
called Mer and Ser, which is further off than the valley of Kashmir, and could
even discern by the distinction of colour, that in that region no snow had
fallen very recently.
I had determined on taking only a small number of attendants to Lahor, and
sending on the greater part direct to Ludhiana; for at Wazirabad the road
branches off to both places, the way to Ludhiana by Lahore being one-third
longer than the direct road. This plan required a division of the baggage, a
most disagreeable occupation for the whole morning. Indian servants are utterly
useless, except as machines; literally obeying their master’s orders, without
exercising a particle of their own intellect. I, therefore, imposed on myself
the penance of packing those objects which had cost me much money and trouble,
and which their negligence might have entirely spoiled.
The servants had taken their departure at eleven o'clock, I strolled, for the
last time, ere I went my way, into the grounds which surround the pavilion;.and
after my last month’s experience of a wild and uncultivated country, I cannot
express the delight I felt at seeing this Indian garden, with its regular little
flower-beds and fountains. There is something very tranquillizing in these
scenes, where the desire of embellishing life is displayed so tastefully;
whereas the love for the darker and more terrible in nature, whether occupied by
the beasts of the forest, or men scarcely less savage, is one of those
unreasonable fancies indulged mostly by persons who have never experienced the
dreariness of regions unimproved by industry and civilization. When one gazes
from some eminence on such a country, and beholds nothing but forests,
unrelieved by field or human habitation, it is then ouly that a correct idea can
be formed of an Indian wilderness. It may be very pleasant to dream of wild
countries and simple people, in a well-furnished house or a beautiful garden,
surrounded by pleasures, and comforts, and friends: but the reality is. very
different. For myself, who have seen enough of solitude, sublimity, and the more
terrific beauties of nature, I admit that the lot of a Euroveanlabourer seems to
be more enviable than that of the greatest among Indian princes; and a small
garden laid out and ornamented by the owner's taste, more charming than the
gigantic scenery of the Himalaya, or the finest view in Ceylon. Perhaps,
nevertheless, I may think otherwise, after enjoying for some time the safety and
peace to be found in the everyday life of Europe.
In the neighbourhood of Kashmir, I had found the Linumtrigynum in the ravines
where waters were flowing; in this garden, the same plant grew: as a beautiful
shrub four or five feet high, of a spherical form, and covered with a profusion
of flowers.
We soon get used to luxury; and in this delightful English carriage, I could
fancy myself, if not in Europe, at least very near it, and forget that I had
ever travelled by a less comfortable conveyance. The distance to Guseraoli is
reckoned twelve kos, about twenty miles: the country is poorly cultivated. This
is one of the possessions of Hari Singh Nalwa, commander-in-chief of all the
Maha Raja's troops, the French legion alone excepted. Originally it was the
property of Ranjit’s family, which can be traced no further back than to his
grandfather, Charat Singh, the descendant of a common ‘trooper, or Dharwari.
Hari Singh Nalwa has a palace and garden in Guseraoli, which are protected by a
mud fort. As we drew near the town, a troop of horse was deputed to escort me;
and presently the Diwan rode up, mounted on an elephant.
The splendour of the rooms in the palace did not excite my admiration nearly so
much as the garden, which was the most beautiful and best kept I had seen in
India. The trees were loaded with oranges, of the same kind known in China as
Mandarin oranges, but much larger and finer, here called the Santreh orange;
Hari Singh has also transported the plane-tree from Kashmir, which seems to
flourish exceedingly well in its new locality. An odour almost overwhelming
ascended from the jonquils, which were in immense abundance, and of an
incredibly large size.
Nothing, in fact, could be more carefully adorned with lovely flowers and plants
of various kinds, than this garden, which evidently formed one of the chief
delights, and sometimes the occupation of its owner: it reminded me of my own at
home. As I approached the terrace, where I saw luxurious carpets spread, Hari
Singh came to meet me, with a present, consisting of twenty-five plates of
sweetmeats, and a dozen baskets of fruit, &c. I tasted some of the former, and
found them very good.
He then conducted me over the palace, every room of which was hung and covered
with the richest carpets of Kashmir and Kabul, a sight promising comfort and
repose, and most inviting in this cool season. When I mentioned the coldness of
the last few days, he immediately ordered two portable stoves to be taken to my
apartments. Hari Singh’s manner and conversation are very frank and affable; and
having acquainted me beforehand with the history of this most distinguished
member of Ranjit’s court, I surprised him by my knowledge whence he had gained
the appellation of Nalwa, and of his having cloven the head of a tiger who had
already seized him as its prey.
He told the Diwan to bring some drawings, and gave me his portrait, in the act
of killing the beast. Hari Singh Nalwa was the person sent. by Ranjit to invite
LordWilliam Bentinck to confer with the Maha Raja at Shimla; and as 1 happened
to know most of the persons he had met there, our conversation was very
different from the majority of such interviews in India, and really consisted of
a due exchange of ideas, and of references to events which had actually taken
place. His questions proved him to pave thought and reasoned justly: he is well
informed on the statistics of many of the European States, and on the policy of
the East India Company, and, what is very rare among the Sikhs, he can both read
and write the Persian language.
As my stores had not arrived at Guseraoli, I was very glad to accept Hari
Singh’s offer of providing us with a dinner, which both Vigne and myself
dispatched with an excellent appetite.
Saturday, January 9.-The warmth of the rooms procured me the great comfort of
rest last night, and for the first time for a very long period, I would
willingly have indulged myself with more sleep. While the carriage was being
packed, I strolled out into a part of the garden which I had not yet visited,
and wondered at the variety of little buildings scattered about it; one of
these, called San Padre, is in the form of a square with one side open, and a
fountain in the middle, which falls into a broad thick sheet of water. In the
three walls, I observed several niches made for lamps.
I wished to take leave of Hari Singh, and thank him for his kind reception of
us; and on inquiring for him, was conducted to the terrace, where he was seated
in the sun, having caught a cold and slight fever. He was able, notwithstanding,
to keep up a very lively conversation, and put a variety of questions. He had
all my answers taken down on paper. On my departure, he presented me with a
beautiful Khilat, accepting in return some trifles as a remembrance of me. He
was pleased greatly to magnify their value. Our station for tonight was only six
kos from Guserdoli; I had, therefore, time enough to see the garden and house
which was formerly the residence of Ranjit Singh, but it contains nothing
remarkable; except a small build. ing erected over the spot, where the remains
of his father Maha Singh were burnt, and another over the ashes of his mother.
Not far from Guserdoli, I was met by Jini Lai, the same Brahmin from Delhi who
had accompanied Burnes, and was now sent to me by the Maha Raja; two elephants,
with rich housings and silver howdahs, and thirty men on horseback, attended
him. On my approach, they saluted me with military honours, and two trumpeters
struck up, “God save the king.” The large tent of General Ventura was pitched at
a small place called Kamutki. It was a singular-looking Beehoba, (a tent fixed
without tent-poles,) which is peculiar to the Panjab. The servants and baggage
all arrived in due time, and we got our dinner before nightfall, which had not
been the case very frequently of late.
Sunday, January 10.-The country still remains but poorly cultivated. To-day we
had a short march of seven or eight kos to Nangel, where another tent belonging
to this General was pitched: this had three separate divisions. We had for
several miles enjoyed the view of the lofty mountain chain, and behind the snowy
range and the Baldewa, at an immense distance, the Mer and Ser were seen proudly
rising.
I can hardly describe how delightful the present mode of travelling seemed to
me. Everything appeared to go on with so little trouble, the only drawback
being, that I did not come into contact so frequently with the natives, nor
learn so much about the country through which I was passing. My present
experience taught me how it happens that so few Englishmen know anything of the
manners or customs of that part of India which they have perhaps travelled over
the best part of their lives. The truth is, they move from place to place,
without giving themselves any concern, and generally by night, unlearning
whatever correct ideas they may have brought out with them from their own
country respecting India, and in their solitary tents kill time, which with them
passes so slowly, by inventing sundry theories, which a just examination of
things as they are, would speedily dispel from their minds.
Written By:
- Navin Kumar Jaggi
- Gurmeet Singh Jaggi
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