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GRAND MOVING
DIORAMA OF HINDOSTAN,
FROM
TO GANGOUTRI
IN THE HIMALAYA.
Astatic Gallery,
BAKER STREET BAZAR, PORTMAN SQUARE.
HINDOSTAN,
DISPLAYING THE SCENERY OF THE HOOGLY, THE BHAGIRATHI,
IN THE HIMALAYA.
Bondon:
PUBLISHED AT THE ASIATIC GALLERY, BAKER STREET BAZAR.
The whole of the Scenes of the Diorama have been arranged by Lieutenant Colonel Luarp,
from his own original and unpublished sketches, taken during a residence of fourteen years
in India; aided by the kindness of friends, who haye placed at his disposal the original
sketches of
The late Sir Cuyartes D’Orty, Bart.,
The late James Prinsrep, Esq.,
The late Captain Prinsep,
The late Colonel Epwarp Smiru,
Major Wutrr,
Witir1am Prinsep, Esq.,
Grorcr CuHInNery, Esq.,
Werpsy Jackson, Esq.,
and the Author of “ Wanderings of a Pilgrim, during Four-and-Twenty Years, in the East.”
LIST OF PLATES.
Barrackpore
Sickri-Gali
The Minarets
The Sati
Hurdwar
Gangoutri
raugoutrl
INTRODUCTION.
In the month of October, 1589, a body of English merchants addressed a memorial to her
majesty, Queen Elizabeth, requesting licence to equip three ships for the purpose of trading
to the East Indies: this request appears to have been favourably received, and in 1591 the first
English commercial voya ge was commenced in three vessels. It proved a disastrous one;
but considerable experience was obtained, and the ardour of the English merchants was but
little damped by the result.
In 1599 an association of merchant adventurers was formed in London, with a capital cf
30,0002., for the purpose of trading “ to the East Indies and countries thereabout;’’ and the
royal assent was applied for and obtained to this project, “intended for the honour of their
native country, and the advancement of trade and merchandise within the realm of England.”
The Charter was dated, 31st December, 1600. This association, which may be looked upon
as the foundation of the present East India Company, led to a succession of voyages more or
less fortunate, which, before long, resulted in the Company obtaining establishments at various
places on the coast of the Peninsula, as well as among the eastern islands. The Presidencies
of Madras and Bombay were first established; but that of Bengal, although the latest, was
soon rendered by circumstances the most important of the three, and is now the seat of the
supreme government of India.
On the 20th December, 1687, Mr. Job Charnock, the agent for the Kossimbazar factory
on the Hoogly, finding it no longer safe to remain at that place, moved down to the village of
Chuttanuttee, on the present site of Calcutta, with all the ships, troops, and property, where
they commenced to intrench themselves. They were afterwards forced to move down the
river to Ingellee, in which pestilential climate the whole force would have been carried off, had
A 3
6 INTRODUCTION.
not the Emperor Aurungzebe made overtures to Mr. Charnock and allowed him to return to
Chuttanuttee. In 1691 they were allowed to form a settlement there: it increased rapidly,
and was permanently fixed upon as the head-quarters of the Company’s establishments in
Bengal.
Chuttanuttee occupied the site of the present native portion of the city ;Govindpoor stood
where the new Fort William is erected; and the European part of the city, including the site
of the old Fort, is built within the precincts of Kalleeghatta, hence originated the modern
appellation of Calcutta; and as the founder of that city, Mr. Job Charnock’s name will
probably be remembered as long as the British Empire in India shall exist. He died in 1692,
and was buried in the old Cemetery, where his tomb is yet to be seen in the old burying-ground
of St. John’s Cathedral, being one of the few allowed to remain when that building was
erected.
In 1695, a rebellion having broken out in Bengal, the local government applied to the
Nawab for permission to put their factories in a state of defence, and on the request not being
positively refused, they hastened to erect walls of masonry, with bastions or flanking towers
at the angles, round their several factories, and thus originated the fortifications of Calcutta.
In 1699, Sir Charles Eyre was re-appointed to the charge of Bengal, which was then for the
first time raised to the rank of a Presidency. Orders were issued that the fortifications should
be strengthened and rendered regular, so as to afford a safe retreat for all their servants and
property ; and it was recommended to give the outline of the buildings the form of a pentagon,
if possible, that being at the time considered the strongest figure of defence. In 1701-2, the
court issued orders that the Fort should be made a regular pentagon with bastions, and the
works be made extensive enough to accommodate all the establishments of the out-factories.
In the year 1707-8, the rival interests of the “ Old London” and the new “ English
Company”’ were merged into “ The United Company of Merchants trading to the East
H ndies.”’
In 1742, the Mahrattas devastated the whole province, and sacked the town of Hoogly.
On this occasion, the English applied for and obtained permission to dig a ditch and throw up
an intrenchment round their settlement, which, if completed, would have extended more than
seven miles. When little more than three miles of the ditch were completed, finding that the
INTRODUCTION. a
Mahrattas did not advance, the work was discontinued: it was, however, always known after-
wards as the Mahratta Ditch ; some traces of which still remain—hence the people of Calcutta
are sometimes called the Ditchers.
The Nawab Sooraj-oo-Dowlah
\} succeeded to the 5government of Bengal
§ in 1756. He en-
tertained the greatest dislike to the English, and determined, if possible, to expel them from
the country. In June, 1756, he appeared before the factory at Kossimbazar, and the place
not being tenable, it surrendered. The Nawab advanced with expedition and attacked Calcutta,
which surrendered on the 20th. Mr. Holwell, with a party amounting to 146 persons, were
thrown into the Black Hole—the history of which is too well known to need repetition. The
Nawab having ransacked Calcutta, changed its name to Alinuggur, and flattering himself he
had for ever extirpated the English power, thought it unnecessary to follow up the small party
of refugees assembled at Fultah. In December, 1756, an armament, under the command of
Colonel Robert Clive, arrived at Fultah, and recaptured Calcutta, where they found the
greater part of the merchandise that had been left there, it having been reserved for the use
of the Nawab.
DIORAMA OF HINDOSTAN.
Tun subject of the Diorama which we shall have the honour to explain, is the course of the
Ganges from its source to Fort William, Bengal :—its picturesque scenery, the towns and
temples on its banks, the religious ceremonies, and the customs of the inhabitants, both Hindu
and Musalman, will be pourtrayed. This noble river, considered the most sacred in Hindostan,
takes its rise at Gangoutri, in the Himalaya, and issues from the mountains upon the plains
near Hurdwar. It passes within a few miles of Meerut, flowing on to Furrackabad, Cawnpore,
and Allahabad; at the latter, it joins the Jumna, the first river of importance with which it
unites. Hence its course becomes more winding, its bed wider, and the united streams flow
past Mirzapur, Chunar, Benares, and Ghazipur. A little above Chupra, the River Ghogra
falls into the Ganges on the left bank ; and below Arrah, on the opposite bank, is its junction
with the Soane. At Hajipir, the Gunduk increases the powerful stream, which flows on and
passes Patna, Monghir, Bhagulpur, Colgong, and Rajmahal, until it reaches Gopalgunj, at
which place a branch of the Ganges quits the main stream, and flowing by Sooty and Moor-
shedabad is called the Bhagirathi, until it reaches Nuddea. The main stream of the Ganges
running to the eastward, joins the Berhampootra, and after its union with that river, falls
into the Bay of Bengal. This, the main stream of the Ganges, is not looked upon with equal
veneration by the Hindiis as the branch before-mentioned, which, flowing by Sooty and
Moorshedabad, is called the Bhagirathi, until it reaches Nuddea, at which place it is joined by
the Jellinghy, and the united currents flow on, passing Calcutta, to the island of Sagar, under
the name of the Hoogly. Prior to the commencement of the nineteenth century, the Ganges
had been traced by Hindi pilgrims from Hindostan into the snowy mountains that run in
a direction north-west to south-east on the frontiers of India. We will now ascend the
stream, stopping, as is the custom with pilgrims, at the junction of rivers, and other sacred
places, considered peculiarly holy by the Hindis, until we reach the last shrine, Gangoutri,
the source of the Holy River.
FORT WILLIAM.
Fort Wi11aM, the citadel of Calcutta, is situated on the left bank of the Hoogly, about a
quarter of a mile below the town; it is a European fortification, and was called Fort William
in honour of his majesty King William the Third. This Citadel was commenced by Lord
Clive soon after the Battle of Plassey, which was fought in 1757 ; it is capable of containing
15,000 men, and the works are so extensive, that 10,000 would be required to defend them
efficiently. The works do not make an imposing appearance from without, nor are they per-
ceptible until closely approached: this excites great surprise in the natives coming from the
interior, who always connect the idea of great strength with great elevation. It is of octagonal
form ; five of the faces are regular, while the forms of the other three next the river are
according to local circumstances.
16 FORT WILLIAM.
The Esplanade, Chowringhee, and the site of Fort William were, so late as 1756, a
complete jungle, interspersed with a few huts, and small pieces of grazing and arable land.
The view now presented shows a part of the rampart of Fort William; the Hoogly flows
beneath, Calcutta appears in the distance, stretching from Chandpaul Ghat to Chowringhee
Road; the situation of the Ghat is marked by the high chimney of the building, contaiming a
stcam engine for raising water.
The next building in the back ground is the Bank of Bengal; the long colonnade is in
front of the Supreme Court of Judicature; and to the right is the Cathedral of St. John, which
stands partly on the site of the old Cemetery. In clearing away the ground for its foundation,
the tomb of Mr. Job Charnock, the founder of Calcutta, was discovered: he died in 1692.
The tomb of Mr. Hamilton was also found, and is now placed in the same building with that
of Mr. Charnock. Mr. Hamilton was surgeon to the embassy sent to the court of the
Emperor Furrookhseer, and the Company are indebted to him for having induced the
Emperor to grant them many privileges, and to confirm all former ones: he died in Wwe we
Mr. Speke was also buried in the old Cemetery, and his tomb, with those before-mentioned,
is one of the few allowed to remain there on the erection of St. John’s Cathedral, where they
are still to be seen. The first stone of St. John’s Cathedral, in Council House Street, was
laid on the 6th of April, 1784. Ona plate of copper, graved in the stone, is the following
inscription :—“ The first stone of this sacred building, raised by the liberal and voluntary
subscription of British subjects and others, was laid, under the auspices of the Honourable
Warren Hastings, Esq., Governor-General of India, on the 6th day of April, 1784, and the
thirteenth year of his Government.”
The architect was Lieutenant James Agg, of the Engineer Corps. On the 24th of
June, 1787, the Church was consecrated and dedicated to St. John. Sir John Zoffani, the
celebrated artist, bestowed the altar-piece, representing the Last Supper.
The Town Hall, a fine building, is rendered conspicuous by its Doric portico; it was
erected by the inhabitants of Calcutta in 1804: the Government Treasury succeeds it, and
in the distance is the spire of St. Andrew’s Church, in the Lall Bazar.
The Government House, the principal building in Calcutta, was erected about the year
1804, during the administration of the Marquis Wellesley ; the architect was Captain Wyatt,
FORT WILLIAM—PRINSEP S GHAT. 1]
of the Engineers. The entrances, or great gateways, are each crowned by a lion, and are con-
tinually the resting-places of the Hargila, the gigantic crane, commonly called the Adjutant.
The Column on the right was erected to the memory of Major-General Sir David
Auchterlony, on account of his distinguished services. It is 160 feet in height, and stands
on the Esplanade in front of the town.
Hargilas or Adjutants are numerous in the Fort, and so tame, that they will allow
men to pass very near them and show no signs of fear; they stalk about the Esplanade, and
rest in the most picturesque manner on the highest buildings in the city.
The officer, with his bearer holding a chatr, or native umbrella, to protect him from the
sun, is watching some monkeys; and a griffin, as a young cadet is called for the first year, is
amusing himself with teazing one.
IN
ae
PRINSEP’S GHAT.
A6
12 PRINSEPS GHAT—THE WATER GATE,
PRINSEP’S GHAT.
Tuer audience are now requested to imagine they have embarked upon the Hoogly, off
Prinsep’s Ghat, the first landing-place of importance that is met with on approaching the
City of Palaces. James Prinsep, Esq., died in 1840, and his fellow-citizens in Calcutta
erected this ghat to his memory, as having been one of the leaders of science in India, the
promoter of every good work, a faithful and useful public servant, and a warm and true
friend. The building in the distance is St. Peter’s, the garrison Church in the Fort, and the
vessel passing up the river is complimented by a salute from its battery. Beyond the flag-
staffisthe Semaphore, or telegraph, a high tower from which intelligence is conveyed by signals.
THe Water Gate of Fort William is now before you, and the horsemen are on the Esplanade,
—a road extending by the river side, from Chandpaul Ghat, to Garden Reach. This is the
favourite ride and drive, during the early morning and in the cool of the evening, of all the
inhabitants of Calcutta. A dinghi, a native boat covered with matting, is going up the river,
filled with gharas, or jars of coarse, red earthenware, used for holding water.
The Governor-General’s pleasure boat, called the Sona makhi, or golden fly, is moored
beyond; she has beautiful accommodations, and is perfectly suited to the river and the
climate. From this point is seen the Government House: the edifice is a noble one, and
particularly well adapted in its plan and interior arrangements to the climate. The external
view is grand and imposing, and it is a fit and proper residence for the supreme ruler of our
Indian possessions. Its two entrances or gateways are shown, and the line of houses, in-
habited by Europeans, in Esplanade Row, in front of which is the Auchterlony Monument.
The long line of vessels so closely moored off the bank, are boats, called Budjerows;
they are commanded by a native called.a Sarhang or Manghi, and carry 12, 14, 16, or 18 oars,
and are generally used by persons going to the upper provinces.
BABU GHAT—CHANDPAUL GHAT.
BABU GHAT.
Tuts building was erected by a wealthy native gentleman, and therefore termed Babu Ghat—
the title Babu, given by Hindis, is equivalent to Mr. or to Esq., and is now as common as the
latter terms are amongus. Numerous small boats are crowding by the steps, and a dinghi has
just put off. A ferry boat with passengers is crossing from the opposite side of the river, in
which a chawkidar, or native policeman, is conspicuous, with his sword and shield. The
Bengalis generally carry chatrs (umbrellas) during the heat of the day, made of matting, or
covered with red calico.
The street now visible is Esplanade Row, which runs from Chandpaul Ghat by the
Government House to Chowringhee Road ; it is full of fine houses belonging to Europeans.
CHANDPAUL GHAT.
THE people are seen crowding on Chandpaul Ghat; and the low, semicircular building at the
summit, is the Police Station. The octagonal building with its long chimney contains a steam-
engine, used for raising water from the river, for the supply of the town, watering the roads,
&c.; but the water used for drinking and culinary purposes, is brought from the tanks by
water-carriers. It is believed that this was the first steam-engine set up in Bengal. The
water passes from the engine-well into a large brick-built reservoir, and from it into aqueducts
constructed on one side of the road. The Bank of Bengal is on the other side of the road
called the Strand, and the high pillars of its verandahs face the Esplanade.
Colvin’s Buildings appear to great advantage; they are lofty and spacious. Three
merchant vessels are anchored off the Strand, and to each of their chain cables a piece of wood
is attached, in a manner that prevents the water-rats from getting up-them into the vessels.
A. native fishing-boat with her immense net fixed upon two bamboos, is making for the ghat
—perhaps bearing a freight of Zapsi Mach, or mango fish (so called because they come in with
the mango season) ; hence the Hindostani proverb, “ Mangoes and fish meet of necessity.”
They are the great luxury of the Calcutta epicures, who make parties to Budge-budge down
the river to enjoy the mango fish, as those of London resort to Blackwall for white-bait.
14 THE STEAM MILLS—THE MINT.
From the Bankshall a red boat (No. 7) is going out with a pilot to some vessel in
the river. Bankshall is said to be a Dutch name for the chief landing-place, which was after-
wards converted into the East India Company’s marine and pilot depot.
THE MINT.
Tue Tuksal, or Mint, a fine edifice of the Doric order, was planned and erected by Colonel
Forbes, the present Mint master. The wide-ranging buildings of the new Mint, with their
tall chimneys, appear to great advantage when viewed from the river. The Bengal Govern-
ment set the first example of introducing extensive machinery, in the erection of the new
Mint of Calcutta, which is filled with the best specimens of the skill and genius of Messrs.
Watt and Co.; and the politeness of the Mint and Assay masters insures easy access to view
the fine and ample machinery.
A Chinese junk on the right adds greatiy to the picturesque beauty of the river, on which
Arab grabs, and vessels from all parts of the world, are crowded together. An eye 1s painted
on each side the bows of the Chinese junk, to enable the spirit of the vessel to see her way
across the deep.
In the foreground is the hulk of a country ship under repair, beyond which are three
vessels from Malacca.
BENGAL COTTAGE SCENERY.
THE NACH.
Tue scene now represents the interior of the building during the celebration of the festival of
the Durga-puja, or Dasera, held in honour of the goddess Durga, and the performance of a
nach by the dancing-girls of Hindostan. During the Durga-pija holidays, which last eight
or ten days, the Hindis lay aside all kind of business, save what necessity renders indispens-
able to pursue, and shops and offices are shut up while that great religious ceremonial is in
course of being observed.
The house, as is generally the case, is a four-sided building, having an area in the middle,
on one side of which the image of the goddess is raised on a throne, and some Brahmans are
in attendance. The area is open to the sky, and a temporary ceiling is formed by fastening
ropes across from wall to wall, over which a cotton carpet of native manufacture, called
shatranji, is spread, thus forming a roof; the floor is also covered with a gay cloth of the
same manufacture, and a Persian carpet.
The goddess Durga, in whose honour this festival is held, derives her name from the
giant Durgt, whom she is represented in the act of slaying with a trident as he issues from
the neck of a buffalo, whose head she has cut off. The image is that of a yellow woman with
ten arms, which are stretched out and filled with instruments of war. This goddess has a
thousand names, and has assumed innumerable forms.
The bright half of the month Aswina, the first of the Hindt lunar year, is peculiarly
devoted to Dirga. The first nine nights are allotted to her decoration; on the sixth she is
awakened ; on the seventh she is invited to a bower formed of the leaves of nine plants, of
which the dilwa is the chief. The seventh, eighth, and ninth are the great days; on the last,
the victims which are immolated to her honour must be killed with one blow only from a sharp
sword or axe. The next day the goddess is reverently dismissed, and her image is cast into
the river, which finishes the festival of the Dasera.
The black figure at the side of the goddess is that of Krishni, one of the most popular
gods of the Hindu Pantheon; he is greatly worshipped in Bengal, as well as in all parts of
Hindostan, a great proportion of the Hindu population being devoted to him, and he is es-
iS THE NACH.
pecially beloved by the women. A black marble figure of this popular deity stands in the
Pilgrim’s Museum, as well as a small brazen one of Durga; the latter is very ancient. Im-
mense sums are expended by wealthy Bengalis during the Durga-puja.
The Babu is conversing with his European guests, and offering flowers to one of the ladies,
who, seated ona sofa, is talking to those around her, and witnessing the nach. The dancing-girls
wear a very full petticoat of fine-coloured muslin, trimmed with deep borders of gold and silver,
full satin trowsers which all but cover their naked and jewelled feet ; and the dopatta, a large veil
worn over the head, is highly embroidered. Various ornaments of native jewellery adorn their
persons; their anklets are formed of numerous small brass bells that sound in time with their
steps in the measured dance, and rings adorn their toes. In the thumb ring, which is about
two inches in diameter, a bit of looking-glass
is inserted, in which the nach-girl often looks
to see if her tresses are in order, and to adjust her flowing drapery. They dance, or rather
move in a circle, attitudinizing and making the small brass bells fastened to their ankles
sound in unison with their movements. Several men, the musicians of the party, attend each
set of nach-girls ; they play on divers curiously-shaped native instruments.
In the hands of one of the native servants, standing near the steps, is a silver tray con-
taining a gulab-dani (a gold or silver vessel used in sprinkling rose-water on departing
guests), and the smaller vessel at its side, of elegant form, contains the ’atr of roses, which is
placed on their hands at the same time.
Before the temples of Durga thousands of animals are annually slaughtered and offered
to her image. In the portico is represented the sacrifice of a goat; the officiating Brahman,
after bathing it, either in the river or in the house, puts his left hand on its forehead, marks
its horns and forehead with red-lead, and repeats an invocation, in which he offers it up to the
goddess thus: “O goddess, I sacrifice this goat to thee, that I may live in thy heaven to the
end of ten years.” He then reads an incantation in its ear, and puts flowers and sprinkles
water on its head. Tho instrument with which the animal is to be killed is next consecrated;
the goat’s head is then put into an upright post, excavated at the top so as to admit the neck
between its forks, the body remaining on one side the post and the head on the other;
after which the executioner cuts off the head with one blow. After all the animals
have been thus killed, and some of the flesh and the heads carried before the image,
OFFERING OF LIGHTS TO THE RIVER—THE MURDA GHAT. 19
the officiating Brahman repeats certain prayers over these offerings and presents them to the
goddess.
The square pillars of the buildmg are of pure Hindostani architecture, very singular, and
elaborately carved.
of the deceased is performing the ceremony. We read of the Romans burning their dead,
regard it in a classical light, and think of it without disgust ; but when we see the ceremony
really performed, it is very painful: nevertheless, a sort of absurdity is mixed with it in the
mind, as “Stir him up with the long pole” flashes across the memory. On the conclusion of
the ceremony, the relatives bathe and return to their homes. The charpai, or native bed, on
which the corpse is carried down to the river side, being reckoned unclean, is generally thrown
into the stream, or left on the bank. Ifa large quantity of wood and ghz be consumed, we
may imagine the deceased to have been a rich man; the relatives of the very poor scarcely do
more than scorch the body, and throw it into the river, where it floats swollen and scorched—
a horrible sight. The burning of the body is one of the first ceremonies the Hindi perform
for the help of the dead in a future state. If this ceremony have not been attended to, the
rites for the repose of the soul cannot be performed.
Perched on the house-top are three vultures, and an hargila, or adjutant, awaiting the
time that they may pounce upon the remains of the corpse, when it is consigned to the holy
river. These insatiate birds of prey perch upon the abutting walls, waiting their opportunity
to descend ; whilst others, repulsed by the attendants of the funeral fires, fly heavily across
the river, passing across the native boats, through the tattered sails of which you might
almost mark their flight. It is a sickening sight, rendered infinitely more sickening by the
abominable effluvium which issues from the bank of death, in spite of the scented wood and
other odoriferous substances, that are placed upon the funeral pile of a rich Hindi, and burnt
with the body. This custom illustrates the text, “So shall they burn odours for thee.”
(Jeremiah xxxiv. 5.) The Hindus believe, that persons for whom funeral rites have not been
performed, wander as ghosts, and find no rest.
An English gentleman travelling dak is standing on the bank; he has just crossed
over, and is watching the bearers who are getting his palanquin out of the boat. Dak
journeys are usually performed, during the hot weather, by night, and the traveller rests at
some house during the day. Of a moonlight night a dah trip is far from being disagreeable.
tree (ficus religiosa) is seen, with its roots exposed, the earth having been washed from them
during the rains by the rising of the river. This tree is particularly venerated by the
Hindi; they believe its sacred branches to be the residence of the gods, and will never
cut a branch to the injury of the tree. In front, a Hindi is sitting at worship by the
side of the river; a charpaz, on which probably a corpse has been brought to be burned,
is near the spot, also a skull and some bones: skulls are continually seen on the banks
of the river.
PANHUTTI.
Tue picturesque and singular group of Bengali temples that now open on our view are at
Panhutti—a spot well known to the English as the Grove; it is about half way between
Calcutta and Barrackpore.
The Budjerow which is coming down the stream is apparently tenanted by a European
gentleman; his khidmutgar (a servant who waits at table) is in the forepart of the vessel,
and the cook-boat is astern—the sails of the latter in the torn and worn-out state in which
they are so continually seen.
The Bengali jantu for watering the land happily illustrates this passage of Scripture,
“Where thou sowedst thy seed, and wateredst it with thy foot, as a garden of herbs.”
(Deut. xi. 10.)
The palm trees next to the well are remarkably beautiful; they are portraits. The one
displaying the broad leaves is the fan-palm, from which the large pankhas are made—
one leaf alone forms the pankha, or fan, of which three specimens are to be seen in the
Museum.
THE RATHJATTRA.
THE scene represents the Rathjattra, or festival of the chariot, as it took place near Serampore,
on the right bank of the Hoogly; and in this manner the ceremonies are performed in
innumerable towns and villages in Hindostan; but the place most celebrated for this worship
is the Temple of Jaganath, in Orissa. In the scene representing a nach, in the house of a
Bengali babu, you beheld the figure of “ Krishnii the Beloved” playing on a flute, standing
by the side of the goddess Darga. At the Rathjattra, Krishnit is worshipped as Jaganath
or lord of the universe. In some period of Hindt history he was accidentally killed by a
hunter, who left the body to rot under a tree where it fell. Some pious person, however,
collected the bones of Krishni, and placed them in a box, where they remained: a king who
was performing religious austerities, to obtain some favour of Vishnu, was directed by the
latter to form the image of Jaganath and put inside these bones of Krishni, by which means
he should obtain the fruit of his religious austerities. The king inquired who should make
this image, and was commanded to pray to Vishnt-Kurmi, the architect of the gods. He did so,
and obtained his request ; but the architect at the same time declared, that if any one dis-
turbed him while preparing the image, he would leave it in an unfinished state. He then
began, and in one night built a temple upon the blue mountain in Orissa, and proceeded to
prepare the image in the temple; but the inpatient king, after waiting fifteen days, went 10
the spot; on which the architect of the gods desisted from his work, and left the image
without hands or feet. The king was very much disconcerted ; but on praying to Briimha, he
promised to make the image famous in its present shape. The king now invited all the gods
to be present at the setting up of this image: Briimha himself acted as high priest, and gave
THE RATHJATTRA—WATER CARRIERS, 3
eyes and soul to the god, which completely established the fame of Jaganath. In the
Museum is a small fac-simile of this god, which was brought from Pooree, in Orissa; and at
its side is the seal with which the Brahmans stamp the worshippers on the breast and arms,
and also a figure in black marble of Krishnu, highly ornamented. The height of the ruth, or
chariot, is forty-two feet, supported on sixteen wheels, and the horses in front are of wood.
Ropes are attached to the bars below; and the car, with the monstrous idol within it, is
drawn by thousands of frantic devotees. Looking out from the top is seen the head of Jaga-
nath. The Brahmans adorn him during the festivals with silver or golden hands—an offering
of a pair of golden ones is considered an act of great devotion.
One of the Hindi poets, in answer to the question, “ Why has Vishnii assumed a
wooden shape ?”’ (alluding to the image of Jaganath) says, “ The troubles of his family have
turned Vishni into wood: in the first place, he has two wives, one of whom (the goddess of
learning) is constantly talking, and the other (the goddess of prosperity) never remains in
one place: to increase his troubles, he sits on a snake, his dwelling is in the water, and he
rides ona bird.” All the Hindus acknowledge it is a great misfortune for a man to have two
wives, especially if both live in one house.
After many ceremonies have been performed, the god is drawn forth in his car, and at
the expiration of eight days he is conveyed back to the place whence he came. The natives
dance before the car, and the procession is accompanied with drums, tom-toms, horns, and all
sorts of discordant native music.
Dancing is considered a religious ceremony among the Hindis. The Brahmans con-
sider it an act of devotion to the god.
WATER CARRIERS.
Tru natives of India carry water long distances in a couple of leathern bags prepared for the
purpose and hung across a bullock ; the behishtz, or water-carrier, by the side of the stream, is
fillmg the skins from his mashk, or water-bag, and another man is bringing up his leathern
bag for the same purpose.
94 THE RAFT—BARRACKPORE
An Hindi girl is taking down a large net to the fisherman in the river, where he has
just spread his own net. On the top of his head a small basket is fixed, into which he puts
whatever he may catch; and floating on the water, attached to his waist bya long string, is a
ghara, an earthen vessel, also used as a depository for the fish.
The oolak is floating timber to Calcutta, secured to her by ropes over the side. She is
ornamented by a border of impressions of the human hand in white paint on the side of the
stern, and has also an eye painted on each side her bows; which the Hindus, like the
Chinese, consider necessary, to enable the spirit of the vessel to see its way upon the waters.
BARRACKPORE.
WE now cross the Hoogly to Barrackpore, called by the natives Achanuck, corrupted from
Charnock, the founder of Calcutta, who lived here. In the park is the country-house of the
Governor-General; and the military cantonment affords accommodation to six regiments of
native infantry. There is nothing remarkable about the Government House; itis a plain
BARRACKPORE—THE TRAVELLER'S PALM. 25
edifice of one story in height, with lofty rooms; the aviary, the menagerie, the garden, and a
pleasant promenade, where the society of the station assemble, are the most attractive features
of the place. The regiments here, with the Artillery at Dum-Dum (seven miles from Cal-
cutta), and the troops in Fort William, constitute the presidency division of the army, which
is commanded by a general officer, who resides at Barrackpore.
The Governor-General having come up the river in his yacht, the Sona-makhi, towed by a
steamer, is represented as quitting the vessel to land at Barrackpore. The troops are drawn
out awaiting his arrival ;the elephants are readyto convey him to the house; the aid-de-camps
are in attendance ; and each of their horses is held by a sas, or groom, who carries in his
hand a chauri, to keep flies from the animal.
In the back-ground is a shutwr-sawar, a man armed, and mounted on a camel, for the
purpose of carrying messages express. This animal, of a much lighter description than the
camel of burthen, can trot exceedingly fast, and will go from sixty to eighty miles a day,
without distress: the pace is very rough, and the riders are not considered long lived. The
camel’s neck is ornamented with small brass bells—a common appendage to couriers in many
countries: it is also adorned with blue beads, cowrie shells, and gaily-coloured cloth and
tassels: a small piece of wood is inserted in the animal’s nostrils, to which is attached a thin
cord, by which it is guided.
The Mausoleum in the Park, of the Corinthian order, to the left of the Government
House, was erected by Lord Minto, at his own cost, to commemorate the names of the officers
who fell at Java and the Mauritius.
water is to be found; hence it is called the Traveller’s Palm. Dr. Wallich mentioned this
circumstance, and at the same time he struck his knife into the tree, of which the one before
you is a portrait.
The cart is the common hackert of the country, and the natives belonging to it are
asleep beneath it; a chadda, or cloth, is drawn over their heads to protect them from the
musquitoes, and their slippers are laid on one side.
The Muhammadan Fakir, a religious mendicant, in front of the group, is a picturesque
personage ; he wanders over the country, and supports himself on alms.
PLASSEY.
Tnx high walls of the Nawab’s hunting-house at Plassey are now before you, and we cannot
but regard the spot with feelings of the deepest interest, as it is the house in which Colonel,
afterwards Lord Clive rested for a short time during the engagement. The famous battle of
Plassey, which may be said to have decided the fate of India, was fought on the 23rd June,
1757, on the plains of Plassey, about thirty miles south of Moorshedabad; near the spot
selected for the Nawab Sooraj-oo-Dowlah’s entrenched camp, the river at that period made a
remarkable bend, in shape like a horse-shoe. In a mango top, or grove, a little more than a
mile from the enemy, Colonel Clive had taken up his position: the trees were planted in
regular rows, as is ustial in the country, and all around the ¢op was a bank of earth, which
afforded a good breast-work for the troops, and also a ditch beyond. One detachment was
stationed at Plassey House, which was made use of by Colonel Clive during the conflict.
About eight o’clock a.m. the battle commenced ; and at eleven, Colonel Clive held a conference
with his officers at the drum-head, when it was decided to maintain the cannonade during the
day, and at midnight to make an attack on the Nawab’s camp. The fate of Sooraj-oo-Dowlah
was sealed by his flight towards the capital, mounted on a fleet sawa7t camel, accompanied by
about 2000 horsemen. By five o’clock the English had taken possession of the whole
intrenchment and camp, with no other obstacle than was presented by the enormous mass of
baggage, stores, camp-equipage, and cattle, scattered around them.
The lofty stage of bamboos in the field is erected sufficiently high to be a refuge from
wild beasts ;it is thatched, and the native farmer places a servant there to keep watch, es-
PLASSEY—-THE ELEPHANT ESTABLISHMENT. 27
pecially during the night, at the time the corn is nearly ripe. When a buffalo, or wild hog,
comes into the field, the keeper takes a wisp of lighted straw in one hand, and in the other
a dried skin containing broken bricks, pots, &c., bound up on all sides; and in this manner
he approaches the animal, shaking his lighted straw and making a loud noise, on which it
immediately runs away. “The boar out of the wood doth waste it, and the wild beast of the
field doth devour it.”” (Psalm lxxx.13.) The wild hogs and buffaloes make great havoc in the
fields of the Hindus.
Below the stage is a domestic buffalo and a group of Bengali cows. The buffalo is a
very useful beast of burthen, yields a rich but strong milk, which is generally made into ght
(clarified butter.) This animal has no hump—a fact not universally known by those who
have not visited India; on the contrary, the buffalo is generally supposed to have the hump.
Those sold under the denomination of buffalo humps are from the common bull or cow of
Hindostan.
ELEPHANT ESTABLISHMENT.
B 2
MOORSHEDABAD—THE PALACE.
MOORSHEDABAD—THE PALACE.
MoorsuepaBaD became the seat of the Bengal Government a.p. 1704. It was transferred
to this place from Dacca, by the Nawab Jaffier Khan, who was appointed Soubadar of Bengal
by Aurungzebe. The City of Moorshedabad continued to be the seat of the British Govern-
ment until a.p. 1771, when it was transferred to Calcutta. During the reign of Aliverdi
Khan, a palace was erected at Moorshedabad, which was ornamented with pillars of black
marble, brought from the ruins of Gour; this building is still in existence. The new palace
of the Nawab erected by the government, is a magnificent edifice, and reflects the highest
honour on the architect, General Macleod, C.B.: it was commenced in the time of Hu-
THE PALACE—THE WRECK. 29
maioon Jah, the late nizdm, who died in 1888, and was succeeded by his son, the present
Nawab. This splendid building, which is in the European style, and of dazzling whiteness, is
a beautiful object from the river, of which it commands a fine prospect, rendered peculiarly
interesting by the variety and elegance of the native vessels, so numerous at this station.
The Mor-pankhi, as the Nawab’s state-barge is called, is used during certain festivals at
Moorshedabad: boats of this description are numerous, and of different forms, some towering
very high, displaying all the colours of the peacock, and all are brilhantly painted and highly
gilt. A band of native musicians follow the state-barge in another tastefully-decorated boat,
and the scene on the river during the festival is highly picturesque.
Here also are seen the snake-boats: they shoot past you with great swiftness when rowed
by twenty men, from their amazing length and extreme narrowness.
Through the influence of Mr. Hamilton, surgeon to the Embassy sent by the local
government to the Emperor Furrookhseer, in the year 1713, the use of the Mint at Moorshe-
dabad was placed at the disposal of the Government of India.
The great object of dread to the Nawab Sooraj-oo-Dowlah, in 1757, was the fire of the
English vessels of war, of the effects of whose broadsides he had received exaggerated accounts;
and, in the excess of his timidity, he conceived it possible that they might proceed up the
great branch of the Ganges, and then come down the Kossimbazar river to Moorshedabad ; to
guard against which, he caused large piles to be sunk across that stream, opposite to Sooty,
about twenty miles above the city. A toll is now levied at Jungipir for keeping open the
entrance of the Bhagirathi, as this branch of the Ganges is called.
THE WRECK.
THE scene now opens on the right bank of the Ganges. We quitted the Bhagrutti (a branch
of the sacred river) at Sooty, and have now entered upon the main stream, at a point where it
is of amazing breadth, the view of it only terminating with the horizon: the waves roar, and
roll, and foam like those at sea; whilst a tufan (one of the heavy storms of India) is blowing
fiercely, accompanied by thunder, lightning, heavy rain, and utter darkness. The impetuous
stream, rushing with the force of a torrent, undermines the banks of the river, and tears up
forest trees by their roots. A voyage at this time is particularly dangerous; native vessels
B38
30 A TUFAN—RAJMAHAL.
are swept along with amazing velocity, and when a ti#fan is encountered, like the one now
blowing, they are frequently wrecked.
Three dandis (native boatmen) have been swept by the violence of the waves from the
mast of their sinking vessel; they are striving to regain their hold: the rest of the crew have
sunk to rise no more. These men are admirable swimmers; they may possibly be carried
along
by the current and rescued on some turn of the river, unless from the violence of the
storm they are carried out into the middie of the stream, and swept onwards, until, overcome
by exhaustion, they sink beneath the waves.
During some periods of the year, a voyage on the Ganges is attended with great risk.
The natives quote the Persian saying as a consolation under misfortune, “ ‘What is the use of
taking precautions, since what has been ordained must happen.’ Truly saith the proverb,
‘If the diver were to think of the jaws of the crocodile, he would never gather precious
pearls.’”’
A TUFAN.
Tux Budjerow is taking in her sails; and the sahib, or gentleman on board, is likely to go
without his dinner, as his cook-boat, with her torn sails, will most likely be unable to come
alongside, and hand it over to the servants.
A voyage up the Ganges may be performed in boats, as various in shape as in size: a
Pinnace is a first-class vessel ; the next is a Budjerow, which draws very little water, and is
divided into two commodious rooms, which may be furnished according to the taste of the
traveller: a complete establishment consists of a horse-boat, a washerman’s-boat, and a cook-
boat; in this country the cooking is always performed in a separate vessel.
The dinghi, or wherry, now making for the land, is generally manned by two rowers and
a steersman: these boats are of slight construction, with a circular awning of bamboo-work
and matting, under which a person can sit, and though in general well managed, are by no
eb Wey Le hs SAI [inpne ene aera
means to be considered Sare COUVeEVances.
RAJMAHATL.
Tux ruins of the palace of Rajmahal are on the bank. During the reign of Akbar, about
1591, Raja Maun Singh fixed upon this city as the capital of Bengal, and changed its name to
RAJMAHAL. st
Raja-Mahul—the Raja erected the palace, and surrounded the town with a rampart of brick
and other fortifications. In 1608, the seat of government was removed hence to Dacca, by
Islam Khan; but in 1639, the Sultan Shah Shuja brought it back again, and strengthened the
fortifications, of which, however, few traces are now to be seen.
Prior to 1638 this town was the residence of the Sultan Shah Shuja, the brother of
Aurunzebe ; but few vestiges of its ancient magnificence now remain. Theruins of his palace
are still standing, but have been much injured by the encroachments of the Ganges. Cows
now ruminate quietly beneath the black marble arches that overlook the river, or seek for
shelter in its empty halls, which still present images of their former grandeur. The marble
floor of the Mosque remains, and a fine old daolz (a large well), Around Rajmahal is a
beautiful jangal of magnificent bamboos, fine clumps interspersed with date-palm trees over-
shadowing the cottages, around which are a number of small cows and fowls of a remarkably
good breed: every thing has an air of comfort, and the walks in all directions are cool and
pleasant. The steamers from Calcutta take in their coal a mile below, and therefore do not
destroy the beauty of the old ruins with their smoke, and noise, and Birmingham appearance.
The Rajmahal hills are distant about five miles inland.
Sooraj-oo-Dowlah, after his flight from Plassey, reached Rajmahal, and took shelter in
the buildings of a deserted garden, where he was discovered by a Fakir named Dana Shah,
whose nose and ears he had ordered to be cut off thirteen months before. This man
recognized him, made the circumstance known, and the Nawab was carried a prisoner back to
Moorshedabad, where he was murdered by order of Meerun, the son of the new Nawab Meer
Jaffier Khan. His mangled remains were placed on an elephant, exposed throughout the city,
and finally interred. Thus perished Sooraj-oo-Dowlah, in the twentieth year of his age, and
the fifteenth month of his reign; a prince whose short career was connected in a most
important manner with the British interests in India, both for good and evil.
B 4
SICKRI-GALI.
A country vessel is being towed by her crew round a rocky point ;each man has his own gu,
or track-rope, fastened to a short, thick piece of bamboo, which he carries over his shoulder.
A Pinnace, or budjerow, tracks, with ten or twelve men, upon one rope only.
The Sickri-gali pass, during the Hindi and Muhammadan Governments, was the com-
manding entrance from Bahar into Bengal, and was fortified with a strong wall; however, in
1742, a Mahratta army of cavalry passed into Bengal through the hills ahove Colgong. The
village of Sickri-gali is eighteen miles above Rajmahal at the base of a high rocky eminence,
commanding a fine view of two ranges of hills. There is here the tomb of a celebrated
Muhammadan Saint, Pir Pointi, and a cave in limestone rock; and higher up, at a place
called Pir Pointi, now a mass of ruins, is another tomb of the saint.
SICKRI-GALI—THE RAJMAHAL HILLS. 83
This pass is close upon the Rajmahal hills, and the only European inhabitant lives in the
Bangla, commonly called Bungalow, the house at the foot of the hill. Wild beasts sometimes
come to this place at night, and the footmarks of the tiger are often to be seen in the garden.
Jackals roam howling through the village; bears, tigers, rhinoceroses, leopards, hogs, deer of
all kinds, abound here, and feathered game in the hills. Elephants are absolutely necessary
to enable a man to enjoy shooting amidst the high grass and thorny thickets. The place is
so much disturbed by the people who go into the hills for wood, that the game retreat farther
into the yangal. When a gentleman goes out shooting on foot, the dandis accompany him
with long poles, to beat the bushes. In the marshy plains under the hills of this pass good
shooting is to be found, but on account of tigers it is dangerous.
their head, the ends fastened in with a wooden comb. They are good-natured, gay-looking
people. Their principal food is Indian corn, boiled and mashed. They kill wild hogs with a
poisoned arrow, taking the precaution to cut out the flesh around the wound before they eat
the animal. Their bows and arrows are rough and wild-looking; the strips of feather on the
latter are from the wing of the vulture. They assert that they procure the poison, into which
they dip their arrows, from a remote hill-tribe, and are ignorant of its nature: it appears to
be a carefully guarded secret. Three of these arrows are in the Museum, At the proper
season the hill-men descend into the plains to gather in the crops of uncut rice.
A country boat filled with bales of cotton is floating down the stream; and the crew of
a Dacca oolak, which is aground, are striving to shove her into deeper water.
A native, sitting on the bank, is quietly watching the noisy scene, and smoking his
nariyal, or cocoa-nut pipe, by the side of his charpaz, or bed, which is on the bank.
Native vessels are towed by the dandis, or boatmen, most part of the way, except during the
rains. These men work from daylight till sunset in the most laborious way, frequently in the
water for hours, up to their middles, towing the vessel or shoving it with their backs
over sand banks: their labour does not cease until the boats are lugao’d (moored) at night;
then they cook on shore and eat their daily meal of boiled rice and curry, or flour cakes,
called chappatis. Occasionally, when a fair wind blows, they get some rest; for then an im-
mense square sail is hoisted, tacks, sheets, and haul-yards are fast belayed: they all go to
sleep except the steersman, and the safety of the boat depends upon the rotten state of the
cordage and sails: frequently very strong and sudden squalls come on, and, before a single
rope is let go, every thing is blown to ribbons.
THE FOOLISH FAKIR,
BENEATH 8 group of beautiful palm-trees, a half-witted young Fakir, adorned with peacocks’
feathers, is sitting and talking to the men around him, who regard as prophetic whatever his
wandering and unsettled mind induces him to utter, and look upon him as the favourite of
heaven—the natives treat persons thus afflicted with the greatest kindness, and supply them
with food. A leaf of the fan palm, here represented, may be seen in the Museum. The whole
group, as well as the trees, are portraits.
On the sands below and close to the edge of the river, is an Hindi in the last stage of
illness. His friends have carried him down to the sacred stream on a charpdi, (a rude native
bed,) and are in the act of making him drink the Ganges water, ere they half immerse his body
B 6
36 THE DYING HINDU.
in the sacred stream. His wife, on the edge of the bed, is weeping, and her dopatta (or veil),
is drawn over her face; the Brahman is offering the prayers usual on this occasion.
The Hindis are extremely anxious to die in sight of the Ganges, that their sins may be
washed away in their last moments. A person in his last agonies is frequently carried on his
bed, by his friends or relatives, in the coldest or in the hottest weather, from whatever dis-
tance, to the river-side, where he lies, if a poor man, without a covering day and night, until
he expires. With the pains of death upon him, he is placed up to the middle in water and
drenched with it; leaves of the shrub goddess, the sacred ¢u/st plant, are also put into his
mouth, the marks on the pebble god, the Salagram are shown to him, and his relations call
upon him to repeat, and repeat for him, the names of Ram, Huri, Ganga, &c. In some cases
the family priest repeats some prayers, and makes an offering to Voitiriinéé, the river over
which, they say, the soul is ferried, after leaving the body. The relations of the dying man
spread the sediment of the river on his forehead and breast, and afterwards with the finger
write on this sediment the name of some deity. If a person should die in his house, and not
by the river-side, it is considered as a great misfortune, as he thereby loses the help of the
goddess in his last moments. If a person choose to die at home, his memory becomes
infamous.
If these unfortunate people recover, after having been exposed by their relatives to die on
the banks of the river, they take refuge in the village of Chagdah on the left bank of the
Matabangah, forty-six miles from Calcutta, of which people who ought to be corpses, are the
sole inhabitants. They are considered to prefer a debased existence to a righteous end,
agreeing therein with the highest authorities. Pope’s Homer makes Achilles in the Elysian
fields say :—
‘¢ Rather I’d choose laboriously to bear
A weight of woes, and breathe the vital air,
A slave to some poor hind that toils for bread,
Than reign the scepter’d monarch of the dead.”
Solomon deems it better to be a live dog than a dead lion; and Job, called by Byron “the
Respectable,” says, “ Why should a living man complain?” to which Byron adds, “ For no
other reason that I can see, except that a dead man cannot.’ In the face of these grave
SAND-BANKS. ot
authorities the Hindostani proverb is of a different opinion, which asserts “ it is better to die
with honour, than live with infamy.”
The passage in the Psalms, “They shall be a portion for foxes,’ appears obscure ; but
give it the probable rendering, “they shall be a portion for jackals ;’> and then the anathema
becomes plain and striking to an Hindi, in whose country the disgusting sight of jackals,
devouring human bodies, may be seen every day. The dying who are left by the side of the
Ganges, are sometimes devoured alive by these animals in the night.
Lugéo’d,or moored off a sand-bank, is a budjerow, her baggage, and her cook-boat. The
crews are cooking and eating their dinners on the sand-bank, and will not recommence their
voyage until day-break, the river being too dangerous to allow of their proceeding further
during the hours of darkness. On a clean dry bank in the centre of the Ganges, covered
with the finest and most sparkling sand, it is far more agreeable to ugdo your vessel for the
night, than on the banks of the river: it is cooler, and you are better defended against thieves;
nevertheless a look-out must be kept during the night.
“Shall be likened unto a foolish man, which built his house upon the sand,” &c.,
(Matt. vii. 26.) The fishermen in Bengal build their huts in the dry season on the beds of
sand, from which the river has retired. When the rains set in, which they often do very
suddenly, accompanied with violent north-west winds, and the waters pour down in torrents
from the mountains, a fine illustration is given of our Lord’s parable: “the rains descended,
the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that house, and it fell’ In one night
multitudes of these huts are frequently swept away, and the place where they stood is, the
next morning, undiscoverable. On one of these occasions a Hindu child was carried down
the stream, seated on a part of the roof of a hut, and rescued from destruction at Allahabad.
The child could not tell whence she had been carried away by the force of the torrent, nor
could the little creature remember the names of her parents.
In some parts of Bengal, whole villages are every now and then swept away by the Ganges
when it changes its course. This river frequently runs over districts, from which, a few
years before, it was several miles distant. “A nation whose land the rivers haye spoiled.”
(Isa. xvii. 2.)
The rocky islands of Colgong in the distance are singular and beautiful, there are four
38 COLGONG—SUNSET.
of them, of unequal size. Rocks on rocks, covered with fine foliage, they rise in the centre of
the river which runs like a mill-sluice, and is extremely broad. They say that no one lives
upon these rocks; that a Fakir formerly took up his abode there, but having been eaten by a
snake (an agar), one of enormous size, and an eater of human flesh, the people became alarmed;
and no holy or unholy person has since taken up their residence on these rocky islands.
Small boats fish under the rocks, and snakes, they say, abound upon them: when a gun is
fired the echoes awaken and startle the myriads of birds that inhabit them. The proverb
says, “The hypocrites of Bhagulpur, the Zhags of Kuhulgaon (Colgong), and the bankrupts
of Patna are famous.’’
they eye the traveller askance: they are too busy to look at him: but when the shades of
evening fall, and the friends have left the dead, it may be the dying Hindi, on the banks of the
river, trusting, that Ganga will receive him to eternal beatitude, then, in that solitary, that
awful hour, the dying man may be awakened from his trance by the sharp tooth of the jackal,
and the fierce beak of the vulture! Such is the power of superstition, that the Hindi might
rejoice, even at this fearful moment, to end his days by the side of the sacred river, and escape
the infamy of seeking refuge at the village of Chagdah.
JACKALS— CROCODILES. 39
“ Wheresoever the body is, thither will the eagles (or rather the vultures) be gathered
together.’ (Luke xvii. 37.) The vulture is equally ravenous after dead bodies as the
jackal; and it is very remarkable how suddenly these birds appear after the death of an animal
in the open field, though a single one may not have been seen on the spot a long time before.
The jackal is considered an incarnation of Durga, when she carried the child Krishna over
the Jumna, in his flight from King Kansa. The worshippers of the female deities adore the
jackal as a form of this goddess, and present offerings to him daily. Every worshipper lays
the offering on a clean place in his house, and calls the god to come and partake of it. As
this is done at the hour when jackals leave their lurking places, one of these animals sometimes
comes and eats the food. In temples dedicated to Durga and other deities, a stone image of
the jackal is placed on a pedestal and daily worshipped. When a Hindi passes a jackal, he
must bow to it; and if it passes on the left hand, it is a most lucky cireumstance.
Crocodiles are very numerous in this part of the Ganges: they show themselves continu-
ally, swimming low in the water, peering over the edge of a sand-bank, or basking in the sun
upon it. Near this place is a village full of a caste of people who live on the flesh of the
crocodile ; the dandis say they understand it smells rank and is very hard. In the evening
you sometimes hear a shrill peculiar scream, which the men declare is the ery of the crocodile.
When fired at, they slink quietly into the water. The long-nosed crocodile is not so formidable
as the snub-nosed alligator: it is said the latter will attack men, the former avoids them if
possible. Human bones and ornaments are sometimes found in the interior of these animals,
To disagree with a superior, under whose command you may be, is, the natives assert, “To
live in the river and be at enmity with the crocodile.”
BENARES.
BENARES—RAJ GHAT.
Tue appearance of Benares, from the Ganges, is very beautiful. It is covered with buildings
to the water’s edge: the architecture of some is Hindi, of others Muhammadan ; many of
them are of imposing appearance and great picturesque beauty. The magnificent flights of steps
alled Ghats, which descend deep into the river, are thronged at all times with people; some
fetching water, others washing, and most performing their ablutions in the sacred stream.
The view is surprisingly picturesque, and so singular, that no city in Europe can convey an
idea of Benares.
For a detailed account of Benares or Bunarus, deriving its name from two streams, the
Burna and the Ussee, you may refer to a beautiful work by the late James Prinsep, Esq., who
statesthat the ancient denomination of this city was Kashi, “The splendid,” whereof the fabu-
lous wonders are fully detailed in the Kasht-Khund, one of the chapters of the Skundu-Poorana.
According to this mythological history, Kashi is a place of most profound antiquity, sanctity,
and splendour: it has survived in age a hundred lives of Brahma, each of whose days is equal
to 4,820,000,000 of years ; it stands raised from the ground, supported upon the ¢risu/ or trident
of Mahadeéo, and is never shaken by earthquakes: the whole city was once of pure gold, but
has since degenerated into stone and brick.
Bunarus (Sanserit, Bardnusee) quasi Burna- Ussee, or from Raja Bunar, who founded the
town A.D. 1000. It contains about 600,000 souls—one-fourth Musalmans. The city stands on
a high ridge of kankar (nodules of lime stone), free from the floods which sometimes cover all its
suburbs. The houses are of stone, from two to six stories high, with terraces on the summit, and
open interior courts. The streets are very narrow, from four and a half to nine feet wide, with
low doors on each side. The trade is in sugar, cotton, indigo, opium, kimkhwab, jewels, &e.
No building in the town now standing can be traced to a higher antiquity than the
time of Man Singh, who was Raja of Jypoor in the reign of Akbar. Both the temple and
the man munduil, or observatory, described by Tavernier, were erected by him. The astrono-
mical instruments were not added until the time of Jy Singh, 1680, more than a century
later.
BENARES—RAJ GHAT. 41
The scene now before you on the left bank of the Ganges represents the holy city com-
mencing from Raj Ghat, the place at which the steamers from Calcutta are moored, as well
as pinnaces and budjerows. The distance from the latter place via the Bhagirathi is 696
miles, and by land or dak, 428. The civil and military station is about four miles inland.
Native merchants bring goods of all descriptions for sale to the steamers and vessels anchored
off this ghat ; jewellery, shawls, portraits of the natives, &c. Provisions of all sorts, with wine
and beer, are procurable in the city.
The house situated above Raj Ghat is the hotel that was so recently destroyed, when the
fleet of magazine boats containing gunpowder was blown up, the vessels having been moored
off this ghat.
Bruhma Ghat is ancient, and of irregular form; it derives its name from a temple of Siva,
under the title of Brumeswur, “the Lord of Brumha.’”’ The temple and ghat were repaired
(perhaps built) 200 years ago, by the Marhattas, and again recently by the ex-Peshwa Baji
Rao. From the number of Marhatta families residing in the neighbourhood, and the com-
jarative iprivacy ) of the spot, ) it is by) courtesyS set apart as a bathing-place
g for their women.
They resort hither in groups, with their children and female servants. Their wet garments
are shifted with dexterity under a large wrapper, which is also worn over their silk dresses, in
passing through the streets. The Brahman of the ghat is of course a privileged person; he
receives a small gratuity for taking care of the clothes, and brass or silver water vessels; he
also affixes the ¢iluk (frontal mark) and pronounces the muntra or morning benediction upon
his spiritual daughters.
On this ghat wood is collected in large piles for sale: “ Our wood is sold to us.”
(Lamentations v. 4.) The poor Hindi, living in the country never purchases wood for fuel.
When such a person removes to a large town, he speaks of it as a great hardship, that he is
obliged to buy his very fire-wood.
Benares is considered as the most holy city of India, and it is certainly one of the most
picturesque. “ A little to eat and to live at Bunarus” is the wish of a pious Hindu; but a
residence at this place is rather dangerous to any one inclined to violate the laws.
“ Kala-Bhoirava the Tremendous, is a naked Siva, smeared with ashes; having three
eyes, riding on a dog, holding in one hand a horn, and in another a drum. In several places
42 BENARES—TUHE MINARETS.
in Bengal this image is daily worshipped. Siva, under this name, is regent of Kashi
(Bunarus). All persons dying at Bunarus are entitled to a place in Siva’s heaven; but’ if
any one violate the laws of the shastrti during his residence there, Kali-Bhoiriivii after death
grinds him between two millstones.”
The dog carries Kali-Bhoirivi, a form of Siva, and therefore receives the worship of
many Hindus, whenever his master is worshipped; still he is considered as an unclean
animal: every offering which he approaches is considered unacceptable to the gods, and every
one who touches him must purify himself by bathing.
THE MINARETS,
Tun Madhoray Ghat and musjid or mosque, are now before you—the mosque was erected by
Aurunzebe, on the site and with the materials of the temple of Vishni. The mosque has little
architectural beauty to boast of, but the minars have been deservedly admired for their sim-
THE MINARETS. 43
plicity and boldness of execution. The are only eight and a half feet in diameter at the base,
and the breadth decreases to seven and a half feet, while they have an altitude of 147 feet
2 inches, from the terraced floor of the musjid to the kalsé or pinnacle. The terrace is
elevated about eighty feet above the river at low water level.
The musjid and the minars were repaired by Mr. James Prinsep—a hazardous under-
taking as regarded the latter, for they were both found to incline outwards fifteen inches from
the perpendicular. One of them was struck by lightning the very day the scaffolding was
removed, but it escaped with the displacement of a stone in the upper cornice. Several
instances have occurred of men throwing themselves from the top of the southern minaret.
One of them, a man who had gambled away his money and his wife during the Diwifi :—
another, a sailor, who was killed on the spot:—another, a Fakir, who, falling through the
tiles and mat-work of a roof, scraping the flesh from his sides, alighted on the floor beneath,
with every bone safe. Such an escape was deemed miraculous; and crowds attended to
minister to one so favoured by heaven. The Fakir disappeared immediately on recovering
from his bruises, and sundry solid moveables of his host disappeared with him.
Men, women, and children bathe together, uniting the worship of the Ganges or of the
gods with their ablutions, washing their long hair with mud, making clay images for pwd,
(worship), or pouring out libations to their deceased ancestors, whilst the children gambol in
the water, or collect clay to assist in making the great image of Bhim Singh the giant, which
is so frequently seen on the side of a ghat, or that of Hunuman the monkey god. The
Hindiis pour out water to the sun, three times a day; and to the moon at the time of wor-
shipping her, which illustrates a passage in Scripture, “To pour out drink-offerings to the
queen of heaven.” (Jer. xliv. 17.)
Ghoosla Ghat unites great solidity with a graceful and appropriate elevation : the double-
arched door case in front of the gate has a very rich effect under the strong shadows of mid-
day, giving an artificial magnitude to the entrance, in just proportion to the dimensions of the
front. The river rises above the top of the doorway, entering the staircase, and affording a
comfortable bath within, where there are convenient recesses on the sides of the steps for the
accommodation of bathers.
The ferry-boat is crossing the river laden with camels, buffaloes, and cows.
RAJRAJESWURREE GHAT.
RAJRAJESWURREE GHAT.
On the sands in the foreground is the hut of a Buniya, or grain merchant, from whom the
dandis procure chabeni, the parched grain of Indian corn (maize), also flour for their chappatis.
A group of pilgrims are seated on one side the hut.
Rajrajeswurree Ghat, which is seen in the distance, takes its name from an ancient
temple of Devz, under the appellation of Rajrajeswurree (“ queen of queens’’). The title Devi,
is usually applied to Bhawani. The facade of this building is a good specimen of the mixed style
of Hindu and Moresque architecture ; the former is observable in the lower half of the central
compartment; while the projecting stone gallery, with its parapet, tukya mootukka, and the
domed octagonal buwrwj at the two corners, giving relief to the rectangular pavilion in the centre,
are seen to be essentially Moorish, from the character of the pillar, and scalloped arch (mehrab).
The man in green is one of a very fine corps of men, called Gardener’s Horse; they were
raised by the late Colonel Wm. Linnzus Gardner, a most highly distinguished and gallant
officer: they are such masters of their horses and weapons, that it is said, single-handed,
nothing can resist them; and one of these men, well known in the up-country, was considered
to be the finest horseman in India. For an account of Colonel Gardner’s romantic, adven-
turous, and distinguished life, we refer you to a work lately published, the “ Wanderings of a
Pilgrim during Four and Twenty Years in the East.”
The two men who next appear belong to Skinner’s Horse, a most efficient irregular corps,
taking its name from its gallant colonel, by whom it was raised and stationed at Delhi.
Skinner’s Horse rendered important services in the Mahratta and Pindaree campaigns. They
are well mounted and appointed, and are an intelligent, fine body of men: with a lance of
great length, they are exceedingly expert, and excellent shots with the matchlock, a most un-
wieldy fire-arm.
A native carriage, called a diz, drawn by two bullocks, stands in the rear: these decorated
carriages are principally used by women in the higher ranks of life; and within the curtains,
which are closely drawn and fastened down, a lady is completely protected from the profane
gaze of man.
RAJRAJESWURREE GHAT—THE SNAKE CHARMERS. 45
In the distance you now behold the Dusaswumed Ghat. The mythological legends
which give rise to the name of this ghat and temple, are connected with the story of Divadas’s
usurpation of Siva’s kingly authority in Kashi. Siva having sent from heaven the yoginis,
or heavenly nymphs, and tried various other stratagems in vain, to turn the earthly monarch
aside from virtue, next deputed Brumha himself, who entered the place, disguised as an old
Brahman, and obtaining access to the king, received permission from him to perform ten (dws)
aswumedha, or horse sacrifices, upon the spot here represented. The horse sacrifice, as de-
scribed in the puwrans, is a very curious ceremony. A horse having peculiar colours and
qualities is selected, and after a course of puja (worship), is turned loose upon the world, fol-
towed by the sacrificing party, with an armed retinue: if stopped by the sovereign of another
country through which the animal may pass, war must be declared, and the interrupter of the
sacrifice subdued :—in this way, after traversing the world, the horse returns, and is put to
death by suffocation.
Hindis from all parts of Upper India, perform pilgrimages to the sacred places on the Ganges:
although the stream throughout is considered holy, there are parts of peculiar sanctity, such
as Hurdwar, Benares, Allahabad, &c. The roads swarm with devotees; they proceed in large
groups, generally well dressed, carrying on their shoulders a large bamboo, supporting at each
end a covered basket, containing small stumpy bottles of the thinnest green glass, having long
necks: they are filled with Ganges water at the sacred places, and sealed with the seal of the
Brahman. These people travel all over the country, selling the sacred water at a high price
at the distant stations. Some of the bottles contain a quart; others are not above two inches
high; they are of all sizes, and the price varies accordingly. The salutation of these people
1
on passing is, “ Ram ram,” or “ Bom bom Mahadéo,’—a pilgrim of this class is called 4
Kanwar-wala. The men come for this water to place it in their houses for religious and
medicinal uses, and sometimes perform a journey on the occasion of five or six months ; it is
also used in the English courts of justice, in administering an oath to an Hindu. The frames
in which the baskets are carried are decorated with feathers of the sacred peacock and small
red flags; and every party appears to have one amongst them more ornamented than the rest,
with a large arched cover, and numerous bells attached to it.
A jumna-par goat, so called because these goats are bred on the other side the Jumna, is
lying on the ground—they are of enormous size, with very broad, long, thin, and silky ears,
as soft as velvet. These animals are better adapted for marching than the small Bengali goat;
but unless they can go into the yangal and browse, they become thin and lose their milk.
On the opposite side of the river is the Jellinghy flat and her steamer, returning from
Allahabad to Calcutta. The steamer herself is not the vessel in which passengers live; but
attached to, and towed by her, is a vessel as large as the steamer herself, called a flat, built
expressly to convey passengers and government treasure. It is divided into cabins, with one
large cabin in the centre, in which the passengers dine together. The deck is covered with
an awning.
The view on the left of the native vessel exemplifies the structure of the ghats on the
water’s edge. The continuity of the line of steps is interrupted by hundreds of stone piers
of various forms, which may be classed under three distinct heads: some are merely intended
to give solidity to the masonry ; others are built for the accommodation of the ghatiyas (ghat
PILGRIMS WITH HOLY WATER—JULSYN GHAT. 47
attendants), and ganga-putras (sons of the Ganges), who enjoy hereditary possession of most
of the ground between high and low water mark, and whose ancestors have resided on the
spot from time immemorial in hereditary attendance upon pilgrims; the third sort consists of
mut’ hs or small temples, erected at the expense of pilgrims and others: they generally have a
flat roof, which serves the ghatiya as a chabitara or terrace to sit and converse upon. The
large chatrs, or umbrellas, so numerous on the ghats, are fixtures, to protect the people from
the intense heat of the sun in India.
On the river’s edge are seen one or two murhis—chambers into which the sick are
removed when at the point of death, that their sins, to the last moment of existence, may be
washed away by the holy stream.
In the midst of hundreds and hundreds of temples and ghats, piled one above another on
the high cliff, or rising out of the Ganges, the mind is perfectly bewildered: it turns from
beauty to beauty, anxious to preserve the memory of each; and the sketcher throws down the
pencil in despair. Each ghat presents a study: the intricate architecture, the elaborate
workmanship, the elegance and lightness of form, and the picturesque groups of natives that
crowd to their devotions, form as fine a subject for a picture as an artist could select.
How soon Benares, or rather the glory of Benares—its picturesque beauty—will be no
more! Since the year 1836 many ghats and temples have sunk, undermined by the rapid
stream which now sets full upon the most beautiful cluster of the temples on its banks:
some have been engulphed, some are falling; and ere long, if the Ganges encroach at an equal
rate, but little will remain of the glory of the most holy of the Hindi cities.
In the rains, some of the temples are submerged to the cornice; many Hindus, not-
withstanding, are bold enough to swim through an impetuous current, and to dive under the
porch and door-way, for the honour of continuing their customary worship despite of perils
and personal inconvenience.
JULSYN GHAT.
Jutsyn Ghat and Raj Bulubh Shiwala are now before you. On the terrace of the latter is a
brahmani bull: these animals walk about the buildings with seeming indifference, ascending
the steps, mixing with the crowd, and constantly attending for their food. They are seldom
48 GANESH, THE PATRON OF LITERATURE,
disturbed; but when molested they are vicious, and will use their horns. The rice and
flowers offered to the idols are swept up, and for the greater part eaten by the brahmani
bulls. The proverb says:—“At Benares you should be on guard against the women, the
sacred bulls, the steps, and the devotees.”
The principal Hindi temples in Benares are crowded with people of both sexes and of all
ages, who daily assemble to pay their devotions to the deity of the place, from the hour of
eight in the morning until nearly four in the afternoon. The form of worship is very simple:
the votary enters the temple and prostrates himself, praying aloud; he then rises and strikes
a bell suspended over a form of Mahadéo, thrice repeating the word bom, or hail, at each
stroke; then putting a few grains of boiled rice, and a small quantity of milk or oil, or
Ganges water, on the Mahadéo, he strews a few flowers over it, and, repeating the same,
sometimes adorns the head of the idol with a chaplet of flowers. This ceremony being over,
the votary lays down a few cowries, and retires to make room for others, The women gene-
rally enter with their garments quite wet, after having performed their ablutions in the
Ganges. The quantity of milk, oil, water, and flowers, thrown about the place, renders it
dirty and wet until the evening, when, the crowd retiring, the Brahmans clean the temple for
the next day.
The music and bells of a hundred temples strike the ear amidst the buzz of human
voices; at the same time the eye rests on the vivid colours of different groups of male and
female bathers, with their sparkling brass vessels, or follows the holy bulls as they wander in
the crowds munching the chaplets of flowers liberally presented to them. Then, as night
steals on, the scene changes, and the twinkling of lamps along the water’s edge, and the
funeral fires and white curling smoke, and the stone buildings lit up by the moon, present
features of variety and blended images of animation, which it is out of the artist’s power to
embody.
The large building that now appearsis on Oomraogir’s pushta or ghat. On the exterior
of the building is a mut’h, an Hindu temple, dedicated to Ganesh, the god of wisdom, and the
patron of literature. In puja this idol is invoked ere any other god is worshipped. Ere a
pious Hindi commence any sort of writing he makes the sign of Ganesh at the top of the
page. With the simplicity of the child he unites the wisdom of the elephant: his writing is
HINDU FAKIR. 49
beautiful, “ Behold! he writes like Ganesh!” Whocansay more? WHeis called two mothered,
uniting the elephant’s head to his natural body, therefore having a second mother in the
elephant. The worshippers pour oil and the holy Ganges water over the head of this god,
who is thus bathed daily; and offerings of boiled rice and flowers are made at the time of
prayer. Around the idol are placed the vessels used in pia, brass bells, the conch shell,
the holy spoons, flowers, &c. In the Museum is a solid white marble image of Ganesh,
which weighs 34 cwt. For a further account of this idol, see the frontispiece, and
the Introduction to the “ Wanderings of a Pilgrim durmg Four and Twenty Years in
the East.”
The Fakir seated on the ghat is one in the highest stage of exaltation, in which clothing is
almost dispensed with, and his only garment is a chatr, an umbrella made of basket work:
his long hair and his beard, matted with cow-dung and ashes, hang in stiff straight locks to his
waist, his body is smeared with ashes; he always remains on the same spot, and when suffer-
ing from illness, a bit of tattered blanket is thrown over him. Passers by throw cowries and
grains of boiled rice at his feet, he remains speechless, disregards all visible objects, asks for
nothing, but subsists on alms. He will not answer any question addressed to him, which
elucidates the proverb: “ Talking to a man in eestasy (of a religious nature) is like beating
curds with a pestle.’ Persons in this state affirm that their minds do not wander after
worldly things, that they live in a state of pleasure, abstraction, and joy, and that they have
attained to that state of perfection required by the shastrs. His red flag is displayed from a
bamboo, below which is a small lantern made of coloured ubruk or tale; sometimes the
lamp is formed of clay, pierced through with fret-work in remarkably pretty patterns. The
Hindis suspend lamps in the air on bamboos in honour of the gods durimg a particular month,
and in obedience to the shastrs. The offering of lamps to particular gods is an act of merit, so this
offering to all the gods, during the auspicious month, is supposed to secure many benefits to
the giver. Lamps suspended from bamboos are also indicative of the ceremony in honour of
Ananta, the great serpent.
On another bamboo is displayed the frist or trident of Mahadéo, and a small double-
headed hand-drum, shaped like an hour-glass, called damaru, used by Fakirs ; and in front
by the side of the Devotee, is an altar, or pillar, hollowed at the top, containing the
Cc
50 MANIKURNIKA GHAT.
sacred fuist plant (ocimum sanctum) purple stalked basil. This plant is worshipped in honour of
a religious female who requested Vishnu to allow her to become his wife. Lukshmi, the
goddess of beauty, and wife of Vishnu, cursed the woman on account of the pious request she
had preferred to her lord, and changed her into a ¢ulst plant. Vishnu, in consideration of
the religious austerities long practised by the enamoured devotee, made her a promise that he
would assume the form of the shalgram, and always continue with her. If one of these sacred
plants die, it is committed in due form to Ganga-jee: and when a person 1s brought to die by
the side of the sacred river, a branch of the tulsi, the shrub-goddess, is planted near the dying
man’s head, and the marks upon the shalgram are shown to him. This pebble god is a small
heavy black cireular stone, rather flattened on one side, with the cornu ammonis strongly
marked upon it. Devotees walk round the sacred plant, pour water upon it, and make
salam. Of an evening a little chiragh, a small lamp, is burned before it. In the courts of
justice the Hindu swears by the Ganges water on which is placed a branch of the twist.
MANIKURNIKA GHAT.
A BRAHMANi bull is going up to the idol Ganesh, expecting a share of the flowers that are
offered to the image. In the distance a band of pilgrims are coming down to fill their baskets
with holy water; and in the foreground is a picturesque figure, also a carrier of holy water,
which is put into small sealed bottles placed in baskets suspended from a bamboo poised on
his shoulder, over which is a covering of red cloth.
A tank of peculiar sanctity is now before you, on the steps of which men are ascending
and descending: it is called the Ohakra kunda, and its history is as follows :—‘‘ After one of
the periodical destructions and renovations of the world, Siva and his bride were alone in the
ananda-vana, or happy forest, occupying the present site of Munikarnika, they found, as
man and wife may sometimes do, that their ¢éte & téte was growing dull, and to vary the party,
Siva created Vishnu. After a while, the married pair wished again for privacy and with-
drew into the forest, desiring Vishnu to amuse himself by doing what was fit and proper;
which, after some consideration, he judged to be a supply of water for the irrigation of the
trees, and with his chakra, or discus, he dug a hole, which he filled with the ambrosial per-
spiration from his body, induced by his hard work; and the pool so dug and filled, has re-
THE HINDU SCHOOL. 51
mained a spot of peculiar sanctity, termed, from the chakra, or discus, chakra kunda, or chakra
pushkarni, discus-pond. When Siva returned and saw what Vishnu had done, he nodded his
head in approbation so energetically, that the jewel (mani) of one of his ear-rings
(karnikda) fell off, and the place was thenceforth called Manikarnika.” (See Kasi Khand,
Part I. chap. 26).
A Brahman sitting beneath a porch is reading aloud, with his book on his knees, and
bending his body backwards and forwards as he reads.
Beneath the shade of a fine pipal tree (ficus religiosa) is a four-headed and holy piece of
sculpture, with the bull (xandi) reposing before it; also another singularly sculptured stone
representing two heads, their bodies formed of snakes entwined. The pipal is universally
sacred: the Hindi are seen in the early morning putting flowers in puja at the foot of the
tree, and pouring water on its roots. They worship the idols placed beneath it in a similar
manner, and they believe that a god resides in every leaf, who delights in the music of their
rustling, and their tremulous motion.
Near this place is the spot on which the dead are burned; it is dedicated to Vishnu, as
Jalsai, or “sleeper on the waters ;” and there, many a Hindi widow has devoted herself to
the flames with the corpse of her husband. In the Museum is a brazen image of Jalsa
floating on Ananta, the great serpent.
his finger wrote upon the ground.” (John viii. 6). Schools for children are frequently held
under trees in Bengal, and th e children who are beginning to learn, write the letters of the
alphabet in the dust. This saves pens, ink, and paper. “The sin of Judah is written with a
pen of iron.” (Jeremiah xvii. 1). The letters are formed by making incisions on the palm-
leaf: these books are very durable.
The scene now represents the gyan-bapi, or the well of knowledge, which is regarded as
peculiarly sacred by the Hindas, and it is related that it was dug by Tsana with his trisul,
or trident, when he was wandering about Kashi. One of the officiating Brahmans is seen re-
ceiving the offerings of rice, &c. from a party of pilgrims, just about to commence the circuit
of the temples. If a rich Hindi present any thing to an inferior, the latter, as a mark of respect,
puts it on his head. An offering of cloth, for instance, received at a temple, the receiver not
only places on his head, but binds it there. The rice and flowers were formerly thrown into the
well; but they rendered the water so putrid, that a defence of planks has been since put up to
prevent it. The man near the gyan-bapi carrying a staff, isa diindi fakir. This name is given
because these devotees receive a staff (diéndii) when they first enter this order. The Brah-
mans, on meeting one, prostrate themselves before him. The dindi shaves his head and beard
every four months. He travels with a staff in one hand, and an alms-dish in the other; he
does not beg or cook his food, butis a guest at the houses of the Brahmans. The ceremonies
to which this order attend, are, repeating the names of Vishni, bathing once a day, and, with
closed eyes, meditating on the attributes of the god by the side of the river. When about to
bathe, they besmear themselves all over with the mud of the Ganges. The dundis do not
burn, but bury their dead, repeating certain forms of prayer.
and she still preserves her balance. The man keeps time with a sort of musical instrument,
which he holds in his right hand, and sings a wild song to aid the goat: without the song
and the measured time, they say the goat could not perform the balance. A. grass-cutter is
looking on: he has just returned from cutting a bundle of dib-grass: every horse in India
has his sd%s, or groom, and his grass-cutter. When a beautiful begam (a native princess) is
suffering from the pangs of jealousy, she often exclaims, “I wish I were married to a grass-
cutter!” because a man of that class is too poor to be able to keep two wives.
The man on the right is a religious mendicant, a disciple of Siva. When this portrait
was taken, his long black hair, matted with cow-dung, was twisted like a turban round his
head: he was dreadfully lean, almost a skeleton. His left arm had been held erect so long,
that the flesh had withered, and the skin clung round the bones most frightfully ;the nails of
the hand, which had been kept immoveably clenched, had pierced through the palm, and grew
out at the back of the hand, like the long claws ofa bird of prey. His skeleton arm was encircled
by a twisted stick, the stem perhaps of a thick creeper, the end of which was cut into the shape
of the head of the cobra di capello, with its hood displayed; and the twisted withy looked
like the body of the reptile wreathed around his horrible arm. His only garment was the skin
of a tiger, thrown over his shoulders, and a bit of rag and rope. He was of a dirty ashen
colour from mud and paint; perhaps in imitation of Siva, who, when he appeared on earth
as a naked mendicant of an ashy colour, was recognized as Mahadéo, the great god. This
man was considered a very holy person. His right hand contained an empty gourd and a
small rosary, and two long rosaries were around his neck of the rough beads called mundrasi.
Acts of severity towards the body, practised by religious mendicants, are not done as penances
for sin, but as works of extraordinary merit, promising large rewards in a future state. The
Byragi is not a penitent, but a proud ascetic.
A very small and beautifully-formed gin? (a dwarf cow) was with him. She was deco-
rated with crimson cloth, embroidered with cowrie shells, and a plume of peacocks’ feathers
as a jika, rose from the top of her head. <A brass bell was on her neck, and around her legs
were anklets of the same metal. Many Fkirs lead these little dwarf cows about the country,
they are fat and sleek, and considered so holy that they will not sell them.
c 3
54 THE FORTRESS OF CHUNAR.
A barber sitting on a ghat, is shaving an Hindi, he makes use of water, but not of
soap, while he shaves all round the head, leaving a tuft of hair in the middle of the back of
the head, which is commonly tied in a knot. Shaving is usually done under a small shed or
a tree, very often in the street or road.
We have now given as many views of Benares as it is possible to introduce within
the limits of our Diorama, and we take leave of the holy city with regret. The Vedas and
Shastrs all testify that “ Viswaswara is the first of Devas, Kashi (Benares) the first of cities,
Ganga the first of rivers, and charity the first of virtues.” Vishveshvur, “ Lord of the Uni-
yerse,”’ is one of the most exalted titles of Siva.
be opened, unless the party opening it lose his hand—four thieves having so suffered once in
an attempt upon it. It is also recorded, that the deified giant Bhim Singh, built the fortress
of Chunar in one day, and rendered it impregnable.
A native has just succeeded in crossing the river on a bundle of reeds; his clothes placed
on the top of his head are safe from wet, and with one hand he paddles along. On the out-
skirts of the village is seen a remarkably ancient Banyan-tree, the Ficus Indica.
In front of the tomb of a Pz (a Muhammadan saint), three followers of the prophet are
at their devotions. A Shamiyana, or awning, screens the tomb from the sun and rain: the
standards of Hussan and Hussein are displayed, and daily coloured lanterns are suspended
from the top of high bamboos.
THE PERSIAN WHEEL.
A womaN is sticking cakes of cow-dung on the wall to dry for fuel. This article, called opla,
is generally used by the poorer classes; 1280 cakes are sold for a rupee: when well prepared
and dried it blazes like wood. On the right is a fine Persian wheel: the water is brought up
in gharas, red earthen vessels fastened round its circumference ; it is worked by two bullocks,
and gives an abundant supply. A wheel of this sort is perhaps superior to any other method
of drawing water.
MIRZAPUR.
Mrrzarir is a military cantonment, famous for its beautiful ghats, and noted for its carpet
manufactory and cotton mart. Some remarkably picturesque Hindi temples are on the
ghats, with fine trees in the back ground. The cliff is abrupt, and the river is always
crowded with vessels full of merchandise: steamers having plenty of cargo to land are
generally detained here four or five hours. Mirzapiur is from Calcutta, via Bhagirathi, 748
miles, and by dak route, 455.
The scene before you is very singular; it represents the finale of the Kali-puja festival:
the goddess is seen on a platform in the boat in the foreground, covered by an awning, and
adorned with flags: on the steps of the ghat, a similar image is being put into a boat, and
from every part of the city the worshippers are bringing forth the idols. One of the boats ig
towed by a dinghi, in which they are firing a few de joie from a matchlock.
oc 4
56 THE TIMBER RAFT.
In the house of the Bengali babu you beheld a nach, and the worship of the goddess
Durga, a yellow woman, with ten arms. You have now before you another form of the same
Hindu deity, under the name of Kali, the black, the terrific. When this goddess is wor-
shipped in the month of May, it is called the Phuluhari festival, on account of the quantity
of fruits and flowers offered to the idol at this particular season: animals are sacrificed in her
honour, and jack fruit and mangoes are presented to her in that particular month.
The day after the worship, the people carry the goddess in state to the river, and place the
image on a platform, between two boats ; the worshippers, attended by the discordant music of
tom-toms (native drums) and horns, row the image out into the stream, and sink her in the
deep waters: the women weep and utter lamentations on parting with the idol.
This goddess is represented as a black woman, with four arms: in one hand she carries
a scimitar, one is bestowing a blessing, another forbids fear, and the fourth holds the head of
the giant whom she slew.
She wears a necklace of skulls, her tongue hangs out of her mouth, her jet-black hair
falls to her heels. Having drunk the blood of the giants she slew, her eyebrows are bloody,
and the blood is falling in a stream down her breast: her eyes are red, like those of a
drunkard: she stands trampling on her husband Siva. Kali had a contest with the giant
Raviina, which lasted ten years: having conquered him, she became mad with joy, and her
dancing shook the earth to its centre. To restore the peace of the world, Siva, her husband,
threw himself amongst the dead bodies at her feet. She continued her dancing, and trampled
upon him. When she discovered her husband, she stood still, horror-struck and ashamed,
and threw out her tongue to an uncommon length ; by this means Siva stopped her frantic
dancing, and saved the universe. ‘The Philistine cursed David by his gods.’ A Hindu
sometimes in a fit of anger, says to his enemy, “ The goddess Kali shall devour thee ;may
Diarga destroy thee !”’
extend, supported on bamboos, far beyond each side of the boat. The next vessel is a large
pataili, called a ghor-daul, or ghora-wal, because the bows are ornamented with a horse’s head.
She is laden with salt.
In the foreground is a timber raft, one of the most picturesque objects to be seen on the
Ganges. The men who accompany the raft have a strangely wild appearance ; fresh from the
jangal, they come down with the floating timber for scarcely any payment, just enough to feed
them. They are small in stature, their skins are very dark, they shave the head completely,
and their bodies are all but naked. They direct the course of the raft with long bamboos; a
small thatch is erected upon her, under’ which they creep, and there they sleep. A picturein
itself is the wild, strange-looking timber raft, which is generally decorated with two or three
small red flags, and is always accompanied by a very small, narrow canoe, hollowed out of the
trunk of a tree.
ALLAHABAD.
Tux fortress of Allahabad was built by Akbar Shah in 1581. On the 11th February, 1765,
the governor of the fort, Ali Beg Khan, surrendered it to the Company’s troops, under the
command of Major Fletcher, and marched out with his garrison, under safe conduct. Thus
in one week Chunar and Allahabad, the two most important fortresses in Shuja-oo-Dowlah’s
possession, fell without loss into the hands of the English.
The fortress is erected upon a point of land, stretching out into the waters at the
junction of the sacred rivers. One of the holiest places on the Ganges is pointed out by
numerous flags at the spot where it joins the Jumna, just below the fort. The Saraswati is
supposed to unite with them wnderground, whence the junction is called Zrivent, or Tribent.
This spot is so holy, that a person dying there is certain of immediate moskh, or beatitude,
without risk of further transmigration. The blue waters of the Jumna contrast strongly at
the junction with the muddy hue of the waters of the Ganges. On the sands below the fort,
the Bura Mela, or great fair, is held annually ; it lasts about two months, and attracts devotees
and merchants from all parts of India. At that period, also, Jakhs and lakhs of natives come
to Prag; they make piija, shave, give money to the Fakirs, and bathe at the sacred junction.
Suicide committed at the Bent is meritorious in persons of a certain caste, but a sin for a
Brahman! The ancient city of Prag, acquired the name of Allahabad from the Musalman
conquerors of India.
58 ALLAHABAD—THE SATI.
The buildings occupied by Shah Allum when he resided in the fort, still retain traces of
their former grandeur, and some of the apartments command a fine view of the Jumna that
flows beneath. An enormous pillar, formerly prostrate near the gateway in the fort, has
been set up on a pedestal, under the superintendence of the late Colonel Edward Smith. The
natives call it Bhim Singh ké lat, that is, Bhim Singh’s walking-stick: some of the inscrip-
tions on the Jat are in unknown characters—those of the mighty dead, who have disappeared
from the earth, leaving records imperishable, but incomprehensible.
The steam vessels and tugs which navigate the Ganges from Calcutta terminate their
voyage at Allahabad.
THE SATI.
Tx scene now before you represents a Satz, the burning of a Hindu widow with the corpse
of her husband. The event here represented took place on the 7th November, 1828, near
THE SATI. 59
Raj ghat, under the Mahratta bund (an embankment raised to prevent the encroachment of
the Ganges). The woman was the wife of a rich buniyd (a corn-chandler), and she deter-
mined to burn on his funeral-pile. The magistrate sent for her, used every argument to
dissuade her, and offered her money. Her only answer was, dashing her head against the
floor, and saying, “If you will not let me burn with my husband, I will hang myself in your
court of justice.’ Ifa widow touch either food or water from the time her husband expires
until she ascend the pile, she cannot, by Hindu law, be burned with the body ; therefore the
magistrate kept the corpse forty-eight hours, in the hope that hunger would compel the woman
to eat. Guards were set over her; but she never touched any thing. A procession of people
accompanied the widow from her dwelling to the river-side; she walked in the midst, dressed
in a red garment, and the corpse, placed on a charpai, fixed on long bamboos, was carried on
men’s shoulders. About 5000 people were collected together on the banks of the Ganges:
the pile was built, and the putrid body placed upon it.
After having bathed in the river, the widow lighted a brand, walked round the pile, set it
on fire, and then mounted cheerfully : the flame caught and blazed up instantly ; she sat down,
placing the head of the corpse on her lap, and repeated several times the usual form, “ am,
Ram, sati; Ram, Ram, sati ;” i.e. “God, God, I am chaste.’ As the wind drove the fierce
fire upon her, she shook her arms and limbs as if in agony; at length she started up, and
approached the side to eseape. An Hindu—one of the police who had been placed near the
pile to see that she had fair play, and should not be burned by force—raised his sword to
strike her, and the poor wretch shrank back into the flames. The magistrate seized and
committed him to prison. The woman again approached the side of the blazing pile, sprang
fairly out, and ran into the Ganges, which was within a few yards. When the crowd and the
brothers of the dead man saw this, they called out, “Cut her down! knock her on the head
with a bamboo! tie her hands and feet, and throw her in again!’”? They rushed down to
execute their murderous intentions, when some English gentlemen and the police drove them
back. The woman drank some water, and having extinguished the fire on her red garment,
said she would mount the pile again and be burned. The magistrate placed his hand upon
her shoulder (which rendered her impure), and said, “ By your own law, having once quitted
the pile, you cannot ascend again ; I forbid it.” He sent her in a palanquin, under a guard,
c 6
60 THE SATI.
to the hospital. The crowd made way, shrinking from her with signs of horror, but re-
turned peacefully to their homes; the Hindus annoyed at her escape, the Musalmans, saying,
“Tt was better that she should escape, but it was a pity we should have lost the tamasha
(amusement) of seeing her burnt to death.” The woman said, “I have transmigrated six
times, and have been burned six times with six different husbands; if I do not burn the
seventh time, it will prove unlucky for me!” “ What good will burning do you ?’ > asked a
bystander: she replied, “The women of my husband’s family have all been satis: why should
IT bring disgrace upon them? I shall go to heaven, and afterwards re-appear on earth, and
be married to a very rich man.”
The woman was about 25 years of age, and possessed some property: had she performed
sat, her relatives would have raised a little cenotaph, or a mound of earth, by the side of the
river ; and every Hindu who passed the place returning from bathing, would have made
salam to it—a high honour to the family. The shastrs say, “ There is no greater virtue than
a chaste woman burning herself with her husband.” Mothers collect the cowries, strewn by a
sati as she walks round the pile, ere she fires it, and hang them round the necks of their sick
children, as a cure for disease.
The woman became an outcast: her own and her husband’s family would lose caste, if
they were to speak to her; no Hindi will eat with her, enter her house, or give her assist-
ance; and when she appears, they will point at her, and give her abuse. Many years after
this event took place, the woman regained caste by giving large feasts and donations to the
Brahmans.
In the Museum are five kalsas, or crowns of unglazed pottery, some of which formerly
decorated the sa#? mounds in Alopee Bagh, near Allahabad, and the rest were brought from
Ghazipir. There are also two black stones, apparently very ancient, on which figures are
carved, brought from the sat2 mound of the widow of a Brahman, at Barrah.
About two years after this event at Allahabad, the practice of sati was abolished, by
order of government.
The fine building here represented is a dhrwm-sala, or place to distribute alms, at Beni
Mahadeo Ghat; it is dedicated to a form of Mahadéo, which stands in the shiwald, or little
temple above. Under the arches in the lower part, by the side of the Ganges, is an enormous
SULTAN KHUSRU’S MAUSOLEUM. 61
figure of Ganesh; the worshippers pour oil and Ganges water over the image, with rice and
flowers, and hang chaplets of flowers around its neck : the idol is generally dripping with oil.
The red flag, at the end of a long bamboo displayed from the pipul tree, denotes the residence
of a Fakir, The temple is very picturesque, and the foliage adds to the beauty of the
scene.
SULTAN KHUSRU’S MAUSOLEUM.
THE sard’e, or caravansary, at Allahabad, built by Sultan Khusri, is a noble one, and the
gateway through which you pass to the baghicha, or garden bearing his name, is very fine. The
garden is a large space of ground, enclosed by a high wall, containing three tombs and a
baithakhana, or pavilion. These palace-like tombs, amongst which is that of Sultan Khusri’s,
are splendid mausoleums. The first and largest monument is that of the Sultan, in which he
is buried ; it is a handsome building, and within it is deposited a beautifully-illuminated kuran.
Sultan Khusru married a daughter of the Wuzeer Azim Khan; he was the son of Jehangir,
and his mother was the daughter of the Rajput Prince Bagwandas, of Amber. The other monu-
ments are those of Noorjahan and the Jodh Ba’i; the fourth building is a pavilion, in which
visitors are allowed to live for a short time, during a visit to the garden. Around the tombs
are some of the finest and most beautiful tamarind-trees. These trees, called by the natives
wmli, are generally found around or sheltering the tombs of revered or sacred characters.
The natives are impressed with a notion that it is dangerous to sleep under the tamarind-tree,
especially during the night.
Just beyond the gates of the sara’e, is a bdolt, a magnificent well, with underground
apartments ; it is a most remarkable and curious place, and the well is a noble one.
A company of pilgrims, carriers of holy water, are en route to the junction, to fill their
bottles at the ben7, or bathing-place. They are passing some of the tombs of the faithful.
In the foreground are some aloes. In India the hedges are full of this plant, and it
flowers annually.
THE GRAM GRINDER.
In front of a native village a woman is spinning, and on the right is another Hindi
woman, ?
a ogram grinder.
5S
Gram (chana, ? cicer arietinum, ?
chick pea) is used for the food of
62 HURDWAR.
horses in India. It is ground in a ehakki, or mill, which is formed of two flat circular stones,
the lower of which is generally fixed in the earth, and from its centre a peg passes through a
hole in the upper stone, and forms a pivot on which the upper stone works. The gram is put in
through this hole in the upper stone, and the flour works out at the edges between the two
stones. When there is much work to be done, two women will sit on the ground and grind
the same mill, which is placed between their legs. This is the sort of mill spoken of in
Scripture: “Two women were grinding at the mill, the one shall be taken and the other left.’’
Matt. xxiv. 41.
Two children are playing with some meal in a basket; one of them is adorned with a
number of charms, fastened on a string. The ¢a’wiz, or charm, is an armlet, to ward off evil
spirits, and all misfortune. The native beds, resting against the wall on the right, serve as
beds by night, and as resting-places by day.
HURDWAR.
Hourpwar, on the right bank of the Ganges, a place of great sanctity, is celebrated as the
resort of Hindi pilgrims, in amazing numbers. Hurdwar, or Huridwar, (the gate of Huri, or .
THE BATHING GHAT. 63
Vishnii,) is alsocalled Ganga-dwara—as at this place the Ganges, having traversed 150 miles from
its secluded mountain birth-place, and having forced a passage through the last barrier or gate
(dwara), emerges in a broad clear stream upon the plains. Hurdwar contains many fine
buildings parallel with the course of the river, some of which have their foundations in the
sacred waters. They are generally of brick, but many are of very fine white freestone. The
bed of the river is intersected with low woody islands, and is a full mile broad in the rainy
season.
A. fair takes place annually at Hurdwar, in the month of April, lasting nearly a fort-
night; that being the period chosen by pilgrims, who flock from all parts of India to perform
their ablutions in the Ganges: it is held in the bed of the river, which at that period is nearly
dry. Two or three hundred thousand people are attracted to this fair, and every twelfth year,
it is supposed a million of people assemble at this place. The scene is interesting in the
highest degree. Merchants from Calcutta meet with others from Osbeck Tartary, and
Cabul; and thousands of Seiks attend the fair. Horse merchants from Bokhara and Cabul
occupy the central parts of the dry bed of the river; those from Turkistan encamp at the
back of the town. Elephant dealers traverse the roads of the fair with their animals, morning
and evening ; and the place is crowded with camels, mules, and shawl and jewel merchants ;
in fact, merchandise of every description is collected at the fair from every part of the Eastern
world, and it is difficult to convey even a faint idea of the swarms of living creatures, men and
beasts of every description, which occupy every foot of ground during the fair.
The Hindus receive from the Brahmans a certificate of having performed the pilgrimage;
and carriers of holy water attend in great numbers to bring away the sacred stream in bottles,
carefully sealed and stamped.
calculated by the Brahmans, who aver that a great increase in the efficacy of the rite is
derivable from its performance, when Jupiteris in Aquarius, which happens every twelfth year,
or when the sun enters Aries.
A wandering mendicant in the foreground is playing on an ekfara, a one-stringed
instrument, formed of a gourd, surmounted by peacocks’ feathers—the Paganini of the
East !
BARH.
Tr scene before you represents the encampment of the Commander-in-chief at Barh, at the
foot of the hills, distant about thirty miles from Simla. Here the baggage elephants, and
camels, deposit their loads, a part of which are carried up the mountains by the hill men; the
remainder, with the carriages, palanquins, and tents, are either sent back to the plains, or
placed in godowns belonging to a Simla firm at Barh. The ladies of the party are sitting in
jampans, ready to ascend “The Hills,” as these mountains are called, from being at the foot of
the Himalaya. The jampdn is a sort of arm-chair, with a top and curtains to it, to afford
shelter from the sun or rain; long poles are affixed to it, and it is carried by four Paharis,
singular-looking little black, hill fellows, harnessed between the poles after their fashion. A
group of them are sitting near the jampans. They are little fellows, with flat ugly faces, like
the Tartar race, dressed in black woollen coarse trowsers, a blanket of the same over their
shoulders, and a rope round their waists; a black greasy round leather cap on their heads,
sometimes decorated all round the face with bunches of freshly gathered hill flowers. They
are very honest, and very idle; moreover, most exceedingly dirty. The women are good-
looking and strong. Polyandry is a common institution. Gentlemen ascend the hills either
in a yampan or on a gunth, a hill-poney, a most sure-footed, sagacious animal, who will carry
ely round the most dangerous places, where you have a wall of rock on the one side,
and a precipice onthe other. A jwmna-par goat, with its long silky ears, is lying on the ground
near a shawl goat from Cashmere. Some men of a corps of irregular horse are in attendance
on the Commander-in-Chief, and the tom-tom wala, with his drum, is seated on his blanket,
on which the people throw cowries, and sometimes paisa, small copper coins ; a tom-tom wala is
a constant attendant on every camp.
SIMLA—THE CONICAL HIUL.
Tue view now before you represents the conical hill at Simla; it was taken by Lieutenant-
Colonel Luard from his house, called The Craigs. Simla is about 7000 feet above the level of
the sea; it is not many miles from Rampore, the chief town in the valley of the Sutledge,
and is one of the favourite places of resort of Europeans during the hot season.
As the chosen retreat of Governors-General and Commanders-in-Chief, from the burning
plains of India, the place has enjoyed for some years past many considerable advantages. A.
great number of residences have been built on the hills; the roads are good; there is
a church, a school, an observatory, an amateur theatre, &. You have a glimpse of the
snowy ranges in the distance. The conical hill is crowned by Stirling Castle; and the house
66 THE GANGES.
below it was then inhabited by Colonel Birch, the Judge Advocate General.
points out the residence of his Excellency the Commander-in-Chief, and the houses below, on
the left, are those occupied by the Aid-de-camps. Two hill men are in the foreground, with
the baskets in which they carry provisions on their backs.
SIMLA.
Tur view is a continuation of Simla; and one of the residences now before you is that
of Mr. Gubbins, of the Bengal Civil Service.
The hills are covered with the finest vegetation, and the views are beautiful. The
evergreen oak flourishes in magnificence, the deodar fir rises to enormous height, and the
bright crimson-flowered rhododendron is a forest tree, not a shrub, as you have it in England.
Violets are under every rock, the wild notes of the hill birds are heard in every direction,
and health, strength, and spirits are imparted by the pure, delicious, and bracing mountain air.
FAGOO.
On the Hill of Fagoo, here represented, is a Traveller’s Bungalow, constructed of wood. A
group of Paharis, or hill men, are on the right, and in the distance are the snowy ranges
of the Himalaya. Water is procured from the khuds, as the deep narrow valleys between
the hills are called, where it is found in little rills.
THE GANGES.
Tis mountainous and picturesque scene represents the force with which the holy river
rushes downwards from the deep recesses in the mountains, until it passes the last barrier of
rocks, and emerges on the plains near Hurdwar.
The déodar, Pinus déodara, rises to a magnificent height in these regions, sometimes
measuring 160 feet: its oil, called déodar, is used by the natives as a powerful remedy
in rheumatic attacks. Leopards and bears inhabit the forests, and the musk deer is
sometimes, though but rarely found. The black and the golden eagles of the Himalaya
swoop over the precipices, and a great variety of remarkably beautiful pheasants are found
here. Specimens of all these birds may be seen in the Museum.
GANGOUTRI. 67
GANGOUTRI.
Gancaourri, the source of the most sacred river in Hindostan, is now before you. The
pious Hindu believes, that in this awful solitude Mahadéo sits enthroned in clouds and mist,
amid rocks that defy the approach of living thing, and snows that make desolation more
awful. Surrounded by gigantic peaks entirely cased in snow, and almost beyond the regions
68 GANGOUTRI.
of animal and vegetable life, an awful silence prevails, except when broken by the thundering
peals of falling avalanches. Cold, wild, and stupendous, the dazzling brilliancy of the snow is
rendered more striking by its contrast with the dark blue colour of the sky; and at night the
stars shine with a lustre they have not in a denser atmosphere. Gangoutri (Ganga avatar?),
marked 10,319 feet above the sea, is the celebrated place of pilgrimage, near to which the
Ganges issues: its course has not been traced beyond Gangoutri; for the stream, a little
farther, is entirely concealed under a glacier or iceberg, and is supposed to be inaccessible.
The mandap, or Hindu temple, built by a Ghoorka chief, is of stone, and contains small statues
of Bhagirath, Ganga, and other local deities. It stands on a piece of rock about twenty
feet higher than the bed of the Ganges; and at a little distance there is a rough wooden
building to shelter travellers. The last day of his journey the pilgrim fasts, and on his arrival
at the sacred spot, he has his whole body shaved; after which he bathes, performs funeral
obsequies in honour of his deceased ancestors, and makes presents to the Brahmans.
To perish by cold in the mountains during a pilgrimage, forms one of the methods by which
the Hindus may meritoriously put a period to their existence; it is also one of the Hindu
atonements for great offences. The pilgrim must remain seven days at Gangoutri: when
he is about to return, he obtains some of the offerings which have been presented to the idol
or idols, and brings them home to give to his friends; these consist of sweet-meats, tulst
leaves, the ashes of cow-dung, &. To obtain its full benefit, the pilgrimage must be
performed on foot. A trifle is paid to the Brahman for the privilege of taking the water,
which the Hindus believe is so pure as neither to evaporate nor become corrupted by being
kept and transported to distant places. Notwithstanding the great efficacy attributed to this
pilgrimage, Gangoutri is but little frequented, owing to the hardships to be endured, and the
great difficulties that are met with on the route; the accomplishment of it is supposed to
redeem the performer from many troubles in this world, and ensure a happy transit through
ali the stages of transmigration he may have to undergo.
The snowy peaks of Gangoutri rise in glittering whiteness high above the clouds. Look
on those mountains of eternal snow,—the rose tints linger on them, the white clouds roll
below, and their peaks are sharply set upon a sky of the brightest, clearest, and deepest blue.
Who may J describe the solitary loveliness, ’ the speaking8 quietude
q that wraps
i these forest
GANGOUTRI. 69
scenes? Who can look unmoved on the coronets of snow that crown the eternal
Himalaya ?
“ Our fathers worshipped in this mountain.” (John iv. 20.) In these awful solitudes,
where eternity is throned in “icy halls of cold sublimity,” the Hindus think “men ought to
worship.” The pilgrim gazes with delight on the aérial mountains that pour down Ganga
and Yamuna from their snow-formed caves, and enjoys those solemn feelings of natural piety
with which the spirit of solitude imbues the soul.
We have now traced the course of the Ganges, from the branch called the Hoogly,
which flows past Fort William, Bengal, to Gangoutri, its source in the Himalaya. The
Diorama is concluded, and we trust that satisfaction and pleasure have been experienced by
the audience who have accompanied us on the pilgrimage.
THE MUSEUM
is open for the inspection of those who have honoured with their presence the DioraMA oF
HINDOSTAN.
THE END.
LONDON :
A- HIStORY
OF THE
BY
Tue object of this work is to describe the numerous changes, which have taken place in the Dress of
Military Men; first, during the time when armour was worn, but more particularly since it has been
left off; with a view, by accurately delineating the various changes, to induce British Officers to reflect
without prejudice on this important subject, and to form a just estimate of what is useful, desirable, and
ornamental for a soldier’s equipment, at the smallest expense, both for officers and privates,—taking into
consideration the best mode of ensuring freedom of action for the different arms of the service, and for
health and comfort, while enduring the various climates of our colonies.
Opiniuns of the Press.
WANDERINGS OF A PILGRIM,
During Four-and-Twenty Years in the East; with Revelations of Life in the Zenana.
BY
Gh Jb
THE ENGLISH REVIEW. ;
‘“‘ The tone of bold and careless frankness in which this interesting and instructive work is written, is
/ singularly attractive. ‘ Les Indoos peints par eux-mémes ”’ might be its title.’ ”
WESTMINSTER AND FOREIGN QUARTERLY REVIEW.
‘But we must here take leave of a work in which we have felt a more than ordinary interest; the
. spirit with which the various events of a prolonged residence in the East are delineated, the beautiful
illustrations, and the graphic descriptions of scenery, will ensure for the book a favourable reception
. from every reader.”
| NAVAL AND MILITARY GAZETTE.
| ‘If we admire the book much for its external beauty, we admire it still more for its internal merit
. —for the infinite variety, curiosity, and interest of its contents.”
| THE COURT JOURNAL.
“To the authoress of the twenty-four years’ ‘ Wanderings’ has been reserved the honour of super-
seding the vivacious correspondent of Alexander Pope, and of taking the first rank as the chronicler of
’
the scenes of the Zenana. Nothing of the kind can rival the portraiture of the ‘Pilgrim.’ It is fresh,
intelligent, and minutely interesting.”
BLACKWOOD'’S LADY'S MAGAZINE.
“We affirm, without fear of contradiction, that so graphic, picturesque, and thoroughly real a
} delineation of India as a country, and its inhabitants as a people, has never before appeared.”
THE ASTATIC AND COLONIAL QUARTERLY JOURNAL.
** This, in all its phases, is a very splendid, very attractive work, and amply meriting the exceeding
favour with which it has been. received; exciting and achieving, as it assuredly has, an extended
interest and popularity throughout the reading communities of Europe and Asia; the while, receiving
Her Majesty of England's gracious patronage, along with that, to its fullest extent, of those mighty
Kings of the East, the Directors of the East India Company.”
THE BRILTANNIA AND CONSERVATIVE JOURNAL.
“ Now, the great charm and recommendation of the ‘ Wanderings’ is their clear and perfect truth.”
THE WEEKLY NEWS.
** She has gone forth with a determination of purpose which none of the perils of Life in India
could shake, and in a zealous pursuit of the truth which no sophistry could check ; and grasping alike at
the loftiest and minutest objects, has contrived to accumulate a mass of information never before com-
prehended in a single work.”’
SILAnedetosditinanetmartataiannniiaticias
AT THE MUSEUM,
AREE R .
Pp, RICHARDSON, pot ‘\ © g VY in the
and
handsomely bound
1, Westbourne Park
£2 12s. Gd.
Terrace.
OF A PILGRIM,
WANDERINGS
IN SEARCH OF
The Picturesque,
RS IN THE EAST ; WITH
DURING FOUR-AN D-T'WENTY YEA
IN THE ZENANA.
REVELATIONS OF LIFE
BY
(.
oS) geet ee
g) ’ i