Asiaticresearche 02 Asia
Asiaticresearche 02 Asia
Asiaticresearche 02 Asia
M M
iiIB141
,
^u*
tf
o 4
ASIATIC RESEARCHES.
or,
/
TRANSACTIONS
O
F
INQUIRING INTO
ASIA.
VOLUME THE SECOND.
a*
London
x>
<7H
"
IIS"*
CONTENTS
OF
THE
SECOND VOLU M E.
Pane
the Fourth on the Arabs II. Discourse the Fifth : on the Tartars III. Discourse the Sixth : on the Persians
I.
.
TMSCOURSE
IQ
43
67 77 109
f
On the Descent of the Afghans from xXxqJcms V. On the Island of Hinzuan VI. On the Indian Gross-beak VII. On the Chronology of the Hindus - - VIII. On the Cure of the Elephantiasis - - IX. On the Indian Game of Chess
IV.
14..
50
167
171
On the Mountaineers of Tripura - - XIII. On the Book of Chinese Odes XIV. On the Introduction of Arabic into Persian XV. On the Astronomy of the Hindus - - XVI. On the Indian Zodiac XVII. An Account of Nepal - XVIII. On the Cure of Persons bitten by Snakes XIX. On some Roman Coins found at Nelore XX. On two Indian Festivals, and the Sphinx XXL On the Isle of Carnicobar XXII. On the Medicinal Plants of India - XXIII. On the dissection of the Pangolin - XXIV. On the Lac Insect
-----.
-
225 2S9
3
323 331
33
3 $
------
3^7
--------361
:
353
XXVL
Ap.
I.
XXV.
XXVII.
XXVIII. On
the Spikenard of the Antients Meteorological Diary II. On the Cases in deducing the Longitude &c. III. On an Ancient Building in Hajipur IV. On some Eclipses of Jupiter3 % Satellites
------
V. On
the
There was not room in this volume for the DisserMusic of the Hindus and the Laws of Siam ; but they will appear in the Third volume, for which ample
tations on the
%*
ADVERTISEMENT.
IT may
greatly conduce to the advancement
if the
of useful knowledge,
learned Societies
on the Phi-
and mechanic;
since
in
it
is
hoped that
subjects
which must
the highest
I.
THE FOURTH
ANNIVERSARY DISCOURSE,
DELIVERED
15
FEBRUARY,
1787,
BY THE PRESIDENT.
Gentlemen,
HAD
my
to
you
on the five principal nations who have peopled the continent and islands of Asia, so as to trace, by an historical and philological analysis, the number of ancient stems from which those five branches have severally sprung, and the central region from which they appear to have proceeded ; you may, therefore,
expect that, having submitted to your consideration a few general remarks on the old inhabitants of India, I should now offer my sentiments on some other nation, who, from a similarity of language, religion, arts, and manners, may be supposed to have had an early connection with the Hindus; but, since we find some
them in all or most of those particulars, and since the difference will strike you more forcibly by an immediate and close comparison, I design at present to give a short account of a wonderful people, who seem in every
Asiatic nations totally dissimilar to
respect so strongly contrasted to the original natives
Vol.
Ii.
for the purpose of these discourses I discovered India on its largest sole, describing it as lying between Perfia and China, Tartary and Java; and, for the same
purpose, I now apply the name of Arabia, as the Arabia?: geographers often apply it, to that exteniive peninsula which the Red Sea divides from Africa, the great Assyrian river from Iran, and of which the Erythrean Sea washes the base ; without excluding any part of its western side, which would be completely maritime, if no isthmus intervened between the Mediterranean and the Sea of Kolzom that country in short I call Arabia, in which the Arabic language and letters, or such as have a near
affinity to
Arabia, thus divided from India by a vast ocean, or at least by a broad bay, could hardly have been connected in any degree with this country, until navigation and commerce had been considerably improved; yet, as the Hindus and the people of Yemen were both commercial nations in a very early age, they were probably the first instruments of conveying to the western world the gold, ivory, and perfumes of India, as well as the fragrant wood, called Alluwwa in Arabic, and Aguru in Sanscrit, which grows in the
greatest perfection in
Anam,
part
or Cockinchina.
It
is
of the Arabian idolatry might have been derived from the same source with that of the Hindus ; but such an intercourse may be considered as partial and accidental only; nor am I more convinced than 1 was fifteen years ago, when I took the liberty to animadvert on a passage in the History, of Prince Kantemir, that the Turks have any just reason for holding the coast of Yemen to be a part of
possible
too that
India,
and
calling
its
ON THE ARABS.
their
borders
modern
times,
the Othman Tartars, have severally acquired settlements ; but, with these exceptions, the natives of Hejaz and Yemen have preserved for ages
the sole dominion of their deserts and pastures, their mountains and fertile valleys thus apart from the rest of mankind, this extraordinary people have retained their primitive manners and language, features and character, as long and as remarkably as the Hindus themselves. All the genuine Arabs of Syria whom saw in the 1 knew in Europe, those of Yemen wjiom isle of Hinzuan, whither many had come from Maskat for the purpose of trade, and those of Hejaz, whom I have met in 'Bengal, form a striking contrast to the
:
Hindu inhabitants of those provinces their eyes are full of vivacity, their speech voluble and articulate, their deportment manly and dignified, their apprehension quick, their minds always present and attentive, with
:
a spirit of independence appearing in the countenances even of the lowest among them. Men will always differ in their ideas of civilization, each measuring it by the habits and prejudices of his own country ; but,
courtesv and urbanity, a love of poetry and eloquence, and the practice of exalted virtues be ajuster measure of perfect society, we have certain proof that the people of Arabia, both on plains and in cities, in republican and monarchical states, were eminently civilized for many ages before their conquest of Perfia.
if
that the ancient history of this It is deplorable, majestic race should be as little known in detail before the time of Dim Yezen, as that of the Hindus before
Vicramaditya ; for, although the vast historical work of Alnuwairi, and the Murujuldhahab or Golden Meadows 6i Ahnasuudi, contain chapters on the kings of Himyar, Ghasan, and Hirah, with lists of them and sketches of their several reigns; and although genea
4
logical
tables,
which chronology
might be
are
many compositions
most manuscripts
contradictions are found in the best of them, that we can scarce lean upon tradition with security, and must have recourse to the
many
same media
that
I
for investigating the history of the Arabs before adopted in regard to that of the Indians;
namely, their language, letters, and religion, their ancient monuments, and the certain remains of their arts; on each of which heads I shall touch very concisely, having premised that my observations will in general be confined to the state of Arabia before that singular revolution at the beginning- of the sc-venth century, the effects of which we feel at this day from the Pyrenean mountains and the Danube, to the farthest parts of the Indian Ewfircyand even to the Eastern Islands.
For the knowledge which any European who may attain of the Arabian language, we are principally indebted to the university of Ley den; for, though several Italians have assiduously laboured in the same wide field, yet the fruit of their labours has been rendered almost useless by more commodious and more accurate works printed in Holland; and, though Pocock certainly accomplished much, and was
I.
pleases
which he enjoyed-, and his theological pursuits, induced him to leave unfinished the valuable work of Maidani which he had prepared for publication; nor, even if that mine of Arabian philology had seen the light, would it have borne any comparison with
which the first Although he bert Schultens translated and and has left his wcrthy sent abroad but few of them, grandson, from whom perhaps Maidani also may be expected, the honour of publishing the rest: but the palm of glory in this branch of literathe
fifty
dissertations of Hariri,
explained,
ON THE ARABS.
ture
is
whose works are equally promethod, that they may always be consulted without fatigue, and read without languor, yet so abundant in matter, that any man who shall begin with his noble edition of the Grammar compiled by his mas^r Erpenhis, and
to Golius,
;
due
so perspicuous in
proceed with the help of his incomparable dictionary, to ftudy his Hiiloryof Taimurby Ibm Arab<shah , and shall make himself complete matter of that sublime work, will understand the learned Arabic better than
Constantinople or at Mecca. Arabic language, therefore, is almoit wholly in our power; and, as it is unqueftionably one of the moft ancient in the world, so it yields to none ever spoken by mortals in the number of its words and the precision of its phrases; but it is equally true and wonderful, that it bears not the least resemblance, either in words or the structure of them, to the Sanscrit, or great parent of the Indian dialects ; of which dissimilarity I shall mention two remarkable instances: the Sanscrit, like the Greek, Persian, and German, delights in compounds, but in a much higher degree, and indeed to such an excess, that I could produce words of more than twenty syllables, not formed ludicrously, like that by which the buffoon in Aristophanes describes a feast, but with perfect seriousness, on the most solemn occasions, and in the most elegant works ; while the Arabic, on the other hand, and all its sister dialects, ahhor the composition of words, and invariably express very complex ideas by circumlocution ; so that if a compound word be found in any genuine language of the Arabian peninsula (znunerJ.ah for instance, which occurs in the Hamasah) it may at once be pronounced an exotic.
The
Again
Tt
is
the
genius
of the
Sanscrit,
and
other languages of the same stock, that the roots of verbs be almost universally biliteral, so t\\^x.five-andtvjenty
t>
composition of the
sition
Indian
letters
compo-
of the twenty-eight Arabian letters would give near tzvo-and-tiventy thousand elements of the language: and this will demonstrate the surprising extent o it ; for, although great numbers of its roots are confessedly lost, and some, perhaps, were never in use ; yet, if we suppose ten thousand of them (without reckoning quadriliterals) to exist, and each of them to admit on\y Jive variations, one with another, in forming derivative nouns, even then a perfect Arabic dictionary ought to contain fifty thousand words, each of which may receive a multitude of changes by the The derivatives in Sanscrit are rules of grammar. considerably more numerous but a farther comparison between the two languages is here unnecessary, since, in whatever light we view them, they seem totally distinct, and must have been invented by two nor do I recollect a single different races of men word in common between them, except Sum], the plural of Siraj, meaning both a lamp and the sun ; the Sanscrit name of which is, in Bengal, pronounced Surja ; and even this resemblance may be purely acmay easily believe with the Hindus, cidental. that not even Indra himself, and his heavenly hands, much less any mortal, ever comprehended in his mind such an ocean of Words as their sacred language contains ; and with the Arabs, that no man uninspired was ever a complete master of Arabic:; in fact, no person, 1 believe, now living in Europe or Asia, can read without study an hundred couplets together, in
c
:
We
and we
are told, that the great author of the Kamus learned by accident from the mouth of a child, in a village
of Arabia, the meaning of three words, which he had long sought in vain from grammarians, and from It is by approxibooks, of the highest reputation. mation alone that a knowledge of these two venerable languages can be acquired and, with moderate auen;
ON THE ARABS.
tion,
enough of them may be known to delight and instruct us in an infinite degree. I conclude this head
with remarking, that the nature of the Ethiopic dialect seems to prove an early establishment of the Arahs in part of Ethiopia, from which they were afterwards expelled, and attacked even in their own country by the Abyssinians, who had been invited over as auxiliaries against the tyrant of Yemen about a century before the birth of Muhammed.
Of
Arabia were written, we know but little, except that the Koran originally appeared in those of Citfah, from which the modern Arabian letters, with all their elegant variations, were derived and which unquestionably had a common origin with the Hebrew or Chaldaic> but, as to the Himyaric letters, or those which we see mentioned by the name of Almusnad, we are still in total darkness ; the traveller JSiebuhr having been unfortunately prevented from visiting some ancient monuments in Yemen, which are said to have inscriptions on them. If those letters bear a strong resemblance to the Nagari, and if a story current in India be true, that some Hindu merchants heard the Sanscrit language spoken in Arabia the Happy, we might be confirmed in our opinion that an intercourse formerly subsisted between the two nations of opposite coasts, but should have no reason to believe that The they sprang from the same immediate stock. first syllable of Hamyar, as many Europeans write it, might perhaps induce an etymologist to derive the Arabs of Yemen from the great ancestor of the Indians ; but we must observe, that Himyar is the proper appellation of those Jtrabs and many reasons concur to prove that the word is purely Arabic. The similarity of some proper names on the borders
,
of India to those of Arabia, as the river Arabius, a place called Araba, a people named Aribes or Am*
B4
hies, and another called Sabai, is indeed remarkable, and may hereafter furnish me with obseivations o some importance, but not at all inconsistent with my
present ideas.
II.
It is generally
but I can offer so little ; accurate information concerning the Sab'ian faith, or even the meaning of the word, that I dare not yet speak on the subject with confidence. This at least is certain, that the people of Yemen very soon fell
into the
common,
but
fatal, error
and the firmament ; for even the third in descent from Yoktan, who was consequently as old as Nahor, took the surname of Abdushams, or Servant of the Sun; and his family, we are assured, paid particular hoother tribes worshipped the nours to that luminary planets and fixed stars; but the religion of the poets at least, seems to have been pure Theism ; and this we know with certainty, because we have Arabian verses of unsuspected antiquity, which contain pious and elevated sentiments on the goodness and justice, the power and omnipresence, of Allah, or the God. If an inscription, said to have been found on marble in Yemen, be authentic, the ancient inhabitants of that country preserved the religion of Eber, and professed a belief in miracles and a future state.
:
resemblance of the pagan Arabs and the Hindus ; but, though this may be true, yet an agreement in worshipping the sun and stars will not prove an affinity between the two nations: the powers of God,' represented as female deities, the adoration of stones, and the name of the idojl Wudd, may lead us indeed to suspect that some
are
also
tolc],
\V
that
strong
the religions
of the Hindu superstitions had found their way into Arabia; and, though we have no traces in Arabian
ON THE ARABS.
'$
history of such a conqueror or legislator as the great Sesac, who is said to have raised pillars in Yemen as
well as at the
mouth of
we
know
that Sac-xa is a title of Buddha, whom some suppose to be Woden, since Buddha was not a native of India, and since the age of Sesac perfectly agrees with that of Sacya, we may form a plausible conjecture that they -were in fact the same person who travelled eastward from Ethiopia, either as a warrior or as a law-
and whose
country of JSison, or, as the Chinese call it, Japuen, both words signifying the Rising Sun. Sacya may be derived from a word meaning power, or from another denoting vegetable food ; so that this epithet will not determine whether he was a hero or a philosopher ; but the title Buddha or wise, may induce us to believe that he was rather a benefactor than a destroyer of his species if his religion, however, was really introduced into any part of Arabia, it could not have been general in that country; and we may safely pronounce, that before the Mohammedan revolution, the noble and learned Arabs were Theists, but that a stupid idolatry prevailed amorfg the lower orders of the people.
see
we now
extended as
far as the
find no trace
any philosophy but ethics; and even their system of morals, generous and enlarged as it seems to have been in the minds of a few illustrious-chieftains, was on the whole miserably depraved for a century at least before Muhammed. The distinguishing virtues which they boasted of inculcating and practising, were a contempt of riches and even of death ; but, in the age of the Seven Poets, their liberality had deviated into mad profusion, their courage into ferocity, and their patience into an obstinate spirit of encountering fruitless dangers ; but I forbear to expatiate on the manners of the Arabs in that age, because the poems, en-
lO
titled
Almoallakaty which have appeared in our own language, exhibit an exact picture of their virtues
and their vices, their wisdom and their folly; and show what may be constantly expected from men of open hearts and boiling passions, with no law to control, and little religion to restrain them.
III. Few monuments of antiquity are preserved in Arabia* and of those few the best accounts are very uncertain ; but we are assured that inscriptions on rocks and mountains are still seen in various parts of the peninsula; which, if they are in any known language, and if correct copies of them can be procured, may be decyphered by easy and infallible rules.
The
cient
first
Memorials of Arabia, the most pleasing of all his works, two little poems in an elegiac strain, which are said to have been found, about the middle of the seventh century, on some fragments of ruined edifices in Hadramut* near Aden* and are supposed to be of an It may naturally indefinite, but very remote age. be asked, In what characters were they written? Who decyphered them ? Why were not the original letters preserved in the book where the verses are cited? What became of the marbles which Abdurrahman* then governor of Yemen* most probably sent to the
Khali/ah at Bagdad? If they be genuine, they prove the people of Yemen to have been ' herdsmen and warriors, inhabiting a fertile and well-watered country * full of game, and near a fine sea abounding with fish, 6 under a monarchical government, and dressed in c green silk, or vests of needlework/ either of their own manufacture or imported from India. The measure of these verses is perfectly regular, and the dialect undistinguishable, at least by me, from that of Kuraish ; so that, if the Arabian writers were much
addicted to literary impostures,
I
ON THE ARABS.
pect
II
them
to be
modern compositions on
the instabi-
and the consequences of irreli^ion, illustrated by the example of the Hymyaric princes ; and the same may be suspected of the first poem quoted by Schultens, which he ascribes to an
lity ol
human
greatness,
Arab
houses of the people called Thamud, be seen in excavations of rocks ; and, in the time of Tabrizi the Grammarian, a castle was extant in Yemen which bore the name of Aladbat, an old bard and warrior, who first, we are told, formed his army, thence called alkhamis, \njive parts, by which, arrangement he defeated the troops of Himyar in an expedition against Sanaa,
are also
still
The supposed
to
Of
pillars
Arabian
histories
and,
perhaps, the story has no more foundation than another told by the Greeks and adopted by Newton, that
the Arabs worshipped Urania, and even Bacchus by name, which, they say, means great in Arabic; but. where they found such a word, we cannot discover: it is true, that Beccah signifies a great and tumultuous crowd, and, in this sense, is one name of the sacred
city
commonly
called Meccah.
The Cabah, or quadrangular edifice at Meccah, is indisputably so ancient, that its original use and the
name
tions.
of
its
An Arab
it,
me
by Abraham, who,
others ascribe
gravely, that
with more probability, to Ismail, or one of his immediate descendants ; but whether it was built as a place of divine worship, as a fortress, as a sepulchre, or as a monument of the treaty between the old possessors of Arabia and the sons of Kidar, antiquaries may dispute, but no mortal can determine.
12
It is
thought by Reland to have been the mansion of some ancient 'patriarchy and revered on that account hy his posterity ; but the room in which we now are assembled, would contain the whole Arabian edifice and, if it were large enough for the dwelling-house of a patriarchal family, it would seem ill adapted to the pastoral manners of the Kedarites. A Persian author insists, that the true name of Meccah is Mahcadah, or the Temple of the Moon ; but, although we may smile at his etymology, we cannot but think it probable that the Cahah was originally designed for religious purposes. Three couplets are cited in an Arabic history of this building, which, from their extreme simplicity, have less appearance of imposture than other
they are ascribed to Asad, verses of the same kind a Tobba, or king by succession, who is generally allowed to have reigned in Yemen an hundred and twenty-eight years before Christ's birth, and they commemorate, without any poetical imagery, the magnificence of the prince in covering the holy temple with stripped cloth and fine linen, and in making keys for its gate. This temple, however, the sanctity of which was restored by Muhammed, had been strangely profaned at the time of his birth, when it was usual to decorate its walls with poems on all subjects, and often on the triumphs of Arabian gallantry and the praises of Grecian wine, which the merchants of Syria brought for sale into the
:
deserts.
the subject of Arabian very difficult to fix the chronology of the Ismailites with accuracy beyond the time of Adrian, from whom' the imposture was descended in the twenty-first degree ; and, although we have gene-
antiquity,
alogies of Alkarnah
and other Himyaric bards as high the thirtieth degree, or for a period of nine hundred as years at least, yet we can hardly depend on them so far, as to establish a complete chronological system. 4
ON THE ARABS.
12 3
l
By reasoning downwards, however, we may ascertain some points of considerable importance. The uniof country ; which settlement, by the computation admitted in Europe, must have been above three thousand six hundred yew's ago, and nearly at the time when the Hindus, under the conduct of Rama, were subduing the first inhabitants of these regions, and extending the Indian empire from Ayodhya, or Audh, as far as the isle of Sinhal,
is,
versal tradition of
Yemen
Eber,
Nuuman, king from Eber, was contemporary with Joseph ; and, if a verse composed by that prince, and quoted by Abulfeda, was really preserved, as it might easily have been, by oral tradition, it proves the great antiquity of the Arabian language and metre. This is a literal version of the couplet
of Yemen,
in the ninth generation
\
power, conductest affairs with high honours of those t who are most exalted, and whose mandates are * obeyed/ are told that, from an elegant verb in this distich, the royal poet acquired the surname of
'
*
When
thou,
who
art in
We
Now
its
easy to be
it,
prized in
which made remembered, and the good sense comwhich made it become proverbial to
brevity,
;
which we mav add, that the dialect is apparently old, and differs in three words from the idiom of Hejaz. The reasons for doubting are, that sentences and verses of indefinite antiquity are sometimes ascribed by the Arabs to particular persons of eminence ; and they even go so far as to cite a pathetic elegy of Adam himself on the death of Abel, but in vey good Arabic Such are the doubts which and correct measure. vet we have necessarily must arise on such a subject no need of ancient monuments or traditions to prove all that our analysis requires, namely that the Arabs of Hejaz and Yemen sprang from a stock entirely differ;
14
ent from that of the Hindus, and that their first establishments in the respective countries where we now
find
without observing, that, ministers instructed the Danish travellers to collect historical books in Arabic, but not to busy themselves with procuring Arabian poems, they certainly were ignorant that the only moI
when
King of Denmark's
numents of old Arabian history are collections of poetical pieces and the commentaries on them j that all memorable transactions in Arabia were recorded in verse and that more certain facts may be known by reading the Hamasah, the Dhvan of Hudhail, and the valuable work of Obaididlah, than by turning over a hundred volumes in prose, unless indeed those poems are cited by the historians as their authorities.
;
IV. The manners of the Hejazi Arabs, which have continued, we know, from the time of Solomon to the present age, were by no means favourable to the cultivation of arts-, and, as to sciences, we have no reason to believe that they were acquainted with any j for the mere amusement of giving names to stars, which were useful to them in their pastoral or predatory rambles through the deserts, and in their observations on the weather, can hardly be considered as a The only arts in which material part of astronomy. they pretended to excellence (I except horsemanship and military accomplishments) were poetry and rhetoric. That we have none of their compositions in prose before the Koran, may be ascribed, perhaps, to the little skill which they seem to have had in writing, to their, predilection in favour of poetical measure, .and to the facility with which verses are committed to memory ; but all their stories prove, that they were eloquent in a high degree, and possessed wonderful powers of speaking, without preparation in flowing
ON THE ARABS.
and
15
forcible periods. I have never been able to discover what was meant by their books called Rawasim ; but suppose that they were collections of their common or customary law. Writing was so little practised among them, that their old poems, which are now accessible to us, may almost be considered as originally unwritten ; and I am inclined to think that Samuel Johnsons reasoning on the extreme imperfection of unwritten languages, was too general since a language that is only spoken, may nevertheless be highly polished by a people who, like the ancient Arabs, make the improvement of their idiom a national concern, appoint solemn assemblies for the purpose of displaying their poetical talents, and hold it a duty to exercise their children in getting by heart their most approved compositions.
;
people of Yemen had possibly more mechanical more science; but, although their ports must have been the emporia of considerable
The
commerce between Egypt and India, or part of Persia, yet we have no certain proofs of their proficiency in navigation or even in manufactures. That the Arabs
of the Desert had musical instruments, and names for the different notes, and that they were greatly delighted with melody, we know from themselves ; but their lutes and pipes were probably very simple, and their music, I suspect, was little more than a natural and
tuneful recitation of their elegiac verses and lovesongs. The singular property of their language, in
shunning compound words, may be urged, according to Bacons idea, as a proof that they had made no progress in arts, ' which require/ says he, * a variety * of combinations to express the complex notions aris* ing from them ;' but the singularity may perhaps be imputed wholly to the genius of the language, and the taste of those who spoke it, since the old Germans who knew no art, appear to have delighted in com-
l6
poetry and oratory, one would conceive, might require as much as any meaner art
So
great,
that we cannot be surprised when we see that blaze of genius which they displayed, as far as their arms extended, when they burst, like their own dyke of Arim, through their ancient limits, and spread, like an inundation, over the great empire of Iran. That a race of Tazis, or Coursers, as the Persians call them, * who drank * the milk of camels and fed on lizards, should enter* tain a thought of subduing the kingdom oiFeridun' was considered by the General of Yezdegird's army
bility
of fortune's levity and mutabut Firdausi, a complete master of Asiatic ; manners, and singularly impartial, represents the Arab?, even in the age of Feridun, as c disclaiming any kind ' of dependence on that monarch, exulting in their
as the strongest instance
*
liberty,
'
*
*
delighting in eloquence, acts of liberality, and martial achievements, and thus making the whole earth,' says the poet, * red as wine with the blood
of canes with their tall spears.' With such -a character they were likely to conquer any country that they could invade , and, if Alexander had invaded their dominions, they
obstinate,
and
have detained you too long, gentlemen, with a nation who have ever been my favourites, and hope at our next anniversary meeting fo travel with you over a part of Asia which exhibits a race of men dis]n tinct both from the Hindus and from the Arabs. the the mean time, it shall be my care to superintend publication of your transactions ; in which if thelearned
But
OF THE ARABS.
17
in Europe have not raised their expectations too high, they will not, I believe, be disappointed my own imperfect essays I always except ; but, though my other engagements have prevented my attendance on your society for the greatest part of last year, and I have set an example of that freedom from restraint, without which no society can flourish j yet, as my few hours of leisure will now be devoted to Sanscrit literature, I cannot but hope, though my chief object be a knowledge of Hindu law, to make some discovery in other sciences, which I shall impart with humility, and which you will, I doubt not, receive with indulgence.
:
II.
FEBRUARY,
1788,
BY THE PRESIDENT.
AT
I
the close of
my last address
to you,
Gentlemen,
design of introducing to your notice a people of Asia, who seemed as different in moft respects from the Hindus and Arabs as those two nadeclared
tions
my
differ
call
mean
ter
whom we
cause
lects
with extreme diffidence on my present subject, beI have little knowledge of the Tartarean dia;
of
perfectly acquainted.
Such
evidence, however, as I reading and scrupulous enquiries, I will now lay before you ; interspersing such remarks as I could not but make on that evidence, and submitting the whole
to
Conformably to the method before adopted in describing Arabia and India, I consider Tartary also, for the purpose of this discourse, on its most extensive scale ; and request your attention whilst I trace the
largest
boundaries that are assignable to it. Conceive mouth of the Oby to that of the
2.0
Dneiper, and, bringing it back eastward across the Euxine, so as to include the peninsula of Krim, extend it along the foot of Caucasus, by the rivers Cur and Aras, to the Caspian Lake, from the opposite shore of which follow the course of the Jaihun, and the chain of Caucasean hills, as far as those of Imaus ; whence continue the line beyond the Chinese wall to the White Mountain and the country of Yetso ; skirting the borders of Persia, India, China, Corea, but including part of'Russia, with all the districts which fie between the Glacial Sea and that of Japan. M. de Guignes*
in solid
however, with a magnificent image of this wide region ; describing it as a stupendous edifice, the beams and pillars of which are many ranges of lofty hills, and the dome one prodigious mountain, to which the Chinese give the epithet of Celestial, with a considerable number of broad rivers flowing down its sides. If the mansion be so amazingly sublime, the land around it is proportionably extended, but more wonderfully diversified ; for some parts of it are encrusted with ice, others parched with inflamed air and covered with a kind of lava here we meet with immense tracts of sandy deserts, and forests almost impenetni/:
ble ; there, with gardens, groves, and meadows, perfumed with musk, watered by numberless rivulets, and abounding in fruits and flowers; and, from east
to west,
lie
many considerable
in
as valleys
them, but in mountains in the world, or at least the highest in Asia. Near one fourth in latitude of this extraordinary region is in the same charming climate with Greece, Italy, and Provence; and another fourth in that of England^ Germany, and the northern parts of France; but the Hyperborean countries can have few beauties to recommend them, at least in the present state of the
provinces, which appear comparison of the hills towering above truth are the flat summits of the highest
ON THE TARTARS.
earth's temperature.
21
To the south, on the frontiers of iron are the beautiful vales of Soghd, with the celebrated cities of Samarkand and Bokhara ; on those of Tibet are the territories of Cashghar, Khoten, CJiegil, and Khata,d\\ famed for perfumes, and for the beauty of their inhabitants ; and on those of China lies the
;
country oiChiu, anciently a powerful kingdom which name, like that of Khata, has in modern times been given to the whole Chinese empire, where such an apmust not pellation would be thought an insult. omit the fine territory of Tancut, which was known to the Greeks by the name of Serica, and considered by them as the farthest eastern extremity of the habitable globe.
We
much
as they
country thus bounded and described; but whether that word be derived, as Pliny seems to intimate, from Sacai, a people known by a similar name to the Greeks and Persians, or, as Bryant imagines, from Cuthia, or, as Colonel J'allancey believes, from words denoting navigation, or, as it might have been supposed, from a Greek root implying wrath and ferociry, ihis at least is certain, that, as India, China, Persia, Japan, are not appellations of those countries in the languages of the nations who inhabit them, so neither Scythia nor Tartars are names by which the inhabitants of the countrv now under our consideration, have ever distinguished themselves. Tataristan is, indeed, a word used by the Persians for the south-western part of Scythia, where the musk-deer is said to be common ; and the name Tatar is by some considered as that of a particular tribe ; by others, as that of a small river only ; while Turan, as opposed to Iran, seems to mean the ancient dominion of Afrasiah to the nor,h and east of the Oxus. There is nothing more idle than a debate concerning names, which, after all, are
22
THE FIFTH
DISCOUS.SE*.
of little consequence when our ideas are distinct without them. Having given, therefore, a correct notion of the country which I proposed to examine, I shall not scruple to call it by the general name of Tartary ; though I am conscious of using a term equally improper in the pronunciation and the application of it.
Tdrtary, then, which contained, according to Pliny, an innumerable multitude of nations, by whom the rest of Asia and all Europe has in different ages been overrun, is denominated, as various images have presented themselves to various fancies, the great hive of the northern Swarms, the nursery of irresistible legions, and, by stronger metaphor, the foundery of the human race ; but M. BaiVy, a wonderfully ingenious man and a. very lively writer, seems first to have considered it as the cradle of our species, and to have supported an opinion that the whole ancient world was enlightened by sciences brought from the most northern parts of Scythia, particularly from the banks of the Jenisca, or from the Hyperborean regions. All the fables of old Greece, Italy, Persia, India, he derives from the north; and it must be owned, that he maintains his paradox Great learning and with acuteness and learning. great acuteness, together with the charms of a most engaging style, were indeed necessary to render even tolerable a system which places an earthly parndise, the gardens of Hesperus, the islands of the Macares, the groves of Elysium, if not of Eden, the heaven of India, the Peristan, or fairy-land of the Persum poets, with its city of diamonds and its country of Shadcam, so named fiom Pleasure and Love, not in any one climate which the common jense of mankind considers as the seat of de-
Frozen Sea,
the Oby, in the only by that where the wild imagination of Dante led him to fix the worst of criminals in a state of punishment after
lights,
but bej'ond
the
mouth of
in a region equalled
ON THE TARTARS.
23
death, and of which he could not , he says, even think A very curious passage in a tract without shivering. of Plutarch on the figure in the moons orb, naturally induced M. Bailly to place Ogygia in the north ; and he concludes that island, as others have concluded rather fallaciously, to be the Atlantis of Plato ; but is at a loss to determine whether it was Iceland or Greenland, Spt-zbergen or New Zembla. Among so many charms it was difficult, indeed, to give a preference ; but our philosopher, though as much perplexed by an option of beauties as the shepherd of Ida, seems on the whole to think Zembla the most worthy of the golden fruit; because it is indisputably an island, and lies opposite to a gulph near a continent, from which a great number of rivers descend
into the ocean.
five nations, real
He
among
and imaginary, to fix upon that which the Greeks named Atlantes; and his conclusion in both cases must remind us of the showman at Eton, who, having pointed out in his box all the crowned heads of the world, and being asked by the schoolboys who looked through the glass, which was the Emperor, which was the Pope, which the Sultan, and which the Great Mogul, answered eagerly, which you please, young gentlemen, which you please.' His letters, however, to Voltaire, in which he unfolds his new system to his friend, whom he had not been able to convince, are by no means to be derided ; and his general proposition, that arts and sciences had their
'
source in Tartary, deserves a longer examination than can be given to it in this discourse. 1 shall, nevertheless, with your permission, shortly discuss the question under the several heads, that will present themselves in order.
Although we may naturally suppose that the numberless communities of Tartars, some of whom
are established in great cities,
C 4
24
on plains in ambulatory mansions, which they remove from pasture to pasture, must be as different in their
features as in their dialects
;
yet,
among
those
who
may
discern a family-likeness,
and countenance, and in that configuration of lineaments which we generally call a Tartar face ; but, without making anxious enquiries, whether all the inhabitants of the vast region before described have similar features, we may conclude from those whom we have seen, and from the original portraits of Taimur and his descendants, that the Tartars in general differ wholly in complexion and countenance from the Hindus and from the Arabs : an observation which tends, in some degree, to confirm the account given by modern Tartars themselves of their Unhappily, their descent from a common ancestor. lineage cannot be proved by authentic pedigrees, or
historical
even those
their
their writings
extant,
is it
possible to distinguish
genuine traditions from those of the Arabs, whose At religious opinions they have in general adopted. the beginning of the fourteenth century, Khizajah Rash id, surnamed Fadluliah, a native of Kazvin, compiled his account of the Tartars and JSIongals from the papers of one Pidad, whom the great grandson of Holacu had sent into Tataristan for the sole purpose and the comof collecting historical information mission itself shows how little the Tartarian princes From this really knew of their own origin. work of Rashid, and from other materials, Abut. ghazi, king of Kfr&arezm, composed in the M>gui language his Genealogical History, which; having been purchased from a merchant of Bokhara bv some Swedish officers, prisoners of war in Siberia, has found its way into several Eunopean tongues it contains much valuable matter, but, like
;
:
ON THE TARTARS.
all
2$
Muhammedan
individual sovereigns
and,
if
Baron
De
ed a large sum, we should probably have found that, it begins with an account of the deluge, taken from the Koran, and proceeds to rank Turc y Chin, Tatar, and The genuine tradiJMongal, among the sons ot Yafet. tional history of the Tartars, in all the books that I have inspected, seems to begin with Oghuz, as that of the Hindus does with Rama : they place their miraculous hero and patriarch four thousand years before Chengiz Khan, who was born in the year 1 164, and with whose reign their historical period commences.
It
is
Mr.
Bai/Iy,
who makes
fre-
quent
rived Ogyges from Oghuz, and Atlas from Altai, or the Golden Mountain of Tartarv : the Greek terminations might have been rejected from both words ; and a mere transposition of letters is no difficulty with an
etymologist.
My
remarks
in
this address,
Gentlemen,
will
be
confined to the period preceding Chengiz ; and, although the learned labours of M. de Gui<jnes, and the Fathers Visdclou, Demailla, and Gauhil, who have
use of their Chinese literature, of the Tartars from a very early age ; yet the old historians ot China were not only foreign, but generally hostile to them, and for both those reasons, either through ignoranee or malignity, may be suspected of misrepreif they speak truth, the senting their transactions
exhibit probable accounts
:
made an incomparable
ancient
of the Tartars presents us, like most other histories, with a series of assassinations,
history
and
all
of
to
Selfish
ambition.
give
you
26
the occasion called for it ; and will barely observe, that the first king of the Hyumuus, or Huns, began his reign, according to Flsdehu, about three thousand Jive hundred and sixty years ago, not long after the time fixed in my former discourses for the first regular establishments
several countries.
first enquiry concerning the languages and of the Tartars, presents us with a deplorable void, or with a prospect as barren and dreary as that The Tartars, in general, had no of their deserts! literature (in this point all authorities appear to conthe Turcs had no letters ; the Huns, according cur) to Procop'ius, had not even heard of them ; the magnificent Chengiz, whose empire included an area of near eighty square degrees, could find none of his own Mongols, as the best authors inform us, able to write his dispatches ; and Taimur, a savage of strong natural parts, and passionately fond of hearing histories read to him, could himself neither write nor read. It is true that Ihnu Arabshah mentions a set of characters called DUberjin, which were used in Khata
I.
Our
letters
says,
to
consist of forty -one letters, a distinct symbol being * appropriated to each long and short vowel, and ' consonant hard or soft, or otherwise varied to each in pronunciation ;' but Khata was in Southern Tarand, from his descriptary, on the confines of India of the characters there in use, we cannot but tion suspect them to have been those of Tibet, which are manifestly Indian, bearing a greater resemblance to The learned those of Bengal than to Devanagari. eloquent Arab adds, * that the Tartars of Khata and
;
wiite, in the
Dilberjin letters,
all
their
tales
and
<
poems, and miscellanies, histories, diplomas, records of state and justice, the laws their composiof Chengix, their public registers, and their
their journals,
OV THE TARTARS.
Khata must have been a polished, and even a lettered nation ; and it may be true, without affecting the
general position, that the Tartars were illiterate ; but Ibnu Arabshah was a professed rhetorician, and it is impossible to read the original passage without full conviction that his object in writing it was to display his power of words in a flowing and modulated pe-
of them, * have a system of fourteen * letters only, denominated, from themselves, Oighuri\ and those are the characters which the ongals are supposed, by most authors, to have borrowed. Almlghazi tells us only, that Chengiz employed the natives of Eighur as excellent penmen ; but the Chinese assert, that he was forced to employ them, because he had no writers at all among his natural-born subjects and we are assured by many, that Kublaikhan ordered letters to be invented for his nation by a Tibet'ian, whom he rewarded with the dignity of chief Lama. The small number of Eighuti letters might induce us to believe that they were Zend ok Pahlavi, which must have been current in that country when it was governed by the sons of Feridim ; and, if the alphabet ascribed to the Eighurians by M. Des Hautesrayes be
riod.
He
Oighur, as he
letters
safely decide, that in many of its resembles both the Zend and the Syriac, with a remarkable difference in the mode of connecting them ; but, as we can scarce hope to see a genuine
correct,
we may
it
specimen of them, our doubt must remain in regard to their form and origin. The page exhibited by Hyde as Khatayan writing, is evidently a sort of broken Cufick ; and the fine manuscript at Oxford, from which it was taken, is more probably a Mendean work on some religious subject, than, as he imagined, a code of Tartarian laws. That very learned man appears to have made a worse mistake, in giving us for Mongal characters a page of writing which has the appearance of
Japanese, or mutilated Chinese
letters.
^3
we have every
it
reason
to believe,
cannot be
thought wonderful that their languages, like those of America, should have been in perpetual fluctuation,
and
that
more than
fifty
dialects, as
and China, by the many kindred tribes or their sevebranches, which are enumerated by Abulghazi. What those dialects are, and whether they really sprang from a common stock, we shall probably learn from Mr. Pallas, and other indefatigable men employed by the Russian court; and it is from the Russians tlut we must expect the most accurate information concerning
their Asiatic subjects
:
if
their
the result of them will prove that all the languages properly Tartarian, arose from one common source ; excepting always the jargons of such wanderers or mountaineers as, having long been divided from the
nation, must, in a course of ages, The have framed separate idioms for themselves.
only Tartarian language of which I have any knowledge, is the Turkish of Constantinople, which is however so copious, that whoever shall know it perfectly, will easily understand, as we are assured by intelligent authors, the dialects of Tataristan ; and we may collect from Abulghazi, that he would find little difficulty in the Calmac and the Mogul. I will not offend your ears by a dry catalogue of similar words in those different languages; but a careful investigation has convinced me that, as the Indian and Arabian tongues
from a common parent, so those of Tartary might be traced to one ancient It stem essentially diffenng from the two others. by Abulghazi, that appears, indeed, from a story told the Virats and the Mongols could not understand each other; but no more can the Danes and the English, yet their dialects, beyond a doubt, are branches of
are severally descended
ON THE TARTARS.
the same Gothic tree.
2$
Moguls, in which some histories of Taimur and his descendants were originally composed, is called in India, where a learned native set me right when I used another word, Turd ; not that it is precisely the same with the Turkish of the Othmanlus, but the two idioms differ, perhaps, less than Swedish and German, or Spanish and Portuguese, and certainly less than Welsh and Irish, In hope of ascertaining this point, I have long searched in vain for the original works ascribed to Taimur and Baher ; but all the Moguls with whom I have conversed in this country, resemble the crow in one of their popular fables, who, having long affected to walk like a pheasant, was unable, after all, to acquire the gracefulness of that elegant bird, and in the mean They have not time forgot his own natural gait. learned the dialect of Persia, bu thave wholly forgotten that of their ancestors. A very considerable part of the old Tartarian language, which in Asia would probably have been lost, is happily preserved in Europe ; and, if the groundwork of the western Turkish, when separated from the Persian and Arabic, with which it is embellished, be a branch of the lost Oghu%ian tongue, I can assert with confidence that it has not the least resemblance either to Arabic or Sanscrit^ and must have been invented by a race of men wholly distinct from the Arabs or Hindus. This fact alone oversets the system of M. Badly, who considers the Sanscrit, of which he gives in several places a most erroneous account, as * fine monument of his prime 1 vol Scythians, the preceptors of mankind, and plant* ers of a sublime philosophy even in India j' for he holds it an incontestable truth, that a language -which is dead, supposes a nation which is destroyed; and he seems to think such reasoning perfectly decisive of the question, without having recourse to astronomical arguments, or the spirit of ancient institutions. For my parr, 1 desire no better proof than that which the
dialect of the
The
30
and
the
language of the Brahmans affords, of an immemorial total difference between the Savages of the Mountains > as the old Chinese justly called the Tartars,
and
of
studious, placid,
contemplative
inhabitants
sun and of fire,' sa) s he, must necessarily have arisen in a cold region ; therefore it must have been
foreign to India, Persia, Arabia
;
therefore
it
must
No man, I behave beep derived from Tariary? lieve, who has travelled in winter through Bahar, or has even passed a cold season at Calcutta within the tropic, can doubt that the solar warmth is often desirable by all, and might have been considered as adorable
or that the
the salutations which it receives from the Persian and Indian poets ; not to rely on certain historical evidence, that Antarah, a
return of spring deserves
and amazing population of his primitive race, in the icy regions of the north, he takes refuge in the hypothesis ofM.Bujfon, who imagines that our whole globe was at first of a white heat, and has been gradually cooling from the poles to the equator; so that the Hyperborean countries had once a delightful temperature ; and Siberia itself was even
to the voluntary settlement hotter than the climate of our temperate zones', that is, was in too hot a climate, by his first proposition, for
That the temperadie primary worship of the sun. ture of countries has not sustained a change in the
lapse of ages,
I
will
by no means
insist
but we can
hardly reason conclusively from a variation of temperature to the cultivation and diffusion of science. If as rnanv female elephants and tigresses -as we now find in
ON THE TARTARS.
gt
Bengal had formerly littered in the Siberian forests, and the young, as the earth cooled, had sought a genial warmth in the climate of the south, it would not follow that other savages, who migrated in the same direction, and on the same account, brought religion and philosophy, language and writing, art and science,
into the southern latitudes.
We
are told
by Abulghazi
gion of human creatures, or the pure adoration of one Creator, prevailed in Tartary during the first generations of Yafet, but was extinct before the birth of
Ogliuz,
who
restored
Mongah and
;
dominions ; that, some the Turcs relapsed but that Chengiz was a Theist,
it
in his
and, in a conversation with the Muhammedan doctors, admitted their arguments for the being and attributes of the Deity to be unanswerable, while he contested the evidence of their prophet's legation. From old Grecian authorities we learn that the Massage^e worshipped the sun ; and the narrative of an embassy from Justin to the Rhakan, or emperor, who then resided in a fine vale near the source of the Irtish, mentions the Tartarian ceremony of purifying the Roman ambassadors by conducting them between two fires. The Tartars of that age are represented as adorers of the four elements > and believers in an invisible spirit, to whom they sacrificed bulls and rams. Modern travellers relate, that, in the festivals of some Tartarian tribes, they pour a few drops of a consecrated liquor on the statues of their gods j after which an attendant sprinkles a little of what remains three times toward the south, in honour of fire ; toward the west and east, in honour of water and air j and as often toward the north, in honour of the earth, which contained the reliqucs of their deceased ancestors. Now all this may be very true, without proving a national affinity between the Tarta
32
and Hindus
ges,
Arabs adored the planets and the Arabs had carved ima; and made libations on a black stone ; the Arabs
for the
turned in prayer to different quarters of the heavens ; yet we know with certainty, that the Arabs are a distinct race from the Tartars ; and we might as well infer that they were the same people, because they had each their Nomades, or wanderers for pasture and because the Turcmans, described by Ibnuarabshah, and by him called Tatars, are, like most Arapastoral and warlike, hospitable and wintering and summering on different plains, and rich in herds and flocks, horses and camels but this agreement in manners proceeds from the similar nature of their several deserts, and their similar choice of a free rambling life, without evincing a community of origin, which they could scarce have had without preserving some remnant at least of a common language.
bian tribes,
generous,
Many Lamas, we are assured, or priests of Buddha have been found settled in Siberia ; but it can hardly be doubted that the Lamas had travelled thither from Tibet ; whence it is more than probable, that the religion of the Bauddhas was imported into Southern, or Chinese Tartary ; since we know that rolls of Tibetian writing have been brought even from the borders of the Caspian. The complexion of Buddha himself, which, according to the Hindus, was between white and ruddy, would perhaps have convinced M. Bail/)', had he known the Indian tradition, that the last great legislator and god of the east was a Tartar; but the Chinese consider him as a native of India ; the Brahmans insist that he was born in a forest near Goya ; and many reasons may lead us to suspect, that his religion was carried from the west and the south, to those eastern and northern countries, in which it prevails. On the whole, we meet
',
ON THE TARTARS.
33
with few or no traces in Scythia of Indian rites and superstitions, or of that poetical mythology with
are decorated ; and we may allow the Tartars to have adored the Sun with more reason than any southern people, without admitting
them
to
even doubt the originality of four elements, which forms a principal part of the ritual introduced by Zeratusht, a native of Rai in Persia, born in the reign of Gushtasp, whose son Pashuten is believed by the Parsis to have resided long in Tartary, at a place called Cangidiz, where a magnificent palace is said to have been built by the father of Cyrus, and where the Persian prince, who was a zealot in the new faith, would naturally have disseminated its tenets among the neighbouring Tartars.
universal
their veneration for the
We may
Of
no more
we find Ara-
bia; nor would the name of a philosopher and a. Scythian have ever been connected, if Anacharsis had not visited Athens and Lydia for that instruction, which his birth-place could not have afforded him but Anacharsis was the son of a Grecian woman, who had taught him her language ; and he soon learned to despise his own. He was unquestionably a man of a iound understanding and fine parts ; and, among the lively sayings which gained him the reputation of a wit even in Greece, it is related by Diogenes Laert'ms, that, when an Athenian reproached him with being a Scythian, he answered, ' My country is, indeed, a dis6 grace to me, but thou art a disgrace to thy country.' What his country was, in regard to manners and civil
:
duties,
we may
his return
it; for
when, on
introducino the
Vol.
II.
34
killed
on a hunting party with an arrow, shot by his Such was the a Scythian, chieftain. philosophy of M. Baillfs Atlantes, the first and most We are assured, however, by enlightened of nations
own
the learned author of the Dabistan, that the Tartars under Chengiz, and his descendants, were lovers of
truth, and
violation of
De
the
who might
parent of all virtues, to the Huns ; and Strabo, only mean to lash the Greeks by praising
merely to satirize his luxurious countrymen, informs us that the nations of Scythia deserve the praise due
to wisdom, heroic friendship, and justice; and this
praise we may readily allow them on his authority, without supposing them to have been the preceptors of mankind.
As to the laws of Zamolxis, concerning whom we know as little as of the Scythian Deucalion, or of Abaris the Hyperborean, and to whose story even Herodotus gave no credit, I lament, for many reasons,
that if ever they existed they have not been preserved.
It is certain that
who
them
adopted and enforced by but they seem to have been a common or traditionary law, and were probably not reduced into writing till Chengiz had conquered a nation who were
institutions were afterwards
Taimur
able to write.
III. Had the religious opinions and allegorical fables of the Hindus been actually borrowed from Sythia,
travellers
ancient
monuments of them
such
as pieces
ON THE TARTARS.
and
inscriptions
25
on pillars or in caverns, analogous to remain in every part of the western those which peninsula, or to those which many of us have seen in Bahar and at Banaras ; but (except a few detached
the only great monuments of Tartarian antiquity are a line of ramparts on the west and east of the Caspian, ascribed indeed by Ignorant Muselmans to
idols)
Yajuj and Majuj, or Gog and Magog ; that is, to the Scythians , but manifestly raised by a very different
nation, in order to stoptheir predatory inroads through The Chinese wall was built, the passes of Caucasiis.
or finished, on a similar construction and for a similar purpose, by an emperor, who died only two hundred and ten years before the beginning of our sera ; and the other mounds were very probably constructed by the old Persians, though, like ma'ny works of unknown
Macedomore ancient hero, supposed by some to have been Jemshld* It is related, that pyramids and tombs have been found in Tatarlstan, or Western Scythia, and some remnants of edifices in the lake Satorigin, they are given to Secander, not the
nian, but a
that vestiges of a deserted city have been recently discovered by the Russians near the Caspian Sea, and. the Mountain of Eagles ; and that golden ornaments
son-,
and
utensils, figures
metal,
iron,
of elks and other quadrupeds in weapons of various kinds, and even imple-
ments for mining, but made of copper instead of have been dug up in the country of the Tshudes, whence M. Badly infers, with great reason, the high antiquity of that people but the high antiquity of the Tartars, and their establishment in that country near four thousand years ago, no man disputes; we are inquiring into their ancient religion and philosophy; which neither ornaments of gold, nor tools of copper, will prove to have had an affinity with the religious rites and the sciences of India. The golden utensils might possibly have been fabricated by the Tartars
:
36
themselves
ried
but
it is
embassies were sent to the kings of Eighur. Towards the end of the tenth century the Chinese emperor dispatched an ambassador to a prince, named Erslan, which, in the Turkish of Constantinople, signifies a lion, who resided near the Golden Mountain ; in the
station, perhaps, where the Romans had been received in the middle of the sixth century. The Chinese on his return home reported the Eighuris to be a grave people, with fair complexions, diligent workmen, and ingenious artificers not only in gold, silver, and iron,
same
fine stones
but
these,
times were comparatively modern 5 and, even if we should admit that the Eighuris, who are said to have been governed for a period of two thousand years by an Idecut, or sovereign, of their own race, were in some very early age a literary and polished nation, it would prove nothing in favour of the Huns, Turcs, Mongals, and other savages to the north of Pekin, who seem in all ages before Muhammed, to have been
equally ferocious and
illiterate.
Without
have been found near the Caspian, it would be imposible ro give a correct opinion concerning them ; but one of them, described as written on blue silky paper in letters of gold and silver, not unlike Hebrew, was probably a Tibetian composition of the same kind with that which lay near the source of the Irtish, and of which Cassiano, I believe, made the first accurate version. Another, if we mayjudge from the description of it, vyas probably modern Turkish', and none of them could have been of great antiquity.
IV.
From
ancient
monuments,
therefore,
we have
; ;
37
Tartars were themselves well-inthat they instructed the world nor have we any stronger reason to conclude from their general manners and character, that they had made an early proficiency in arts and sciences. Even of poetry, the most universal and most natural of the fine arts, we find no genuine specimens ascribed to them, except some horrible war-songs expressed in Persain by Alt of Ye&d, and possibly invented by him. After the conquest of Persia by the Mongals, their princes indeed encouraged learning, and even made astronomical observations at Samarkand as the Turc became polished by mixing with the Persians and Arabs, though their very riature, as one of their own writers confesses, had before been like an incurable distemper, and their minds clouded ivith ignorance : thus also the Mancheu monarchs of China have been patrons of the
much
less
if
he be now
living, a fine
In
all
mans, who, before they had subdued Greece, were little better than tigers in war, and fauns or syhmns
in science
and
art.
Before
I left
Europe,
had
insisted in conversation,
commentaries, for Tartarian king of his age could write at all ; and, in support of my opinion, I had cited lbnuArabshah, who, though justly hostile to the savage, by whom his native city, Damascus, had been ruined, yet praises his talents and the real greatness of his mind; but adds, " He was wholly illiterate ; he neither read nor wrote " any thing; and he knew nothing of Arabic " though of Persian, Turkish, and the Mogul dialect, ** he knew as much as was sufficient for his purpose,
Davy, was never Casar wrote one very plain reason, that no
least
not as
D3
3$
<c *'
by memory to correct an inaccurate This passage had no effect on the transla' cr, whom great and learned men in India had assured, it seems, that the zvork was authentic, by which he meant composed by the conqueror himself: but the great in this country might have been jinlearned, or the learned might not have been great enough to answer any leading question in a manner that opposed
* c
reader."
sive evidence.
whom we
all
On my part, I will name a Muselman, know, and who has enough both of
:
Jang informed me of
of sense
his
own
in Hindustan believed the work to have been composed by Taimur, but that his favourite, surnamed Hindu Shah, was known to have written that book and
many
:
confidential
ON THE TARTARS.
39
self, before he departed from Bengal, told me, that he was greatly perplexed by finding in a very accurate and old copy of the Tuzuc, which he designed
to republish with considerable additions, a particular account, written wiqestio?iably by Taimur, of his own No evidence, therefore, has been adduced death. to shake my opinion, that the Moguls and Tartars, before their conquest of India and Persia, were wholly unlettered ; although it may be possible, that, even without art or science, they had, like the Huns, both warriors and lawgivers in their own country some centuries before the birth of Christ.
If learning was ever anciently cultivated in the region to the north of India, the seats of it, I have reason to suspect must have been Eighur, Cashghar, Khata, Chin, Tancut, and other countries of Chinese
Tartary, which lie between the thirty-fifth and fortyfifth degrees of northern latitude ; but I shall, in another discourse, produce my reasons for supposing that those very countries were peopled by a race allied to the Hindus, or enlightened at least by their viciyet in Tancut, which by nity to India and China some is annexed to Tibet, and even among its old inhabitants, the Seres, we have no certain accounts of uncommon talents or great improvements they were famed, indeed, for the faithful discharge of moral duties, for a pacific disposition, and for that longevity which is often the reward of patient virtues and a calm temper ; but they are said to have been wholly
, :
and even
to
commerce
many
branches of natural philosophy were cultivated in Cam-cheu, then the metropolis of Serica.
We may readily
believe those,
who
40
some tribes of wandering Tartars had real skill in applying herbs and minerals to the purposes of medicine, and pretended to skill in magic ; but the general character of tfeeir nation seems to have been this : They were professed hunters or fishers, dwelling on that account in forests or near great rivers, under huts or rude tents, or in waggons drawn by their cattle
from
station to station ; they were dexterous archers, excellent horsemen, bold combatants, appearing often
to flee in disorder for the sake of renewing their attack with advantages; drinking the milk of mares, and eating the flesh of colts ; and thus in many respects resembling the old Arabs, but in nothing more than in their love of intoxicating liquors, and in nothing less than in a taste for poetry and the improvement of their language.
Thus has it been proved, and, in my humble opinion, beyond controversy, that the far greater part of Asia has been peopled and immemorially possessed by
whom, for want of better Hindus, Arahs, and Tartars: each of them divided and subdivided into an infinite number of branches, and all of them so different in form and features, language, manners, and religion, that,, if they sprang originally from a common root, they must have been separated for ages. Whether more than three primitive stocks can be found, or, in other words, whether the Chinese, Japanese, and Persians, are entirely distinct from them, or formed by their intermixture, I shall hereafter, if your indulgence to me To what conclusions continue, diligently inquire.
three considerable nations,
call
names, we may
these inquiries will lead, I cannot yet clearly discern; hut, if they lead to truth, we shall not regret our journey through this dark region of ancient history,
which, while we proceed step by step, and follow itself, ever}' glimmering of certain light that presents
in
ON THE TARTARS.
41
those false rays and luminous vapours which mislead Asiatic travellers, by an appearance of water, but are found on a near approach to
we must beware of
be
deserts of sand.
III.
THE
SI
XTH
DISCOURSE:
ON THE
PERSIANS.
DELIVERED
19
FEBRUARY, 1-89.
Gentlemen,
vast
mountains and
we
travelled
year with no perfect knowledge of our course, and request you now to accompany me on a literary jourlast
ney through one of the most celebrated and most a country, the hisbeautiful countries in the world tory and languages of which, both ancient and modern, I have long attentively studied, and on which I may without arrogance promise you more positive information than I could possibly procure on a nation so disunited and so unlettered as the Tartars : I mean that which Europeans improperly call Persia, the name of a single province being applied to the whole empire of Iran, as it is correctly denominated
:
by
the present natives of it, and by the learned Mus elmans who reside in these British territories. To give you an account of its largest boundaries, agreeably to my former mode of describing India, Arabia, and
44
Tartary, between which it lies, let us begin with the source of the great Assyrian stream Euphrates (as the Greeks, according to their custom, were pleased to
miscall the Forat)
in the
line
and thence descend to its mouth Green Sea, or Persian Gulf, including in our some considerable districts and towns on both
;
named, and other Iranian provinces, we come to the Delta of the Sindhu or Indus whence ascending to the mountains of Cashghar, we discover its fountains and those of the Jaihun, down which we are conduct-,
ed to the Caspian, which formerly perhaps it entered, though it loses itself now in the sands and lakes of Khzvarezm. We next are led from the Sea of Khozar, by the banks of the Cur, or Cyrus, and along the Caucasean ridges to the more of the Euxine, and thence by the several Grecian Seas to the point whence we took our departure, at no considerable distance from the Mediterranean. cannot but include the Lower Asia within this outline, because it was un-
We
questionably a part of the Persian, if not of the old Assyrian empire ; for we know that it was under the dominion of Caikhosrau ; and Diodorus, we find, asserts, that the kingdom of Troas was dependent on Assyria, since Priam implored and obtained succours from his emperor Teutames, whose name approaches nearer to Tahmuras than to that of any other Assyrian monarch, Thus may we look on Iran as the noblest island (for so the Greeks
or at least as the noblest peninfula on this habitable globe ; and if M. Bailly had fixed on it as the Atlantis of Plato, he might have supported his
have called
it)
opinion with far stronger arguments than any that he has adduced in favour of Nezv Zembla. If the account, indeed, of the Atlantes be not purely an Egyptian, or an Utopian fable, I should be more inclined to place them Iran than in any region with which I am ac-
quainted.
ON THE PERSIANS.
Ir
45
may seem
distinguished an empire should be yet so imperfectly known ; but very satisfactory reasons may be assigned
them are the superficial knowledge of the Greeks and Jews, and the loss of Persian archives, or historical compoThat the Grecian writers, before Xenophon, sitions. had no acquaintance with Persia, and that all their
for
our ignorance of
it
the principal of
accounts of it are wholly fabulous, is a paradox too extravagant to be seriously maintained but their connection with it in war or peace had, indeed, been ge:
kingdoms under feudaPersian emperor, whose life and character they seem to have known with tolerable accuracy, was the great Cyrus, whom I call,
nerally confined to bordering
;
tory princes
and the
first
without fear of contradiction, Caikhosrau ; for I shall then only doubt that the Khosrau of Firdausi was the Cyrus of the first Greek historian, and the hero of the oldest political and moral romance, when I doubt that Louis Qiiatorze and Lewis the Fourteenth were one and the same French King. It is utterly incredible that two different princes of Persia should each have been born in a foreign and hostile territory should each have been doomed to death in his infancy by his maternal grandfather in consequence of portentous dreams, real or invented ; should each have been saved by the remorse of his destined murderer and should each, after a similar education among herdsmen, as the son of a herdsman, have found means to revisit his paternal kingdom > and having delivered it, after a long and triumphant war, from the tyrant who had invaded it, should have restored it to the summit of power and magnificence Whether so romantic a story, which is the subject of an epic poem, as majestic and entire as the Iliad, be historically true, we may feel perhaps an inclination to doubt ; but it cannot with reason be denied, that the outline of i" related to a single hero, whom the Asiatics, con
!
46
ing with the father of European history, described according to their popular traditions by his true name, which the Greek alphabet could not express nor will a difference of names affect the question, since the Greeks had little regard for truth, which they sacrificed willingly to the graces of their language, and the nicety of their ears ; and, if they could render foreign words melodious, they were never solicitous to make them exact ; hence they probably formed Cambyses from Cambakhsh, or granting desires, a. title rather than a name ; and Xerxes from Shiruyi, a prince and warrior in the Shahnamah, or from Shirshah, which might also have been a title ; for the Asiatic princes
:
titles
or epithets at dif;
on
different occasions
custom which we have seen prevalent in our own times both in Iran and Hindustan, and which has been a source of great confusion even in the scriptural Both Greeks accounts of Babylonian occurrences. and Jeivs have in fact accommodated Persian names and both seem to have disto their own articulation regarded the native literature of Iran, without which they could at most attain a general and imperfect knowledge of the country. As to the Persians themselves, who were contemporary with the Jews and Greeks, they must have been acquainted with the history of their own times, and with the traditional accounts of past ages ; but for a reason, which will pre;
Cayumers as the founder of their empire ; and, in the numerous distractions which followed the overthrow of Dara, especially in the great revolution on the defeat of Yezdegird, their civil histories were lost, as those of India have unhappily been, from the solicitude of the priests, the only depositaries of their learning, to preserve their books of law and religion at the expence of all others. Hence it has happened, that nothing remains of genuine Persian his:ory before the dynasty
ON THE PERSIANS.
47
of Sasan, except a few rustic traditions and fables, which furnished materials for the Shahnamah, and which are still supposed to exist in the Pahlavi language. All the annals of the Pishdadi, or Assyrian race, must be considered as dark and fabulous ; and those of the Cayanl family, or the Medes and Persians, as heroic and poetical ; though the lunar eclipses, said to be mentioned by Ptolemy, fix the time of Gushtasp, the prince by whom Zeratush was protected, of the Parthian kings descended from Arshac or Arsaces,
we know little more than the names; but the Sasanis had so long an intercourse with the emperors of Rome and Byzantium, that the period
of their dominion may be called an historical age. ]n attempting to ascertain the beginning of the Assyrian empire, we are deluded, as in a thousand instances, by names arbitrarily imposed. It had been settled
by chronologers,
in
that the
first
;
Persia
that it rose in the first century afbut unable by his own calculations to extend it farther back than seven hundred and ninety years before Christ, rejected part of the old system, and adopted the rest of it ; concluding, that the Assyrian monarchs began to reign about two hundred years after Solomon, and that, in all preceding ages, the government of Iran had been divided into several o _ petty states and principalities. Of this opinion 1 confess myself to have been ; when, disregarding the wild chronology of the Mnsehnans and Gahrs, I had allowed the utmost natural duration to the reigns of eleven Pishdadi kings, without being able to add more than a hundred years to Newton s computation. It seemed indeed unaccountably strange, that, although
ter
some of opinion,
the Flood,
....
Ahraham had found a regular monarchy in Egypt although the kingdom of Yemen had just pretensions
;
to very high antiquity; although the Chinese, in the twelfth century before our sera, had made approaches
48
form of their extensive dominion ; and although we can hardly suppose the first Indian monarchs to have reigned less than three thousand years ago, yet Persia, the most delightful, the most compact, the most desirable country of them all, should have remained for so many ages unsettled
at least to the present
and disunited. A fortunate discovery, for which I was first indebted to Mir Muhammed Husain, one of the most intelligent Musehnans in India, has at once dissipated the cloud, and cast a gleam of light on the primeval history of Iran and of the human race, of which I had long despaired, and which could hardly have dawned from any other quarter.
The
rare
and interesting
tract on
twelve different
Mohammedan
Mohsan, but distinguished by the assumed surname of Fani, or Perishable, begins with a wonderfully curious chapter on the religion of Hushang, which was long anterior to that of Zeratnsht, but had contito be secretly professed by many learned Pereven to the author's time ; and several of the most eminent of them, dissenting in many points from the Gabrs, and persecuted by the ruling powers of their country, had retired to India ; where they compiled a number of books, now extremely scarce, which Mohsan had perused, and with the writers of which, or with many of them, he had contracted an intimate friendship. From them he learned, thac a powerful monarchy had been established for ages in Iran before the accession of Cayumers ; that it was
nued
sians
called the
will
soon be mentioned
seven or eight are only named in the Dabistan, and among them Mahbul, or Malm Beli, had raised If we their empire to the zenith of human glory.
whom
ON THE PERSIANS.
49
can rely on this evidence, which to me appears unexceptionable, the Iranian monarchy must have been the oldest in the world ; but it will remain dubious to which of the three stocks Hindu, jlrahan, or Tartar, the first Kings of Iran belonged, or whether they sprang from a fourth race distinct from any
of the others; and these are questions which we shall be able, J imagine, to answer precisely, when we have carefully inquired into the languages and letters,
religion
and
sciences,
1.
In the
going to of Iran,
for
offer
I
new and important remarks which I am on the ancient languages and characters am sensible that you must give me credit
on
this occasion,
it is imyour indulpossible to prove; for I should ill deserve gent attention, if I were to abuse it by repeating a dry list of detached words, and presenting you with a vocabulary instead of a dissertation ; but, since I have no system to maintain, and have not suffered imagination to delude my judgment ; since I have habituated myself to form opinions of men and things from evidence, which is the only solid basis of civil, as experiment is of natural knowledge ; and since I have maturely considered the questions which I mean to discuss, you will not, I am persuaded, suspect my testimony, or think that 1 go too far, when I assure you, that I will assert nothing positively which
many
assertions which,
1 am not able satisfactorily to demonstrate. When Muhawmedwas born, and Atiushiravan, whom he calls
two languages appear to have been generally prevalent in the great empire of Iran ; that of the Court, thence named Deri, which was only a refined and elegant dialect ot the Parsi, so called from the province, of which Shiraz is now the capital, and that of the learned, in which most books were composed, and which had the
the Just King, sat on the throne of Persia,
Vol.
II.
&
name of Pahlavi,
it
from the
heroes,
who spoke
of land,
in
tract
which included, we are told, some considerable cities of Irak. The ruder dialects of both were, and, I believe, sc ill are spoken by the rustics in several provinces ; and in many of them, as Herat, Zabul, Sistan, and others, distinct idioms were vernacular, as it happens in every kingdom of great extent. Besides the Parsi and Pahlavi, a very ancient and abstruse tongue was known to the priests and philosophers, called the language of the Zend, because a book on religious and moral duties, which they held sacred, and which bore that name, had been written in it while the Pazand, or comment on that work, was composed in Pahlavi, as a more popular idiom ; but
a learned follower of Zeratnsht, named Bahman, who lately died at Calcutta, where he had lived with me as a Persian reader about three years, assured me, that the letters of his prophet's book were properly called
poems of
Let us however, in compliance with custom, give the name of Zend to the sacred language of Persia, until we can find, as we shall very soon, a fitter The Zend and the old Pahlavi are appellation for it.
letters.
almost extinct in Iran ; for among six or seven thousand Gabrs, who reside chiefly at Yezd, and in Cirrnan^ there are very few who can read Pahlavi, and scarce any who even boast of knowing the Zend], while the Parsi, which remains almost pure in the Shalmamah, has now become by the intermixture of numberless Arabic words, and many imperceptible
changes, a new language exquisitely polished by a seof fine writers in prose and verse, and analogous to the different idioms gradually formed in Europe afbut with ter the subversion of the Roman empire modern Persian we have no concern in our present inries
:
Ott
THE PERSIANS.
51
qulry, which
Mohammedan
conquest.
confine to the ages that preceded the Having twice read the works
of Firdansi with great attention since I applied myself to the study of old Indian literature, I can assure you with confidence, that hundreds of Parsi nouns are pure Sanscrit, with no other change than such as may be observed in the numerous bhashas, or vernacular dialects of India \ that very many Persian im; and that even the moods and tenses of the Persian verb sub-
which
is
the model of
all
clear analogy : conclude, that the Parsi was derived, like the various Indian dialects, from the language of the Brahmans ; and I must add, that in the pure Persiafi I find no trace of any Arabian tongue, except what
and
we may hence
proceeded from the known intercourse between the Persians and Arabs, especially in the time of Bahrain, who was educated in Arabia, and whose Arabic verses are still extant, together with his heroic line in Deri r which many suppose to be the first attempt at Persian versification in Arabian metre but, without having recourse to other arguments, the composition of words, in which the genius of the Persian delights, and which that of the Arabic abhors, is a decisive proof that the Parsi sprang from an Indian, and not from an Arabian stock. Considering languages as mere instruments of knowledge, and having strong reasons to doubt the existence of genuine books in Zend or Pahlavi (especially since the well-informed author of the Dabistan affirms the work of Zeratusht to have been lost, and its place supplied by a recent compilation) I had no inducement, though I had an opportunity, to learn what remains of those ancient languages ; but I often conversed on them with my friend Bahman; and both
:
of us were convinced after full consideration, that the Zend bore a strong resemblance to Sanscrit, and the He had at my request translated Pahlavi to Arabic.
exhibited in the
diadem of Cyrus and I had the patience to read the list of words from the Pazcnd in the appendix to the Farliangi Jehangiri. This examinathat the Pahlavi Chaldak; and of this curious fact By the nature of the I will exhibit a fhorr proof. Chaldean tongue most words ended in the first long vowel, like shemia, heaven ; and that very word, unaltered in a single letter, we find in the Pazend, toge-
Gidistan, on the
tion
gave
me
perfect conviction,
was a
dialect of the
ther with lailia, night ; meyd, water ; nira, fire matra, rain ; and a multitude of others, all Arabic or Hebrew, with a Chaldean termination ; so zamar, by
a beautiful metaphor, from pruning trees, means in Hebrew to compose verses, and thence, by an easy
transition to sing them ; and in Pahlavi we see the verb zamrunilen, to sing, with its forms zamrunemi, 1 sing, and zamrunid, he sang ; the verbal terminations of the Persian being added to the Chaldaic root. Now all those words are integral parts of the language, not adventitious to it like the Arabic nouns and verbals engrafted on modern Persian ; and this distinction convinces me, that the dialect of the r Gabrs, which they pretend to be that of Leratusht, and of which Rahman gave me a variety of written specimens, is a late invention 01 their priests, or subsequent at least to the Musclmau invasion; for, although k may be possible that a few of their sacred books were preserved, as he used to assert, in sheets of lead or copper, at the bottom of wells near Yezd, yet, as the conquerors had not only a spiritual, but a
.
and
indignant race of irreconcileable, conquered subjects, a long time must have elapsed, beiore the hidden scriptures could have been safely brought to light, and few, who could .perfectly understand them, must then have remained ; but, as they continued to profess among themselves the religion of their forefathers, it then became expedient for the Mubeds-
ON THE FERSIANS,
to supply the lost or mutilated
$$
works of their legist laror by new composition., partly from their imperfect recolL. ction, and partly from such moral and religious knowledge as they gleaned, most probably, among the Christians, with whom they had an intercourse. One rule we may fairly establish in deciding thequesrion, Whether the books of the modern Gabrs were anterior to the invasion of the Arabs f When an Arabic noun occurs in them, changed only by the spirit of the Chaldean idiom ; as werta for werd, a rose ; Jaba for dhahab, gold ; or demon for zeman, time, we may allow it to have been ancient Pahiaviy but when we meet with verbal nouns or infinitives, evidently formed by the rules of Arabian grammar,
we may be
modern ; and not a single passage, which Bahman produced from the books of his reliare comparatively
this test.
now to the language of the Zend; and must impart a discovery which I lately made, and from which we may draw the most interesting
here
I
We come
consequences. M. Anquetil, who had the merit of undertaking a voyage to India, in his earliest youth, with no other view than to recover writings of Zeratusht, and who would have acquired a brilliant reputation in France, if he had not sullied it by his immoderate vanity and virulence of temper, which alienated the good-will even of his own countrymen, has exhibited in his work, entitled Zendavesta, two vocabularies in Zend and Pahlavi, which he had found in an approved collection of Rawayat, or Traditional pieces, in modern Persian. Of his Pahlavi no more need be said than that it strongly confirms my opinion concerning the Chaldaic origin of that language ; but, when I perused the Zend glossary, I was inexpressibly surprised to find that six or seven words in ten were pure Sanscrit, and even some of their inflexions
-
54
formed by the
Vyacaran
as
yushnacam*
Now M. Anqnetil the genitive plural of yushmad. most certainly, and the Persian compiler mosr probably,
therefore, an authentic
in
list
books, or by tradition
and
least
it
Zend was
at
to
it
we
know
India two
it
years ago,
From
ail
these facts
is
sequence, that the oldest discoverable languages ot Persia were Chaldaic and Sanscrit ; and that, when they had ceased to be vernacular, the Pahlavi and Zend were deduced from them respectively, and the Parsi either from the Zend, or immediately from the dialect of the Brahmins', but all had perhaps a mixture of Tartarian ; for the best lexicographers assert, that numberless words in ancient Persian are taken from the language of the Cimmerians, or the Tartars of Kipchak ; so that the three families, whose lineage we -have examined in former discourses, had left visible traces of themselves in Iran, long before the Tartars and Arabs had rushed from their deserts, and returned to that very country from which, in all probability, they originally proceeded, and which the Hindus had abandoned in an earlier age, with positive
commands from
I
it
no
no reposition of a mere political or commercial intercourse between the different nations, will account for the Sanscrit and Chaldaic words, which we find in the
more.
first
numerous to have been introduced by such means and secondly, are not the names of
;
but those of
ON THE PERSIANS.
and
relations, affections
55
common
If a
to the
nation of Hindus, it may be urged, ever posand governed the country of Iran, we should find on the very ancient ruins of the temple or palace, now called the Throne of Jemshid, some inscriptions in Devanagari, or at least in the characters on the stones at Ekphanta, where the sculpture is unquestionably Indian, or in those on the Staff of Firuz Shah, which exist in the heart of India ; and such inscriptions we probably should have found, if that edifice had not been erected after the migration of the Brahmans from Iran, and the violent schism in the Persian religion, of which we shall presently
sessed
speak ; for, although the popular name of the building at lstakhr, or Persepolis, be no certain proof that it was raised in the time of Jemshid, yet such a fact might easily have been preserved by tradition ; and we shall soon have abundant evidence, that the temple was posterior to the reign of the Hindu mo-
which are represented with the figures in procession, might induce a reader of the Shahnamah to believe, that the sculptures related to the new faith introduced by Zeratusht ; but as a cypress is a beautiful ornament, and as many of the figures appear inconsistent with the reformed adoration of fire, we must have recourse to stronger proofs, that the Takhti Jemshid was erected after
narchy.
cypresses indeed,
The
Cayumers.
The
building has
lately
been
visited,
and the characters on it examined, by Mr. Francklift} from whom we learn, that Njebuhrhas delineated them with great accuracy; but without such testiof I should have suspected the correctness the delineation, because the Danish traveller has exhibited two inscriptions in modern Persian, and one of them from the same place, which cannot have
mony
E4
56
they are very elegant been exactly transcribed verses of Nizami and Sadi on the instability of human greatness, but so ill engraved or so ill copied, that if had not had them near :/ by heart, 1 should not I have been able to read them; and M. Rousseau of han, who translated them with shameful inaccuracy, must have been deceived by the badness of the copy, or he never would have created a new king If'akam, by forming one word of Jem and the parAssuming, however, that we ticle prefixed to it. may reason as conclusively on the characters published by Niebuhr as we might on the monumenis themselves, were they now before us, we may begin with observing, as Chardin had observed on the very spot, that they bear no resemblance whatever to the Gabrs in their copies of the letters used by the This I once urged, in an amicable debate Vendidad with Bah-man, as a proof that the Zend letters were a modem invention 1 but he seemed to hear me without surprize, and insisted that the letters to which I alluded, and which he had often seen, were monumental characters never used in books, and intended either to conceal some religious myfrom the vulgar, or to display the art of the sculptor, like the embellished Cicfick and Nagari on several Arabian and Indian monuments. He wondered that any man could seriously doubt the antiquity of the Pahhivi letters; and in truth the inscription behind the horse of Rustam, which Niebuhr has also given us, is apparently Pahlcvi, and might with some pains be decyphcred ; that character was extremely rude, and seems to have been written, like the Reman and the Arabic, in a variety of hands ; for 1 remember to have examined a rare collection of old Persian coins in the Museum of the great Anatomist 11 dliam Hunter ; and, though I believed he legends to be PahJavi, and h d no doubt that they were coins of Parthian kings, yet I could not read the inscrip1
ON THE PERSIANS.
tions without wasting more time than
I
57
had then
at
comparing the letters and ascertaining the proportions in which they severally occurred. The gross Pahlavi was improved by Zeralusht or his disciples into an elegant and perspicuous character, in which the Zendavesta was copied ; and both were written from the right hand to the left, like other
in
command,
Chaldaic alphabets, for they are manifestly both of Chaldean origin ; but the Zend has the singular advantage of expressing all the long and short vowels by distinct marks in the body of each word, and all the words are distinguished by full points between them; so that if modern Persian were unmixed with Arabic,
it
might be written
Zend with the greatest conveniperceive, by copying in that few pages of the Shahnamah. As to the
in
may
unknown
inscriptions in the palace of Jemshid, it may reasonably be doubted whether they contain a system of letters which any nation ever adopted in Jive of them the letters, which are separated by points, may
:
be reduced to
forty,
at
least
;
can distinguish no
all
more
essentially
different
and they
seem to be
regular variations and compositions of a straight line and an angular figure like the head of a javelin, or a
leaf (to
lanced.
use the language of botanists; hearted and Many of the Runic letters appear to have
;
and
it
word Agam
but
I
in Sanscrit
call Ogham. The means mysterious knowledge ; that the two words had a com-
mon
and only mean to suggest that, if the ; characters in question be really alphabetical, they were probably secret and sacerdotal, or a mere cypher perhaps, of which the priests only had the key. They might, I imagine, be decyphered if the language were
certainly
known
but in
all
58
riations
complex, and the vaof them too numerous, to admit an opinion that they couli be symbols of articulate sounds ; for even the Nagari system, which has more distinct letters than any known alphabet, consists only of fortynine simple characters, two of which are mere substitutions, and four of little use in Sanscrit, or in any
same
other language ; while the more complicated figures, exhibited by Niebuhr, must be as numerous at least as the Chinese keys, which are the signs of ideas only, and some of which resemble the old Persian letters
at Istakhr.
The Danish
traveller
his
left
own
;
observation that they were written from the hand, like all the characters used by Hindu na-
but I must leave this dark subject, which I cannot illuminate, with a remark formerly made by myself, that the square Chaldaic letters, a few of which are found on the Persian ruins, appear to have been originally the same with the De-vanagari before the latter weie enclosed, as we now see them, in angular
tions
frames.
II.
The
if
we
rely
on the
authorities
that
which
called
Newton
<
calls the
all
may be justly
the noblest) of
"
and
"
'*
continually governed it by his providence ; a pious fear, love, and adoration of him ; a due reverence
for parents for the
and aged persons ; a fraternal affection whole human species, and a compassionate " tenderness even for the brute creation." A system of devotion so pure and sublime could hardly, among mortals, be of long duration ; and we learn from the
"
"
Dabistan, that the popular worship of the Iranians under Hushang, was purely Sal>ian; a word of which I cannot offer any certain etymology, but which has
host^
ON THE PERSIANS.
$9
and particularly the host of heaven, or the celestial bodies, in the adoration of which the Sabian ritual There is a description is believed to have consisted. in the learned work just mentioned, of the several
Persia?! temples dedicated
to the
Sun and
Planets,
them, and of the magnificent processions to them on prescribed festivals; one of which is probably represented by sculpture in the But the planetary worship in ruined city of Jemshid. Persia seems only a part of a far more complicated religion, which we now find in these Indian provinces; for Mohsan assures us that, in the opinion of the best informed Persians, who professed the faith of /&. shang, distinguished from that of Zeratusht, the first monarch of Iran, and of the whole earth, was Mahaof the images adored
in
and
the
servile, to
which he assigned
in
now
the sacred hook in a heavenly language, to which the Musehnan author gives the Arabic title of Desatir, or Regulations, but the original name of which he has not mentioned ; and that fourteen Mahahads had appeared or would appear in human shapes for the government of this world. Now when we know that the Hindus believe
Creator, and promulgated
Hindus.
They added,
that he
received from
among men, a
in fourteen
Menus, or
celestial
of regulations,
they hold equal to the Veda, and the language of which they believe to be that of the gods, we can hardly doubt that the first corruption of the purest and oldest religion was the system of Indian theology, invented by the Brahmans,
and prevalent in these territories, where the book of Mahabad, or Menu, is at this moment the standard of all religious and moral duties. The accession of Cayu-
60
mers to the throne of Persia, in the eighth or ninth century before Christ, seems to have been accompanied by a considerable revolution both in government and religion he was most probably of a different race from the Mahabadians who preceded him, and began perhaps the new system of national faith which Hushang, whose name it bears, completed but the reformation was partial j for, while they rejected the complex polytheism of their predecessors, they retained the laws of Mahabad, with a superstitious veneration for the sun, the planets, and fire ; thus resembling the Hindu sects, called Sauras and Sagnicas, the second of which is very numerous at Banares,
:
where many agnihotras are continually blazing, and where the Sagnicas, when they enter on their sacerdotal office, kindle, with two pieces of the hard wood Semi, 2l fire which they keep lighted through their lives for their nuptial ceremony, the performance ot solemn sacrifices, the obsequies of departed ancestors, This remarkable rite and their own funeral pile. Zeratitsht, who reformed the old rewas continued by ligion by the addition of genii, or angels, presiding over months and days, of new ceremonies in the veneration shown to fire, of a new work which he pretended to have received from heaven, and, above all, by establishing the actual adoration of one Supreme He was born, according to Mohan, in the Being. district of Rai; and it was he (not, as Ammianus asserts, his
protector Gushtasb)
who
that he might receive information from the Brahmans It is barely possible that Pyin theology and ethics. in the capital of Irak ; but the thagoras knew him
Grecian sage must then have been far advanced in years ; and we have no certain evidence of an interThe reformed course between the two philosophers. continued in force till that country religion of Persia was subdued by the Musehnans ; and, without studying the Zend, we have ample information concerning
ON THE PERSIANS.
ir
6l
in the
it.
modern Persian
writings of several
who
prore-
fessed
Bahman
always
verence, but he was in truth a pure Theist, and strongly disclaimed any adoration of the fire or other
elements
he denied that the doctrine of two coeval good and supremely bad, formed any part of his faith ; and he often repeated with emphasis the verses of Firdausi on the prostration of Cyrus and his paternal grandfather before the blazing altar: "Think not that they were adorers of fire j " for that element was only an exalted object, on the
:
principles, supremely
"
Ct
humbled
"
IC
'*
themselves a whole week before God; and, if thy understanding be ever so little exerted, thou must
pure."
religion of the Hindus with that of the Gabrs, calling the Brahnans not only Moghs, (which might be justified by a passage in the Mesnavi) but even readers of the Zend and Pa^end. Now, whether this confusion proceeded from real or pretended ignorance I cannot decide, but am as firmly convinced that the doctrines of the Zend were distinct from those of the J'eda, as I am that the religion of the Brahmans, with whom we converse every day, prevailed in Persia before the accession of Cayu*
titers,
whom
consider as the
the Parsis, from respect to his memory, first of men, although they believe in
his reign,
With
losophy
the
religion
(or as
much
mately connected ; of the luminaries, which they adored and established, according to Mohsan, who confirms in some degree the fragments of Bercsics, a number ot arcier,
of the old Persians their phiwe know rf it) was incifor they were assiduous observas
62
'.
cate a
They are said also to have known appear to revolve. the most wonderful powers of nature, and thence to have acquired the fame of magicians and enchanters ; but I will only detain you with a few remarks on that metaphysical theology which has been professed immemorially by a numerous sect of Persians and Hindus, was carried in part into Greece, and prevails even now among the learned Muselmans, who sometimes avow it without reserve. The modern philosophers of this persuasion are called Siifis, either from the Greek word for a sage, or from the woollen mantle which they used to wear in some provinces of Persia : their fundamental tenets are, that nothing exists absolutely but God ; that the human soul is an emanation from his essence, and though divided for a time from its heavenly source, will be finally reunited with
it
;
from
its
reunion; and that the chief good of mankind in this transitory world, consists in as perfect an union with the Eternal Spirit as the incumbrances of a mortal frame will allow that for this purpose they should break all connection (or iaalluk, as they call it) with extrinsic objects, and pass through life without attachments, as a swimmer in the ocean strikes freely without the impediment of clothes ; that they should be straight and free as the cypress, whose fruit is hardly perceptible, and not sink under a load, like fruit-trees attached to a trellis ; that, if mere earthly charms have power to influence the soul, the idea of celestial
;
beauty must overwhelm it in extatic delight ; that for want of apt words to express the divine perfections and the ardour of devotion, we must borrow such expressions as approach the nearest to our ideas, and sneak of Beauty and Love in a transcendent and tical sense; that, like a reed'torn from its native
- ;
on
the
tep.sia^s.
63
bank,
sic,
like
soul of
moment
ot
its
extinction,
disengagement
I
means
(for
ot returning to
only beloved.
Such
in
omit the minuter and more subtil metaphysics of the Sufis, which are mentioned in the Dabista?i) is the wild and enthusiastic religion of the modem
great Maulavi.
poets, especially of the sweet Hafiz a Such is the system of the Vedanti philosophers and best lyric poecs of India ; and as it
Persia?!
was a system of the highest antiquity in both natic: it may be added to the many other proofs of an immemorial affinity between them.
III.
On
and architecture we have already made such observations as were sufficient for our purpose
;
nor will
you be surprized at the diversity between the figures at Elephanta, which are manifestly Hindu, and those at Persepolis, which are merely Sabian, if you concur
with
?nans
me
in
had migrated from Iran, and when their in mythology had been superseded by the simpler adoration of the planets and of fire.
IV. As to the sciences or arts of the old Pers have little to say ; and no complete evidence them seems to exist. Mohsan speaks more t once of ancient verses in the Pahlavi language and Bahman assured me, that some scan of them had been preserved: their musi painting, which Nizarm celebrated, have irrecoi ably perished; and in regard to Ma and impostor, whose book of dr
I
;; ;
64
tang, which he pretended to be divine, is supposed to have been destroyed by the Chinese, in whose dominions he had sought refuge, the whole tale is too modern to throw any light on the questions before us concerning the origin of nations, and the inhabitants of the primitive world.
been proved by clear evidence and that a powerful monarchy was established in Iran long before the Assyrian, or Pishdadl government ; that it was in truth a Hindu monarchy, though if any chuse to call it Cusian, Casdean, or Scythian, we shall not enter into a debate on mere names; that it subsisted many centuries, and that its history has been ingrafted on that of the Hindus, who founded the monarchies of Ayodhya and Indrapresllw, that the language of the first Persian empire was the mother of the Sanscrit, and consequently of the Zend and Parsi, as well as of Greek, Latin, and Gothic that the language of the Assyrians was the parent of Chaldaic and Pahlavi, and that the primary Tartarian language also had been current in the same empire although, as the Tartars had no books or even letters, we cannot with certainty trace their unpolished and variable idioms. We discover therefore in Persia, at the earliest dawn of history, the three distinct races of men, whom we described on former occaand s sions as possessors of India, Arabia, Tartary whether they were collected in Iran from distant regions, or diverged from it as from a common centre, we shall easily determine by the following considerhas
it
Thus
plain
reasoning,
Let us observe, in the first place, the central of Iran, which is bounded by Arabia, by whilst Arabia lies contiguous Tartary, and by India to Iran only, but is remote from Tar/ary, and divided even from the skirts of India by a considerable gulf no country, therefore, but Persia seems likely to have
ations.
position
ON THE PERSIANS.
sent forth
its
65
all the kingdoms of Asia. never have migrated from India to Tfw/, because they are expressly forbidden by their oldest existing laws to leave the region which they inhabit at this day j the Arabs have not even a tradition of an emigration into Persia before Mohammed, riof had they indeed any inducement to quit their beautiful and extensive domains ; and as to the Tartars, we have no trace in history of their departure from their plains and forests till the invasion of the Medes, who, according to etymologists, were the sons of Madai and even they were conducted by princes of an Assy-
colonies to
rian family.
The
whom we
have already mentioned (and more than three we have not yet found) migrated from Iran as from their common country ; and thus the Saxon Chronicle^ I presume from good authority, brings the first inhabitants of Britain trom Armenia while a late very
;
all
his
laborious re-
came from Perand another contends with great force, that both the Irish and old Britons proceeded severally from the
searches, that the Goths or Scythians
j
a coincidence of conclusions
from different media by persons wholly unconnected, which could scarce have happened if they were not We may therefore grounded on solid principles.
hold
this proposition firmly established, that Iran,
its
or
was the true centre of population, of knowledge, of languages, and of arts which, instead of travelling westward only, as it has been fancifully supposed, or eastward, as might with equal reason have been asserted, were expanded in all directions to all the regions of ihe world in which the Hindu race had settled under various denominations: but whether Asia has not produced other race9 of men, distinct from the Hindus, the Arabs, or the Tartars ; or whether any apparent diversity may no; ipruns from an intermixture of those thres P r
Persia in
largest sense,
;
66
ON THE PERSIANS.
in different proportions,
ture inquiry.
mediate importance, which you, gentlemen, only can decide ; namely, " by what means we can preserve " our Society from dying gradually away? as it has ad*' vanced gradually to its present (shall I say flourish" ing or languishing ?) state." It has subsisted five years without any expence to the members of it, until the first volume of our Transactions was published ; and the price of that large volume, if we compare the different values of money in Bengal and in England, is not more than equal to the annual contribution towards the charges of the Royal Society by each of its fellows, who may not have chosen to compound for it on his admission. This I mention not from an idea that any of us could object to the purchase of one copy at least, but from a wish to inculcate the necessity of our common exertions in promoting the sale of the work, both here and in London. In vain shall we meet as a literary body, if our meetings shall cease
be supplied with original dissertations and memorials ; and in vain shall we collect the most interesting papers, if we cannot publish them occasionally without exposing the superintendents of the Company's press, who undertake to print them at their own haBy united zard, to the danger of a considerable loss. efforts the French have compiled "their stupendous repositories of universal knowledge ; and by united efforts only can we hope to rival them, or to diffuse over our own country and the rest of Europe the lights
to
67
IV.
LETTER
FROM
ESQ.
HAVING
some time ago met with a Persian abridgment, composed by Maulavi Khairuddin> of the asrarul Afaghinah, or the secrets of the Afghans, a book written in the Pushto language by Husain, the son of Sabir, the son of Khizr, the disciple of Hazrat Shah Kas'im Sulaimani, whose tomb is in Chunargnr y Although it opens with I was induced to translate it. a very wild description of the origin of that tribe, and contains a narrative which can by no means be offered upon the whole as a serious and probable history yet I conceive that the knowledge of what a nation suppose themselves to be, may be interesting to a Society like this, as well as of what they really are. Indeed the commencement of almost every history is fabulous ; and the most enlightened nations, after they have arrived at that degree of civilization and importance which has enabled and induced them to commemorate their actions, have always found a vacancy at their outset which invention, or at best presumption, musr supply. Such fictions appear at first in the form of traditions ; and having in this shape amused successive general ions by a gratification oi
their national vanity, they are
68
As a kingdom is an assemblage of component: parts, condensed by degrees from smaller associations of individuals to their general union, so history is a combi* nation of the transactions not only of the different
which
but even of the individuals of the nation of each particular narrative in such a getreats neral collection must be summary and incomplete. Biography, therefore, as well as descriptions of the manners, actions, and even opinions of such tribes as are connected with a great kingdom, are not only entribes,
it
:
but useful, as they explain and throw a light upon the history of the nation.
tertaining in themselves,
Under these impressions I venture to lay before the Society the translation of an abridged history of the Afghans ; a tribe at different times subject to and always connected with the kingdoms of Persia and Hindustan. I also submit a specimen of their language,
which
is
called
by them Pukhto
is
sof-
am,
Sir,
With
Your most
Henrx Vansittart.
Calcutta,
March
3,
17S4,
69
ON
"PHE
and
In a war which raged between the children of Israel the Amalekites, the latter being victorious, plundered the Jews, and obtained possession of the ark of the covenant. Considering this the god of the
it
affect
They
with axes,
but without success: every individual who treated.it with indignity was punished for his temerity. They then placed it in their temple ; but all their idols bowed to it. At length they fastened it upon a cow, which they turned loose in the wilderness.
When
" by
<c
"
We hive
a king, that we may " glory of God." Samuel said, " In case you are led " out to battle, are you determined to fight r" They answered, M What has befallen us that we should not " fight against infidels ? That nation has banish d " us from our country and children." At this time
said,
the angel Gabriel descended, and, delivering a wand, " It is the command of God that the person
stature shall correspond with this
" whose
wand,
shall
be king of Israel."
F3
*JO
Melic Taint was at that time a man of inferior condition, and performed the humble employment of One day a feeding the goats and cows of others. charge was accidentally lost. Being cow under his his searches, he was greatly distressed, disappointed in and applied to Samuel, saying, " I have lost a cow, <c and do not possess the means ol satisfying the owner. " Pray for me, that I may be extricated from this il Samuel, perceiving that he was a man difficulty." of lofty stature, asked his name. He answered, Taint. Samuel then said, " Measure Talut with the wand " which the angel Gabriel brought." His stature was equal to it. Samuel then said, " God has raised Talut to be your king." The children of Israel anare greater than our king. are swered, " of dignity, and he is of inferior condition. f* men " How shall he be our king." Samuel informed them
We
We
they should know that God had constituted Talut their king, by his restoring the ark ol the covenant. He accoidingly restored it, and they acknowledged
him
their sovereign.
After Talut obtained the kingdom, he seized part of the territories of Jalut, or Goliah, who assemble Talut afterlarge army, but was killed by David. wards died a martyr in a war against the infidels ; and
God
constituted
David king
or the Jezvs.
Melic Talut had two sons, one called Berkia, and who served David, and were beloved
by him.
He
sent
them
The son cf Berk/a was called Afghan, and the son Those youths distinof Irmia was named Usbec. guished themselves in the reign of David, and Afghan was distinwere employed by Solomon.
'
71
strength,
Demons and
Genii.
Afghan used
mountains
built forts,
;
frequently to
make
excursions to the
where
infidels.
When
Muhammed, appeared
upon earth, his fame reached the Afghans^ who sought him in multitudes under their leaders Khal'id and Ahdid Rashul, sons of IValld. The prophet honoured them with the most gracious reception, saying, " Come, O Muluc, or Kings ;" whence they assumed the title of Melic, which they enjoy to this day. The prophet gave them his ensign, and said that the faith would be strengthened by them.
Many
lid)
who
prophet, by fighting against the infidels. honoured and prayed for them.
Muhammed
In the reign of Sultan Mahnud of Ghaz?iah, eight arrived, of the posterity of Khal'id the son of fVahd, whose names were Kalun> Alun, Daud, Yalua, Ahmedy Awin, and Ghazi. The Sultan was much pleased with them, and appointed each a commander in his army. He also conferred on them the offices of Fazlr, and Fakili Mutlak, or Regent of
men
the Empire.
threw
much,
They encreased
so
Mahnud
was
chiefly
F4
72
composed of Afghans.
When Herhind, a powerful prince of Hindustan, meditated an invasion of Ghaznahy Sultan Mahniui dispatched against him the descendants of Khalid with twenty thousand horse : a battle ensued ; the Afghans made the attack ; and,
after a severe
break
faith.
till
infidels,
engagement, which lasted from daynoon, defeated Herhind, killed many of the and converted some to the Muhammedan
The Afghans now began to establish themselves in the mountains ; and some settled in cities with the permission of Saltan Mahmud. They framed regulations, dividing themselves into four classes, agreeThe first is the ably to the following description pure class, consiting of those whose fathers and
:
The second class consists mothers were Afghans. of those whose fathers were Afghans, and mothers The third class contains those of another nation. whose mothers were Afghans, and fathers of another
nation.
dren
of
The fourth class is composed of the chilwomen whose mothers were Afghans, and
not
different nation. Persons belong to one of these classes, are not
fathers
and husbands of a
who do
called Afghans.
After the death of Sultan Mahmud they made anoShihabuddin settlement in the mountains. Gauri, a subsequent Sultan of Ghaznah, was twice His J'azir assembled the repulsed from Hindustan. people, and asked if any of the posterity of Khalid were living. They answered, " Many now live
ther
"
" where
by
of independence in the mountains, The they have a considerable army." Vazir requested them to go to the mountains, and
in
state
entreaties prevail
were prophet
they
the descendants of
f%
Ghaznah undertook this cm* The entreaties and presents, conciliated the bassy, and, by minds of the Afghans, who promised to engage in the service of the Sultan, provided he would himself come and enter into an agreement with them. The Sultan visited them in their mountains, honoured them, and gave them dresses and other presents. They supplied
hi.n with twelve thousand horse, and a considerable
army of
Being dispatched by the Sultan they took Dehli, killed Roy Pahtoura the king, his ministers and nobles ; laid waste tht. city, and made the infidels prisoners. They afterwards exhibited nearly the same scene in Canauj.
infantry
q his
own army,
The Sultan, pleased by the reduction of those cities, conferred honours upon the Afghans. It is said that he then gave them th titles oi Patau and Khan. The
word Patan
my.
is derived from the Hindi verb Paitna, to rush, in allusion to their alacrity in attacking the ene-
greatly distinguished
selves in the
history of Hindustan)
The race of Afghans possessed themselves of the Mountain of Solomon, which is near Kandahar, and the
circumjacent country, where they have built forts many kings. The following monarchs of this race have sat upon the throne of Dehli: Sultan Behlole, Afghan Lodi, Sultan Secander, Sultan Ibrahim, Shir Shah, Islam Shah, Adil Shah Sur. T hey also number the following kings of Gaur Solaiman Shah Gurzani, Bayazid Shah, and Kuth
:
Shah; besides whom their nation has produced many conquerors of provinces. The Afghans are called So. Jaimani, either because they were formerly the subjects of Solomon, king of the Jews, or because they inhabit the
Mountain of Solomon.
74
The
add
that
a province of
Cahul, was originally called Boh, and from hence is derived the name of the Bohillahs. The city, which
was established in it by the Afghans, was called by them Pr.ishwer, or Paishor, and is now the name of The sects of the Afghans, or Pathe whole district. The principal are these tans, are very numerous. Lod'i, Lohauni, Sur, Serzvani, Yusujzihi, Ba7igish, DiThe meanlazai, Khatii, Yasin. KhaiL and Baloje. A very ing of Zihi, is offspring ; and of Khail, sect. particular account of the Afghans has been written by the late Hafiz Rahnat Khan, a chief of the Bohillahs, from which the curious reader may derive much information. They are Maitlntdns, partly of the Simni, and
:
They
of the antiquitv of their origin, and reputation of their tribe ; but bther' MuseMdris entirely reject their claim, and consider them of modern and even base extraction. However, their character may be collected from history, they have distinguished themselves by their courage, both singly and unitedly, as principals and auxiliaries. They have conquered for their own princes and for foreigners, and have always been considered the main strength of the army in which they have As they have been applauded for virtues, served. they have also been reproached for vices, having sometimes been guilty of treachery, and even acted the base
part of assassin?.
Language.
flf^
>?
"j
^ ^ j .*& j y^j&
the oppression of tyrannical rulers, Fire the grave, and Paisbor, all three have been rendered equal.
;
By
With
It is
by the Sunnah,
:
If a
it is
it is
very laudable.
If
no crime in him.
.-
-o
o j
^.
,.
,.
o ^
_.-
-.
Mirza, If the difpolition be not good, What difference is there between a Sayyed and a
Brahman
76
JSOTE
BY THE PRESIDENT.
to
learn
that the ten tribes, after a wandering journey, came to a country called Arsareth ; where, we may suppose, they settled. Now the Afghans are said, by the best Persian historians, to be descended from the Jews ; they have traditions among themselves of such a descent; and it is even asserted, that their families are distinguished by the names of Jewish tribes, although,
the Pushto language, of which have seen a dictionary, has a manifest resemblance
:
to the Chaldaic;
their
and a considerable district under dominion is called Hazareh, or Hazaret, which might easily have been changed into the word used by Esdras. I strongly recommend an inquiry into the literature and history of the Afghans.
77
V.
REMARKS
ON THE
HINZUAN
On Monday,
rugged islands of Cape Verd, our eyes were delighted with a prospect so beautiful, that neither a painter nor a poet could perfectly represent it, and so cheering to
us, that
can justly be conceived by such only as have been in our preceding situation. It was the sun rising in full splendor on the isle of May at a (as the seamen called it) which we had joyfully distinguished the preceding afternoon by the height of its peak, and which
it
at no great distance from the windows of our cabin j while Hinzuan, for which we had so long panted, was plainly discernible a-head, where its high lands presented themselves with remirkable boldness. The weather was fair, the water smooth j and a
now appeared
78
a rock, on which the Brilliant struck just a year before, into a commodious road *, where we dropped our anchor early in the evening. had seen Mehilay another sister island, in the course of the day.
We
was presently surrounded with canoes, and the deck soon crowded with natives of all ranks, from the high born chief, ivho washed linen, to the
frigate
The
half-naked slave, who only paddled. Most of them had letters of recommendation from Englishmen, which none of them were able to read, though they spc ke English intelligibly; and some appeared vain of titles, which our countrymen had given them in play achad Lords, cording to their supposed stations. Dukes, and Princes on board, soliciting our custom and importuning us for presents. In fact, they were too sensible to be proud of empty sounds, but justly
We
imagined, that those ridiculous titles would serve as marks of distinction, and, by attracting notice, proThe only men cure for them something substantial.
of
real
consequence
in the island,
whom we saw
before
the Governor Abdullah, second coufin to the king, and his brother Akvi, with their several sons ; all of whom will again be particularly men-
we landed, were
tioned
the
Mohammedan
they understood Arabic, seemed zealots in faith, and admired my copies of the
read, whilst
Arabia??,
Al-
manu-
script, and explained it in English more accurately than could have been e?:pected.
The
beauty
;
ail
its-
* Lat\ 12
10'
47"
S. Long.'
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
tinct
79
the
could hardly have been exhibited by you must, therefore, be satisfied with a mere description, written on the very spot, and compared attentively with the natural landscape. were at anchor in a fine bay, and before us was a vast amphitheatre, of which you may form a general notion by picturing in your minds a multitude of hills infinitely varied in size and figure, and then supposing them to be thrown together, with a kind of artless symmetry, in all imaginable posiThe back ground was a series of mountions. tains, one of which is pointed, near half a mile perpendicularly high from the level of the sea, and little more than three miles from the shore all of them were richly clothed with wood, chiefly fruittrees, of an exquisite verdure. I had seen many a mountain of a stupendous height in Wales and SwisserlanJy but never saw one before, round the bosom of which the clouds were almost continuallv rolling, while its green summit rose flourishing above them, and received from them an additional Next to this distant range of hills was brightness. another tier, part of which appeared charmingly verdant, and part rather barren ; but the contrast of colours cH.nged even this nakedness into a Nearer still were innumerable mountains* beauty. or rather cliffs, which brought down their verdure' and fertility quite to the beach ; so that every shade of green, the sweetest of colours, was displayed at one view by land and by water. But nothing conduced mere to the variety of this enchanting prospect, than the many rows of palm-trees, especially the tall and graceful Arecas on the shores, in the valleys, and on the ridges of hills, where one might almost suppose them to have been planted regularly" by design. A more beautiful appearance can scarce be conceived, than such a number of elegant palms in such a situation, with luxuriant tops, ke verdant plumes, placed at just intervals, and
it
view of
best pencil
We
80
showing between them part of the remoter landscape, while they left the rest to be supplied by the beholder's imagination. The town of Matsamudo lay our left, remarkable at a distance for the tower on of the principal mosque, which was built by Hahmaky a queen of the island, from whom the prea little on our right was a sent king is descended called Bantam. Neither the territory of small town, its olives, date-trees, and cypresses, nor JSice> with
:
of Hieres> with their delightful orangegroves, appeared so charming to me as the view from the road of H'mzuan ; which, nevertheless, is far surpassed, as the Captain of the Crocodile assured us, by many of the islands in the Southern Ocean, If life were not too short for the complete discharge of all our respective duties, public and private, and for the acquisition even of necessary knowledge in any degree of perfection, with how much pleasure and improvement might a great part of it be spent in admiring the beauties of this wonderful orb, and contemplating the nature of man in all its varieties
the
isles
had been
hastened to tread on firm land, to which we so long disused, and went on shore, after breakfast, to see the town, and return the Governor's As we walked, attended by a crowd of natives, visit. I surprized them by reading aloud an Arabic inscription over the gate of a
I
We
mosque, and still more, when bv explaining four sentences, which were written very distinctly on the wall, signifying, " that ** the world was given us for our own edification,
entered
it,
"
"
*'
ings
not for the purpose of raising sumptuous buildlife, for the discharge of moral and relij gious duties, not for plcasureable indulgences
wealth, to be liberally bestowed, not avariciously
"
*4
hoarded
and learning,
disputes."
to
We
false
of a
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
:
8t
found such excellent morality we saw nothing better ainong the Romish trumpery in the church at MaWhen \vc came to Abdullah's house, we were deira. conducted through a small court-yard into ah open room, on each side of which was a large and convenient sofa, and above it a high bed-place in a dark recess, over which a chintz counterpoint hung down from '.he ceiling. This is the general form of the besc rooms in the island ; and most of the tolerable houses have a similar apartment on the opposite side of the
all hours a place in the were entertained shade for dinner or for repose. with ripe dates from Yemen, and the milk of cocoanuts; but the heat of the room, which seemed accessible to all who chose to enter it, and the scent of musk, or civet, with which it was perfumed, soon made us desirous of breathing a purer air ; nor could I be detained long by the Arabic manuscripts, which, the Governor produced, but which appeared of little use, and consequently of no value, except to such as love mere curiosities. One of them, indeed, relating to the penal law of the Mohammedans, I would gladly have purchased at a just price ; but he knew not what to ask ; and I knew that better books on that subHe then offered ject might be procured in Bengal. me a black boy for one of my Alhrans, and pressed me to barter an Indian dress, which he had seen en The golden board the ship, for a cow and calf. slippers attracted him most, since his wife, he said, would like to wear them ; and, for that reason, I made him a present of them but had destined rhe book and the robe for his superior. No high opinion could be formed of Sayyad Abdullah, who seemed very eager for gain, and very servile where he expected it.
may
be at
We
Our next
eldest son
-,
visit
king'.-;
and
if
first,
the state
Vol.
II.
82
Il'mzuan would have appeared worst English hacknev in the worst stable is better lodged, and looks more princely than this heir apparent ; but though his mien and apparel were extremely savage, yet allowance should have been made for his illness; which, as we afterwards learned, was an abscess in the spleen: a disorder not uncommon in that country, and frequently Cured, agreeably to the Arabian practice, by the actual cautery. He was incessantly chewing pieces of the Areca-nnt with shell-lime : a custom borrowed, I suppose, from the Indians, who greatly improve the composition with spices and betel-leaves, to which they formerly added camphor: all the natives of
at
of civilization
lowest ebb.
The
rank chewed it, but not, 1 think, to so great an excess. Prince Salim from time to time gazed at himself with complacency in a piece of broken lookingglass, which was glued on a small board a specimen of wretchedness, which we observed in no other house; but many circumstances convinced us that the apparently low condition of his royal highness, who was not on bad terms with his father, and seemed not to want authority, proceeded wholly from his His brother Hamdullah, who generally reavarice. sides in the town of Domoni, has a very different character, being esteemed a man of worth, good sense, and learning : he had come, the day before, to Maisamudo, on hearing that an English frigate was in the road ; and I, having gone out for a few minutes to read an Arabic inscription, found him on my return devouring a manuscript which I had left with some of
:
the company. He is a Kadi or Mohammedan judge and as he seemed to have more knowledge than his countrymen, I was extremely concerned that I had so
little conversation with him. The king, Shaikh Ahmed, has a younger son, named Abdullah, whose usual residence is in the town of JVani, which he seldom leaves, as the state of his health is very infirm. the succession to the title and authority of Suh Since
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
83
tan is not unalterably fixed in one line, but requires confirmation by the chiefs of the island, it is not improbable that they may hereafter be conferred on
prince Hamdullali.
little beyond the hole in which Salim received was his haram\ or the apartment of 'his women, which he permitted us all to see, not through polite-
us,
ness
to
strangers,
as
we believed
at first,
own
lips, in
but as I expectation
saw only two or three miserable of a present. creatures with their heads covered, while the favourite, as we supposed, stood behind a coatse curtain, and showed her ankles under it, loaded with silver rings; which, if she was capable of reflection, she must have considered as glittering fetters rather than ornaments but a rational being would have preferred the condition of a wild beast, exposed to perils and hunger in a forest, to the splendid misery of being
;
We
me
Before we returned, Alwi was desirous of mowing: his books ; but the day was too far advanced,
and
I promised to visit him some other morning. governor however prevailed on us to see his place The in the country, where he invited us to dine the next day. The walk was extremely pleasant from the town to the side of a rivulet, which formed in one part a small pool very convenient for bathing, and thence through groves and alleys to the foot of a hill; but the dining-room was little better than an open barn, and was recommended only by the coolness of its shade. Abdullah would accompany us on our return to the ship, together with two Muftis who spoke Ara-
bic indifferently,
to see
ail
my ma-
nuscripts
but they were very moderately learned, and gazed with stupid wonder on a fine copy of the Hamasah) and on other collections of ancient poetry.
;
$4
Early the next morning a black messenger, with a tawny lad as his interpreter, came from prince Salim ; who having broken his perspective glass, wished to procure another by purchase or barter. A polite answer was returned, and steps taken to gratify his As we on our part expressed a desire to visit wishes. the king at Domohi, the prince's messenger told us' that his master would, no doubt, lend us palanquins (for there was not a horse in the island) and
order a sufficient
number of
his
might pay for their trouble as we thought commissioned him therefore to ask that just. favour, and begged that all might be ready for our excursion before sun-rise, that we might escape the heat of the noon, which, though it was the middle of The boy, whose winter, we had found excessive. name was Combo Madi, staid with us longer than there was something in his look so his companion ingenuous, and in his broken English so simple, that we encouraged him to continue his innocent prattle. He wrote and read Arabic tolerably well, and sec down at my desire the names of several towns in the island, which he first told me was properly called HtnThe fault of begging for whatever he liked,, zuan. had in common with the governor and other he
whom we
We
his first penobles, but hardly in a greater degree tition for some lavender-water was readily granted r and a small bottle of it was so acceptable to him, that
:
if
suffered him, he would have kissed our feet was not for himfelf that he rejoiced so extrabut he told us, with tears starting from his vagantly eyes, that his mother would be pleased with it, and the idea of her pleasure seemed to fill him with rap-
we had
it
Never did I see filial affection more warmly more tenderly and, in my opinion, unaffectfelt, yet this boy was not a favourite of edly expressed His mother's officers, who thought him artful. the he said, was Fatima ; and he importuned us t& name,
ture.
or
;.
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
;
85
conceiving, I suppose, that all mankind it her must love and admire her. We promised to gratify him ; and having made him several presents, permitted him to leturn. As he reminded me oi Aladdin in the Arabian talc, I designed to give him that name in a recommendatory letter, which he pressed me to write, instead or St. Domingo, as some European visiter had ridiculously called him; but, since the allusion would not have been generally known, and since the title of Alauldtn, or eminence in faith, might have offended his superiors, I thought it .advisable for him to keep his African name. A very ind.fferent dinner was
prepared for us at the house of the Governor,
whom
we
was the beginning of Ramadan, the Mohammedan lent, and he was engaged in his devotions, or made them his excuse but his eldest son sat by us while we dined, together with \lusa who was employed, jointly with his brother Husain, as purveyor to the Captain of the frigate.
it
Having observed
about
six
grew
hinna, of which
Laivso?iia.
learned with pleasure, that it was had read so much in Arabian poems, and which European botanists have ridiculously named
then in flower,
Mitsa bruised some of the leaves, and, having moistened them with water, applied them to our nails and the tips of our fingers, which in a short time became of a dark orange-scarlet. I had before conceived a different idea of this dye, and imagined, that it was used by the Arabs to imitate the natural redness of those parts in young and healthy persons, which in all countries must be considered as a beauty : perhaps a less quantity oi hinna, or the same differently prepared, might have produced that effect. The old men in Arabia used the same dye to conceal their grey hairs, while their daughters were dying their
86
lips
teeth
so universal
sonal vanity and a love of disguising truth; though in all cases, the farther our species recede from na-
from true beauty ; and should disdain to use artifice or deceit for any purpose or on any occasion. If the women of rank, at Paris, or those in London who wish to imitate them, be inclined to call the Arabs barbarians, let them view their ow-n head-dresses and cheeks in a
ture, the farther they depart
at least
men
glass,
and,
if
they have
left
no room
for blushes,
be
inwardly
at least
ashamed of
I
their censure.
In the afternoon
walked a long way up the mounamVd plants and trees no less new
than beautiful, and regretted exceedingly that very few of them were in blossom, as I should then have Curiosity led from had leisure to examine them. hill to hill ; and I came at last to the sources of a rivulet, which we had passed near the shore, and from which the ship was to be supplied with excellent wa-
saw no birds on the mountains but Guinea-fozvl, which might have been easily caught no insects were troublesome to me but mosquiand I had no fear of venomous reptiles, "tos ; having been assured that the air was too pure for any to exist in it; but I was often unwillingly a cause of fear to the gentle and harmless lizard, who
ter.
I
:
ran
among
the shrubs.
I
On my
return
missed the
had ascended; but, having met blacks laden with yams and plantains, I was some by them directed to another, which led me round, through a charming grove of cocoa-trees, to the Governor's country-seat, where our entertainment was closed by a syllabub, which the English had taught the Muselmar.s to make for them.
path by which
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
87
received no answer from Salim ; nor, indeed, expected one ; since we took for granted that he could not but approve our intention of visiting his
father;
We
sun-rise, in full
:
but
we were
The
servants, at the
prince's door, told us coolly, that their master was indisposed, and, as they believed, asleep; that he had given them no orders concerning his palanquins, and
Ahu soon came to and was followed by his eldest son, Ahmed with whom we walked to the gardens of the two princes SaJim and Hatndullah; the situation was naturally good, but wild and desolate ; and, in Salmis garden, which we entered through a miserable hovel, we saw a convenient bathing place, well-built with stone, but then in great disorder, and a shed, by way of summer-house, like that under which we dined at the Governor's, but smaller and less neat. On the ground there lay a kind of cradle, about six feet long, and a little more than one foot in breadth, made of cords twisted in a sort of clumsy
that they durst not disturb him.
his
pay us
compliments,
,
net-work, with a long thick bambu fixed to each side of it this, we heard with surprize, was a royal palanquin, and one of the vehicles in which we were intended to have been rocked on mens shoulders over the mountains. I had much conversation with Ahmed) whom I found intelligent and communicative he told me that several of his countrymen composed songs and tunes ; that he was himself a passionate lover of poetry and music ; and that, if we would dine at his house, he would play and sing to us. declined his invitation to dinner, as we had made a conditional promise, if ever we passed a day at MaisamndO) to eat our curry with Bana Gifru, an honest man, of whom we purchased egg? and vegetables, and to whom some Englishman had given the title of Lordx which made him extremely vain. we could therefore
:
We
88
visit. He sung and accompanied his drawling, though pathetic, psalmody with a kind of mandoline, which he touched with an awkward quill the instrument was very imperfect, but seemed to give him delight. The names of the strings were written on it in Arabian or Indian figures, simple and compounded ; but I could not think them worth copying
hymn
or two in Arabic,
gave Captain Williamson, who wished to present some literary curiosities to the library at Dublin, a small roll containing a hymn in Arabic letters, but in the language of Mombaza, which was mixed with Arabic; but it hardly deserved examination, since the study of languages has little intrinsic value, and is only useful as the instrument of real knowledge, which we can scarce expect from the poets of the MozamAhmed would, I believe, have heard our En* bique. ropcan airs (I alwavs except French melody) with rapture, for his favourite tune was a common Irish jig, with which he seemed wonderfully affected.
4
He
our return to the beach I thought of visiting old Aizvi, according to my promise, and prince Salim, whose character I had not then discovered I resolved for that purpose to stay on shore alone, our dinner Ahvi with Gibu having been fixed at an early hour. showed me his manuscripts, which chiefly related to the ceremonies and ordinances of his own religion ; and one of them, which I had formerly seen in Europe, was a collection of sublime and elegant hymns in praise of Mohammed, with explanatory notes in the, margin. I requested him to read one of them after the manner of the Arabs ; and he chanted it in a strain by no means unpleasingj but I am persuaded that he The room, which understood it very imperfectly. was open to the street, was presemly crowded with viwhom were Muftis, or Expounders, siters, most of of the Law 3 and Alwi 9 desirous perhaps to djsplay
:
On
OF HINZUAN, OR /OHANNA,
his zeal before
89
them
at
the expcnce of
good breed-
ing
tary
iirected
my
attention to a passage in a
commen-
on the Koran, which I found levelled at the The commentator, having related with Christians. some ad litions (but on the whole not inaccurately)
the circumstances of the temptation, puts this speech " Though I am uninto the mouth of the tempter
:
"
*c
*'
will mislead, by thy means, more human creatures than thou wilt set l Nor was this menace vain, (says the right."
I
Mohammedan write.) * for the inhabitants of a region * many thousand leagues in extent, are still so deluded
' '
by the Devil,
God I Heaven preserve us,' he adds, from biaspheming Christians as well as blaspheming Jews* Although a religious dispute with those obstinate zealots would have been unreasonable and fruitless, yet
<
thought, a slight reprehension, as the among them. % The * commentator, said I, ' was much to blame for passing * so indiscriminate and hasty a censure: the title, which ' gave your legislator and gives you such offence, was ' often applied in Judea (by a bold figure agreeable ' to the Hebrew idiom, though unusual in Arabic) ' to angels, to holy men, and even to all mankind, who * are commanded to call God their Father ; and in ' this large sense the apostle, to the Romans, calls ' the elect the children of God, and the Messiah the * frst-born among many brethren ; but the words only ( begotten are applied transcendently and incompa* rably to him alone*; and, as for me who believes
they Reserved,
1
* f
f*
you also profess to believe, though you assert without proof that we have altered them, I cannot refuse him an appellation, though far surpassing our reason, by which he is
Rom.
viii.
29.
See
John
iii.
1,
II.
i)Q
'
*
distinguished in the Gospel ; and the believers in Muhammed, who expressly name him the Messiah,
to have been born ot a virgin,
fully justify the
phrase conthemselves condemn6 able for cavilling at words, when they cannot ob' ject to the substance of our faiih consistently with ' The Muselmans had nothing to say in their own.' reply ; and the conversation was changed,
demned by
to
which Ahvl put peace and the independence of America ; the several powers and resources of Briand France, Spain and HoIJanu, the character and supposed views of the Emperor, the comparative strength of the Russian, Imperial, and Othnan armies, and their respective modes of bringing their 1 answer him without reserve, exforces to action.
I
was astonished
at the questions
la:e
me
concerning the
cept on
were
my
the state of our possessions in India ; nor answers lost, for I observed, that all the
variously affected by them, generally
company were
with amazement, often with concern, especially when I described to them the great force and admirable discipline of the Auftrum army, and the stupid prejudices of the Turks, whom nothing can induce to abandon their old Tartarian habits ; and exposed the weakness of their empire in Africa, and even in the more distant provinces of Asia. In return, he gave me clear but general information concerning the go" His counvernment and commerce of his island ** try," he said, " was poor,, and produced few articles
:
<{
of trade
but
if
to phiv-tuiu^s,"
they could get money, ivhich tiny those were his words,
they might easily," he added, " procure foreign commodities and exchange them advantageously " with their neighbours in the islands and on the
continent.
"
*
Thus
with
little
money,"
balls,
said
he,
cutlasses,
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
9I
articles
"
w cotton, and other knives, c!< " brought from Bombay, and with those we
" Madagascar
*
trade to
or
dollars,
with which
the
" honey
**
With butter, and so forth, in that island. gold, which we receive from your ships, we can procure elephants teeth from the natives of Mob&rtei
;
" and
<'
bars
of iron
country give us clothes of various kinds in exthese cloths we disfor our commodities " pose of lucratively in the three neighbouring islands, " whence we bring rice, cattle, a kind of bread-fruit, <c which grows in Comara, and slaves, which we buy
" change
fC also at
,
we
trade
and we carry
"
on
this traffic in
our own
vessels."
could not help expressing my abhorrence of their slave-trade, and asked him by what law they claimed a property in rational beings, since our Creator had given our species a dominion, to be moderately exercised, over the beasts of the field and the fowls of the air, but none to man over man. " By no " law," answered he, " unless necessity be a law.
Here
'*
nations in
Madagascar and
his prophet,
:
neither
God nor
**
"
i(
many
whom,
if
they could not sell, they would certainly kill. *Tn" dividuals among them are in extreme poverty, " and have numbers of children, who, if they can-
"
Sl
"
tl
"
"
<c
not be disposed of, must perish through hunger, together with their miserable parents. By purchasing these wretches we preserve their lives, and, perhaps, those of many others whom our money The sum of the argument is this If we relieves. buy them they will live ; if they become valuable
:
but, if they
f
"
must
die miserably."
There
9^
* *
*.
*
'
such cases; but you fallaciously draw a general conclusion from a few particular instances and this is the very fallacy which, on a thousand other occasions, deludes mankind. It is not to be doubted, that a constant and gainful craffic in husaid 1,
<
may be,'
*
*
'
* *
'
man creatures foments war, in which captives are always made, and keeps up that perpetual enmity which you pretend to be the cause of a practice in itself reprehensible, while in truth it is its effect. The same traffic encourages laziness in some parents, who might in general support their families by proper industry, and seduces others to stifle their natural feelings. At most, your redemption of those unhappy children can amount only to a personal
* *
1
*
*
contract implied between you, -for gratitude and reasonable service on their part, for kindness and humanity on yours ; but can you think your part
*
*
performed by disposing of them against their wills, with as much indifference as if you were selling ' cattle, especially as they might become readers of the * Koran, and pillars of your faith ? The law," said be, ** forbids our selling them, when they are be" lievers in the Prophet ; and little children only are te ' You, sold ; nor they often, or by all masters."
' ''
*
*
who
believe in
spirit
MuhammedJ
and
letter
said I,
are
bound
of his laws to take pains, * that they also may believe in him ; and if you ne* gleet so important a duty for sordid gain, I do * not see how you can hope for prosperity in this world, ' old friend and or for happiness in the next.' the Muftis assented, and muttered a few prayers; but
by the the
My
probably forgot
my
preaching before
many minutes
had passed.
slipped away in this conversacould make but a short visit to Prince Salim ; and my view in visiting him was to fix the time of our journey to Domoni as early as possible on His appearance was more savage the next morning.
tion, that
I
OF HINZUAN, OF JOHANNA.
than ever, and
plain
bitterly
I
95
found him
the
in a disposition to
against
English.
No
comacknow-
attentions of
ledgement, he said, had been made for the kind himself and the chief men of his country to the officers and people of the Brilliant, though a whole year had elapsed since the wreck. I really wondered at the forgetfulness, to which alone such a neglect could be imputed, and assured him that I would express my opinion both in Bengal and " have little," said he,: In letters to England. *' to hope from letters ; for, when we have been paid *l with them instead of money, and have shewn * c them on board your ships, we have commonly ** been treated with disdain, and often with impreca-
We
**
tions."
assured him,
that either
those letters
must have been written coldly and by very obscure persons, or shown to very ill-bred men, of whom there were too many in all nations ^ but that a few instances of rudeness ought not to give him a general prejudice against our national character. " But you,"' said he, " are a wealthy nation, and we are indigent,. " yet, though all our groves of cocoa-trees, our " fruits, and our cattle, are ever at your service, you " always try to make hard bargains with us for what * you chuseto dispose of > and frequently will neither " sell nor give those things which we principally " want." 4 To form,' said I, ' a just opinion of * Englishmen, you must visit us in our own island, or at least India ; here we are strangers and travel. * lers many of us have no design to trade in any 4 country, and none of us think of trading in: * Hinzuan, where we stop only for' refreshment. The clothes, arms, or instruments, which yoir * may want, are commonly necessary or conveniens: but, \{ Sayyad Alzvi or his sons were to be to us strangers in our country, you would have no rea4 He then son to boast of superior hospitality.' showed me, a second time, a part of an old silk vest,, with the star of the Order of the Thistle, and be^: '
94
ged me to explain the motto ; expressing a wish, that the order might be conferred on him by the King of
England,
I
good
represented to
him
gratified,
was
more
than in
This conversation being agreeable to neither of us, changed it, by desiring that the palanquins and bearers might be ready next morning as early as He answered, that his palanquins were possible. at our service for nothing, but that we must pay
I
him
it
ten
dollars
for
each
set
of
bearers;
that
was the stated price, and that Mr. Hastings had This, as I paid it when 'he went to visit the king. learned afterwards, was false; but, at all events, I knew that he would keep the dollars himself, and give nothing to the bearers, who deserved them better, and whom he would compel to leave their cottages, and toil for his profit. " Can you imagine," I replied, V that we would employ four-and-twenty men to bear us so far on their shoulders without rewardi( But since they are freemen (so ing them amply ? assured me) " and not your slaves, we will pay he had " them in proportion to their diligence and good beha" viour ; and it becomes neither your dignity nor ours M to make a previous bargain." I showed him an elegant copy of the Koran, which I destined for his father, and described the nest of my present; but he coldly asked, " if that was all?" Had he been king, a purse of dry dollars would have given him more pleasure Finding him, in than the finest or holiest manuscript. variety of subjects, utterly void of inconversing on a telligence or principle, I took my leave, and saw him no more; but promised to let him know for certain whether we should make our intended excursion.
"
OF HINZUAN, OR
JOHANNA.
95
We
dined
in tolerable
manners of
the natives in the middle rank, who are called Banas^ all of whom have slaves constantly at work for them.
We visited
who seemed
;
in
and her husband, who was a mariner, bartered an Arabic treatise on astronomy and navigation, which he had read, for a sea-compass, of which he w ell knew the
a station but
raised above indigence
r
use.
In the morning I had conversed with two very 'old Arabs of Yemen, who had brought some articles of trade to Hhizuan and in the afternoon I met another, who had come from Maskat (where at that time there was a civil w ar) to purchase, if he could, an hundred I told them all that I loved their nastand of arms. tion ; and they returned my compliment with great warmth, especially the two old men, who were near foursccre, and reminded me of Zohair and Hareth.
;
r
'
96
Before sun-rise, on the 2d of August, I went alone on shore, with a small basket of such provisions as I might want in the course of the day, and with some
cushions to
able vehicle
le-ist
a toler-
the dollars to which his men were entitled ; and he knew that, as I was eager for the journey, he could prescribe his own terms. Old Ahvi met me on the
who he
said
was indisposed. He conducted me to his house, and seemed rather desirous of persuading me to abandon my design "of visiting the king ; but I assured him, that, if the prince would not supply me with proper attendants, I would walk to Domoni with my own servants and a guide. Shaikh Salim, he said, was miserably avaricious, and that he was ashamed of a kinsman with such a disposition but that he was no less obstinate than covetous; and that, without ten dollars paid in hand, it would be impossible to I then procure bearers. gave him three guineas, which he carried, or pretended to carry to Salim ; but returned without the change, alleging that he had no silver, and promising to give me on my return the
;
few dollars that remained. In about an hour the ridiculous vehicle was brought by nine sturdy blacks, who could not speak a word of Arabic, so that I expected no information concerning the countrv through which I was to travel ; but Ahvi assisted me in a point You cannot go,' said of the utmost conseqrfence. he, ( without an interpreter, for the king speaks only ' the language of this island ; but I have a servant, 4 whose name is Tumitni, a sensible and worthy man, who understands English, and is much esteemed * by the king; he is known and valued all over
'
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
c
97
;
'
Ifmzuan. This man shall attend you will soon be sensible of his worth.'
and you
Twmtn'i desired to carry my basket ; and we set out with a prospect of fine weather, but some hours later than I had intended. I walked, by the gardens of the two princes, to the skirts of the town, and came to a little village consisting of several very neat huts made chiefly with the leaves of the cocoa-tree; but the road a little farther was so stony, that I sat in the palanquin, and was borne with perfect safety over some rocks. I then desired my guide to assure the men that I would pay them liberally ; but the poor peasants, who had been brought from their farms on the hills, were not perfectly acquainted with the use of money, and treated my promise with indifference.
About five miles from Matsamudo lies the town of Waul, where Shaikh Abdullah, who has already been mentioned, usually resides I saw it at a distance, and it seemed to be agreeably situated. When I had passed the rocky part of the road, I came to a stony beach where the sea appeared to have lost some ground, since there was a fine sand to the left, and beyond it a beautiful bay, which resembled that of Weymouth, and seemed equally convenient for bathing; but it did not appear to me that the stones over which I was carried had been recently covered with
:
Here I saw the frigate, and, taking leave of it for two days, turned from the coast into a fine country very neatly cultivated, and consisting partly of hillocks exquifitely green, partly of plains, which were then in a gaudy dress of rich yellow blossoms. guide informed me they were plantations of a kind of vetch, which was eaten by the natives. Cottages and farms were interspersed ail over this. gay champaign, and the whole scene was delightful ; but it was soon changed for beauties of a different kind.
water.
My
Vol.
II.
q8
We
ing
from the laughter and of my bearers I concluded them to be merriment quite at their ease, I bade them set me down, and walked before them all the rest of the way. Mountains, clothed with fine trees and flowering fhrubs, presented themselves on our ascent from the vale ; and we proceeded for half an hour through pleasant woodwalks, where 1 regretted the impossibility of loitering a while to examine the variety of new blossoms, which succeeded one another at every step, and the virtues, as well as names, of which seemed familiar
vehicle uneasy, though
to
my
Tumuni.
At
length
we descended
:
into a valley
of greater extent than the former wintery torrent ran through it, and fell down a steep declivity at the end of it, where it seemed to be lost among rocks. Cattle were grazing on the banks of the river, and the huts of their owners appeared on the hills a more agreeable spot I had not before seen even in Swisserland or Merionethshire ; but it was followed by an assemblage of natural beauties, which I hardly expected to find in a little island twelve degrees to the south of the Line. I was not sufficiently pleased with my solitary journey to discover charms which had no actual existence, and the first effect of the contrast between St. Jago and Hinzuan had ceased ; but, without any disposition to give the landscape a high colouring, I may truly say, what I thought at the time, that the whole country which
a river or large
:
next presented itself, as far surpassed ErmenorroiUe, or Blenheim, or any other imitations of nature, which I had seen in trance or England, as the finest bay surTwo very high passes an artificial piece of water. mountains, covered to the summit with the richest verdure, were at some distance on my right hand, and separated from me by meadows diversified with cottages and herds, or by vallies resounding with tor-
OF HINZUAN,
Tents
OR.
JOHANNA.
gO.
was the sea, to which from the hills and woods; and the road was a smooth path naturally winding through a forest of spicy shrubs, fruit-trees, and palms. Some high trees were spangled with white blossoms,
and
waterfalls;
on
my
left
equal in fragrance to orange-flowers my guide called them Mynongos ; but the day was declining so fast
:
that
was impossible to examine them the variety flowers, and birds, of which I had a tranof sient view in this magnificent garden, would have
it
:
fruits,
month
but I saw no remarkable insect, and no reptile of any kind. The woodland was diversified by a few pleasant glades, and new prospects were continually opened at length a noble view of the sea burst upon me unexpectedly ; and, having passed a hill or two, we came to the beach, beyond which were several turned from the shore; and, hills and cottages. on the next eminence, I saw the town of Domrni at a little distance below us. I was met by a number of natives, a few of whom spoke Arabic, and thinking it a convenient place for repose, I sent my guide to He returned apprize the king of my intended visit. in half an hour with a polite message ; and I walked into the town, which seemed large and populous. great crowd accompanied me ; and I was conducted to a house built on the same plan with the best houses In the middle of the court -yard at Matsamudo. stoocfa large Monongo-tree, which perfumed the air; the apartment on the left was empty ; and in that on the right sat the king on a sofa or bench, covered with an ordinary carpet. He rose when I entered, and grasping my hands, placed me near him on the right but as he could speak only the language of Hinzuan, I had recourse to my friend Tumuni, than whom a readier or more accurate interpreter could not have been found. I presented the king with a very handsome Indian dress of blue silk with golden flowers,
:
We
IOO
which had been worn only once at a masquerade, and with a beautiful copy of the Koran, from which I He took them with great read a few verses to him. complacency, and said, he wished I had come by one of my boats sea, that he might have loaded He with fruit, and with some of his finest cattle. had seen me, he said, on board the frigate, where he had been, according to his custom, in disguise, and had heard of me from his son Shaikh HamduUah. 1 gave him an account of my journey, and he put many extolled the beauties of his country questions concerning mine, and professed great regard for our nation. " But I hear," said he, " that you are
:
"
f
why
you armed with a broad sword?'* * I was a * man/ I said, before I was a magistrate and, if it ' should ever happen that law could not protect ' me, 1 must protect myself.' He seemed about sixty years old, had a very cheerful countenance, and great appearance of good-nature mixed with a certain dignity, which distinguished him from the crowd of Our conministers and omcers who attended him. versation was interrupted by notice, that it was the time for evening prayers ; and, when he rose, he said " this house is yours, and I will visit you in it, after " you have taken some refreshment." Soon after, his servants brought a roast fowl, a rice pudding, and some other dishes, with papayas and very good pome;
supper.
basket supplied the rest of my with old red cloth, and decorated with pieces of porcelain and festoons of English bottles ; the lamps were placed on the ground in large sea-shells; and the bed-place was a recess, concealed by a chintz hanging, opposite to the sofa, on which we had been sitting. Though it was not a place that invited repose, and the gnats were inexpressibly troublesome, yet the fatigue of the clay progranates
;
my own
cured
me
was waked
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANKA.
;
.101
by (he return of the king and his train some of whom were Arabs, for I heard one of them say ftutva rakicl, or, he is sleeping. There was immediate silence, and I passed the night with little disturbance, except from the unwelcome songs of the mosquitos. In the morning all was equally silent and solitary ; the house appeared to be deserted ; and I began to wonder what had become of Tumuni he came at length with concern on his countenance, and told me that the bearers had run away in the night ; but that the king, who wished to see me in another of his houses, would supply me with bearers, if he could not prevail on me to stay till a boat could be sent for. I went immediately to the king, whom I found sitting on a raised sofa in a large room, the walls of which were adorned with santences from the Koran in very legible characters about fifty of his subjects were seated on the
:
ground
in a semicircle before
him; and my
inter-
The good
guest for a week, I hope ; but, seriously, if you must return soon, I will send into the country for " some peasants to carry you." He then apologized for the behaviour of Shaikh Salhn, which he had heard from Tumuni, who told me afterwards that he was much displeased with it, and would not fail to
He concluded with a long harangue on the advantage which the English might derive from sending a ship every year from Bombay to trade with his subjects, and on the wonderful cheapness of their commodities, especially of their cowries. Ridiculous as this idea might seem, it showed an enlargement of mind, a desire of promoting *.he interest of his people, and a sense of the benefits arising from trade, which could hardly have been expected from a petty African chief, and which, if he had
express his displeasure.
102
proportioned to the extent of answered, that I was imperfectly acquainted with the commerce of India ; but that I would, report the substance, of his conversation, and would ever bear testimony of his noble zeal for the good of his country, and to the mildness with
dominions
which he governed
it.
As
had no inclination to
I
:
pressing
me
to lengthen
my
to
visit,
Arabian
assured
politeness
j
be
but impor-
We
in
therefore parted
and
at the request
time would showing attention to one of the worthiest men in Hinzuan, I made a visit to the Governor of the town, whose name was Mutekka : his manners were very pleasing, and he showed me some letters from the officers of the Brilliant, which appeared to flow warm from the heart, and contained the strongest eloge of his courtesy and He insisted on filling my basket with liberality. some of the finest pomegranates I had ever seen ; and 'I left the town, impressed with a very favourable When I opinion of the king and his governor. reascended the hill, attended by many of the natives, one of them told me in Arabic^ that I was going to receive the highest mark of distinction that it was in the king's power to show me and he had scarce ended, when I heard the report Shaikh Ahmed had saluted me pf a single gun I waved my hat, with the whole of his ordnance. and said Allah Acbar the people shouted, and 1
of Tumurii,
that
little
who
me
be
lost
continued my journey, not without fear of inconvenience from excessive heat, and the fatigue of climbThe walk, however, was not on the ing rocks. whole unpleasant I sometimes rested in the valleys, and forded all the rivulets/ which refreshed me with
:
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
their coolness,
IO3
me with exquisite water to pomegranates, and occasionally with brandy. were overtaken by some peasants, who came from the hills by a nearer way, and brought the king's present of a cow with her calf, and they had apparently been a she-goat with two kids selected for their beauty, and were brought safe to Bengal. The prospects, which had so greatly delighted me the preceding day, had not lost their charms, though they wanted the recommendation of novelty ; but I must confess, that the most delightful object in that day's walk, of near ten miles, was the Black Frigate, which I discerned at sunset from a rock near the prince's gardens. Close to the town I was met by a native, who, perceiving me to be weary, opened a very fine cocoa-nut, which afforded a delicious draught he informed me, that one of his countrymen had been punished that afternoon for a theft on board the Crocodile, and added, that, in his opinion, the punishment was no less just than the offence was disgraceful to his country. The offender, as I afterwards learned, was a youth of good family, who had married a daughter of old Alwl, but, being left alone for a moment in the cabin, and seeing a pair of blue Morocco slippers, could not resist the temptation, concealed them so ill under his gown, that he was detected with the mainer. This proves, that no principle of honour is instilled by education into the gentry of this island even Ahvl, when he had observed that, " in the month of Ramadan, it was " not lawful to paint with hinna, or to tell lies" and when I asked, whether both were lawful all the rest of the year, answered, that " lies were innocent, if no *' man was injured by them." Tumuni took his leave, as well satisfied as myself with our excursion. I told
and supplied
mix with
the juice of
my
We
him, before
guineas
;
him
and
that, if
me
104
be very glad to receive him into my service in India. Mr. Roberts, the master of the ship, had passed the day with Sayyad Ahmed, and had learned from him
a few curious circumstances concerning the government of Hhrznan ; which he found to be a monarchy The king, he was told, had limited by aristocracy. no power of making war by his own authority ; but, if the assembly of nobles, who were from time to time convened by him, resolved on a war with any of
the neighbouring islands, they defrayed the charges of it by voluntary contributions, in return for which
they claimed as their own all the booty and captives The hope of gain or the want that might be taken. is usually the real motives for such enterof slaves prizes, and ostensible pretexts are ea-.ly found. At that very time he understood they medicated a war, because they wanted hands for the following harvest. Their fleet consisted of sixteen or seventeen small vessels, which they manned with about two thousand five hundred islanders armed with muskets and cutlasses, IS ear two years had elapsOr with bows and arrows. ed before they had possessed themselves of two towns in Mayata, which they still kept and garrisoned. The ordinary expences of the government were defrayed by a tax from two hundred villages; but the three principal towns were exempt from all taxes, except that they paid annually to the chief Mufti a fortieth and part of the value of all their moveable property from that payment neither the king nor the nobles claimed an exemption. The kingly authority, by the principles of their consitution, was considered elective, though the line of succession had not been altered since He was informed that a the first election of a sultan. wandering Arab, who had settled in the island, had, by his intrepidity in several wars, acquired the rank of a chieftain, and afterwards of a king with
;
limited powers ; and that he was the grandfather of Shaikh Ahmed. 1 had been assured that Queen
OF HINZUA.N, OR JOHANNA.
.10$
grandmother; and, that he was the sixth king ; but it must be remarked, that the words jedd and jeddah in Arabic are used for a male and female ancestor ind finitely ; and, without a correct pedigree of Ahmed's family, which I expected to procure but was disappointed, it would scarce be possible to ascertain the time when his forefather obtained the highest rank in the government. In the year iooo Captain John Davis, who has written an account of his voyage, found May ata governed by a king, and Atisuame, or Hinzuan, by a queen, who showed him great marks of friendship. -He anchored before the town of Demos (does he mean Domoni?} which was as large, he says, as Plymouth ; and he concludes, from the ruins around it, that it had once been a place of strength and grandeur. I can only say, that I observed no such ruins. Fifteen years after, Captain Peyton and Sir Thomas Roe touched at the Comara islands ; and, from their several accounts, it appears that an old sultaness at that time resided in Hinzuan, but had a dominion paramount over all the isles, three of her sons governing Mohila in her name. If this be true, Sohaili and the successors of Halimah must have lost their influence over the other islands and, by renewing their dormant claim as it suits their convenience, they may always be furnished with Five generations of eldest a pretence for hostilities. sons would account for an hundred and seventy of the years which have elapsed since Davis and Peyton found Hinzuan ruled by a sultaness ; and Ahmed was of such an age, that his reign may be reckoned equal to a generation. It is probable, on the whole, that Halimah was the widow of the first Arabian king, and that her mosque has been continued in
his
Hahmah was
so that
we may
reasonably
suppose two centuries to have passed since a single Arab had the courage and address to establish in that beautiful island a form of government, which,
106
in itself, appears to have been adadvantage to the original inhabitants. ministered with have lately heard of civil commotions in Hinzuan, which, we may venture to pronounce, were not excited by any cruelty or violence of Ahmed, but were probably occasioned by the indolence of an oliThat garchy naturally hostile to king arnH people. islands contain diathe mountains in the Comara monds, and the precious metals, which are studiously concealed by the policy of the several governments, may be true, though I have no reason to believe it, and have only heard it asserted without evidence; but I hope, that neither an expectation of such treasures, nor of any other advantage, will ever induce an European power to violate the first principles of justice by assuming the sovereignty of Hi?izuan y which cannot answer a better purpose than that of supplying our fleets with seasonable refreshment and,, although the natives have an interest in receiving us with apparent cordiality, yet, if we wish their attachment to be unfeigned and their dealings just, we must set them an example of strict honesty in the performance of our engagements. In truth, our nation is not cordially loved by the inhabitants ot H'mzuan, who, as it commonly happens, form a general opinion from a few instances of violence or breach Not many years ago an European, who of faith. had been hospitably received and liberally supported at Matsamudo, behaved rudely to a young married woman, who, being of low degree, was walking
We
veiled through a street in the evening. Her husband ran to protect her, and resented the rudeness, probably with menaces, possibly with actual force ; and
wound with
der,
the European is said to have given him a mortal a knife or bayonet, which he brought, This foul murafter the scuffile, from his lodging.
which the law of nature would have justified the magistrate in punishing with death, was reported
OF HINZUAN, OR JOHANNA.
to the king,
10?
who
told
would be wiser to hush up." A/wi mentioned a civil case of his own, which ought not to be concealed. When he was on the coast of Africa* in the dominions of a very savage prince, a small European vessel was wrecked and the pr nee not only seized all that could be saved from the week, but claimec the captain and the crew as
thi.t *'
;
1
his slaves,
APwi
and treated them with ferocious insolence. when he heard of the accifell
prostrate before
him, and by tears and importunity prevailed on him to give the Europeans their berty ; that he supported
1
them
at his
to build ano-
which they sailed to Hinzuan y and departed thence for Europe or India. He showed me Captain's promissory notes for sums, which to an tf] African trader must De a considerable object, but which are no price for liberty, safety, and, perhaps, life, which his good though disinterested offices had procured. I lamented that, in my situation, it was of my power to assist Akvi in obtaining wholly out justice ; but he urged me to deliver an Arabic letter from him, inclosing the notes, to the Governor Geand I comneral, who, as he said, knew him well
ther vessel, in
:
may
I
accused of
living,
injustice,
Since it is possible that a be made by the person thus will not name either him or
commanded
fall
but, if he be
into his hands,
and
if
this
paper should
he may be induced to reflect our national honour, that a savage, but who administer to have no just cause to reproach our contracts.
VI.
GROSS- BEAK,
DEHLI.
KHAN OF
Baya
THE
little
bird, called
in Hindi,
Berbcra in
Cibum
Persian, and
Tmawwit
is
in Arabic,
from
his
remark-
with yellow-brown plumage, a yellowish head and. feet, a light coloured breast, and a conic beak, very This bird is exceedthick in proportion to his body. ingly common in Hindustan : he is astonishingly sensible, faithful, and decile, never voluntarily deserting the place where his young were hatched, nowise averse,
birds, to the society of mankind, taught to perch on the hand of his master. In a state of nature he generally builds his nest on the highest tree that he can find, especially on the Palmyra, or on the Indian fig-tree ; and he prefers that
like
most other
and
easily
which happens
to overhang a well or a rivulet : he of grass, which he weaves like cloth, and shapes like a large bottle, suspending it firmly en the branches, but so as to rock with the wind ; and placing it with its entrance downwards, to secure it from birds of prey. His nest usually consists of two or three chambers ; and it is the popular belie that he lights them with fire-flies, which he catches alive at night and confines with moist clay, or with cowdung that such flies are often found in his nest, where pieces of cow-dung are also stuck, is indubitable; but, as their light could be of little use to him, it seems probable that he only feeds on them. He may be taught with ease to fetch a piece of paper,
makes
it
no
or any small thing that his master points out to him. It is an attested fact, that, if a ring be dropped into a deep well, and a signal given to him, he will fly down with amazing celerity, catch the ring before it touches the water, and bring it up to his master with apparent exultation; and it is confidently asserted, that, if a house or any other place be shown to him once or twice, he will carry a note thither immediately on a proper signal being made. One instance of his docility I can myself mention with confidence, having often been an eve-witness of it the vouno- Hindu women at Banares and other places wear very thin plates of gold, called ticas, slightly fixed, by way of ornament, between their eye-brows; and, when they pass through the streets, it is not uncommon for the youthful libertines, who amuse themselves with training Bayas, to give them a sign which they understand, and send them to pluck the pieces of gold from the foreheads of their mistresses, which they bring in triumph to the lovers. The Bay a feeds naturally on grasshoppers and other insects, but will subsist, when tame, on pulse macerated in water. His flesh is warm and drying, of easy digestion, and recommended, in medical books, as a solvent of stone in the bladder or kidneys ; but of that virtue The female lays many there is no sufficient proof. beautiful eggs, resembling large pearls the white of them, when they are boiled, is transparent, and the flavour of them is exquisitely delicate. When many assembled on a high tree, they make a Bayas are lively din, but it is rather chirping than singing their want of musical talents is, however, amply supplied by their wonderful sagacity, in which they are not excelled by any feathered inhabitants of the
:
forest.
VII.
HLXDUS.
BY THE PRESIDENT.
THE
so
is
believed so
firmly by themselves,
much conversation among Europeans, that a short view of their Chronological System, which has not yet been exhibited from certain authorities, may be acceptable to those who seek truth without partiality to received opinions, and without regarding any consequences that
may
result
from
their inquiries.
The
conse-
quences, indeed, of truth cannot but be desireable, and no reasonable man will apprehend any danger to society from a general diffusion of its light ; but we must not suffer ourselves to be dazzled by a false
glare,
cal
nor mistake enigmas and allegories for historiAttached to no system, and as much disposed to reject the Mosaic history, if it be proved erroneous, as to believe it, -if it be confirmed by sound reasoning from indubitable evidence, I propose to lay before you a concise account of Indian Chronology, extracted from Sanscrit books, or collected from conversations with Pandits, and to subjoin a few remarks on their system, without attempting to decide a question, which I shall venture to start, " Whether it is not in fact the same with our " own, but embellished and obscured by the fancy " of their poets and the riddles of their astroverity.
nomers
.-"
112
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
One of the most curious books in Sanscrit, and one of the oldest after the Pedas, is a tract on religions and civil duties, taken, as it is believed, from the oral instructions of Menu, son of Brahma, to the An exceeding wellfirst inhabitants of the earth. collated copy of this most interesting law-tract is now before me; and I begin my dissertation with a few couplets from the first chapter of it tf The sun *c causes the division of day and night, which are *' of two sorts, those of men and those of the
:
cf
c
Gods
their several
employments
the night
for
their
"
< ce
*f
slumber.
patriarchs
;
A
is
month
it
and
is
a day and
<f
<c
**
<
the ; a day and night of the Gods ; and that is also divided into two halves ; the day is, when the sun moves toward the north ; the night, when it moves toward the south. Learn now the duration of a
bright half
their
dark, half,
year
is
"
c
Brahma with
in order.
call
that of
the ages
and
" of
Gods they
and
6i In the three in like manner, as many hundreds. " successive ages, together with their limits at the " beginning and end of them, are thousands and
c
"
"
u
,f
"
"
"
"
w
hundreds diminished by one. This aggregate of four ages, amounting to twelve thousand divine years, is called an age of the Gods ; and a thousand such divine ages added together must be considered as a day of Brahma : his night has also the same duration. The before mentioned age of the Gods, or twelve thousand of their years, multiplied by seventy-one, form what is named here below a Manwantara. There are alternate creations and destructions of worlds through innumerable Manwantaras: the Being supremely desirable performs all this again and again."
OT
THE HINDUS.
1*3
Such is the arrangement of infinite time, which the Hindus believe to have been revealed from Hea*. ven, and which they generally understand in a literal sense: it seems to have intrinsic marks of being purely
tions
astronomical ; but I will not appropriate the observaof others, nor anticipate those in particular, which have been made by two or three of our members, and which they will, I hope, communicate to A conjecture, however, of Mr. Paterthe Society. son has so much ingenuity in it, that I cannot forbear
:
mentioning it here, especially as it seems to be confirmed by one of the couplers just cited he supposes, that, as a month of mortals is a day and night of the patriarchs, from the analogy of its bright and dark halves, so, by the same analogy, a day and night of mortals might have been considered by the ancient Hindus as a month of the lower world ; and then a year of such months will consist only of twelve days and nights, and thirty such years will compose a whence he surmises that the lunar year of mortals four million three hundred and twenty thousand years, of which the four Indian ages are supposed to consist,
;
mean only years of twelve days \ and, in tact, thac sum divided by thirty, is reduced to an hundred and forty -four thousand : now a thousandfour hundred and
forty years are one pads, a period in the Hindu astronomy ; and that sum multiplied by eighteen,
amounts precisely to twenty -five thousand nine hundred and twenty, the number of years in which the
fixed
also of
stars
last mentioned sum is the product an hundred and forty -four, which, according to M. Badly, was an old Indian cycle, into an hundred and eighty, or the Tartarian period, called Van, and of two thousand eight hundred and eighty into nine, which is not one only of the lunar cycles, cut considered by the Hindus as a mysterious number and an emblem of Divinity, because, if it be multiplied by any other
eastward.
The
114
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
whole number, the sum of the figures in the different products remain always nine, as the Deity, who appears in many forms, continues One immutable
The important period of twenty-jive thousand nine hundred and twenty years is well known to arise from the multiplication of three hundred and sixty into seventy-two, the number of years in which a fixed star seeais to move through a degree of a great circle; and, "although M. Le Gentil assures us, that the modern Hindus believe a complete revolution of the stars to be made in twenty-four thousand years, or fifty-four seconds of a degree to be passed in one year, yet we may have reason to think that the old Indian astronomers had made a more accurate calculation, but concealed their knowledge from the people under the veil of fourteen Manwantaras, seventyone divine ages, compound cycles, and years of different sorts, from those of Brahma to those of Patala,
essence.
If we follow the analogy or the infernal regions. suggested by Menu, and suppose only a day and night to be called a year, we may divide the number
of years in a divine age by three hundred and sixty, and the quotient will be twelve thousand, or the numbut, conjecture ber of his divine years in one age apart, we need only compare the two periods 4320000 and 25920, and we shall find, that among their com-' mon divisors, are 6, 9, 12 &c. 18, 36, 72, 144, &c. ; which numbers with their several multiples, especially in a decuple progression, constitute some of the most celebrated periods of the Chaldeans, canCreeks, Tartars and even of the Indians. not fail to observe, that the number 432, which appears to be the basis of the Indian system, is a 60th part of 25920, and, by continuing the comparison we might probably solve the whole enigma. In the preface to a Varancs Almanac I find the following " wild stanza thousand Great Ages are a day of ' Brahma ; a thousand such days are an Indian hour
:
We
OF
THE HINDUS.
t$
w of Plshnu; six hundred thousand such, hours make " a period of Riulra and a million of Rudras
;
**
(or
/ioo
quadrillions five
trillions
iC
thousand
" to the Supreme deny the conclusion of the stanza to be orthodox: " Tithe'" they say, " exists not at all with God'" and
they advise astronomers to mind their own business, The astronomical without meddling with theology.
however, will answer our present purpose ; for shows, in the first place, that cyphers are added at pleasure to swell the periods ; and, if we take ten cyphers from a Rudra, or divide by ten thousand millions, we shall have a period of 259200000 years, which, divided by 60 (the usual divisor of time among the Hindus) will give 4320000, or a Great Age, which we find subdivided in the proportion of 4, 3, 2, 1, from the notion of -virtue decreasing
verse,
it
arithmetically
copper,
and ear-
then ages.
that the
But, should
be thought improbable
made more
andria,
Indian astronomers in very early times had accurate observations than those of Alexstill
more im-
probable that they should have relapsed with appathat they rent cause into error, we may suppose formed their divine age by an arbitrary multiplication of 24000 by 1 80, according to Le Gentil, or of 2 600 by 200, according to the comment on the Stay a SidNow, as it is hardly possible that such dhanta. coincidences should be accidental, we may hold it nearly demonstrated, that the period of a divine age was at first merely astronomical, and may consequently reject it from our present inquiry into the historical or civil chronology of India. Let us, however, proceed to the avowed opinions of the Hindus, and see, when we have ascertained their system, whether we can reconcile it to the course of nature and
i
the
common
sense of
mankind.
I
j X6
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
aggregate of their four ages they call a divine age, and believe that, in every thousand such ages, or in every day of Brahma, fourteen Menas are successively invested by him with the sovereignty of the earth : each Menu, they suppose, transmits his empire to his sons and grandsons during a period of seventyone divine ages ; and such a period they name & Manwantara ; but, since fourteen multiplied by
seventy-one are not quite a thousand, we must conclude that six divine ages are allowed for intervals between the Manwantaras, or for the twilight of Brahma\
The
day.
'1
opinion, a month of Brahma ; twelve such months, one of his years j and an hundred such years, his age; of which age they assert, that fifty years have are now then, according to the Hindus elapsed. day or Calf a of the first month of the in the first fifty-first year of Brahma's age, and in the twenty-
We
eighth divine age of the seventh Manwantara, of which divine age the three first human ages have passed, and four thousand eight hundred and eightyeight of the fourth.
In the present day of Brahma the first Menu was surnamed Sivayambhuva, or son of the self-existent and it is he by whom the institutes of religious and In civil duties are supposed to have been delivered. descended at a sacrifice, and, by his time the Deity
his wife Satarupa,
he had two distinguished sons, and three daughters. This pair were created for the multiplication of the human species, after that new creation of the world which the Brahmans call Padmacatyiya, or the jLo/<w-creation.
were worth while to calculate the age of Menu's institutes, according to the Brahmans, we must multiply four million three hundred and twenty thousand by six times seventy-one, and add to the
If
it
OF
THE
HI>TDUS.
product the number of years already past in the seventh Manvcautara. Of the five Menus who succeeded him, 1 have seen little more than the names ; but the Hindu writings are very diffuse on the life and posterity of the seventh Menu, surnamed Vaivasivata, or Child of the Sun: he is supposed to have had ten sons, of whom the eldest was Icshwacu and to have been accompanied by seven Rishis, or holy persons, whose names were, Casyapa, Atri, Vasishtha, Viswa?nitra, Gautama, Jamadagni, and Bharaaivaja an account which explains the opening of the fourth chapter of the Gita : " This im" mutable system of devotion," says Grishna, " I " revealed to Fivaswat, or the Sun ; Vivaswat " declared it to his son Menu; Menu explained
;
M "
it
to
Icshzvacu
thus
the
chief Rishis
know
to
this
sublime
doctrine
delivered
from
one
" another."
In the
reis;n
of this
su?i
and
human
prince
the
seven
Rishis,
and
the
is
deluge.
This general
first
fraylaya, or destruction,
Purana, or sacred poem, which consists of fourteen thousand stanzas ; and the story is concisely, but clearly and elegantly, told in the eighth book of the Bhagawata, from which I have abstracted the whole, and translated it with great care, but will only present you here wiih an abridgment of it. M The demon Hayagrha having purloined the *' Vedas from the custody of Brahma, while he was " reposing at the close of the sixth Manivantara, " the whdle race of men became corrupt, except * the seven Rishis and Satyavata, who then reigned
I
1,1
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
in
"
*'
maritime region to the south of was performing his ablutions Carnata; " in the river Critamala, when Vishnu appeared to " him in the shape of a small fish, and, after seve*4 ral augmentations of bulk in different waters, " was placed by Satfavrata in the ocean, where " he thus addressed his amazed votary: " In seven <e days all creatures, who have offended me, shall be ** destroyed by a deluge, but thou shalt be secured f take in a capacious vessel miraculously formed " therefore all kinds of medicinal herbs and' esculent M grain for food, and, together with the seven holy
Dra-Sira, a
this prince
:
pairs of
all
ani-
"
then shak thou ; t: face to face, and all thy questions shall know God " be answered." Sayihg this; he disappeared ; and began to overflow the after seven days, the ocean earth to be flooded by constant coasts, and the showers, when Satyavratd? meditating on the ' Deity, saw a large vessel moving on the waters:
mals, enter the ark without fear
*.
having in all respects conformed to who, in the form of a the instructions oi Vishnu 6 vast fish, suffered the vessel to be tied with a great * sea-serpent, as with a cable, to his measureless * horn. When the deluge had ceased, Vishnu slew ' the demon, and recovered the Vedas, instructed ' Sat)ai'idta and appointed in divine knowledge, * him the seventh Menu by the name of Va'wasc rj;ata. Let us compare the two Indian accounts of the Creation and the Deluge with those delivered
he entered
it,
\
y
-
It is
first
stood in a literal* the only points before us are, whether the creation described by the first Menu, which the Brahmins call that of the Lotos, be not the same with that recorded in our Scripture ; and whether the story of
not made a question in this tract, chapters of Genesis are to be underor merely in an allegorical sense;
OF THE HINDUS.
II9
the seventh Menu be not one and the same* with that of Noah. I propose the questions, but affirm nothing ; leaving others to settle tneir opinions, whether Adam be derived from a dim, which in Sanscrit
means the
first
or
the true
of the patriarch ; whether the sacrifice, at which God is believed to have descended, alludes to the offering -'of Abel \ and, on the whole, whether the two Menus can mean any other persons than the
great progenitor, and the restorer of our spechs.
name
On a supposition that Vaivaswata, or sun-born, was the Noah of Scripture, let us proceed to the Indian account of his posterity, which I extract from
the Puranart' haprecasa, or
by Radhacanta Sarman, a Pandit of extensive leaning and great lame among the Hindus of this province. Before we examine the genealogies of kings, which he has collected from the Puranas, it will be necessary to give a general idea of the avataras, or descents, of the The Hindus believe innumerable such desDeity. cents or special interpositions of Providence in the but they reckon ten principal affairs of mankind, a-cataras in th< current period of four ages ; and
lately
in
work
composed
all
of them are described, in order as they are supposed to occur, in the following Ode of Jayadeva, the great lyric poet of India.
1.
the
of ocean of destruction, placing it joyfully in the bosom of an ark fabricated by thee, Cesava, assuming the body of a fish. Be victorious, Heri y lord of the universe
!
" Thou
recoverest the
Veda
in the water
2.
" The
back,
earth
stands
frn on
larger
broad
which grows
I
12
to
THE CHRONOLOGY
vast burden,
Cesavrt,
tortoise.
!
E>e victorious,
The earth, placed on the point of thy tusk, remains fixed like the figure of a black antelope on the moon, Cesava, assuming the form of a hoar. Be victorious, Heri, lord of the uni :
j*
verse
" The claw with a stupendous point, on the 4. exquisite lotos of thy lien's paw, is the black bee that stung the body of the embowelled Hiranyacasipu,
Be
victorious,
f* By thy power thou beguilest Bali, thou 5. miraculous dwarf, thou purifier of men with the water (of Ganga) springing from thy feet, Cesava, assuming the form of a dwarf. Be victorious, Heri, lord of the universe
!
{c 6. Thou bathest in pure water, consisting of the blood of Cihatriyas, the world, whose offences are removed, and who are relieved from the pain of other births, Cesava, assuming the form of ParasuRama, Be victorious, fieri, lord of the uni-
verse
7.
" With
of the eight
in the plain
ease to thyself, with delight to the Genit regions, thou sCatterest on all sides
of combat the demon with ten heads, Cesava, assuming the form of Rama Chandrc^. Heri, lord of the universe ! Be victorious,
8.
<
Thou
PF-THE HINPWS,
1^1
shining like a blue cloud, or like the water of Yamuna tripping towards thee through fear of thy fur-
rowing ploughshare,
Bulla Rama.
universe
9.
Be
victorious,
!)
O kind-hearted, the slaughter of cattle prescribed for sacrifice, O Cesava, assuming the body of Buddha. Be victorious, O Heri, lord of the universe
when thou
1
10. " For the destruction of all the impure thou drawest thv cimeter like a blazing comet (how tremendous!) Cesava, assuming the body of Caki, Her'i, lord of the universe!*' Be victorious,
from four to and, if such an arrangement were universally received, we should be able to ascertain a very material point in the Hindu chronology ; I mean the birth of Buddha, concerning which the different Pandits^ whom I have consulted, and the same Bandits at different times, have expressed a strange diversity of They all agree that Calcl is yet to come, opinion. and that Buddha was the last considerable incarnation of the Deity ; but the astronomers at Varanes place
ages, or in an arithmetical proportion
one
him
jn the third age, and Radhacant insists that he appeared after the thousandth year of the fourth. The learned and accurate author of the Dahistan, whose information concerning the Hindus is wonderfully correct, mentions an opinion of the Pandits, with whom
he had conversed, that Buddha began his career ten before the close of the third age; and Go~ verdhaua of Cashmir, who had once informed me thai Crishna descended two centuries before Buddha,
years
122
ON THE CHRONOLOC.Y
assured
interval
me
of
lately
twenty-four
all, is
years
(others
allow
an only
best
The
the
Bhagawat
itself,
in the first
chapter of which it is expressly declared, that " Bud*.' dha, the son of Jina, would appear at Cicata for t( the purpose of confounding the demons, just at " the beginning of the Caliyug" I have long been convinced, that, on these subjects, we can only reason satisfactorily from written evidence, and that our forensick rule must be invariably applied to take the declarations of the Brahmans most strongly against themselves
;
that
is,
so
hat,
Buddha
but what is just at the beginning of the present age the beginning of it ? When this question was proposed to Radhacant, he answered, " Of a period com-
more than four hundred thousand years, two or three thousand may reasonably be < c On my demanding written called the beginning" evidence, he produced a book of some authority, composed by a learned Goswami, and entitled Bhagawatamarita, or the Nectar of the Bhagazvat, on which it is a metrical comment ; and the couplet which he read from it deserves to be cited. After the just mentioned account of Buddha in the text, the commenprising
"
"
the
first
tator says,
chicurojfhita.
his
body of-a-colour-bewithout-
* '
with-two-arms,
named
in the text
as the birth-place of
OF
THE HINDUS.
12$
Buddha, the Goswami supposes to have been Dhermaranya, a wood near Gay a, where a colossal image of that ancient deity still remains. It seemed to me of bat, as. 1 saw it by torch-light, I canblack stone not be positive as to its colour, which may indeed have been changed by time.
:
The Brahmans
with
all
yet rhe
mosr orthodox among them consider Buddha himself as an incarnation of Vishnu. This is a contradiction
hard to be reconciled, unless we cut the knot, instead of untying it, by supposing with Giorgi, that there were tzvo Buddhas, the younger of whom established the new religion, which gave so great offence in India, and was introduced into China in the first The Gashmirian before mencentury of our sera. tioned asserted this fact, without being led to it by any question that implied it ; and we may have reason to suppose that Buddha is in truth only a general word for a Philosopher. The author of a celebrated
Sanscrit Dictionary,
cosha,
entitled
from
his
name Amara-
himself a Bauddha, and flourished in the first century before Christ, begins his vocabulary with nine words that signify heaven, and proceeds to
; after which come and Demons, all by generic names ; and they are followed by two very remarkable heads ; first (not the general names of Buddha, but) the names of a Buddha-in-general of which he gives us eighteen, such as Muni, Sastri, JSIunindra, Vinayaca, Samantabhadra, Dhermaraja, Sugata, and the like ; most of them significative of excellence, ivisdom, virtue, and sanctity ; secondly, the names of a particular-Buddha-Mum-who-descendedin-the-family-of-<Stff}Yz (these are the very .words of the original) and his titles are, Sacyamuni, Sacyasinha,
who was
tho c e which
mean a
deity in general
124
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
.or
Servarfhasiddha, Saudhodani, Gautama, Arcahandhu, Kins mati of the Sun, and Mayaderoisuta, or Child of Maya* Thence che author passes ro the different epithets of parxicu lax Hindu deities. When I point> ed out this curious passage to Radhacant, he contendsed that the first eighteen names were general epii^s, and the following seven proper names, or patrony^^L of one and the same person ; but Ramalochan, my own teacher, who though not a Brahman is an excellent scholar and a very sensible unprejudiced man*
me that Buddha was a generic word, like Deva, and that the learned author, having exhibited the names of a Devata in genearl, proceeded to those of a Buddha in general, before he came to particulars he added, that Buddha might mean a Sage or Philosopher, though Budha was the word commonly used for a mere wise man without supernatural powers.
assured
seems highly probable, on the whole, that the whom Jay adeva celebrates in his Hymn, was the Sacyasinha, or Lion of Sacya, who, though he forr bade the sacrifices of cattle, which the Vcdas enjoin, was believed to be Vishnu himself in a human form, and that another Buddha, one perhaps of his followers in a later age, assuming his name and character, attempted to overset the whole system of the Brahnans, and was the cause of that persecution, from which the Bauddhas are known to have fled into very distant May we not reconcile the singular difference regions. of opinion anion g the Hindus as to the time of Buddha's appearance, by supposing that they have confounded the two Buddhas, the first of whom was born
It
Buddha,
a few years before the close .of the last age, and the second, when above a thousand years of the present know from better authorities, age had elapsed ? and with as much certainty as can justly be expected on so doubtful a subject, the real time, compared with our own aera, when the ancient Buddha began tq
We
OF
THE HINDUS.
it is
12$
have dwelt with minute anxiety on the subject of the last Avatar.
The
Brahmans, who
assisted
Ahdfazi
in his curi-
ous but superficial account of his master's empire, informed him, if the figures in the Ayini Acbar'i be correctly" written, that a period of 2962 years had elapsed from the birth of Buddha to the 40th year of Acbars reign; which computation will place his birth in the 1366th year before that of our Saviour; but, when the Chinese government admitted a new religion from India in the first century of our sera, they made particular inquiries concerning the age of the old Indian Buddha, whose birth, according to Couplet, they place in the 41st year of their 28th cycle, or 1036 years before Christ ; and they call him, says he, Foe, the son of Moye or Maya; but M. De Guignes, on the authority of four Chinese historians asserts, that Fa was born about the year before Christ 1027, in the kingdom of Cashmir. Giorgi, or rather Cassiano, from whose papers his work was compiled, assures us. that, by the calculation of the Tibetians, he appeared only 959 yenrs before the Christian epoch ; and M. Badly, with some hesitation, places him 1031 before it, but inclines to think him far more ancient, confounding him, as I have done in a former tract, with the first Buddha, or Mercury, whom the Goths called Woden, and of whom I shall presently take Now, whether we assume the meparticular notice.
dium of
rely
on the authorities quoted by De Guignes, wz mv.y conclude, that Buddha was first distinguished in this country about a thousand years before the beginning of our aera ; and whoever, in so early an age, expects a certain epoch unqualified with about or nearly, will be greatly disappointed. Hence it is clear, that, wi:e-
126
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
ther the fourth age of the Hindus began about ons thousand years before Christ, according to Goverdhan's account of Bud rh, or two thousand, \
;
according to that of Radhacant, the common opinion that 4880 years of it are now elapsed, is erroneous; and here for the present we leave Buddha, with an intention oi: returning to him in due time ; observing only, that if the learned Indians differ so widely in their accounts of the age, when their ninth Avatar appeared in their country, we may be assured that they have no cerain chronology before him, and may suspect the certainty of all the relations concerning even his appearance.
The received chronology of the Hindus begins with an absurdity so monstrous, as to overthrow the whole system ; for, having established their period of seventy one divine ages as the reign of each Menu, yet thinking it incongruous to place a holy personage in times ot impurity, they insist that the Menu reigns only in every golden age, and disappears in the three human ages that follow it, continuing to dive and emerge like a water-fowl, till the close of his Manwantara. The learned author of the Puranart'hapracasa, which I will now follow step by step, mentioned this ridiculous opinion with a serious face ; but, as he has not inserted it in his work, we may take his account of the seventh Menit according to its obvious and rational meaning, and suppose that Vaisvaswata^ the son of Surya, the son of Casyapa, or Uranus, the son of Marichi, or Light: the son of Brahma, which is clearly an allegorical pedigree, reigned in the last golden age, or, according to the Hindus, three million eight hundred and ninety-two thousand eight hundred and eighty eight years ago. But they contend that he actually reigned on earth one million seven hundred and twenty-eight thousand yeats oi mortals, or
OF THE HINDUS.
127
;
four thousand
this
eight hundred years of the Gods and opinion is another monster so repugnant to the course of nature and to human reason, that it must be rejected as vvhollv fabulous, and taken as a proof, that the Indians know nothing of their sun-born Menu but his name and the principal event of his life; I mean the universal deluge, of which the three first Avatars are merely allegorical representations, with a mixture, especially in the second, of astronomical
mythology.
From
to have
this
Menu
men
is
believed
descended
who were
preserved #ith
fathers of
him
human
families;
I/a was married, as the Indians tell us, to the first Buddha, cr Mercury, the son of Chandra, or the Moon, a male-deity, whose father was Atri, son of Brahma, (where again we meet with an allegory
purely astronomical or poetical) his posterity are divided into two great, branches, called the Children of the Sun, from his own supposed father, and the Children of the Moon, from the parent of his daughter's husband. The lineal male descendants in both these families are supposed to have reigned in the cities of Ayodhya, or AudJi, and Pratishfhana, or Vitora, respectively till the thousandth year of the present age, and the names of all the princes in both lines having been diligently collected by Radhacant from several Puranas, I exhibit them in two columns, arranged by myself with great attention.
ia8
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
SECOND
suR
leshwacu,
Vicucshi
Cticutst'ha,
AGE.
MOO^.
&udha>
Pururavas,
CHILDREN OF THE
Ayush,
Aneas,
5.
Nabusha,
layati,
Prifhu
Viswagandhi*
Puru>
Janamejaya
Prachinwat,
Pravira,
Chandra,
Yuvanaswa,
Srava,
10. Vrihadaswa,
Menasyu,
Charupada,
IOd
Dhundhumara
Drid'haswa,
Sudyu,
Bahugava*
Sanyati,
Heryaswa,
Nicumbha,
15. Crisaswa,
Senajit,
Ahanyati,
1*
Raudraswa,
Riteyush,
Rantinava,
Yuvanaswa,
Mandhatri,
Purucutsa
20. Trasadasyu,
Sumati,
Aiti
fto.
Anaranya,
Heryaswa,
Praruna,
Dushmanta y Bharata, *
(Vitat'ha,
OF
THE HINDUS.
129
CHILDREN OF THE
S
1ST.
MOON.
Manyu,
Vrihatcshetra,
25.
Trivindhana>
25. Satyavrata,
Trisancu,
Hastin,
Harischandra^
Rohita,
Harita,
30.
Ajamid'ha,
Ricsha,
Samwarana,
Champa,
Sudeva,
Vijaya,
Curu y
JahnUy
Surat'ha,
30.
Bharuca,
Vrica,
35. Bahuca,
Vidurat'ha,
Sarvabhauma,
Jayatsena,
35
Sagara,
Radhica,
AsamanjaSj
Ayutayush,
Ansumat,
I$hagira?ha %
40. Sruta*
Acrodhana,
Devatit'hi,
Rissha,
Dilipa,
40.
Nabha,
Sindhudwipa*
Pratipa,
Ayutayush,
Ritaperna,
Santanu,
Vichitraviryciy
45. Saudasa,
Pandu,
Yudhishfhir)
45.
Asmaca
Mulaca,
Dasarat'ha,
Vol.
II.
%$0
N THE CHRONOLOGY
CHILDREN OF THE
SUN.
Aidabidi,
50. Viswasaha,
MOON.
C'hatwanga,
Dirghabahu,
Raghu,
Aja,
55. Dasarafha,
Rama.
It
is
agreed among
incarnate
all
Rama,
appeared as king of Ayodhya in the interval between the silver and the braze?i ages ; and, if we suppose him to have began his reign at the very beginning of that interval, still three thousand three hundred years of the Gods, or a million one hundred and eighty-eight thousand lunar years of mortals will remain in the silv.er age, during which the fifty-five princes between Vaivasivata and Rama must have governed the world ; but, reckoning thirty years for a generation, which is rather too much for a long succession of eldest sons, as they are said to have been, we cannot, by the course of nature, extend the second age of the Hindus beyond sixteen hundred and fifty solar years. If we suppose them not to have been eldest sons, and even to have lived longer than modern princes in a dissolute age, we shall find only a period of two thousand years; and, if we remove the difficulty by admitting miracles, we must cease to reason, and may as well believe at once whatever the Brahmans chuse to tell
their seventh
Divinity,
11s.
OF THE HINDUS
In the lunar pedigree
lJJC
absur-
Hindu system. As far as the twenty-second degree of descent from Vaivasivata, the synchronism of the two families
appears tolerably regular, except that the Children of the Moon were not all eldest sons; for king Yayati appointed the youngest of: his five sons to succeed
him
in India,
and
the
allotted inferior
kingdoms
;
to the
part of
the
Yadu,
the ancestor of
east to
Criskna
the
north to
Anu, the
Druhya,
to
to Turvasu, from
whom
the Pandits
compliment
our
descended. But of the subsequent degrees in the lunar line they know so little, that, unable to supply a considerable interval between Bharat and Vital ha, whom they call son and successor, they are under a necessity of asserting, than the great ancestor of Yudhisln hir actually reigned seven-arid-twenty thousand years ; a fable of the same class with that of his wonderful birth, which is the subject of a beautiful Indian drama. Now, if we suppose his life to have lasted no longer than that of other mortals, and admit Vitufha and the rest to have been his regular successors, we shall fall into another absurdity ; for then, if the generations in both lines were nearly equal, as they would naturally have" been, we shall find Yudhishfhir, who reigned confessedly at the close of the brazen age, nine generations older than Rama, before whose birth the silver age is allowed to have ended. After the name of. Bharat, therefore, 1 have set an asterisk, to denote a considerable chasm in the Indian history, and have inserted between brackets, as out of their places, his tiventyare
'
we
four successors, who reigned, if at ail, in the following age, immediately before the war of ih.^ MahalThe fourth Avatar, which is placed in the harat. interval between the first and second ages, and the
1*2
fifth bles
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
which soon followed it, appear to be moral fagrounded on historical facts. The fourth was the punishment of an impious monarch, by the Deity himself bursting from a marble column in the shape of a lion ; and the fifth was the humiliation of an arrogant prince, by so contemptible an agent as a After these, and immediately mendicant dwarf. come three great warriors, all named before Buddha, Rama but it may justly be made a question, whether they are not three representations of one person, or three different ways of relating the same history. The first and second Ramas are said to have been contemporary ; but whether all or any of them mean
;
the son of Cush, 1 leave others to determine. The mother of the second Rama was named Caushalya, which is a derivative of Cushala, and, though
Rama,
his father be distinguished by the title or epithet of JDasarafha, signifying that his war- chariot bore him
of the world ; yet the name of Cush, as the Cashnirians pronounce it, is preserved entire in that oi his sen and successor, and shadowed in that of his ancestor I'icucshi; nor can a just objection be made to this opinion from the nasal Arabian
to all quarters
word Ramah, mentioned by Moses, since the very word drab begins with the same letter, which the Greeks and Indians could not pronounce ; and they were obliged, therefore, to express it by On this the vowel which most resembled it. assert nothing; nor on anoquestion, however, I ther, which might be proposed: " Whether the " fourth and fifth Avatars be not allegorical stories c of the two presumptuous monarchs, himrod and t( Be/us ?' The hypothesis, that government was first established, laws enacted, and agriculture envowel
in the
*
couraged in India by Rama about three thousand eight hundred years ago, agrees with the received account of Noah's death, and the previous se:tlement of his immediate descendants.
OF
THE HINDUS.
*tt
THIRD AGE.
CHILDREN OF THE
SUN.
Cusha,
Atit'hi,
MOON.
Nishadlia,
Nabhas,
5.
Pundarica,
Cshemadhanwas,
Devanica,
Vitat'ha,
Many
11,
Ahinagu,
Paripatra,
Vrihatcshetra,
Hastin,
To. Ranach'hala.
Ajamid'ha,
Ricsha,
Vajranabha,
Area,
Samwarana,
Curu,
Jahmi,
Surat'ha,
Sugana,
Vidhriti,
1 5.
Hiranyanabha,
Pushya,
Vidurat'ha,
Dhruvasandhi,
Sudersana,
Sarvabhauma,
Jayatsena,
Agniverna,
Radhica,
20 Sighra,
Ayutayush,
*5
Maru,
be
supposed to
alive,
Acrodhana,
Devatit'hi,
still
Prasusruta,
Sandhi,
Ricsha,
134
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
CHILDREN OF THE
SUN.
Amersana,
%i. Mahaswat,
MOON.
Lilipa,
Pratipa,
20.
Viswabhahu,
Prasenajit,
Santanu,
Vichitravirya,
Tacshaca,
Vrihadbala,
Pandu,
Yudhishfhira,
Paricshit,
30. Vrihadrana, Y. B. C.
25.
3100.
between
reigns',
exclusively
during the whole bfazeti age, are supposed to have lasted near eight hundred and sixtya supposition evidently against four thousand years nature, the uniform course of which allows only a period of eight hundred and seventy or., at the very utmost, ol a thousand, years for twenty-nine gene-
and
their
Paricshit, the great nephew and successor of Yudhishfhir, who had recovered the throne from Duryodhan, is allowed without controversy to have reigned in the interval between the brazen&nd earthen of 'the ages, and to have died at the setting in so that, if the Pandits of Cashmir and VhQaliyug ranes have made a right calculation of Buddha'" appearance, the present, or fourth, age must have begun about a thousand years before the birth of Christ, and consequently the reign of Icshwacu, could not have been earlier than four thousand years before that great epoch ; and even that date will, perhaps, appear, when it shall be strictly examined, to be near two thousand years earlier than the truth. I cannot leave the third Indian age, in which the virtues and vices of mankind are said to have been equal, withrations.
;
OF
THE HINDUS.
I35
out observing, that even the close of it is manifestly fabulous and poetical, with hardly more appearance of historical truth than the tale of Troy, or of the
Argonauts ; lor Yudhishfhir, it seems, was the son of Dherma, the Genius of Justice ; Bhima of Pavan, or the God of Wind ; Arjun of Indra, or the Firmament ; JSacul and Sa/iadeva, of the two Cumars, the Castor and Pollux of India ; and Bhishma, their reputed great uncle, was the child of Ganga, or the Ganges, by Santanu, whose brother Dei-api is supposed to be still alive in the city of Calapa ; all which fictions may be charming embellishments of an heroic poem, but are just as absurd in civil history as the descent of two royal families from the Sun and the
Moon.
FOURTH
S
AGE.
CHILDREN OF THE
N.
M OON,
Janamejaya,
Satanica,
Urucriya,
Vatsavriddha,
Prativyoma,
Sahasranica,
Bhanu,
5.
Aswamedhaja,
Asimacrishna,
Devaca,
Sahadeva,
Vira,
Nemichacra,
Upta,
Chitrarat'ha,
Vrihadaswa,
Bhanumat,
10. Praticaswa,
Suchirat'ha,
D;
ritimat,
10.
Supratica,
Sushena >
'
tfi
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
CHILDREN OF THE
S
N.
MOON.
Sunit'ha,
Marudeva,
Sunacshatra.
Nrichacshuh,
Suc'hinala,
Pushcara,
15. Antaricsha,
Pariplava,
15.
Sutapas,
Amitrajit,
Sunaya,
Medhavin,
Nripanjaya,
Vrmadraja,
Barhi, 20. Critanjaya,
Derva,
Timi,
Vrihadrat'ha,
20.
Rananjaya,
Sanjaya,
Sudasa,
".Satan ica,
Slocya,
Suddhoda,
25. Langalada,
Prasenajir,
'Durmadana,
Rahinara,
25,
Dandapani,
Cshudraca,
Sumitra, Y. B. C. 2ico.
In both
families,
Nimi,
Cshemaca,
we
see,
thirty
generations' are
reckoned from Yudhishfhir, and from Vrlhadbala his contemporary (who was killed in the war of Bharat
by Abhimartyu, son of Arjiin and father of Paricshit) to the time when the solar and lunar dynasties are believed to have become extinct in the present divine
H'mdus allot a period of one thousand years only, or a hundred years for three generations ; which calculation, though pro i\?r.
and
OF
THE HINDUS.
137
bably too large, is yet moderate enough, compared with their absurd accounts of the preceding ages but they reckon exactly the same number of years for twenty generations only in the family of Jarasandha*, whose son was contemporary with Yudhishfhir, and founded a new dynasty of princes in Magadha, or Bahar-, and this exact coincidence of the times, in which the three races are supposed to have been extinct, has the appearance of an artificial chronology* formed rather from imagination than from historical evidence, especially as twenty kings, in an age comparatively modern, could not have reigned a thousand years. I, nevertheless, exhibit the list of them as a curiosity, but am far from being convinced that all of them ever existed that, if they did exist, they could not have reigned more than seven hundred years, I am fully persuaded by the course of nature and the concurrent opinion of mankind.
;
KINGS
Sahadeva,
of
MAGADHA.
138
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
revolution constitutes an epoch of the highest importance in our present enquiry ; first, because it happened according to the Bhagawatamrita, two years exactly before Buddha 's appearance in the same kingdom ; next, because it is believed by the Hindus to
thousand eight hundred and two thousand one hundred before Christ ; and lastly, because a regular years chronology, according to the number of years in each dynasty, has been esiablished from the accession of JPradyoia to the subversion of the genuine Hindu government ; and that chronology I will now lay before you, aher observing only, that Radhacant himself says nothing of Buddha in this part of his work, though he particularly mentions the two preceding
three
KINGS
Pradyota,
Palaca,
of
MAGADHA.
Y. B. C. 2100
Visac'haynpa,
Rajaca,
Nandiverdhana, 5 reigns
Sisunaga,
138
years.
Cacaverna,
196a
Cshemadherman,
Cshetrajnya.
-
Vidhisara
Ajatasatru,
5.
Darbhaca.
Or THE HINDUS.
I39
KINGS
Ajava
op
MAGADHA.
Y.
B. C.
Nandiverdhana
Mahanandi,
10
r.
= 360^.
l
Kanda,
This prince, of
602
in
whom frequent
mention
is
made
the Sanscrit books, ib said to have been murdered, after a reign of a hundred years , by a very learned and
ingenious, but passionate and vindictive, Brahman, whose name was Chanacya^ and who raised to the throne
a man of the Maurya race, named Chandragupta. By the death of Nanda, and his sons, the Cshatriya family of Pradyota became extinct.
MAURYA
Chandragupta,
Varisara,
KINGS.
y. b.
*5 02
Asocaverdhana
Suyasas*
Desarat'ha,
5.
Sangata,
Salisuca,
Somasarman,
Satadhanwas,
Vrihadrat'ha,
10
r.
137^.
I40
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
the death of the tenth
On
Maurja king,
chief,
his place
Pushpami-
SUNG A
Pushpamitra,
KINGS.
Y. B. C. 1365
Agnimitra,
Sujyesht'ha,
Vasucnitra,;
Abhadraca^
Pulinda,
3,
Ghosh a,
Vajramitra,
Bhagavata,
Devabhuti,
10
!
r.
=ii2>
prince was killed by his minister VasuJfa>a\ o'irthe Canna race, who usurped the throne of
The
last
Magadha.
CANNA KINGS.
OF
THE HINDUS.
141
Sudra, of the Andhra family, having murdered master Susarman, and seized the government, founded a new dynasty of
his
ANDHRA
Balin,
KINGS.
'/.
B. C.
908
Crishna,
Srisantacarna,
Paurnamasa,
Lambodara,
Vivilaca,
5.
Meghasvvata,
Vatamana,
Talaca,
Sivaswati,
10.
Purishabheru,
Sunandana,
Chacoraca,
Bataca,
Gomatin
Purimat,
Medasiras,
Sirascand'ha,
15.
Yajnyasri,
Vijaya,
20.
Chandrabija,
21
r.
= 456^.
142
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
After the death of Chandrabija, which happened, according to the Hindus, 396 years before Vicramaditya^ or 452 B. C. we hear no more of Magadha as an independent kingdom ; but Radhacant has exhibited the names of seven dynasties, in which seventy six princes are said to have reigned one thousand three hundred and ninety-nine years in Avabhriti, a town of the Dacshin, or South, which we commonly call Decan. The names of the seven dynasties, or of the families who established them, areAbhira, Gardabhin, Canca, Yavana, Turushcara , Bhurunda, Maula ; of which the Yavanas are by some, not generally, supposed to have been Ionians or Greeks, but the Turushcaras and Maulas are universally believed to have been Turcs and Moguls ; yet Radhacant adds, " when, " the Maula race was extinct, five princes, named Bhut nanda Bangira, Sisunandi, Yasonandi, and Pravi'* raca reigned an hundred and sixyears (or till the year " 1053) in tl>e city of Cdacila," which he tells me, he -understands to be in the country of the Maharashtras, or Mahrattas ; and here ends his Indian chronology ; for " after Praviraca," says he, " this empire " was divided among Mleclihas, or Infidels." This account of the seven modern dynasties appears very doubtful in itself, and has no relation to our present inquiry; for their dominion seems confined to the Decan, without extending to Magadha ; nor have we any reason to believe that a race of Grecian princes ever established a kingdom in either of those counAs to the Moguls, their dynasty still subsists tries. at least nominally, unless that of Chengiz be meant and his successors could not have reigned in any part of India for the period of three hundred years, which is assigned to the Manias ; nor is it probable that the word Turc, which an Indian could have easily pro-
nounced and
Nagari
letters,
On, should have been corrupted into Turushcara. the whole, we may safely close the most authentic
0F
THE HINDUS.
143
system of Hindu Chronology that I have yet been able to procure, with the death oiChandrahija. Should any hither information be attainable, we shall, perhaps, in due time attain it either from books or inscriptions in the Sanserif language ; but from the materials with which we are at present supplied, we may esta-
two following propositions i Hindus are chiefly mythological, whether their mythology was founded on. the dark enigmas of their astronomers, or on the heroic fictions of their poet c ; and that the fourth, or historical age, cannot be carried farther back than about two Kven in the history of thousand years before Christ. the present age, the generations of men and the reigns of kings, are extended beyond the course of nature, and beyond the average resulting from the accounts of the Brahmans themselves ; for they assign to an hundred and forty -two modern reigns a period of three thousand one hundred and fifty -three years, or about twenty-tivo years to a reign one with anodier; yet they represent only four Gonna princes on the throne of Magadha ror a period of three hundred and forty-five
blish as indubitable the
That the
years
now
it is
and Nanda should have been king ^.hundred years, and murdered at last. Neither account can be credited but, that we may allow the highest probable antiquity to the Hindu government,
cessive kings should have reigned eighty -six years
let
us grant that three generations of men were equal on an average to an hundred years, and that Indian princes have reigned, one with another, tivo-andtwenty : then reckoning thirty generations from Arjun,
rr.ee, and taking the Chinese account of Buddha's birth from M. De Gziignes, as the most authentic medium between Abidfazt and the Tihetians, we may arrange the corrected Hindu Chronology according to the fol-
144
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
lowing table, supplying the word about or nearly (since perfect accuracy cannot be obtained, and ought not to be required) before every date.
OF THE HINDUS.
145
Y. B. C.
Buddha ,
Paricshir,
generations)
1027 1017
^
Qr
'
Pradyota (reckoning 20 or 30
'
y. a. c.
Nanda,
13 or 313
ditya before
This correction would oblige us to place llcramaNanda, to whom, as all the Pandits agree,
it
and, if this be an historical j seems to confirm the Bhagawatamrita, which fixes the beginning of the Culiyug about a thousand years before Buddha ; besides that Balin would then be brought down at least to the sixth and Chundrabija to the tenth century after Christ, without leaving room for the subsequent dynasties, if they reigned
fact,
successively.
and
have traced the foundation of the Indian empire above three thousand eight hundred years from the present time ; but, on a subject in itself so obscure, and so much clouded by the fictions of the Brahmans, who, to aggrandize themselves, have designedly raised their antiquity beyond the truth, we must be satisfied with probable conjecture and just reasoning from the best attainable data j nor can we hope for a system of Indian Chronology, to which no objection can be made, unless the astronomical books in Sanscrit shall
clearly ascertain
in
some
by by
I46
Chiron,
ON THE CHRONOLOGY
who
" he lived,"
says JSewtoti,
in the golden age," which must long have preceded the Argrmautic expedition) but by such evidence as our own astronomers and scholars shall allow to be unexceptionable.
"
OF THE HINDUS.
14?
A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE,
according
to
preceding Tract.
CHRISTIAN AND
vra.
INTRODUCTORY NOTE.
AMONG and
vices
the afflicting maladies which punish the try the virtues of mankind, there are
few disorders of which the consequences are more dreadful or the remedy in general more desperate than xhtjudham of the Arabs, or khorah of the Indians. It is also called in Arabia dauVasad: a name corresponding with the Leontiasis of the Greeks, and supposed to have been given in allusion to the grim distracted and lion-like countenances of the miserable persons who are affected with it. The more common name of the distemper is Elephantiasis, or, as Lucretius calls it, Elephas, because it renders the skin, like that of an Elephant, uneven and wrinkled, with many tubercles and furrows ; but this complaint must not be confounded with the dauTJil, or swelled legs, described by the Arabian physicians, and very com-
mon
lish,
in this country.
It
has no fixed
name
in
Eng-
though Hillary,
eases of Barbadoes, calls it the Leprosy of the joints, because it principally affects the extremities, which
malady are
distorted,
and at
length drop off; but, since it is in truth a distemper corrupting the v\hole mass of blood, and therefore considered by Paul of AZgina as an universal ulcer, it requires a more general appellation and may properly be named the Black leprosy :
which term is in fact adopted by M. Boissieu cle Salvages and GorrceuSy in contradistinction to the White
L3
I50
ON THE CURE OF
tlie
This
is
disease,
Europe. The philosophical poet of Rome supposes it confined to the Banks of the Nile ; and it has cenainly been imported from Africa into the West India islands by the black slaves, who carried with them their resentment and their revenge ; but it has been long known in Hindustan: and the writer of the following Dissertation, whose father was phvs cian to Nadirshah
:
to Dehli,
assures
me
that
it
among
habitants of Calcutta.
His observation,
fre-
quently a consequence of the venereal infection, would lead us to believe that it might be ra ily cured by mercury; which has, nevertheless, been found ineffectual, and even hurtful, as Hdlrry reports, in the Went Indies. The juice of hemlock, suggested
;
by
and approved by
his
medi-
Roederer, might be very efficacious at the beginning of the disorder, or in the milder sorts of it; but, in the case of a malignant and inveterate
cal friend
judkam, we must either administer a remedy of the highest power, or, agreeably to the desponding opinion of Celsus, leave the patient to his fate, instead of teasing him with fruitless medicines, and suffer him, in the forcible words of Aretaus, to sink from inextricable slumber into death. The life of a man is, however, so dear to him by nature, and in general so valuable to society, that we should never despond while a spark of it remains ; and, whatever apprehensions may be formed of future danger from the distant effects of arsenic, even though it should eradicate a present malady, yet, as no such inconvenience has arisen from the use of it in India, and as experience
THE ELEPHANTIASIS.
must ever
prevail over theory,
I
151
under the inspection of our European surgeons, whose minute accuracy and steady attention must
always give them a claim to superiority over the most learned natives ; but many of our countrymen have assured me, that they by no means entertain a contemptuous opinion of the native medicines, espe-
Should it be thought that the mixture of sulphur must render the poison less active, it may be adviseable at first to administer
cially in diseases of the skin.
L4
153
ELEPHANTIASIS,
IS
the year of the Messiah 1783, when the worthy IN and respectable Maulavi Mir Muhammed Husain,
who
humble writer of this tract, long been attached to him with sincere and, in the course of their conversation, affection ' One of the fruits of my late excursion,' said he, ' is a present for you, which suits your profession, ' and will be generally useful to our species. Conceiv* ing you to be worthy of it, by reason of your assi' duity in medical inquiries, I have brought you a pref scription, the ingredients of which are easily found, f but not easily equalled as a powerful remedy against * all corruptions of the blood, xhtjudham, and the 1 Persian fire, the remains of which are a source of infinite maladies. It is an old secret of the Hindu * physicians, who applied it also to the cure of cold * and moist distempers; as the palsy, distortions of the * face, relaxation of the nerves, ana! similar diseases. * Its efficacy too has been proved by long experience; * and this is the method of preparing it :
Calcutta, he visited the
who had
Take of white arsenic, fine and fresh, one tola \ of picked black pepper six times as much let both be well beaten at intervals for four days successively in an iron mortar, and then reduced to an impalpa*
:
154
* ' *
*
oN THJS
CUI^E OF
powder in one of stone with a stone pestle, and thus completely levigated, a little water being mixed
ble
with them.
place *.
Make
or small pulse,
(
' *
1
'
' One of those pills must be swallowed morning and evening with some betel-leaf, or, in countries where betel is not at hand, with cold water. If the body be cleansed from foulness and obstructions by gentle cathartics and bleeding before the medicine is administered, the remedy will be speedier.'
The
arsenic,
is
the
call
Shuce
the Persians
mergi mush, or mouse-bane ; and the Indians, sanc'hya : a mineral substance ponderous and crystalline. The orpiment, or yellow arsenic, is the weaker sort. It is deadly poison, -and so subtil, that, when mice are killed by it, the very smell of the dead will destroy the living of that species. After it has been kept about
*
rest,
The
among
the Hindus
is
the
;
the red and black seed of the gunja plant, which is a creeper of the same class and ordevi at least with glycyrrbiza : but I take this from report, One rattica is said to having never examined its blossoms. be of equal weight with three barley-corns, or four grains and eight rf<7-weights, used by jewellers, of rice in the husk
and
from
crisbna, black
it is
a number of I have weighed are equal to seven carats. the seeds in diamond-scales, and find the average Apothecary's weight of one seed to be a grain andfive-sixteenths. Now, id the Hindu medical books, ten of the rattica-seeds are one masbaca: and .eight masbacas make a tolaca, or tola ; but in the law-bertras of Bengal a masbaca consists of sixteen racticas, and a rolaca of five
and, according to some authorities, fivf retis only go may observe, to one maiba, sixteen of which make a tolaca. that the silver rf/z'-weights, used by the goldsmiths at Banares are twice as heavy as the seeds ; and thence it is that eight retis are commonly said to constitute one masba; that is, eight silver weights,
tnasbas;
We
or sixteen seeds; eighty of which seeds, or 105 yrains, constitute the quantity of arsenic in the Hindu prescription.
THE ELEPHANTIASIS.
seven years,
it
155
of its force ; its colour becomes turbid, and its weight is diminished. This mineral is hot and dry in the fourth degree it causes suppuration, dissolves or unites, according to the quantity given, and is very useful in closing the lips of wounds when the pain is too intense to be borne. An unguent made of it with oils of any sort, is an effectual remedy for some cutaneous disorders ; and,
loses
:
much
it is
it
such is its power, powder, drawn, like alcohol, between the eye-lashes, would in a single day entirely corrode the coats and humours of the eye; and fouiteen retls of it would in the same time defor
it
in
stroy
life.
The
its
effects are
of leather reduced to ashes. If the quantity of arsenic taken be accurately known, four times as much of those ashes, mixed with water and dr^nk by the patient, will sheath and counteract the
the scrapings
poison.
The
same
writer,
156
serve.
OX THE CUKE OF
Some blood was taken from him on the same and a cathartic administered on the next. On day, the third day he began to take the arsenic-pitk, and, by the blessing of God, the virulence of his disorder abated by degrees, until signs of returning health apIn a fortnight his recovery was complete, peared. and he was bathed, according to the practice of our He seemed to have no virus left in his physicians. blood, and none has been since perceived by him.
medicine has chiefly been Juzam, as the word is pronounced in India ; a disorder infecting the whole fnass of blood, and thence called by some fisadi khun. The former name is derived from an Arabic root
this
signifying, in general, amputation, maiming, excision, and, particularly, the truncation or erosion of the fingers, which happens in the last stage of the disease. It is extremely contagious ; and, for that reason, the prophet, said, Ferru mind'lmejdhumi cama teferru mind I asad, or, ' Flee from a person afflicted with the judham, as you would flee from a lion.' The author of the "Bahhru'ljawahir, or Sea of Pearls, ranks it as an infectious malady with the measles, xht small pox, and the plague. It is also hereditary, and, in that respect, classed bv medical writers with the gout, the
consumption,
and the
ivhite hprc
cause of this distemper is the unwholemany of whom are accussome tomed, after eating a quantity of fish, to swallow copious draughts of milk, which fail not to cause an accumulation of yellow and black bile, which mingles itself with the blood and corrupts it: but it has other causes ; for a Brahmen, who had never tasted fish in his life, applied lately to the composer of this
diet of the natives,
essay,
A common
and appeared
by
THE ELEPHANTIASIS.
I57
a corruption of blood ; which he might have inherited, or acquired by other means. Those, whose religion permits them to eat beef, are often exposed to the danger of heating their blood intensely through the knavery of the butchers in the Bazar, who fatten their calves with Balazver ; and those who are so ill-advised as to take provocatives (a folly extremely
common
in
India')
misdis-
persed, find their whole mass of blood inflamed and, as it were, adust; whence arises the disorder of
which we now
Prasad,
are treating.
The
this
Persia?!, or
;
ends in
malady
as
veneone Devi
some
here worth while to report a remarkable related to me by a man who had been afflicted with the juzam near four years ; before which
case,
may be
which was
time he had been disordered with the Persian fire, and, having closed an ulcer by the means of a strong healing plaister, was attacked by a violent pain in his joints. On this. he applied to a Cabiraja, or Hindu physician, who gave him some pills, with a positive assurance, that the use of them would remove his pain in a fewdays ; and in a few days it was, in fact, wholly re-
moved
but, a very short time after, the symptoms of ; the juzam appeared, which continually encreased to such a degree, that his fingers and toes were on the point of dropping off. It was afterwards discovered, that the pills which he had taken were made of cinnabar, a common preparation of the Hindus; the heat of which had first stirred the humours ; which, on stopping the external discharge, had fallen on the
joints,
bile to
and then had occasioned a quantity of adust mix itself with the blood aad infect the whole
mass.
I58
dreadful complaint, however caused, the are a numbness and redruss of rhe whole body, and principally of the face, an im^ec'ed
first
Of
symptoms
perspiration and
hoarse voice, thin hair and even baldness, off sive breath, and whitlows on the nails.
The
cure is best begun with copious bleeding, and cooling drink, such as a decoction of the niJufer, or JSymphea, and of violets, with some doses of manna: after which stronger cathartics must be administered.
But no remedy has proved so efficacious composed of arsenic and pepper one
:
as
the
pills
instance of
their effect
may
many more
may
be added,
required.
In the month of February in the year just mentioned, one Shaikh Ramazam, who then was an upper-servant to the Board of Revenue, had so corrupt a mass of blood, that a black leprosy of his joints was approaching ; and most of his limbs began to be ulcerated. In this condition he applied to the writer, and reThough the disorquested immediate assistance. dered state of his blood was evident on inspection, and
required no particular declaration of it, yet many questions were put to him ; and it was clear, from his he then answers, that he had a confirmed juzam lost a great deal of blood, and, after due preparation, took the arsenic-pills. After the first week his malady seemed alleviated ; in the second it was considerably diminished ; and, in the third, so entirely removed, that the patient went into the bath of health, as a token that he no longer needed a phy:
sician.
IX.
CHESS.
with
the testimony of the Persians ; who, though as much inclined as other nations to appropriate the ingenious
inventions of a foreign people, unanimously agree, that the game was imported from the west of India, together with the charming fables of Vishnusarman, in the
sixth century of our aera. It seems to have been
imme-
morially
Hindustan by the name of Chatuthat is, the four angas, or members of an ranga, army, which are said in the Amaracosha to be hasty-
known
in
aswarafhapadatam, or elephants, horses, chariots, and foot soldiers ; and in this sense the word is frequently used by epic poets in their descriptions of
real
armies.
By
it
;
Sanscrit word,
into Chatrang
who
possession of their
country, had neither the initial nor final letter of that word in their alphabet, and consequently altered it further into Shatranj, which
its
found
way
of India, where the true derivation of the name is known only to the learned. Thus has a very significant word in the sacred language of the Brahma?is been transformed by successive changes into axedrez, scacchi, echecs, chess, and, by a whimsical concurrence of circumstances, given
at length into the dialects
word
check
The
beautiful
as
it is
l60
ON THE INDIAN
played in Europe and Asia, convince me was invented by one effort of some great genius; not completed by gradual improvements, but foFmed, to use the phrase of Italian critics, by the first Intention ; yet of this simple game, so exquisitely contrived, and so certainly invented in India, I cannot find any account in the classical writings of the Brah-
commonly
it
that
mans.
crit
It is,
books on Chess
at
Banares, they will assuredly be can only exhibit a description of a very ancient Indian game of the same kind ; but more complex, and, in my opinion, more modern This game than the simple Chess of the Persians. is also called Chaturanga, but more frequently Chaturaji, or the four Kings, since it is played by four
sent to us.
can be procured
At
persons representing as many princes, two allied armies combating on each side. The description is taken
in
which YudhisMhir
is
represented conversing with Vyasa, who explains at the king's request the form of the fictitious warfare
and the
principal rules of it. " Having marked eight " squares on all sides," says the sage, " place the red " army to the east, the green to the south, the yellow
let the to the north of the king; next to him, * the horfe ; then the boat ; and, before them all, "'four foot -jbldiers ; but the boat must be placed in " the angh of the board." From this passage it clearly appears, that an army, with its four ungas, must be placed on each side of the board, since an elephant could not stand in any other position on the left hand of each king.; and Radhacant informed me, that the board consisted, like ours, of sixty-four squares, half of them occupied by the forces, and half vacant. He added, that this game is mentioned in the oldest law-books, and that it was invented by the
" u
to the west,
Lama,
in order to
amuse him
CAME
with an image of war,
closely besieged
OF CHESS.
while
in
his
l6t
metropolis was
by Rama,
world. He had not heard the story told by Firdatisi, near the close of the Shahnamah ; and k was probably carried into Persia from Canyacuvja, by B>jrzu the favourite 'physician, thence called- Paidyaprya, of the great Anushiravan ; but he said that the Brahmans of Gaur, or Bengal, were once celebrated for superior skill in the game, and that his father, together with his spiritual preceptor Jagahnai'h, now living at Tribeni,
had instructed two young Brahmans in all the rules of it, and had sent them to Jayanagar at the request of the late Raja, who had liberally rewarded them. A ship or boat is snbsituted, we see, in this complex game for the rafh, or armed chariot, which the Bengalese pronounce rot'h, and which the Persians changed into rokh, whence came the rook of some European nations; as the vierge and/o/ of the French are supposed to be corruptions of ferz and fil, the prime minister and elephant of the Persian and Arabs. It were in vain to seek an etymology of the word rook in
the modern Persian language ; for, in all the passages extracted from Firdausi and Jami, wheie rokh is conceived to mean a hero or a fabulous bird, it signifies,
no more than a cheek or a face ; as in the following description of a procession in Egypt: " When a thousand youths, like cypresses, box-trees,
I believe,
" and firs, with locks as fragrant, cheeks as fair, and " bosoms as delicate as lilies of the valley, were " marching gracefully along, thou wouldst have said " that the new spring was turning his face (not, as Hyde translates the words, carried on rokhs) from " station to station." And as to the battle of the du~ wazdeh rakh, which Herb clot supposes to mean douze
I am strongly inclined to think that the phrase only signifies a combat of twelve persons face to face, or six on a side. I cannot agree with my friend Radhacant, that a ship is properly introduced
preux chevaliers,
Vol.
II.
162
ON THE INDIAN
in this imaginary warfare instead of a chariot, in which the old Indian warriors constantly fought ; for, though
the king might be supposed to sit in a car, so that the four angas would be complete, and though it may often be necessary in a real campaign to pass rivers or
lakes, yet
no river is marked on the Indian, as it is on the Chinese chess-board ; and the intermixture of ships with horses, elephants, and infantry embattled on
The use a plain, is an absurdity not to be defended. of dice may, perhaps, be justified in a representation of war, in which j or tune has unquestionably a great share ; but it seems to exclude chess from the rank which has been assigned to it among the sciences, and to give the game before us the appearance of whist* except that pieces are used openly, instead of cards which are held concealed nevertheless, we find that the moves in the game described by Vyasa were to a certain degree regulated by chance; for he proceeds to tell his royal pupil, that, " if cinque be thrown, the *' king or a pawn must be moved; if quatre, the
:
"
elephant
; it
trois,
the horse
and
if
He
"
moves
" The
king passes
but over one square only; and " with the same limitation, the pazvn moves, but he " advances straight forward, and kills his enemy " through an angle; the elephant marches in all direcfreely
on
all
sides,
"
?'
The elephant, goes over two squares diagonally." has the powers of our queen, as we are pleased to call the minister, or general, of the Persians; and the ship has the motion of the piece to which we give the unaccountable appellation of bishop; but with a restricwe find,
tion
CAME
OF CHESS.
I63
bard next exhibits a few general rules and for the conduct of the game " the pawns and the ship both kill and may be volun" tarily killed while the king, the elephant, and the M horse may slay the foe, but cannot expose themsuperficial directions
;
The
*'
selves to be slain.
his
own
all,
" and
"
piece."
Here
the
serves, that
the horse,
who
must be preferred to has only the choice of four ; but this argument would not have equal weight in the common game, where the bishop and tower command a
central position,
who
'whole line, and where a knight is always of less value than a tower in action, or a bishop of that side oh, which the attack is begun. " it is by the overbearing
" power of
"
*
the elephant that the king fights boldly the whole army, therefore, be abandoned, in order to secure the elephant: the king must never place
-,
let
" one elephant before another, according to the rule " of Gotama, unless he be compelled by want of room, " for he would thus commit a dangerous fault and, if " he can slay one of two hostile elephants, he must
;
destroy that on his left hand." The last rule is extremely obscure but, as Gotama was an illustrious lawyer and philosopher, he would not have condescended to leave directions for the game of Chaturanga, if it had not been held in great estimation by the ancient sages of India.
<{
;
All that remains of the passage, which was copied, me by RaJhacant and explained by him, relates to the several modes in which a partial success or complete victory may be obtained by any one of the four
for
players
arisen
for
we
as
if
a dispute had
between two
of all
the
command
one of the kings may assume the forces, and aim at separate con1
164
quest. First,
<c
ON THE INDIAN
When
" on the square of another king, which advantage is " called Sinhasana, or the throne he wins a stake j which is doubled, if he kills the adverse monarch " when he seizes his place ; and, if he can seat himself
t
*,?
i(
tf
on the throne of
*'
he takes the command of " If he can occupy suecessively the thrones of all the three princes, he obhis ally,
"
<*
which is named Chaturaj'i; and the doubled if he kill the last of the three just " before he takes possession of his throne j but if he " kill him on his throne, the stake is quadrupled."
stake
as the commentator remarks, in a real warfare, a king may be considered as victorious when he seizes the metropolis of his adversary but if he can destroy his foe, he displays greater heroism, and relieves his people from any further solicitude. " Both in gaining " the Sinhasana and the Chaturaji" says Vyasa, ie the " king must be supported by the elephants, or all the " forces united." Thirdly, t( When one player has " his own king on the board, but the king of his 11 partner has been taken, he may replace his captive " ally, if he can seize both the adverse kings ; or, if " he cannot effect their capture, he may exchange his " king for one of them, against the general rule, " and thus redeem the allied prince, who will supply " his place." This advantage has the name of Nripacrishta, or recovered by the king ; and the Naucacr'ishta seems to be analogous to it, but confined ro
-,
Thus,
Fourthly, " If a pawn can march any square on the opposite extremity of the board, s< except that of the king or that of the ship, he as*' sumes whatever power belonged to that square ; and tc this promotion is called Shatpada, or the six strides ." litre we find the rule, with a singular exception, concerning the advancement of the pawns, which often occasions a most interesting struggle at our common
the case of ships.
"
to
chess,
moralists
CAME OF
CHESS.
165
of Arabia and Persia with many lively reflections on. human life. It appears that this privilege of Shatpada was not allowable, in the opinion ot Gotarrias when a player had three pawns on the boa r d b ., when only one pawn and one ship remained, the pawn might advance even to the square cf a king or aship,
;
" According to the Racskasas, or giants (that is, the people of L..Kca, where the game v/as invented there could " be neither victory nor defeat it a kins ::" the " plain without force: a situation which t ned u Cacacashfha." Sixthly, " If three ships happen to <s meet, and the fourth can be brought up to them in i( the remaining an;le, this has the name of Vriaan" nauca, and the player of the fourth seizes ail the " others." Two or three of the remaining couplers are so dark, either from an error in the manuscript or from the antiquity of the language, that I coulJ not understand the Pandit's explanation of them, and suspect that they gave even him very indistinct ideas but it would be easy, if it were worth while, to play at the game by the preceding rules ; and a little practice would, perhaps, make the whole intelligible. One circumstance, in this extract from the Pumn, seems very surprizing all games of hazard are positively forbidden by Memiy yet the game of Chaturanga, in which dice are used, is taught by the grear Vyasa himself, whose law tract appears with that of Gotama among the eighteen books which form the Dhermasastra ; but, as Radhacant and his preceptor Jagarmafh are both employed by government in compiling a digest of eIndian laws, and as both of them, especially Tribeni, understand the game, they are rable sage of able I presume to assign reasons why it should have been excepted from the general prohibition, and even openly taught by ancient and modern Brahmans. and assume the power of
either.
Fifthly,
"
X.
TWO
INSCRIPTIONS
FIRST INSCRIPTION,
In a Cavern,
1
master of the hearts of *"* the people, who was the good son of Sree Sardoola, by his own birth and great virtues classed amongst the principal rulers of the earth, gladly caused this statue of Kreeshna, of unsullied renown, confirmed in the world like his own reputation, and the image of Kanteematee * to be deposited in this great mountain-cave.
i.
\ NANTA VARMA,
2. Sree Sardoola, of established fame, jewel of th diadems of kings, emblem of time to the martial possessors of the earth, to the submissive the tree of the fruit o^ desire, a light to the Military Order, whose glory was not founded upon the feats of a single battle, the ravisher of female hearts, and the image of Smara "f, became the ruler of the land.
Kama JDeva,
M4
l68
TWO
INSCRIPTIONS FROM
3. Wherever Sree SardooIaJis wont to cast his own discordant sight towards a toe, and the fortunate star, his broad eye, is enflamed with anger between its ex-
panded lids ; there falleth a shower of arrows from the ear-drawn string of the bow of his son, the renowned Atlanta Farma, the bestower of infinite happiness.
SECOND INSCRIPTION,
In a
1.
HPHE
move-
ment was
son of
lust,
was like Manoo*, the appointer of the all the chiefs of the earth. By whos-? divine offerings, the God with a thousand eyes -f being constantly invited, the emaciated Powlomee J, for a long time, suhied the beauty of her cheeks with falling tears.
military station of
2. Ananta Farma by name, the friend of strangers, renowned in the world in the character of valour, by nature immaculate as the lunar beams, and who is the offspring of Sree Sardoola By him this wonderful statue of Bhoofapatee and of Devee j|, the maker of
all
which hath taken sanctuary in this cave, was caused to be made. May it protect the universe
!
* The
first legislator
f Eendra
J
a deification
The wife
of Eendra.
Seeva, or Mahadeva and his consort in one image, as a type J| Of the denies, Gmitor and Geaitrix.
169
3. The string of his expanded bow, charged with arrows and drawn to the extremity of the shoulder, bnrsterh the circle's centre Of spacious brow, propitious distinction, and surpassing beauty, he is the image of the moon with an undiminished countenance. Ananta Parma to the end Of form like Smara * in
!
seen with the consrant and affectionate standing with their tender and fascinated eyes conexistence, he
stantly fixed
is
upon him.
4. From the machine his bow, reproacher of the crying Koorara -j~, bent to the extreme, he is endued with force ; from his expanded virtue he is a provo-
he
by his good conduct his renown reacheth to afar ; a hero by whose coursing steeds the elephant is disturbed, and a youth who is the seat of sorrow to
ker
;
is
the
women
is
of his foes.
\*
He
is
name
Ananta
* The Hindoo
f
Cupid.
A bird
that
is
constantly
rain.
% This word
signifies eternal
XL
A DESCRIPTION OF ASAM,
BY
MOHAMMED
CAZIM.
of Bengal, to the A-SAM, which two parts bynorth-east Brahmaputra^ the river divided into
lies
is
The northern portion is calthat flows from Khata. Uttarcul led Vttarcul, and the southern Dacshincul. begins at Gowahutty, which is the boundary of his
and terminates in mountains inhabited by a tribe called Meeri Mechmi. Dacshincul extends from the village Sidea to the hills of Srinagar. The most famous mountains to the northward of Uttarcul, are those of Duleh and Landah ; and to the southward of Dacshmad are those of Namrup, (Camrup?) situated four days journey above Ghergong, to which the Raja retreated. There is another chain of hills, which is inhabited by a tribe called Nanac, who pay no revenue to the Raja, but profess allegiance to him, and obey a few of his orders. But the -f Zemleh tribe are entirely independent of him ; and, whenever they find an opportunity, plunAsam der the country contiguous to their mountains. is of an oblong figure ; its length about 200 standard coss, and its breadth, from the northern to the southern mountains, about eight days journey. From
Majesty's territorial possessions,
* This account of Asam was translated for the Society, but afterwards printed by the learned translator as an appendix to his jdalemgirnamah. It is reprinted here, because our government has an interest in being as well acquainted as possible with all the pations bordering on the British territories. t In another copv this tribe are called DuJUb,
172
A DESCRIPTION
GoivahittyX.o Ghergong are seventy-five standard cos3 ; and from thence it is fifteen days, journey to Khotcn, which was the residence of Peerau IVis-ek*, but is now called Ava -f, and is the capital of the Raja of Pegu, who considers himself of the posterity of that famous General. The first five days journey from the mountains of Qamrup, is performed through forests, 'and over hills, which are arduous and difficult to pass.
You
Ava
through a
level
and smooth country. To the northward is the plain of Kfiata, that has been beiore mentioned as the place from whence the Brahncfuira issues, which is afterwards fed by several riveis that How from the southern mountains of Asam. The principal of these is the DhoneC) which has before occurred in this history
:
it
gerch.
Between these rivers is an island well inhabited, and in n excellent state of riiLge. It contains a spacious, clear, and pleasant country, extending to the distance of about fifty coss. The cultivated tract is bounded by a thick forest, which harbours elephants, and where those animals may be caught, as well as in four or five other forests of Asam, If there be occasion for them, five or six hundred elephants may be procured in a year. Across the Dhonec, which is the side of Ghergong, is a wide, agreeable, and level country, which delights the heart of the beholder. The whole face of it is marked with population and tillage; and it presents on every side charming pros2
* According to Kbondcmlr, Peerau Wiseb was one of the nobles of Afrasiah, King of Ti/ran, contemporary with Kaicaus, second Prince of the Ktanian Dynasty. In the Ferbung Jebangeery and Borbaun Katea (two Persian Dictionaries) Peer an is described as one of the Peblovan or heroes of c furan, and General under Afrasiab, the name of whose father was Wiseb. f This is a palpable mistake. Kboten lies to the north of Him* mlaya ; and Piran Fisah could never feave 8een Ava.
OF A SAM.
pects
173
of
ploughed
fields,
harvests,
gardens,
lies in
and
D<ic-
groves.
shincul.
From the village Saugereh to the city of Ghergong is a space of about fifty coss, filled with such an uninterrupted range of gardens, plentifully stocked with fruit-trees, that it appears as one garden. Within them arc the houses of the peasants, and a beautiful assemblage of coloured and fragrant herbs, and of garden and wild flowers blowing; together. As the country is overflowed in the rainy season, a high and broad causeway has been raised for the convenience of travellers from Salagereh to Ghergong, which is the only uncultivated ground that is to be seen. Each side of this road is planted with shady bamboos, the Amongst tops of which meet, and are intertwined. the fruits which this country produces, are mangoes,
plantains, jacks, oranges, citrons, limes, pine-apples,
'
who
tastes
it
pre-
to the
There are also cccoa-nut trees, trees, and the Spdij** in great
plenty.
ness,
and
is
There
DO
excels in softness and sweetof three colours, red, black, and white. ginger free from fibres, and betel vines. The
is
_ -
The sugar-cane
of vegetation and fertility of the soil are such, that whatever seed is sown, or slips planted, they always thrive. The environs of Ghergong furnish small apricots, yams, and pomegranates ; but as
strength
these articles are wild,
and not
are
assisted
by cultivation
The very indifferent. this country consists in rice and -\ mash. Ades is very scarce ; and wheat and barley are never sown. The silks are excellent, and resemble
and engraftment, principal crop of
they
*
The
is
Sadij
is
which has
pungent
it
taste,
and
the
beais
name of Malabatbrum, or
is
f Masb
Ada
a kind of pea.
174
A DESCRIPTION
those of China ; but they manufacture very few mord They are successful in than are required for use. embroidering with flowers, and in weaving velvet
and tauthund, which is a species of filk of which they make tents and * kenauts. Salt is a very precious and scarce commodity it is found at the bottom of some of the hills, but of a bitter and pungent quality. A better sort is in common, which is extracted from The mountains inhabited by the the plantain-tr^e. tribe called Nanae, produce plenty of excellent Lignum Aloes, which a society of the natives import every year into Asam, and bartar for salt and grain. This evil disposed race of mountaineers are many degrees removed from the line of humanity, and destitute of the characteristical properties of a man. They go naked from head to foot, and eat dogs, cats, snakes, mice, rats, ants, locusts, and every thing of this sort which they can find. The hills of Camrup, Sidea, and Luckigereh, supply a fine species of Lignum Aloes, which sinks in water. Several of the mountains con;
tain musk-deer.
is on the northern Brahmaputra, is in the highest state of cultivation, and produces plenty of pepper and Are* It even surpasses Dacshincul in population #2- nuts. and tillage ; bur, as the latter contains a greater tract of wild forests, and places difficult of access,
The
side of the
As am have chosen to reside in it for the convenience of control, and have erected in it the The breadth of Utlarcul, capital of the kingdom. from the bank of the river to the foot of the mountains, which is a cold climate, and contains snow, is various; but is nowhere less than fifteen coss, nor
the rulers of
more than
forty-five coss.
The
inhabitants of those
tents
OF ASAM.
175
mountains are strong, have a robust and respectable appearance, and are of the middling size. Their complexions, like those of the natives of all cold climates, are red and white ; and they have also trees and fruits
Near the fort of Jum peculiar to frigid regions. Dereh, which is on the side of Goivahutty, is a chain of mountains, called the country of Dereng ; all the inhabitants of which resemble each other in appearance, manners, and speech, but they are distinguished by the names of their tribes, and places of resiSeveral of these hills produce musk, kataus*, dence. bhoat -f,peree, and two species of horses, called goont and tanyans. Gold and silver are procured here, as in the whole country of Asam> by washing the sand of the This, indeed, is one of the sources of revenue. rivers. It is supposed that 12,000 inhabitants, and some say 20,000, are employed in this occupation ; and it is a regulation, that each of these persons shall pay a fixed revenue of a tola % of gold to the Raja. The people of jisam are a base and unprincipled nation, and have no fixed religion. They follow no rule but that of their own inclinations, and make the approbation of their own vicious minds the test of the propriety of their actions. They do not adopt any mode of worship practised either by Heathens or Mohammedans ; nor do they concur with any of the knolvn sects which prevail amongst mankind. Unlike the Pagans of Hindustan^ they do not reject victuals which have been dressed by Muselmans j and they abstain from no flesh
*'
* Kataus is thus described in the Barbaun Katea : " This word, language of Rum, is a sea-cow the tail of which is hung '* upon the necks of horses, and on the summits of standards. ' Some say that it is a cow which lives in the mountains of *' Kkata." It here means the mountain-cow, which supplies the tail that is made imo dowries and in Sanscrit is called cbamara. t Bboat andferee are two kinds of blanket.
in the
;
j Eighty nti-w&ghts.
Seepage
154, note*
176
A DESCRIPTION
They even
;
taste of ghee, they have such an antipathy to this article, that if they discover the least smell of it in their victuals, they have no relish for them. It is not their custom to veil their women for even the wives of the Raja do not conceal their
used to the
from any person. The females perform work open air, with their countenances exposed and heads uncovered. The men have often four or five wives each, and publicly buy, sell, and change them. They shave their heads, beards, and whiskers, and reproach and admonish every person who neglects this ceremony. Their language has not the least affinity with that of Bengal '*. Their strength and courage
faces
in the
physiognomy.
They are superior to most nations in corporal force and hardy exertions. They are enterdeceitful.
and
The
truth, honour, good faith, shame, and purity of morals, have been left out of their composition. The seeds of tenderness and humanity have not been sown in the field of their frames. As they are destitute of the mental garb of manly qua-
friendship,
sincerity,
they are also deficient in the dress of their bodies. tie a cloth round their heads, and another round their loins, and throw a sheet upon their shoulder; but it is not customary in that country to wear turbans, There are no buildings of robes, drawers, or shoes. brick or stone, or with walls of earth, except the gates
lities,
They
of the
city
temples.
The
of Ghergong, and some of their idolatrous rich and poor construct their habita-
* This is an error : young Brabmens often come from Asam to NaJiya for instruction j and their vulgar dialect is understood by the Bengal teachers.
OF ASAM.
tions of
177
straw.
;
sometimes brought thither from other countries. The from a congenial impulse, are fond of seeing and keeping asses, and buy and sell then at a high price; but they discover the greatest surprize at seeing a camel; and are so afraid of a horse, that if one trooper should attack a hundred armed Asamians, they would all throw down their arms and flee ; or should they not be able to escape, they would surrender themselves prisoners. Yet, should one of that detestable race encounter two men of another nation on foot, he would defeat them.
brutal inhabitants,
The
into
ancient inhabitants of this country are divided two tribes, the Asamians and the Cultanians.
The
the former in all occupations except war and the conduct of hardy enterprises, in which the former are superior. body-guard of six or seven thousand Asamians, fierce as demons, of unshaken
latter excel
courage, and well provided with warlike arms and accoutrements, always keep watch near the Raja's sitting and sleeping apartments ; these are his loyal and confidential troops and patrol. The martial weapons of this country are the musquet, sword, spear, and arrow and bow of bamboo. In their forts and boats they
in the
have also plenty of cannon, zerbzen-f, and rarnchangee, management of which they are very expert.
* As the author h?s asserted that two species of horses, called goont and tanyans, are produced in Dereng, we must suppose that
this
is
a different
f Swivels.
Vol.
II.
l*}%
A DESCRIPTION
men
die,
which they inter his women, attendants, and serand some of the magnificent equipage and useful furniture which he possessed in his life-time ; such as elephants, gold and silver, baJcash (large fans), carvants,
;
these articles
They
afterwards construct
over the cave upon thick timbers. people of the army entered some of the old caves, and took out of them the value of 90,000 rupees, But an extraordinary circumin gold and silver. stance is said to have happened, to which the mind of man can scarcely give credit, and the probability of which is contradicted by daily experience. It is this All the nobles came to the imperial general and declared, with universal agreement, that a golden betelstand was found in one of the caves that was dug eighty years before, which contained betel-leaf quite green and fresh ; but the authenticity of this story
The
rests
upon
report.
Gkervonv has four sates, constructed of stone and earth ; from each of which the Raja's palace is distant three coss. The city is encompassed with a fence of bamboos; and within it high and broad causeways have been raised for the convenience of passengers during the rainy season. In the front of every man's house is a garden, or some cultivated ground. This is a fortified city, which encloses villages and tilled fields. The Raja's palace stands upon the bank of This the Degoo, which flows throughout the city. river is lined on each side with houses ; and there is a small market, which contains no shopkeepers except .sellers' of betel. The reason is, that it is not customary for the inhabitants to buy provisions for daily use, because they lay up a stock for themselves., which lasts
OF ASAM.
179
them a year. The Raja's palace is surrounded by a causeway, planted on each side with a close hedge of bamboos, which serves instead of a wall. On the outside there is a ditch, which is always full of water. The circumference of the enclosure is one coss and
Within it have been built lofty and spacious apartments for the Raja, most of them of wood, and a few of straw, which are called chippers. Amongst these is a dkvan khanah, or public saloon, one hundred and fifty cubits long, and forty broad, which is supported by sixty-six wooden pillars, placed at an interval of about four cubits from each other. The Raja's seat is adorned with latticework and carving. Within and without have been,
fourteen jereebs.
halls
placed plates of brass, so well polished, that when the rays of the sun strike upon them, they shine like mirrors. It is an ascertained fact, that 3000 carpenters
and i2co labourers were constantly employed on this work, during two years before it was finished. When the Raja sits in this chamber, or travels, instead of drums and trumpets, they beat the * dhol and dand. The latter is a round thick instrument made of copper, and is certainly the same as the drum -}-, which it was customary, in the time of the ancient kings, to beat in battles and marches.
this country have always raised the and vainglory, and displayed an ostentatious appearance of grandeur, and a numerous train They have not bowed of attendants and servants. the head of submission and obedience, nor have they paid tribute or revenue to the most powerful monarch ; but they have curbed the ambition, and
The
Rajas of
crest of pride
is
a kind of
drum, which
and
is
ie
beaten
at
each end.
a coCDposicioa
a kind of kettie-drum,
made of
of seveial metals.
N2
iSo
A DESCRIPTION
The solution of the difficulties ces of Hindustan. attending a war against them, has baffled the penetration of heroes who have been stiled Conquerors Whenever an invading army has enof the World.
tered their
territories,
in
the Asamians
have covered
distressed
themselves
the
enemy by
If these means have cutting off their provisions. failed, they have declined a battle in the field, but have carried the peasants into the mountains, burnt
But when the grain, and left the country empty. the rainy season has set in upon the advancing enemy,
they have watched their opportunity to make excursions, and vent their rage ; the famished invaders have either become their prisoners, or been put to
death. In this manner powerful and numerous armies have been sunk in that whirlpool of destruction, and
Formerly Husdin Shah, a king of Bengal, undertook an expedition against -Asam, and carried with h m a formidable force in cavalry, infantry, and boats. The beginning of this invasion was crowned with He entered the country, and erected the victory.
;
The Raja standard of superiority and conquest. being unable to encounter him in the field, evacuated Has the plains, and retreated to the mountains.
army, to keep possession of and returned to Bengal. The rainy season commenced, and the roads were shut up by The Raja descended from the mounthe inundation. tains, surrounded the Bengal army, skirmished with them, and cut off their provisions, till they were reduced to such straits, that they were all, in a short
left his
the country,
made
prisoners.
OF ASAM.
In the same manner
l8l
Mohammed
Togluc Shah, who was king of several of the provinces of Hindustan, sent a well-appointed army of an hundred thousand cavalry to conquer Asarn ; but they were all devoted to oblivion in that country of enchantment ; and no intelligence or vestige of them remained. Another army was dispatched to revenge this disaster ; but when they arrived in Bengal, they were panic-struck, and shrunk from the enterprize; because if any person passes the frontier into that district, he has not leave to return. In the same manner, none of the inhabitants of that country are able to come out of it, which is 'the reason that no accurate inroimation has hitherto been obtained reThe natives of Hindujlan conlative to that nation. sider them as wizzards and magicians, and pronounce the name of that country in all their incantations and They say that every person who counter-charms. sets his foot there, is under the influence of witchcraft, and cannot find the road to return.
Jeidej Sing*, the Raja of Ascan, bears the title of Szverg, in the Hindustani lanSwergi, or Celestial. 1 hat frantic and vainodoguage, means heaven. rious prince is so excessively foolish and mistaken, as to believe that his vicious ancestors were sovereigns of the heavenly host ; and that one of them, being inclined to visit the earth, descended by a golcen ladder. After he had been employed some time in regulating and governing his new kingdom, he be-
came
it,
so attached to
it,
.that
he fixed
his
abode in
stances of
Banners of Con~
l82
lous,
perils
A DESCRIPTION
and hard to be penetrated ; that it abounds in that the paths and roads are and dangers
;
quest of
it
are
that the
inhabitants are a savage race, ferocious in their manners, and brutal in their behaviour ; that they are of a gigantic appearance, enterprising, intrepid, treacherous,
well armed, and more numerous than can be conceived 5 that they resist and attack the enemy from secure posts, and are always prepared for battle ; that they
soldiers,
possess forts as high as heaven, garrisoned by brave and plentifully supplied with warlike stores,
the reduction of each of which would require a long space of time ; that the way was obstructed by thick and dangerous bushes, and broad and boisterous riwhen we consider these circumstances, we shall vers wonder that this country, by the aid of God, and the auspices of his Majesty, was conquered by the im:
army, and became a place for erecting the standard of the faith. The haughty and insolent heads of several of the detestable Asamans, who stretch the neck of pride, and who are devoid of religion and remote from God, were bruised by the hoofs of the The Mussi horses of the victorious warriors. experienced the comfort of fighting for their heroes religion ; and the blessings of it reverted to the sovereignty of his just and pious Majesty.
perial
The Raja, whose soul had been enslaved by pride, who had been bred up in the habit of presuming on
the stability of his own government, never dreamt of this reverse of fortune ; but being now overtaken by the punishment due to his crimes, fled, as has been before mentioned, with some of his nobles, at* tendants, and family, and a few of his effects, to the
mountains of Gamrup. That spot, by its bad air and water, and confined space, is rendered the worst place in the world, or rather it is in one of the pits of hell,
OF ASAM.
1S3
The
that
and thickets. A few took refuge in other mountains, and watched an opportunity of commitforests
ting hostilities.
Camrup
is
of Dacshhicul,
insomuch
that a
foot-traveller
proceeds with the greatest inconvenience. There is one road wide enough for a horse ; but the beginning of it contains thick forests for about half a coss. Afterwards there is a defile, which is stony and full of water. On each side is a mountain towering to
the sky.
Imperial General remained some days in Gherwhere he was employed in regulating the afgorigi fairs of the country, encouraging the peasants, and collecting, the effects of the Raja. He repeatedly read the Khotbeh, or prayer, containing the name and titles of the Prince of the Age, King of Kings, Akmgeer, Conqueror of the World and adorned the
;
The
At
time there were heavy showers, accompanied with violent wind, for two or three days ; and all the *igns appeared of the rainy season, which in that country sets in before it does in Hindustan. The General exerted himself in establishing posts, and fixing guards, for keeping open the roads and supplying the army with provisions. He thought now of securing himself during the rains, and determined, after the sky should be cleared from the clouds, the
N4
184
A DESCRIPTION
lightning cease to illuminate the air, and the swelling of the water s ould subside, that the array shod d again be se: in motion against the Ra';a and his attendants, and be employed in delivering the country from
1
The
author
;
then
mentions
several
skirmishes,
which happened between the Rajas forces and the Imperial troops in which the latter were always victorious.
He
concludes thus
all
" At
length
the villages of
Dacshinad
fell
into the
habitants and peasants, from the diffusion of the fame of his Majesty's kindness, tenderness, and justice,
submitted
to his
their habitations
Jrlis
obedient to his commands. Majesty rejoiced when he heard the news of this conquest, and rewarded the General with a costly
dress,
his favour."
The narrative, to which this is a supplement, gives a concise history of the military expedition into Asavu In this description the author has stopt at a period
when
the Imperial troops had possessed themselves of the capital, and were masters of any part of the plain country which they chose to occupy or over-run. The sequel diminishes the credit of the conquest, by showing that it was temporary, and that the Raja did not forget his usual policy of harassing the invading army during the rainy season but this conduct produced only the effect of distressing and disgusting it with the service, instead of absolutely destroying it, as his predecessors had destroyed former adventurers.
:
Yet the conclusion of this war is far from weakening the panegyric which the author has passed upon the Imperial General, to whom a difference of situa1
OF ASAM.
185
tioa afforded an opportunity of displaying additional virtues, and of closing that life with heroic fortitude
which he had always hazarded in the field with martial spirit. His name and titles were, Mir Jumhh, Moazzim Khan, Khans Khanan, Sipahi Salar,
REMARK.
The preceding account of the Asamians, who arc probably superior in all respects to the Moguls* exhibits a specimen of the black malignity and frantic intolerance with which it was usual, in the rein of Aurangztb, to treat all those whom the crafty, cruel and avaricious emperor was pleased to condemn as
infidels
and barbarians.
XII.
ON THE MANNERS,
OF THE
CUCIS,
RELIGION,
AND
LAPPS
OR MOUNTAINEERS^
OF 7IPRA.
Communicated., in Persian, by John Rawlins, Esq.
THE
the
inhabitants of the
mountainous
districts
to
to
name of Patiyan
Being who created the universe; but they believe that a deity exists in every tree, that the sun and moon are Gods, and that whenever they worship
those subordinate divinities, Patiyan
If any one
is
pleased.
another to death, the who bear no relation to the deceased, have no concern in punishing the murderer; but, if the murdered person has a brother, or other heir, he may take blood ; nor has any man .whatever a right to prevent or oppose such
chief of the tribe,
or other persons
retaliation.
When a man is detected in the commission of theft or other atrocious offence, the chieftain causes a recompense to be given to the complainant, and reconciles
both parties
;
ary fine: and each party gives a feast of pork, or other meat, to the people of his respective tribe.
In ancient times it was not a custom among them to cut off the heads of the women whom they found but it happened in the habitations of their enemies
,*
l88
ON THE MOUNTAINEERS
once that a
late to
woman
asked another
why
:
she
came
so
she answered,
to battle, and that the and other things for him had occasioned her delay. This answer was overheard by a man at enmity with her husband and he was
that her
with resentment against her, considering, that, as she had prepared food for her husband for the purpose' of sending him to battle against his tribe, so, in general, if women were not to remain at home^ their husbands could not be supplied with provision, and consequently could not make war with advantage. From that time it became a constant practice to cut off the heads of the enemy's women ; especially, if they happen to be pregnant, and therefore confined to their houses. And this barbarity, is carried so far, that if a Cucl assail the house of an enemy, and kill a woman with child, so that he may bring two heads, he acfilled
quires honour and celebrity in his tribe, stroyer of two foes at once.
as the
de-
As
to
the marriages of
this'
wild nation
when
he gives four rich man has (the cattle of the mountains) or five head of gayals to the father and mother of the bride, whom he carher parents then kill the gayah* ries to his own house prepared fermented liquors and boiled and, having rice, with other eatables, invite the father, mother, brethren, and kindred of the bridegroom to a nuptial When a man of small property is inentertainment.
a contract of marriage,
:
made
clined to marry,
is
made, a
:
and a similar method is followed in a lower degree any woman, except his own mother. man may marry If a married couple live cordially together, and have a son, the wife is fixed and irremoveable ; but, if they
have no son, and especially if they terms, the husband may divorce
another woman.
live together
his wife,
OF TIFRA.
189
They have no idea of heaven or hell, the reward of good, or the punishment of bad actions ; but they profess a belief, that when a person dies, a certain spirit comes and seizes his soul, which he carries away ; and that whatever the spirit promises to give at the instant when the body dies, will be found and enjoyed by the dead ; but that, if any one should take up the corse and carry it off, he would not find the treasure.
The food of this people consists of hogs, deer, and other animals ; of which,
the carcasses or
cat
elephants,
if
them
occasionally.
When they have resolved on war, they send spies before hostilities are begun, to learn the stations and strength of the enemy, and the condition of the roads;
after
which they march in the night ; and two or three hours before daylight, make a sudden assault with swords, lances, and arrows. If their enemies are comto
pelled
abandon
their
station,
the
assailants
in-
males and females who are left behind, and strip the houses of all their furniture ; but, should theiradversaries, having gained intelligence of the intended assault, be resolute enough to meet them in battle, and should ihey find themselves overstantly put to death all the
retreat
to
own
habitations.
very near the moon, they say, * to-night we shall undoubtedly be attacked by some enemy;" and they pass that night under arms with extreme vigilance. They often lie in ambush in a forest near the path where their foes are used to pass and repass, waiting for the enemy with different sorts of weapons, and killing every man or woman who happens to pass by. In
*
bite
XgO
ON THE MOUNTAINEERS
bring;
off,
is
,
home
the head of an
enemy
and
sure to be distinguished
When two hostile tribes apexalted in his nation. pear to have equal force in battle, and neither has hopes
of putting the other to
pacific intentions, and,
flight,
soon conclude a treaty ; after which they kill several head of gay ah and feast on their flefh, calling on the sun and moon to bear witness of the pacificabut if one side, unable to resist the enemy, be tion thrown into disorder, the vanquished tribe is considered as tributary to the victors, who every year receive from them a certain number of gaytih, wooden dishes, weapons, and other acknowledgments of vassalage. Before they go to battle they put a quantity of roasted a/us (esculent roots like potatoes) and paste of riceflour into the hollow of bamboos, and add to them a provision of dry rice, with some leathern bags full of then they assemble and march with such celiquor lerity, that in one day they perform a journey ordi: :
narily
made by
letter-carriers
since they have not the trouble and delay of dressing When they reach the place to be attacked, victuals.
they surround it in the night, and, at early dawn, enter women it, putting to death both young and old, and children, except such as they chuse to bring away captive. They put the heads which they cut off and if the blood of their enemies into leathern bao;s be on their hands they take care not to wash it orr. When, after this slaughter, they take their own food, they thrust a part of what they eat into the mouths of the heads which they have brought away, saying to each of them, f Eat, quench thy thirst, and satisfy thy * appetite. As thou hast been slain by my hand, so
:
kinsmen ! During their journey, they have usually two such meals; and every watch, or two watches, they send intelligence
c
may
thy
kinsmen be
slain
by
my
OP TIPRA.
I91
of their proceedings to their families. When any of them sends word that he has cut off the head of an enemy, the people of his family, whatever be their age
or sex, express great delight, ments of red and black ropes
vessels
making caps and ornathen filling some large with fermented liquors, and decking them;
to
they go forth meet the conqueror, blowing large shells and striking plates of metal, with other rude instruments of When both parties are met they show extramusic. vagant joy, men and women dancing and singing together ; and if a married man has brought an enemy's head, his wife wears a head-dress with gay ornaments, the husband and wife alternately pour fermented liquor into each other's mouths, and she washes his bloody hands with the same liquor which they are drinking ; thus they go revelling, with excessive merriment to their place of abode ; and, havinopiled up the heads of their enemies in the court-yard of their chieftain's house, they sing and dance round the pile ; after which they kill some gay ah and hogs with their spears, and, having boiled the flesh, make a feast of it, and drink the fermented liquor. The
richer
men
on a bamboo, and fix it on the graves of their parents, by which act they acquire great reputation. He who brings back the head of a slaughtered enemy, receives presents from the wealthy of cattle and spirituous liquors ; and if any captives are brought alive, it is the
prerogative of those chieftains who were not in the campaign, to strike off the heads of the captives. Their weapons are made by particular tribes; for some of them are unable to fabricate instruments of war.
In regard to their
civil institutions,
the whole
in clearing
mafo-
nagement of
their
household
affairs
belongs to the
women ^
while the
men
are
employed
ItyZ
ON THE MOUNTAINEERS
rests, building huts, cultivating land, "making war* Five days (they or hunting gaine and wild beasts. never reckon by months or years) after the birth of a male child, and three days after that of a female, they entertain their family and kinsmen with boiled rice and
fermented liquor ; and the parents of the child partake of the feast. They begin the ceremony with fixing a pole in the court-yard; and then, killing a gayal or a hog with a lance, they consecrate it to their deity ; after' which all the party eat the flesh and drink liquor, If any closing the day with dancing and with songs. one among them be so deformed, by nature or by accident, as to be unfit for the propagation of his species, he gives up all thought of keeping house, and begs for his subsistence, like a religious mendicant, from door to door, continually dancing and singing. When such a person goes to the house of a rich and liberal man, the owner of the house usually strings together a number of white and red stones, and fixes one end of
the string on a long cane, so that the other end may hang down to the ground ; then, paying a kind of superstitious homage to the pebbles, he gives alms to after which he kills a gayal and a hog, the beggar and some other quadrupeds, and invites his tribe to
;
The giver of such an entertainment acquires a feast. and all unite in extraordinary fame in the nation applauding him with every token of honour and re:
verence.
a Cud dies, all his kinsmen join in killing hog and a gayal; and, having boiled the meat, pour some liquor into the mouth of the deceased, round whose body they twist a piece of cloth by way of shroud. All of them taste the same liquor as an offering to his and this ceremony they repeat at intervals for soul
When
several dtiys.
Then
kindling a
fire
under
they lay the body, on a stage, and, it, pierce it with a spit, and
OF TIPRA.
dry
it
:
I93
two
it with and, enclosing it in a little cafe within a chest, bury it under ground. All the fruits and flowers that they gather within a year after the burial, they scatter on the grave of the deceased but fome bury their de-id in a different manner, covering them first with a shroud, then with a mat of woven reeds, and hanging them on a high tree. Some, when the flesh is decayed, wash the bones, and keep them dry in a bowl, which ihey open on every sudden emergence ; and fancying themselves at a consultation with the bones, purfue whatever measures they think proper, alledging, that they act by the command of their departed parents and kinsmen. A widow is obliged to remain a whole year near the grave of her husband, where her family if she die within the year, they bring her food for her; if she Lve, they carry her back to mourn her house, where all her relations are entertained with the usual feast of the Cuci,
when
it is
and the
but the middle son if he have no sons, his estate goes to his brothers ; and if he have no brothers, it escheats to the chief of the tribe.
all
his property,
NOTE.
A party of Cuci visited the late Charles Croftes,
Esq.
after
tained
Jafarabad'm the spring of 1776, and entera dance they promised to return their harvest, a id seemed much pleased with
at
him with
their reception.
Vol.
II.
XIII.
ON THE
THE from
our Indian territories, the capital of which there are not more than six hundred miles to the province of Tunan, must necessarily draw our attention to that most ancient
vicinity of China to
if
we had no commercial
and maritime provinces; and the benefits that might be derived from a more intimate connection with a nation long famed for their useful arts and for the valuable productions of their country, are too apparent to require any
distant
more
own
me
present their laws, politics, and morals, with which is closely blended, than their
manufactures and trade nor-will I spare either pains or expense to procure translations of their most approved law-tracts, that I may return to Europe with
:
distinct ideas,
It will probably be a long time before accurate returns can be made to my inquiries concerning the Chinefe Laws; and, in the
to
know
that a translation of a
excellent
According
"Ping,
* '*
to a Chinese
writer,
named Li Tang
earthly
and
I96
celestia 1
:
but as things merely intellectual could not be expressed by rhoe figures, the grammarians of China contrived to represent the various operations of the mind by metaphors drawn from the productions of nature :" thus the idea of roughness and of rotundity, of motion and rest, were conveyed to the eye by signs representing a mountain, the sky, a river and the eaith ; the figures of the sun, the moon, and the stars, differently combined,
aitfully
stood for smoothness and splendour, for any thing wrought, or woven with delicate workman;
ship
many
other
were painted in characters taken from clouds, from the firmament, and from tne vegetable part of the creation; the different ways of moving, agility and slowness, idleness and diligence, were expressed by various insects, birds, In this manner passions fish, and quadrupeds. and sentiments were traced by the pencil, and ideas not subject to any sense were exhibited to the sight, un^il by degrees new combinations were invented, new expressions added ; the characters deviated imperceptibly from their primitive shape, and the Chirefe language became not only clear and forcible, but rich and tlegant in the highest degree/
qualities,
In this language, so ancient and so wonderfully are a multitude of books abounding in useful, as well as agreeable, knowledge; but the highest class consists of Five works ; one of which, at least, every Chinese who aspires to literary honours,
composed,
until
he possess
it
per-
The first is purely Historical, containing annals of the empire from the two-thousand three-hundred thirtyit is entitled Shuking, Jeventh year before Christ and a version of it has been published in France ; to
:
I97
which country we are indebted for the mod authentic and moft valuable fpecimens of Chineje hiftory and literature, from the compofitions which preceded thofe of Homer to the poetical works of the prefent Emperor, who Teems to be a man of the brighten: We may genius and the mod: amiable affections.
fmile,
if we pleaie, at the levity of the French, as laugh without fcruple at our ferioufnefs but let they us not fo far undervalue our rivals in arts and in arms,
:
as to
deny them
their juft
commendation, or
to relax
our efforts in that noble ftruggle, by which alone we can preferve our own eminence.
fecond clamcal work of the Chinefe contains poems, in praife of ancient sovereigns and legislators, or defcriptive of ancient manners, and recommending an imitation ofthem in the diicharge of all public and domeftic duties they abound in wife maxims and excellent precepts, their whole doctrine,' according to Cunfu-tsu, in the Lunyu or Moral Discourses, ' being re* ducible to this grand rule, that we mould not even ' entertain a thought of any thing bafe or culpable;* but the copies cf the Shi King, for that is the title of the book, are fuppofed to have been much disfigured, fince the time of that great philofopher, by fpurious paiTages and exceptionable interpolations ; and the itvle of the poems is in fome parts too metaphorical, while the brevity of other parts renders them obfcure ; though many think even this obfcurity fublime and venerable, like that of ancient cloyfters and temples, ' Shedding,' as Milton expreffes it, * a * dim religious light.' There is another paffage in the Lunyu, which deferves to be fet down at length ' Why, my Ions, do you not ftudy the book of Odes ? 6 If we creep on the ground, if we lie ufelefs and
The
inglorious, thofe
poems
98
in
them we fee, as in a mirror, what may bell become us, and what will be unbecoming; by their influence we (hall be made focial, affable, benevolent
lb
;
for as
the ancient poetry tempers and compofes our the Odes teach us our duty to our parents passions
:
said the philosopher of the three hundred Odes on the nuptials of Prince Venvam and the virtuous Tat Jin ? He who studies them not resembles a man with his face against a wall, unable to advance Most of those Odes a step in virtue and wisdom.' are near three tboufiind years old, and some, if we give credit to the Cbinefe annals, considerably older; but
nature.'
the
first
recent, having been comemperors of the third family, called Sheu. The work is printed in four volumes; and towards the end of the first, we find the Ode, which Couplet has accurately translated at the beginning of the Tahio, or Great Science, where it is finely I produce the original amplified by the philosopher from the Shi King itself, and from the book in which it is cited, together with a double version, one verbal and another metrical ; the only method of doing justice to the poetical compositions of the Asiatics, h is a panegyric on Vucun, Prince of Guey in the province or Honang, who died, near a century old, in the thirteenth year of the emperor Pingvang, seven hundred and fifty-six years before the birth of Christ, or one hundred and forty eight, according to Sir Isaac Newton, after the taking of Troy; so that the C'inese Poet might have been contemporary with Hesiod and Homer, or, at least, must have written the Ode before the Iliad and Odyssey were carried into Greece by
others are
somewhat more
later
Lycurgus.
I99
The
characters
1
this
24
5
'
'
Its
green reeds
9
11
is
how
16
luxuriant
10
how
luxuriant
12
Thus
13
14
'
As
17
a carver, as a filer,
18
19
of ivory,
20
22
!
'
As
'
how
O
24
how
dauntless and
23
6
How
25
worthy of fame
27 28
How
31
worthy of reverence
26
'
We have a prince
Whom
29
to the
forget.'
THE PARAPHRASE.
Behold, where yon blue riv'let glides Along the laughing dale;
its
verdant sides,
:
And
In bright array So shines our Prince The Virtues round him wait
!
And
As
That
him
'
Rich iv'ry carve and smoothe, His Laws thus mould each ductile
rriind,
And
!!
200
What soft, yet awful, dignity What meek, yet manly, grace What sweetness dances in his eye, And blossoms in his face
! !
Ne'er
shall Oblivion's
murky cloud
Obscure
The
sition
complished
but he
little
imagined that
his prince
his
compo-
celebrated
of regions so remote from his own. In the tenth leaf of the Ta Hio, a beautiful comis quoted from another ode in the Shi King, which deserves to be exhibited in the same form with the preceding
parison
The
4 5
. !
peach-tree,
6
how
fair
how
!
graceful
7
Its leaves,
how blooming
10
how
pleasant
89
e
11
Such
a bride, house,
is
when
is
{
14
15
And
201
The
simile
may
thus be rendered
Gay child of Spring, the garden's queen, Yon pe.^ch tree charms the roving sight: Its ft 'grant leaves how richly green Its blossoms how divinely bright
!
So
blooming bride,
By Love and conscious Virtue led O'er her new mansion to preside,
And
The next
leaf exhibits a
comparison of
a different
nature, rather sublime than agreeable, and conveying rather censure than praise :
1
2
.
O
.5
how
6
horridly
Its
rocks in
9
how
how rude
11
78
5
,
a heap
12
Thus
4
loftily
J
thou
sittest,
O
J
minister of
YN
16
up
Which may
be thus paraphrased
The sunny
And
highland crowns, hideous as the brow of night, Above the torrent frowns
will
is
law,
Wich
202
It was a very ancient practice in China to paint or engrave moral sentences an'd approved verses on vessels in constant use; as the words Renew thyfelf daily were inscribed on the 'bason of the emperor Tang, and the poem of Kien Long, who is now on the throne, in praise of tea, has been published on a set of porcelain cups ; and if the description just cited of a selfish and insolent statesman were, in the same manner, constantly presented to the eves and attention of rulers, it might produce some benefit to their subjects and to themselves ; especially if the comment of Tsem Tsu, who may be called the Xenopbon, as dm Ftt Tsu was the Socrates, and Mem Tsu the Plata, of China, were added to illustrate and
enforce
it.
Odes be similar to the specimens adduced by those great moralists in their works, which the French have made public, I should be very solicitous to procure our nation the honour of bringing to light the second classical book The third, called Teking, or the of the Chinese. book of changes, believed to have been written by Fo, the Hermes of the East, and consisting of right lines variously disposed, is hardly intelligible to the most learned Mandarins ; and Cun Fit Tsu himself, who was prevented by death from accomplishing his design of elucidating it, was dissatisfied with all the interpretations of the earliest commentators. As to the fifth, or Liki, whjch that excellent man compiled from old monuments, it consists chiefly of the Chinese ritual, and of tracts on moral duties; but the fourth entitled Chung Cieu, or Spring and Autumn, b\ *\hich the same incomparable writer mtaned the flourishing state of an empire under a virtuous monarch, and the fall of kingdoms under bad governors, must be an
If the rest of the three hundred
interesting
work
in
every nation.
The
powers, how-
20J
ever, of an individual are so limited, and the field of is so vast, that I dare not promise more
than to procure, if any exertions of mine will avail, a complete translation of the Shi King, together with an authentic abridgement of the Chinese laws, civil and criminal. A native of Canton, whom I knew some years ago in England, and who passed his first examinations with credit in his way to literary distinctions, but was afterwards allured from the pursuit of learning by a prospect of success in trade, has favoured me with the Three Hundred Odes in the orig-inal, together with the Lun Yu, a faithful version of which was published at Paris near a century ago; but he seems to think, that it would require three or four years to complete a translation of them ; and Mr. Cox informs me that none of the Chinese to whom he has acce c s, possess leisure and perseverance enough for such a task; yet he hopes, with the assistance or Whang Atong, to send me next season some of the po^ms translated into English. A little encouragement would induce this young Chinese to visit India, 2nd some of his countrymen would, perhaps, accompany him but though considerable advantage to the public, as well as to letters, might be reaped from the knowledge and ingenuity of such emigrants, yet we must wait for a time of preater national wealth and prosperity, before such a measure can be formally recommended by us to our patrons at the helm of government".
;
204
A Letter
SIR,
to
the
the favour of your letter dated 28th I remember the 784, by Mr. Cox. pleasure of dining with you in company with Captain Blake and Sir Joshua Reynolds ; and I shall always remember the kindness of my friends in England.
RECEIVED
March,
1
The Chinese book, Shi King, that contains three hundred poems, with remarks thereon, and the work of Con-fu-tsu, and his grandson, the Tai Ho, I beg you will accept but to translate the work into
:
English will require a great deal of time, perhaps three or four years ; and I am so much engaged in
business, that
I
hope you
will
excuse
my
not under-
taking
If
it.
any books or other things from as to let me know, and I will take particular care to obey your orders.
for
you wish
Canton, be so
good
Wishing you
I
health,
am,
SIR,
Servant,
WHANG
To
Sir
ATONG.
WILLIAM
1784.
JONES,
Dec. 10,
XIV.
A TABLE,
species of Infinitives all the afferent Containing Examples of
and
from
Triliteral Verbs,
in the
form
in
Language of Hindostan.
a*
4th.
Conjugation
1//.
I.
With
three
different
radicals,
none of them,
as
>i
radicals the
II.
III.
With
for the
1st radical,
IV.
With
for
the
id radidal.
V.
With
for
the
3d
radical.
"*
VI.
With
for the
1st
radical,
S{
VII. With
,
for the
2d radical,
VIII.
With
, for the
3d radical,
IX.
With *
for the
1st
radical,
\. With
if
for
the
;d
radical,
XI.
With
,.
for
the
3d radieal,
XII.
With
for the
st,
and
the
as
heal,
A
r l.
m.
vaO
am
A
Conjugation
&c.
206
3*
Infin.
f
oi
strength,
-V.'
,ujU confirmation,
it***
2**y*
XIII.
With
and
<s
'
oyT potent,
*>1
confirming,
the 2d radical,
as
^C
made
desperate,
u~,l
confirmed,
filnfin.
'?- depravity,
*>~
tjy^j accusation,
XIV. With
2d
the 3d,
and s the
as
Part. act.
radical,
Part. pas.
Infin.
lD e act
^
'^=-
iu$J
preparation,
XV. With
2d
the
3d,
and
cj
the
Part. act. Part. pas.
Infin.
t?*U coming,
<_-^ preparing,
radical,
L^o prepared,
yJi medicine,
y~\
j~l
jlj
'
father,
XVI.
With
2d
the
st,
and s the
Part. act.
Part. pas.
Infin.
gJ
curing,
radical,
^U
csi!
cured,
trouble,
^~l
gal
cjil
mstj
performance.
XVII.
With
3d
the 1st,
and
is
the
Part. act.
radical,
Part. pas.
Infin.
is\,
observation,
gl,
flj
XVIII.
With
2d
the
as
Part. act.
Part. pas.
^\j observing,
radical,
c?^
observed,
!,
{
XIX. With
3d
, the
1st,
f Infin.
Jl, protection,
J>\,
and
<s
the
protecting,
protected,
J} J}
J>,
radical,
Jl^
(jJo
power,
cWy
XX. With
3d
the 1st,
and the
Part. act.
radical,
Part. pas.
Infin.
ju
I"
c^
,s,\i
strength, seizing,
narrated,
life,
XXI. With 3d
} the
2d,
and g the
Part. act.
I
radical,
Part. pas.
Infin.
ct,j^
iL>
act.
i5;U.
XXII.
With
3d
the
as
radical,
1 Part.
living,
Part. pas.
T Infin.
vs
}\
\
vid. gol.
vid. gol.
1st,
and
1?
2d
$}
radical,
cjlj
promise,
XXIV. With
3d
, the
st,
and
cs
the
J Part. act.
Part. pas.
radical,
ADVERTISEMENT.
of derivatives from Arabic quadrithe Persian language ; and from the 9th, 11th, 12th, and 13th, conjugations of nilirerals there are none to be met with. I have, therefore, confined my observations to the nine conjugations included in the table. And al hough particular senses and uses are assigned to each of hesd by grammarians, (which may be seen in Mr, Richardson's Gram. p. 65 ) it is at the same time to be observed, that they are nevertheless frequently used in other senses; many of them retaining the simple signification of their primitives: and that every root does not extend through every conjugation, hut that
literals
EXAMPLES
rarely occur in
in
to the present
;
and the derivatives of such conjuat or.s as are more frequently used in the Arabic, seem also to be more frequently than any other introduced into
the Persian.
of any particular form is to be Golius and Meninski, I have left a blank in the table, which may be filled up whenever any can be met with.
Where no example
in
found
With regard to the examples which I have brought to illustrate the following rules, they are such as
and one example of an infinitive ; intended as a representation of the infinitivts and participles of every species and conjugation. To have attempted a complete system of
first
came
to
hand
is
or participle
208
ON THE INTRODUCTOIN' Or
me
far
beyond the
my
present undertaking.
OF ARABIC INFINITIVES.
Their Masculine Singulars are used in the Perand in every resoect serve the ; same purposes, and are subject to the si me rules of
I.
sian as Substantives
governing a fub.
fol.
t5^ jL"^a:0
HP3
'
demonstrations of unanimity
x.
3.
j^o^u^d jjys'J
1 r
4.
nominatives to verbs,
*y-i (gZ/J-ij**-
view
was
5.
governed by verbs,
^^V.
( h*M
^ y^
(*^*^^'
bcXs*) he received
greai delight
*^*~? a ^ er performing the duties
J*-*^'
6.
governed by a prep.
united by a conjunction
\r^
7.
ii^*' J
prosperity
and
splendour
S.
rendered definite by
affixing <>
^^(*yJ^Jr
that
was between
sian as substantives
Their Masculine Plurals are used in the Per; and in every respect serve the same purposes, and are subject to the same rules of
II.
Ex.
1.
governing a sub.
fol.
*j*
O ib^l
the dispositions
of men
20i)
jCJ
fol.
.Jbti^
good actions
the
qualifications described
j yaj^^ j ^'
1
III. Their Feminine Singulars are used in the Persian as substantives; and in eve ct serve the s^me purposes, and are subject to the same rules of construction as substantives originally Persian.
:
Ex.
1.
nominatives to verbs,
<J*.*J
CjLsl there
is
per-
mission
3.
governing a sub.
fol.
><Xc
CLc
s-
3.
fol.
bloody battle
letter written
4.
^^^<XjX*^3'^wcXaJ'!X^! a
"
in friendship
IV. Their Feminine Plurals are used in the Persian and in every respect serve the same ; purposes, and are subject to the same rules of conas substantives
Ex.
1.
governing a sub.
fol.
{.
jUUn jf A
wlfl^J
1.
fol.
3.
fol.
jjj* *UuXO
"
said
bur-
thens
V.
table.
The
of tranof the form exhibited in the But those of Intransicives are reducible to no
2IO
ON THE INTRODUCTION OP
proper rule without innumerable exceptions. Grammarians make of them in all thirry two different forms, which may be seen in Mr. Richardson's Grammar, p. 92. but for these irregula ities, he justly observes, that a dictionary is the onlv proper guide. These Infinitives, both Singulars and Plural, are introduced ireely into the Persian as Substantives.
fol.
<->ykX*
^5^2
Persian as participles,
jectives.
in
the
as ad-
Ex.
1.
as participles
with a verb
fol.
tXiLo
jJL
he remained expecting
aLt
:.
cS
yJJ* yz*
2*yc
m
causing
the
uuJyji
^tx*a^c composing
book
t^ijjS*)
the author
of this book
yZ uJOUa^o following
-
3:
^J^J
f^J
-0 an able
man
4.
Li >j*a2> God
the creator
211
fol.
tivxi
3-*^
a good agent.
6.
fol.
7.
governed by a verb,
nominatives to verbs,
*1a^Sj
IjJj'li'
8.
Cw-loiLsiJuclx^n
the
lover
be
sincere
9.
with a prep.
fol.
common
construction,
II. Their masculine perfect plurals are used in the Persian as substantives in the form of the oblique
to be used in the
But they do not seem case which terminates in ^j . form of the nominative which terin ^_yj
.
minates
Ex.
^j^lSj ^*1 j\
.jA4Xv*o
fyi
'-
the
sect
of the
faithful
III. Their masculine imperfect plurals are used in the Persian as substantives.
Ex.
J*
1.
governing a sub.
fol.
officers
sent
2.
IV. Their feminine singulars are used in the Persian as participles, as substantives, and as adjectives..
Ex.
1.
tIXv.1 A-Lo
she
is
pregnant
2,
i3
212
Ex.
3.
ON THE INTRODUCTION OF
-
AaxIs*
s-
y j a pregnant wo-
before,
4. as a sub. qualified
man
by an
ad.
friend
following,
as a sub. qualified
5.
by a
part.
pas. following,
V, Their feminine
Persian as
life.
substantives
expressing
things without
Ex.
1.
{jjy^j ^u^jj
the incidents of
time
I
3.
yn^IuLJbjl^
unforeseen events
^X^sf
the
sum of my
is
desire
be-
stowed on that
a Li ^ Js*xi
CouLw
}.ls
2.
as a sub. go\i ] Z jX**q j.aa*o %.*+& S yQ*** I make it the " ' ver mug another perception (i.e.
following
it
e. I
it,
re-
&c.
21 3
(i.
f
j.
f>^-
&<**> the
before,
4. joined
injured slave
^j^e^^ytax^s
intention
and
design
5.
^J^LlJ
^ -y^*^
Their masculine perfect plural does not seem in the Persian, either in the form of the nominative or the oblique case.
II.
to be used
III.
sian as substantives,
in the
Per-
Ex.
1.
it,
^
***
s
<X
j^R-o my beloved,
e.
i.
the beloved
of
s-
me
said
^-jy
& yJ*x^>
s-
the
be-
pas. fol.
3. as
loved
A*e^Xsr.o
5
woman
IV. Their feminine perfect plurals are usejl in the Persian as substantives, to express things without
life.
Ex.
1.
governing a sub.
fol.
the
demands
of that friend
3. agreeing
with an ad.
214
ON THE INTRODUCTION OF
prefixed to
,
compounds corresponding
in
to that of
tf^uyi
tives
and
as adjectives.
Ex.
i.
*,
as a sub. a nominative to
<-***'
the verb,
2.
^jLwaXJJ
e^kX*
OF ARABIC ADJECTIVES
TICIPLES.
I.
resembling
PAR-
The
(:J
a^
of Arabic words which are derived from intranand called by Arabic grammarians, ad; The singulars of jectives resembling participles. these forms are used in the Persian both as adjectives
cies
sitive verbs
and
Ex.
i.
substantives.
*_
as a sub. qualified
by the pronoun
jj js. qj)
*-**"' J^.J*"
dem.
2.
with a verb,
an ad. qualifying a sub.
he
is
wicked
3. as
II.
sub-
stantives.
Ex.
1.
governing a sub.
fol.
( >^>rf
^^^
:Sfc
the learned
men of Greece
2.
^l$JJ
t?lij-K noblemen of
integrity
215
adjectives, resembling
having
the article
prefixed to
it,
compounds corresponding
to that of iS^j^yLy which are used in the Persian both as substantives and adjectives.
Ex.
1.
^
by the
as a sub. qualified
*^y*
^***=^ j
that beauty
pro. demon.
^
that old servant
jy
*>><
vant
***> tXs"')
*j X5
f-ij>-<
'
OF PARTICIPLES
PRIMITIVES
I.
expressing
in
the
Sense of their
a stronger Degree.
>.asj
The
are
par-
ticiples which express the sense of their primitives in a stronger degree; and are sometimes used in the
Persian as adjectives.
Ex.
1.
alio *J^iJ
a poisonous dicine
is
me-
2.
*j\jyyo he
full
of pa-
tience
t-j^*>
is
sense of the primitive in a less degree not seem to be used in the Persian.
but
it
does
OF ARABIC SUBSTANTIVES.
I. The Arabic noun of time and place are frequently employed in the Persian ; and the following list exhibits the forms of such as are derived from the first conjugations of the different species of tri-
literals.
2l6
ON THE INTRODUCTION OF
CONJUGATION
from
I.
FIRST.
Roots
v^^
j>
II.
o -
J***
residence,
III.
^U
- o ^
a place of safety,
the place and time of beginning,
P^ ace
^1
\&j
**jj
V.
o
Ia^o
o ^
VI.
VII.
VIII.
ff'y*
-\3L-o
opportunity,
-y
Is O 1
J^
,.
^si
xaj
A.
XI.
^-i"
- o
..
me
P^ ace
an d time of selling,
^,
^J
-^
J
ft*
XII.
the center,
XV.
XVII.
XVIII.
coming
arrival,
way of approaching,
j'J
Z 2
O
CO
<s\j
XIX.
and
thus lord,
^
the interval,
cf*.
XXI.
XXII.
XXIII.
|^4.^o
a place of division
, O ,
L^c*
^
<s^\
refuge,
more
particularly, c>
common
form, as s^JU
2I7
The noun
tive conjugations
ticiple passive';
and
is
Ex.
1.
Persian language has terms proper to expressing the instrument of action ; it does not howvver reject the use of the Arabic instrumental noun, which is represented by the forms,
III.
The
itself for
jLwaX-o j>ak*a
Of
dl>.AA*o
Ex.
1.
J y^j he weighed
"
"
in,
scale of reason
his in-
Ex.
*j -
Mary,
*^=.* Mecca,
Sec.
*J.
flesh, .Xa*
an ancestor,
&c.
OF ARABIC ADJECTIVES.
I. Besides the Arabic participles which we have already observed are used as adjectives, there is also a pi. ntitul source of re.il adjeel 'ves formed by affixing <s
to
substantives
cf
which are
2l8
ON THE INTRODUCTION OF
tian, &"c.
^Ji
earthly,
<sya^ Egyp-
II.
The masculine
and ad-
Ex.
x.
as a sub.
governing another
fol. it
Q_y-oJ*XR*J
2. as
most lucky
time
III.
The
Ex.
I.
asasub.governinganotherfol.it,
as an ad. qualifying a sub.
3jjj\j\
men of
a.
,j l=jl
going before,
IV.
The
Ex.
ts*^*
most
in the Persian
Ex
i.
Jji
-Aj the
first
chapter
2K)
Of
the
FORM
of
ARABIC
WORDS when
uied in
the
PERSIAN.
I. All Arabic infinitives, participles, substantives, and adjectives, are introduced into the Persian in the form of the nominative, which throws away from the
last letter
every species of nunnation ("/"), or short vewel (<"" J )j which they may posses as Arabic word?, and remain without motion but when their construction in the Persian requires them to assume the ter;
manner
mination of another case, they receive it in the same as if they were originally Persian words; with the following exceptions.
i/?.
When
in <s
that
must be pronounced
lowing
( )
it,
*,
becomes the
\
first
sub-
stantive in construction with another substantive fol<s is actually changed into , to which short afterwards affixed to shew the construction.
,
is
Ex.
a^c
t5
;*3*
in construction
becomes
^U^J.'
'
as (fUtJ
Jy>
>* &C.
zd. Feminine Arabic substantives terminating in x, when introduced into the Persian, change * semetimes into s , and sometimes into c
,
.
Ex. C1*ju<* friendship, being found written by the same author aa^u and CXks:*
.
nating in
when introduced
>
ways change
into
Gram.
p. 109.
Canon.
IIT.
220
ON THE INTRODUCTION OF
cl*a!U. pure,
is
Ex
**a!L:
pure friendship.
4th. Arabic participles plural terminating in although introduced into the Persian as nominatives, are originally the oblique case.
JrLx.
aj^^ J
cjt*^
u^
t5s ****
(^_>LL*^
the learned
When an Arabic infinitive is used in the Perlanguage as an adverb, it is introduced in the form of the Arabic accusative without any change.
$th.
sian
Ex.
ISUuJ accidentally,
&c. &c.
seem
OF ARABIC COMPOUNDS.
I. The manner in which different Arabic parts of speech are employed to form a variety of compounded words made use of in the Persian, is well explained by Sir William Jones in his Persian Grammar; and
221
with respect to phrases purely Arabic, and whole sentences, which are often met with in Persian authors, they require a perfect knowledge of the Arabic language, and do not belong to this place.
STANTIVES,
I.
AND
ADJECTIVES.
when Arabic adjectives use of to qualify Arabic or Persian substantives singular, they agree with them
In the Persian language,
or participles are
made
in
Ex.
jy
jy^o
2.
3. a Pers. sub.
(^.^
sj-j ys.
*1^aw_j.S
fi
an old friend
by
***+&
*
dear
sister
When Arabic adjectives and participles are use of to qualify Arabic and Persian substantives masculine and plural, they remain in the masculine singular.
II.
made
Ex.
1.
_j^f^
a.
j^** (^Jj ^ Uj
222
III.
ON THE INTRODUCTION OF
Arabic adjectives and participles are of to qualify Arabic or Persian substantives made use feminine and plural, they are put in the feminine singular ; and often, though not so properly, in the masculine singular.
Ex.
j
.
When
Arabic
part. sin.
jy X*
a Persian sub. fem. plur. with Arabic part. sing, both fem.
and mas.
<3y&yc siyoyA
(j_y->j
accomplished \vo-
IV. An Arabic substantive, in the Persian, is often rendered definite by a following Arabic adjective or
participle having the articled prefixed.
part. pas.
JCxk+iS
(S
For an account of the genders of Arabic words, and of their perfect and imperfect plurals, I must and
again refer to Mr. Richardson''s Arabic Grammar; to that of Erpenius, where the latter subject is treated at still greater length.
Of
the
INTRODUCTION
into the
LANGUAGE
of
ARABIC HINDOSTAN.
of the
I.
ples,
substantives,
;
enumerated
and
all
223
are introduced into the language of Hindostan, in the same form, for the same purposes, and with the same freedom as in the Persian: submitting themselves to the different rules of regimen and concord that are peculiar to that language in the same manner as if they were words originally belonging to it. Arabic adverbs, prepositions, and conjunctions, are also used in the language of Hindustan ; but I think less frequently than in the Persian.
XV.
ON THE
ASTRONOMICAL COMPUTATIONS
OF THE
HINDUS.
BY SAMUEL
is,
DAVIS, Escu
Bhagalpur,
I
$t>
Feb. 17S9.
admitted, IT thebelieve, generallyHindus may that inquiries lead to much astronomy of the into
I
curious information, besides what relates merely to the science itself; and that attempts to ascertain the chronology of this ancient nation will, as they have hitherto done, prove unsatisfactory unless assistance
The following communication is not expected to contribute towards so desirable a purpose ; but, with all its imperfections, it may have the useful effect of awakening the attention of others in this country who
are better qualified for such investigations, and of inciting
fully,
them to pursue the same object more successby showing that numerous treatises in Sanscrit
on astronomy are procurable, and that the Bra': nuns are extremely willing to explain them. As an encouragement to those who may be inclined to amuse themselves in this way, I can farther venture to declare, from the experience I have had, that Sanscrit books in this science are more easily translated than almost any others, when once the technical terms are
understood the subject of them admitting neither of metaphysical reasoning nor of metaphor, but being delivered in plain terms and generally illustrated with examples in practice, the meaning may be well enough made out, by the help of a Pandit r through the medium of the Persian or the Hindi language.
:
226
Moreover,
necessary
;
skill in the
ab-
struse parts of
ometry and the circles of the sphere as, it may be supposed, most of the members of this society possess, a considerable progress might be made in revealing many interesting particulars, which at present lie hid to Europeans in the Jyotish, or astrono-
mical, Sastra.
The prediction of eclipses and other phenomena, published in the Hindu Patra, or almanac, excited my curiosity long ago to know by what means it was effected ; but it was not until lately that I had any means of gratification. I had before this been inclined to think, wirh many others, that the Brahmens possess no more knowledge in astronomy than they have derived from their ancestors in tables ready calculated to their hands, and that few traces of the principles of the science could be found among them ; but by consulting some Sanscrit books, T was induced To satisfy myself on this subto alter my opinion. ject, I began with calculating, by a modern Hindu, "formula, an eclipse which will happen in next Nomember i the particulars of which process, although in some measure interesting, were not sufficient for my purpose, as it yet remained to be learnt on what grounds some tables used in it were constructed ; and for this information I was referred to the Surya Siddkanta, an original treatise, and reputed a divine revelation. For a copy of the Surya Siddhanta I am indebted to Sir Robert Chambers, who procured it among other books at Benares ; but the obscurity of many technical terms made it some times difficult to be understood even by the Bandit I employed, who v, as by no means deeply versed in the science he professed. Bv his diligence, however, and through the
obliging assistance of Mr. Duncan at Benares, procured for me the Ti:a t or Commentary,
who
this
F
difficulty
THE HINDUS.
;
227
was
at
length surmounted
and a computaon
the principles, but strictly by the rules, of the Surya Siddhanta, is what I propose now to present you with,
after
may be
neces-
sary to
make
it
intelligible.
suppose
as ours
it
sufficiently well
known,
that the
Hindu
is
the
same
is
sydereal,
parting from a
star,
returns to the
mences on the instant of his entering the sign Aries; or Tather the Hindu constellation Mesha * ; that each astronomical month contains as many even days and fractional parts as he stays in each sign j and that the civil differs from the astronomical account of time only in rejecting those fractions, and beginning the year and month at sunrise, instead ot the intermediate instant of the artificial day or night. Hence arises the unequal portion of time assigned to each month dependent on the situation of the sun's apsis, and the distance of the vernal equinoctial colure from the beginning of Mesha in the Hindu sphere; and by these means they avoid those errors which E-urofieat&j from a different method of adjusting their calendar by
intercalary days, have been subject zo.
An
explana-
my
pre-
which is to give a general account only" of the method by which the Hindus compute -eclipses,, and thereby to show, that a late French author was too
hasty in asserting generally that they determine
them
* Or, to be more particular, on his entering the Nacsbatra, or lunar mansion {jisiuim). There were formerly only twenty-seven Nacshatras: a 28th {Abbijit) has been since added, taken out of the 2 1st and 22d, named Uttarasbara and Sravana. Trese three in their order comprehend io, 5 , and it? 40' of the Zodiac : the 20' each. rest comprehend 13
Vol.
II.
Q_
2 28
" by set forms, couched in enigmatical verses,*" Sec, So far are they Irom deserving the reproach of ignorance which Mons. Sonnerat has implied, that on inquiry, I believe, the Hindu science of astronomy will
be found as well known now as it ever was among them, although, perhaps, not so generally, by reason of the little encouragement men of science at present meet with, compared with what they formerly did under their native princes.
It
has been
common
;
with astronomers to
fix
on some
planetary motions
as from a radix, to compute the and the ancient Hindus chose that point of time counted back when, according to their motions as they had determined them, they must have been in conjunction in the beginning of Mesha, or Aries ; and coeval with which circumstance they sup-
posed the creation. This, as it concerned the planets would have produced a moderate term of years compared with the enormous antiquity, that will be hereafter stated; but, having discovered a slow motion of the nodes and apsides also, and taking it into the computation, they found it would require a length of time corresponding with 1955884890 years now expired, when they were so situated, and 2364 151 io years more, before they would return to the same situation again, forming together the grand anomalistic period denominated a Calpa, and fancifully assigned as The Culpa they divided intc* the day of Brahma. Manwantsras, and greater and less Yugas. The use ot' the ManivcJ/i/ era is not stated in the Surya Suldhanonly,
[
ta\ but that of the Maha, or greater Yug, is sufficiently evident, as being an anomalistic period of the sun and moon, at the end of which the latter, with her apogee and ascending node, is found, together with the sun,
VoyagM
OF THE HINDUS.
in the
229
that
first of Aries \ the planets also deviating from point only as much as is their latitude and the
mean and
true anomaly.
These
certain
number of mean
days,
svstem assuming that an the creation, when the planets began their motions, a right line, drawn from the equinoctial point Lanca through the centre of the earth, would, if continued, have passed through the centre of the sun and planets to the first star in Aries : their mean longitude for any proposed time afterward! may be computed by proportion. As the revolutions a planet makes in any cycle are to the number of days composing it, so are the days given to its morion in that time and the even revolutions being rejected, the fraction, if any, shows its mean longitude at midnight under their first meridian of Lanca: for places east or west of that meridian a proportional allowance is made for the difference of longitude on the earth's surface, called in Sanscrit the Desantara. The positions of the apsides and nodes are computed in the same manner ; and the equation of the mean to the true place, determined on principles which will be hereafter mentioned.
;
The division of the Malia Yug into the Satya, Treta, Dzvapar, and Call ages, does not appear from the Surya Siddhanta to answer any practical astronomical purpose, but to have been formed on ideas similar to the golden, silver, brazen, and iron sges of the Greeks. Their origin has however been ascribed to the precession of the equinoxes by those who will of course
refer the JSIamvantera
and Calf a
to the
same founda-
tion
either
way the
latter .will
has been described, if 1 ing passage in the first section of the Surya Siddhanta ; the translation of which is, I believe, here correctly given.
Q+. 2
23O
Murta
*,
is
"
estimated by respirations ; six respirations make a " Vicala, sixty Vicalas a Danda, sixty Dandas a Nac" shatra day, and thirty Nacshalra days a Nacshatra " month- The Savan month is that contained beH tween thirty successive risings oiSurya, and varies in " its length according to the Lagna Bhtija. Thirty
" Tifhis compose the Chandra month. The Saura " month is that in which the sun describes one sign " of the Zodiac, and his passage through the twelve
" signs is one year, and one of those years is a Deva " day, or day of the Gods. When it is day at Asura-f" it is night with the Gods, and when it is day with the
({
Gods it is night at Asura. Sixty of the Deva days multiplied by six give the Deva year, and twelve hundred of the Deva years form the aggregate of
the four Yugas. To determine the Saura years contained in this aggregate, write down the following numbers, 4, 3, 2, which multiply by 10,000 ; the " product 4,320,000 is the aggregate or Maha Yuga, " including the Sandhi and Sandhyansa \. This is " divided into four Yugas, by reason of the diffe-
" rent proportions of Virtue prevailing on earth, in " the following manner Divide the aggregate " 4,320,000 by o, and multiply the quotient by four " for the Satya Yug, by three for the Treta, by two
:
* This is mean sydereal time : A Nacsbatra, or syderal day, b the time in which the earth makes a turn upon Us axis, or, according to the Hindus, in which the stars make one complete revolution. This is shorter than the Savan, or solar day, which varies in its length according to the Lagna Bbuja, or right ascension, and also from the sun's unequal motion in the ecliptic ; for both which' circumstances the Hindus have their equation of time, as will appear in the calculation of the eclipse. \ Asura, th.e south pole, the habitation of the Asura Loca, or demons, with whom the Dcvas, who reside at Sumeru, the north
pole,
X
The
wage eternal war. Sandhi and Sandhyansa, the morning and evening twilight. proper words, I heliev?, are Sund'oya and Sandhyansa.
OF THE HINDUS.
*'
23I
for the
vide either of the Yugs by six far its Seventy-one fugs ake a MinwanSandhyansa. tera ; and at the close of each Nanvjantera there is " a equal to the Satya Yug, during which
" "
" "
"
an universal deluge. Fourteen Manwanincluding the Sandhi, compose a Calpa, and teras, there is a at the commencement of each Calf a
there
is
SW&
a Sandhi equal to the &*/>w Yug, or 1,728,000 ,S*wra " years. A Calpa is therefore equal to 1000 Maha Kg*. One 6W^ is a day with Brahma, and his " night is of the same length ; and the period of his " life is 100 of his yeais. One half of the term of
"
Brahma's
life,
or
fifty
years,
is
" remainder the first Calpa is begun; and six Man wan t eras, including the Sandhi, are expired. The " seventh Manwantera, into which we are now ad" vanced, is named Vaivaswata. Q{x\<v=>Manwante a " twenty-seven Maha Yugs are elapsed, and we are
" now
in the Satya
" Satya Yug consists of 1,728,000 Saura whole amount of years, expired from
The
the begin-
" ningofthe
may hence
the
of
period
2
..
432CCC
864000
1296000
of the
last
Satya age,
when
sup-
X7 W ^^r,
4-520000 -^ X =
the Surya
Siddhanta
is
4^0000
,.
Sandhi
5fl
Va
Tie
Maha
Tug,
-"
beginning of theCalfa,
at the
1728000
,-
Aggregate or
432COCO
6 Manwanteras,
or
308448000
= 1850688*00
I166400CO
W ich
lio^oooo
*7*8
27
X i?"
28th
-
308448000
C,Jf>a,
----eqU
1
Satya
Age
of
the
-
4T^7^"o
-
Maha
Tug,
=~ *?8ooo
i
t0 th
-
^Savant
Whole
'-
i78eo o
7~4<>
duration of Calpa,
4320000000
Q.3
232
*
*'
but from the number of years so ; found, must be made a deduction of one hundred " limes four hundred and seventy-four divine years, " or of that product multiplied by three hundred and *; sixty for human years, that being the term of Brah-
be computed
M mas employment
**
in the
creation
after
which the
planetary motions
commenced.
sixty
*c
" Sixty Vicalas make one Cala, Bhaga, thirty Bhagas one Rasi,
in the
Colas one
Bhagaria
*.
"
f
" 4^20000 Madhyama revolutions through the Zodiac. " Mavgala, Vrihaspatl^vA Sani make the same num**
it
Chandra makes
" 57753336 \
'.'
Madhyama revolutions; Mangala 22,96832 Madhyama revolutions ; Budha* s Sighras " are 17937060; Vrihaspatis Madhyamas 364220; *' S ucra's Sighras 7022376 ; Sani's Madhyama s are ie 46568. The Chandrochcha revolutions are 488203
7
are
"
is
time contained between sunrise and sunrise the number of those days the Bhwni Saian day
:
The
The
division of the
Bbagana,
grees, &c.
__
; ; ;
Budha, Mercury Sucra, Venus ; Mangala, Mars; F'rihaspati, Jupiter; Sani, Saturn; Chandra, the Moon; the Chandra Ucbcba, or Chandrochcha, the Moon's apogee Chani a Fata, the Moon's ascending node. The Madhyama revolutions of Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, and the Sighra revolutions of Venus and Mercury, answer to their revolutions about the Sun.
in a
rVg*
17753336 4320000=53433336 lunar months, or lunations D.D. P. . _ r S IC7*'QI?823 t and J-7 =29 31 co, 6, Sec.
'
53433336
in
'
D. H. M.
each
S.
.
mean
? 3.43 3
336
lunation, or in English time zg 12 .44 2 ^j'"^'"'. 5 1840000= 1 593336 Adhi or intercalary lunar months
.
in
4320000
OF THE HINDUS.
1*
f
233
contained in a Yug is of Nucshatra day s 1 5 8 2 2 3 7 8 2 8 -j* ; of Chandra days " 1603000080 ;of Adhl months 1593336 ; of Cshaya " Tit Ins 2^082252 ; of -SWra months 51840000. ** From either of the planets Nacshatra days deduct
*
8 ^ li_12iZli
4320000
I
365. 15. 31. 31. 24. diurnal revolutions of the Sun, the length of the Hindu year.
8 i_ili2li. -- 365, 15. 31. 31. 24. diurnal revolutions of the 43^uo stars in one year.
lH2H2l2l
577S333 6
27.
19.
18.
1.
37. &c.
the
Moon's
periodical
month.
The 1603000080
called also Tit'bis, are each one-thirtieth part of the moon's synodical month or relative period, and vary in length according to
the inequality of her motion from the sun. The Csbaya Tit'his and Adbi, or intercalary lunar months, are sufficiently evident. The sun and planets preside alternately over the days of the week, which are named accordingly. The first day after the creation was Ravivar, or Sunday k began at midnight, under the meridian of Lanca and the Ravivar of the Hindus corresponds with our Sunday. The sun and planets in the same manner goTern the years hence they may be said to have weeks ol years. J)anisJ's prophecy is supposed to mean -weeks of years. The Hindu cycle of 60, supposed by some to be the Chaldean Sosos, is referred to the planet Jupiter: " one of these years is ' equal to the time in which by the mean motion, he (F~r ibaspati) " advances one degree in his orbit." (Commentary on the Surya Siddbanta.) This cycle is, I believe, wholly applied to astrology. Neither this cycle of 60 nor the Pitri's day are mentioned in thi3 part of the Surya Siddhanta, uherc they might be expected to occur. Perhaps on inquiry there may be found some reason for supposing them both of a later invention. " The Pitris inhabit be*' hind Chandra, and their mid-day happens when Chandra is in " conjunction with Surya; and their midnight, when Chandra is in ** opposition to Surya their morning, or suniise, is at the end " of half the Crishna Pacsha ; and their sunset at the end of half
:
this
is
Sv:ati,
declared in the Sacelya Sanbita. Their &c. their day and night are therefore
together equal to one Chandra month." (Commentary). Hence, it appears, the Hindus have observed that the moon revolves once on her axis in a lunar month, and consequently has the fame side always opposed to the earth. They have also noticed the difference of her apparent magnitude in the horizon and on the meridian, and end ca\our to explain the cause of a phenomenon, Which Europeans as well as themselves are at a logs to account for.
234
the
number of its revolutions, the remainder will be the number of its Savan days contained in a Yug. The difference between the number of the revolutions of Surya and Chandra gives the number of Chandra months ; and the difference between the Saura months and Chandra months gives their number of Adlii months. Deduct the Savan days from the Chandra days, the remainder will be the number of Tifhi Cshayas. The number of Adhi months, Tit* hi Cshayas, JSacshatra, Chandra, and Savan days, multiplied severally by iooo, gives the number of each contained in a Culpa.
" The number of Mandochcha revolutions, which " revolutions are direct, or according to the order of
*'
ts
is
Mangala 204; of Buddha 368 " 900 ; of Sucra 535 ; of Sani 39.
of
" of the signs contained in a Calpa, is of Mangala " 214; of Buddha 488 ; of Vrihaspati 174; of SuCi
era 903 ; of Sani 662. The Pal a and Uchcha of " Chandra are already mentioned."
It must be observed, that, although the planetary motions as above determined might have served for computations in the time of Meya, the author of the Surya Siddhanla, yet for many years past they have not been found to agree with the observed places in the heavens in every instance ; and that corrections have accordingly been introduced, by increasing or reducing those numbers. Thus the motions of the moon's apogee and node are now increased in computations of their places by the addition of four revolutions each in a Yug to their respective numbers above given. The nature of these corrections, denominated in Sanscrit
1
OF
Bija,
THE HINDU*.
235
Tica, or Comis explained in a passage mentary, on the Surya Siddhanfa, wherein is maintained the priority of that Sastra in p >int of time to all others. The translation of that passage, together with the text it illustrates, is as follows
:
li
" "
{
(Surya SiddhantaJ. " Area (the Sun) addressing Meya, who attended with reverence, said, Let your attention, abstracted from human concerns., be wholly Surya in every forapplied to what I shall relate.
invariable science
The
planetary motions
may
alter %
" "
Hence it appears, that the " Surya Siddhanta was prior to the Brahma Siddhanta " and every other Sastra ; because this Saftra must be
The Commentary.
'*
*l
"
the same that was revealed in every former Yug, although the motions of the planets might have been
different.
is
<c
"
This variation in the planetary motions mentioned in the Vishnu Dhermotter, which di" rects that the planets be observed with an instru" ment, whereby their agreement or disagreement " may be determined in regard to their computed i( places ; and in case of the latter, an allowance of <f Bija accordingly made. Vasisht'ha in his Siddhanta
6i also recommends this occasional correction ot Bija, " saying to the Muni Mandavya," I have shown you " how to determine some matters in astronomy but Cl the mean motion of Surya and the other planets " will be found to differ in each Yug.'* Accordingly " jiryabhatta, Brabnagupta, and others, having ob" served the heavens, formed rules on the principles " of former Sajlras, but which differed from each
;
"
other in proportion to
severally
to their
computed
*3^
*'
"
Why the Munis, who certainly knew, did not :ions, may seem give the particulate of tho accountable, when the men Aryabhatta^ Brahmagufta, and others have determined them. The wa?, that chose del are not in them-
" selves uniform ; and to state their variations would u have been endless. It was therefore thought better, rcxami should be made, u and due corrections of the Bija introduced. A " Ganita Sattra, whose rules are demonstrable, is " true; and when conjunctions, oppositions, and u other planetary phenomena, calculated by such 11 Sastras, arc found not to agree with observation, " a proportionable Bija may be introduced without " any derogation from their credit. It was therefore
" necessary, that
Sastra (the Surya Siddhanta) each Yug, and that other " Sastra should be composed by the Mums.
this
riled
in
" The original Sutra then appears to be the Surya " Siddhanta the second, the Brahma Siddhanta the " third, the Paulastja Siddhanta the fourth, the Soma " Siddhanta:'
;
;
In the
'
lutions of th<
to
at
present u:
nodes and apsides, accordThe correction', of Bija contained in one column *, and
,
their
the ecliptic
is
in
an-
inserted ac-
This
th-
covered
must, however, tt pretent on.it, not having I of th:s kind that will bum; even the d by the Sitrya Si(/(/be at a, xactly
I
<
ent use.
ki,
the
\mda Qted
at
.1
1513 8m
OP
THE HINDUS.
237
cording to the same Sastra. Its diminution does not appear to have been noticed in any subsequent
treatise.
Grahalaghava, the
it is
also in the only 268 years ago, expressly stated at twenty-four degrees.
latter written
In the tables of
Macaranda and
The motion. of
tary,
commen-
as
not noticed in the foregoing passage of that book; and, as the Hindu astronomers seem to entertain an idea of the subject different from that of
node,
its
shall farthrough the Platonic year what is mentioned, both in the original and commentary, concerning it.
revolution
next requisite for the computation of the eclipse the portion of the Calpa expired to the present time, which is determined in the following manner :
is
The
The
Surya Siddhanta
is
re-
the Saiya age, at the end of which, 50 of the years of Brahma were expired, and of the next Calpa, or day, 6 Manivanlcras, 27 greater lugs, and the Satya
age of the the 28th Yvg % together with the Sandhya at the beginning of the Calpa the aggregate of which several periods is 1970784000 years elapsed of the Calpa to the beginning of the last Treta age ; to which add the Tret a and Divapar ages, together with the years elapsed of the present Call age, for the whole amount of sydereal years from the beginning of the Calpa to the present Bengal year. But in the foregoing quotation it is observed, from that amount of years must be made a deduction of
or twilight
;
47400
divine, or
17064000 human or
sydereal years,
the term
23B
ON'
0 O O
O
6)
<N
-
IN.
'O vO
,v
*+
tnOvO
* *+
vo O IN N nO voCC InvD Th
GO
OO O
t(-
vo
in
u,
o
CO rt
r^;
&
J3
2 *
is
M co^ - *n
vo M
13 .2
'to
to
t N *
**
v
o
~
><
fi
S * 3
S O ^ nS
^
:%
> X
.
Vh
m
4_,
CO
P-S2
00
^ c
2^
I* -a
<u
+_>
^G
vo cO
-J-
o
bfi
>s X!
03
~ o
eg
Cj_,
O c a> >
c
-G
S * c
vO In OCX) co
in,
h 13 ^H
<s
<->
CO
o)
<U
ON
.5
f-
o C
f*
&
<y "
^
is
ccj
-G ^2
3.
<u
O
1
^ Cl,
2,
cu
bO
VS
^ o d w
rt o?j
<J
^J
Oh
<U
*o
vo
r-
XmM
1)
<^
<U C/3
"+CO
IN \0
O
e
JCO ">
Q.
x
+m
J^ C* -j- -.
OO
r>
t*c<-.
J3
*+
** 1
Oh
S W L <U O o
G
<u
<^-<
cT^
U "3 O u dfl rt O ^
in
co
* m ^ >+ co vo ^ OvO
rt-
W1MR
I
co IN CO r)<N IN
u o I-
CO InvO CO CO O co
co
J>|
(U
(SI
"
o L*
O
c
5, 5 -3 -3 U O ^
CU
v "
o o o
C&C3
, nJ
<3
-t-
co
O <5
Q
v M
Cj
vo
vo -h
OsO ^
co O O C7 t^ co
CU CU
+j-c U r] G CU N .5 JG C -G M
u
ccj
<*
In
-
coco
C
O
UG t^
<u
til
CO
O K In O
O O
zr
IN 00
CO
IN OO +
**
VO CO tN CO vosO IN IN IN
IN
rjcl
w CJ
<ch
3
C/3
'
m-i
cu
*>
o u
OO co
<3
v^
OCU cu
4-i
T3
t;
<U
cu
3
]^
(U
w
co
O CO ^ "
_T! n ol
"Si
_C3 "*-
.
crj
Cm
CO
OO
co
O
Vo
+
"-"
N
<*
^=!
C 3
-G
-G
<u
CJ
cu
<u
<U
Q
in
</
cl
O OvO
"cf
s
c o
u
%
is!!*
i^ -
CO 00
c<
vo O n
vO '> vo CO covO vO CO in
g-O
Cm
cu
CU
cu
ft,.fc
r;
u 9 w *w *CO
Q-4-i
H*m>
^w N
cu
bD
T3
D--3 f^ P u 'O to r: . O cu G -5 J3
c3
-Q
Or
creation
;
THE HINDUS.
commence
239
until that por-
for,
as the universe
was elapsed.
to
as a
Calpa as settled, probably, by yet more ancient astronomers, might (joined perhaps with other regulations) bring the computed places of the planets to an agreement with their observed places, when the Surya Siddhanta was written ; and, as the arguments of its commentator in support of the propriety of it, without
prejudice to other authors, contain
ticulars,
I
some curious
par-
my
"
hope I may be excused for departing from immediate object to insert a translation of them.
"
<f
<c
In the Surya Siddhanta, Soma Siddhanta, Prajapeti t Vasishfha, and other Sastras, this deduction is required to be made from the Calpa, because at
the end of that term the planetary motions
"
com-
menced. The son of Jisfaui, who understood four <e Vedas, and Bhascaracharya, considered these mo" tions as commencing with the Calpa. It may seem
<e
As
it
is
is
"
"
" "
**
"
Brahma, and as a day is dependent on the rising and setting of the sun, the motion of the sun and planets must have begun with the Calpa and therefore Brahmagupta should be followed but I think otherwise. The Calpa or Brahma's day is not to be understood as analogous to the solar day
the day of
" "
otherwise than as containing a determined portion of time ; neither is it at all dependent on the corn-
" mencement ofthe Calpa ; but, beingcomposed of the " same periods as the latter, it will not end until the
" term of
trie
next Calpa.
The
24<>
N T-HE
ASTRONOMICAL COMPUTATIONS
computed from the point
of time hero-
"
*'
therefore be
Brahma's day, and not " as Brahmagupt a and others direct, from the begin" ning of the Calpa ; which will not be found to an-
"
swer.
"
*'
*c
say, that rules derived from the Ganita Sastra and agreeing with observation, are right; that any period deduced from such a mode of computation, and the planets determined to have been
;
then in the first of Mesha, may be assumed that " it will therefore answer either way, to consider these " motions as beginning with the Calpa or after the
,
lc
"
**
"
"
"
"
"
" "
*f
"
"
above-mentioned period of it was expired. This however is not true ; for in the instance of Mangala there will be found a great difference, as is here shown. The revolutions of Mangala in a Calpa, according to Brahnagipta^ are 2296828522, and, by the rule of proportion, the revolutions of Mangala'm 1 7064000 years are 9072472 7 28o'i6"*. For any other planet, on trial, a similar disagreement will be found, and the proposition of computMoreing from either period must be erroneous. over, of what use is it to make computations for a space of time, when the planets and their motions were not in being ?
,
f<
'*
It
stances,
rest,
"
might, however, from the foregoing circumbe imputed to Brahmagupta and the that they have given precepts through igno-
22o6mSc42X -*
#n
TTC64.OOO
ReTolutions.
.,
;r^~432COOPOOO
=?
Q072472 T/ '
'
7f '
28
16
OF
THE HINDUS.
to deceive
241
"
ranee,
or with
intent
That,
having
from
That Brahnagupta
Swya
could not
" have counted the revolutions from the beginning of " the Culpa neither could he from the mean mo:
" tion of the planets have so determined them. He " was a mortal, and therefore could not count the re"
<e
"
"
* ' *'
"
'
"
**
11
" "
"
**
"
"
Although the rule of proportion shouid be granted to have served his purpose for the revolutions of the planets, yet it certainly could not for those of their Mandochcha. because it was not within the term of a man's life to determine the mean motion of the Mandochcha ; and this assertion is justifled by the opinion of Bhascaracharya. But the rule of proportion could not have answered even for the planets; for, although their mean motion be observed one day, and again the next, how can a man be certain of the exact time elapsed between the two observations ? And if there be the smallest error in the elapsed time, the rule of proportion cannot answer for such great periods. An error of the io-millionth part of a second (Vicala) in one day, amounts to forty degrees* in the computation of a Calf a and the mistake of i-tenth of a respiration in one Saura year, makes a difference in the same pevolutions.
-,
days.
That
it is
therefore evident,
motive
t(
to be computed as commencing with the Calpa, was to deceive mankind, and that he had not the authority of the Munis, because he differs
" from
"
the Surya Siddhanta, Brahma Siddhanta^Soma Siddhanla ; from Vasishtha, and other Munis.
The
error would be
242
" "
" Such opinions would have no foundation, as I shall proceed to show. Brahmagupta\ rules ar6
consistent with the practice of the Pandits his pre;
" decessors and he formed them from the Purana " Vishnu Dhermottara, wherein is contained the " Brahma Siddhanta and the periods given by Ary" abhatta are derived from the Parasera Siddka?ita : " the precepts of the Munis are therefore the autho" rities of Brahmagupta, Aryabhatta, and Bhasca" racharya, whose rules cannot be deceitful. The f Munis themselves differed with regard to the num" ber of Saimn days in a Yug, which is known from li the Pancha Siddhanta, composed by Vara Acharya ; " wherein are proposed two methods of computing " the sun's place, the one according to the Surya " Siddhanta. the other according to the Romaca Stdd" Jia/ita whence it appears that there were diffeM rent rules of computation even among the Munis.
;
*
;
It is also mentioned in the Tica on the Varaha " Sanhita, that, according to the Paidastya Siddhanta, il there was formerly a different number of Savan " days estimated in a Yug. The maxims therefore of Brahmagupta and the other two, agreeing with those ** of the Munis, are right ; but, should it even be " supposed that the Munis themselves could be " mistaken, yet Brahmagupta and the other two had " the sanction of the Vedas, which in their numerous <4 Sac'has (branches) have disagreements of the same " kind ; and, according to the Sacalya Sanhita, " Brahma, in the revelation he made to Nared, told " him, although a circumstance or thing were not
* c
'-'
<
;
" "
perceptible to the senses, or reconcileable to reason, if authority for believing it should be found
in the
Vedas,
it
must be received
as true.
" If a planet's place, computed both by the Surya " Siddhanta and Parasera Siadhanta % should be found
OF THE HINDUS.
243
M "
i'
to differ, which rule must be received as right ? answer, that -which agrees with his place I by observation and the Munis gave the same di:
computations from the beginning ot **< the Calpa, and from the period stated in the Sutya " Suldhanta give a difference, as appears in the in" stance of Mangala, which of the two periods to be *' computed from is founded in truth ? I say it is " of no consequence to us which, since our ob" ject is only to know which period answers for com" putation of the planetary places in our time, not
rection.
If
"
"
*
c
" "
'
'
" "
"
"
beginning of the Calpa. The difference found in computing according to Brahmagupta and the Munis, must be corrected by an allowance of bija, or by taking that difference as^the cshepa ; but the books of the Munis must not be altered*, and the rules given by Brahmagupta, ^aracharya^ and Aryabhatta may be used with such precautions. Any person may compose a set of rules for the cornmon purposes of astronomy; but, with regard to the duties necessary in eclipses, the computation must be made by the books oj^the Munis, and the bija applied ; and in this majlner it was that Varaha, Aryabhatta, Brahmagupta, and Cesava Samvatsara, having observed the planets and made due alat the
lovvance of bija,
composed
their books.
" "
<c
<c
gc
.'*
iC
Ganesa mentions, that the Grahas ,were right in their computed places in the time of Brahma, Acharya, VashWha, Casyapa, and others, by the rules they gave, but in length of time they differed ; after which, at the close of the Satya age, Surya revealed to Meya a computation of their true places. The^ules then received answered during the Treta and uwapar ages, as also did other rules formed by the Munis during those periods. In the beginning of the Call Yuf, Parasems book answered ; but Aryabhatta, many years after, having examined
II.
Vol.
R.
244
4<
TI * E ASTRONOMICAL COMPUTATIONS
a'correction of bija.
some deviation, and introduced After him, when further de" viations were observed, Ditrga Sniha, JStihira, and ^ others, made corrections. After them came the ".json of Jistnk and Brahmagupta, and made correc-* " tions. After them Cesava settled the places of " the planets ; and, sixty years after Cesava, his son
the heavens, found
t;
corrections/'
have now, according to the Hindu system, the mean motion of the planets,, their nodes and apsidesj and the elapsed time since they were in conjunction in th'e first of Media, with which, by the rule of proportion, to determine their mean longitude for any proposed tir&p of the present year. It is, however, observed in the Sitrya Slddhanta, that to assume^ a
unnecessary; for use, the computathe beginning of the Treta age, at which instant all the Gralias, or moveable points in the heavens, were again in conjunction in Mcsha, except the apogees and ascending nodes, whicr^ must therefoi^be computed from the creation.
period so great
is
We
tion
The same
age;
of days
is
true of
thfl|
common divisor of the number composing the Maha Yug and the planetary
in
revolutions
.
that
period,
is
four,
which quotes
394479457 days, or ioSoootD years ; and the Treta and Divc/pap*j&Qs contain together just that number of .years. The present Hindu astronomers therefore
it unnecessary to go farther back than the beginning of the Cali Vug * in determining the mean lon-
find
A;?e,
* Neither do they, in computing by the formulas itvxommon go farther back than to some assigned d <te ot theiSra Saca ; but, having the planets places determined for that point of time, thry compute their mean places ancLother requisites ror any pmposed dare afterwards by tables, or by combinations"^ figures conas in Grahalagbava, Siddbanta Ratrived to facilitate the work An inquirer into Hindu astronoi basya, and m ay other books. having access to such books only, might easily be led to x^,c~.
:
<
}
,
OF THE HINDUS.
245
gitude of the planets themselves ; but for the posiand nodes, the elapsed time since j the creation must be used ; or at least in instances, as of the sun, when the numbers 387 and -432,000000 1 have however 'are incommensurable but by unity. in the accompanying computation, taken the latter
tion of their apsides
*
For the equation of the mean to the true anomaly, which the solution of triangles is concerned, and which is next to be considered, the Hindus make use of a canon of sines, constructed according to the " Divide Siuya Siddhanta, in the following manner: " the number of minutes contained in one sine 1800 " by eigfcit, the quotient 225 is the first Jyapinda, or
in
" the first of the twenty-fourth portions of half the " string of the bow. Divide the first Jyap'mda by " 225, the quotient 1 deduct from the dividend,
" and the remainder 224 add to the first for the 'se" cond Jyap'mda 449. Divide the second Jyap'mda
i:
1,
" more' than half a minute, deduct 2 from the fore" going remainder 224, and add the remainder
"
r*
f.
by 225, the quotient 3 deduct from *<e the last remainder 222 the remainder so found " 219, add to the third for the fourth Jyapinda 890* ** Divide this by 225, and the quotient deduct frorri " the last remainder; the remainder^so found add " to the fourth for the fifth Jyap'mda 1105, and *' proceed in this manner until the twenty-four Crat,
" Divide
that the
tical verses,
tem
or"
Brahmans compute eclipses by set forms, couched in enigma.' out of which it would be difficult to develop their svsastronomy and this I apprehend was the case with Mons*
;
Jyotisb Pandits in general, it is true, know little more irf astronomy than they lenrn from sucft bpdks, and they are consequently very ignorant of the pynciples of the science;
rr.it. Sonncra*.
The Tne
who
24-6
ON THE ASTRONOMICAL COMPUTATIONS " majyas\ are completed, which will be as follows
123456
I
7
l
8
1
5>
14
S 20 >
15
V9*
16
10
11
iz
13
19
>
20
21
>
22
Z3
24
"
c<
3 o3 4>3
" For
or twenty-fourth cramajya,
first utcramajya ; the twenty-second deducted from the twenty-third, leaves the second " utcramajya ; the twenty-first from the twenty-second, " leaves the third; the twentieth from the twenty-
"
"
"
first,
" ceed
"
will
8
be
as follows
9
1234s
12
13
which 67
16
7,
10
n
19
ab
21
22
Z3
24
" 1928,2123,2233,2548,2767,2989,3213,3438." So fir the Su^*Sufdhanta on the subject of the The commentator shows how they are geosines. " With a radius describe a metrical!} constructed *' circle, the periphery of which divide into 21600 " equal parts, or minutes. Draw north and south, " and east and west, lines through the centre: set " off cpritrarywise from the east point, 225 on the " periphery, and draw a string from those extremi" ties across the tr'ijya \. The string is the jya> and
:
<
its
"
" "
:c
half the ardhajya, called jk\i. The Faruiits say, a planet's place will correspond with the ardhajya ; by which, therefore, computations of their places
are always made ; and by the term jya is always The first jya will be understood the ardhajya. ss found to contain 449 minutes, and the operation, " repeated to twenty-four divisions, will complete the "' In each operation, the distance cqncramajya.
OF
<f
'*
THE HINDUS.
247
tained between the jya and its arc, or that line which represents the arrow of a bow, must be exa-
" mined, and the number of minutes therein con" tained and taken for the utcramajya. The circle '* may represent any space of land; the hhujajya * is
<c
the cot, and -the trijya the square of the hhujajya deducted from the square of the trijya, leaves the square of the cotijya}, the root of which is the cotijya; and, in
the bhuja; the cotijya
carna.
The
rhe
cotijya
" "
hhujajya.
The
cotyutcra??:ajya
"
trijya, leaves the bhujacramajya. The bhujot-cramajya deducted from the trijya, leaves the coticramajya. When the hhujajya is the first division of the trijya, the cotijya is the twenty-three remaining divisions
which
ven
6i
cotijya
bhujotcramajya.
On
may
be determined by calcu-
" The
<c
" one
"
<(
the
sixteenth
which
trijya multiply
by
3,
and "divide
the'
product by
"
"
"
" "
4, the square root of the quotient is the jya of two sines, or 2977'. The square root of half the square of the trijyakjhejya of one sirifc and an half (45 ) or 2431' j which deducted from the trijya
leaves the utcramajya 1007'.
;
" multiply the trijya the square root of half the pro" duct is the jya of 22 30', or 131 3". The square
,
tR^ s
utcramajya
iC
of
this
trijya, the
f A diagram might here be added for illustration, but it must be unnecessary to any one who has tlie smallest knowledge at
Geometrv.
248
" square
"
of the difference is the jya, of 67% 30', which is the cotijya of 22 , 30' equal " to 13 5'. The bhujajya and cot'ijya deducted is severally from the trijya, leaves the utcramajya of iC each 2,123", an ^ 261'." &c.
or 3177',
1
This
is
sufficient to
do not can learn, ever to h$ve carried it farther than to twenty-four divisions of the quadrant, as in'the following table. Instances of the like inaccuracy will occur in the course of this paper. The table of sines may perhaps be more clearly represented
in the following:
manner
Vol,
Fyf.
/.
>5
F. 24p
Fia. 2
F 2JO
Fur.3.
F. 263
"1
OF
THE HINDUS.
I-5
249
proportional number, to be added to the sine of the tabular a'c, for the sine required of 14 or 831' 36". In the sexagesimal arithmetic, which apthird
pears to be universally used in the Hindu astronomy, when the fraction exceeds half unity, it is usually
taken
hole
rit'ten
number: Thus,
S31', 36.
831", ^j",
35'",
would be
T
pla
ti
account for the apparent unequal motions of the lets, which they suppose to move in their respecorbits through equal distances in equal time.-, the
to
mine the
moon
of the sun and with respect to that circle, in which they place the earth as the centre of the universe, to be equal to
excentricity
of the
the smes of their greatestanomalistic equations, and accordingly that the delineation of the path of either may
be made
in the following
manner
which divide as the ecliptic into and minutes I note the place oF^ne Mandochcha^ or higher apsis, which suppose in ^ Draw a diameter to that point, and set off from the centre towards the place of the apogee, the excentricity equal to the sine of the greatest equation, which of the sun is 130' 32'^ Here the excentricity is reDescribe a
circle,
signs, degrees,
much greater, that the figure may be better understood. Round the point E, as the cent e, describe the excentric circle FGH1, which is the sun's^, orbit, and in the point H, where it s cut by the line* S prolonged, is the place of the Mandochcha, or ^higher ^psis ; and in tae opposite point F is the From the place of the apogee H, set off its lpwer. ^longitude in reverse, or contrary to the order of the signs, for the beginning of Afies, and divide this
presented
R4
*
ft
25O
circle, as
Note the former, into signs and degrees. the sun's mean longitude in each circle, as suppose in Gemini, and from both points draw right lines to
According to the Hindu system, which appears to be the same as the Ptolemaic, the angle a C will be the mean anomaly, the angle b
the earth at
.
the true anomaly, and the angle a b their difference, or the equation of the m?an to the true place ;
to be subtracted in the
first
six signs of
anomaly, and
added
in the
last six.
C,
left
the equation, which as the Hindus, they inserted in tables calculated for the several degrees of the qua-
drant
as the co- sine of the mean anomaly e=Ed added to the excentricity E , is to the sine of the mean anomaly aebd; so is the radius to the tangent of the true anomaly or, in the right angled triangle d h, in which are given d and bd, if d be made
;
:
^re-
have not the invention of tcngcntsX take a different method, on principles equalThey imagine the small circle or epicycle, ly true. cdef, drawn round the phnet's mean place a with a radius equal to the excentricity, which in this case, of the sun, is 130' 30", and whose circumference in degrees, or equal divisions of the deferent will be in proportion as thei^semi-diameters ; or, as
quired.
ABCD,
=3 43V, to A B C D=3*o,
efgd=
ridlii
1
so
^=130'
32", to
j 40',
which
is
degrees. In the same proportion also will be the correspondent sines he and ai, and their co-sines
cb and Ik,
tation, in
which
are
therefore
known by compu-
minutes or equal parts of the radius a , which contains, as before mentioned, 343s'. In the right angled trangle // c, right angled at h, there are given the sides./; + cf, because cb=ha)
(=#
OF THE HINDUS.
25
and he; to find the hypotenuses, by means of which the angles m may be determined; for its sine is 1 m, and, in the similar triangles he and / m , as c is to ;// , so is // c to lm, the sine of
From the third to the ninth the angle of equation. sine of anomaly, the co-sine c b must be subtracted from the radius 343 8' for the side h .
It is,
tions
cury, Vctvts,
and other particulars respecting the planets MtMars, Jupiter, and Saturn, where circles greatly excentric are to be considered, that the Hindus
in
other cases, as for the anomalistic equations of the sun and moon, they are satisfied to take he as equal to the sine lm, their difference, as the commentator on the Biddhanta observes, being inconsideiable.
Upon this hypothesis are the Hindu tables of anomaly computed with the aid of an adjustment, which, as far as 1 know, may be peculiar to themselves. Finding that,
in the first degree of anomaly, both from the higher and lower apsis, the difference between the mean and observed places of the planets was greater than became thus accounted for, they enlarged the epicycle in the apogee and perigee, proportionably to
respectively,
conceiving
sine of the
sines, or
it
mean anomaly,
half-way between those points, the radius of the epicycle should be equal to the excentricity or sine
of the greatest equation. This assumed difference in the magnitude of th^epicycle, they called the difference of the paridhi ansa, between vishama and sama ; the literal meaning of which is odd and even. From the first to the third sign of anomaly, or rather in the
third, a planet
is
in
vishama
to.
the
ASTRONOMICAL COMPUTATIONS
the
;
'
22.
ON THE
or
in
sixth,
perigee,
anr*
in
sama
in
the ninth
sign, in vlshama
in
'
in the twelfth,
or the apogee,
The ... utgrees, or circumference of sama. the epicy soma are, of the sun 14 ; mvishama 15 40'; ul che moon in sama 3 2; in vlj/tama, 3i4o
,-
'
ama, 20
To illustrate these matters by examples, let it be required to find the equation of the sun's mean to his true place in the first degree of anomaly. The sine of i is considered as equal to its arc, or 60. The wrcumference of the epicycle in sama, or the apogee, is 14% but diminishing in this case towards vishama, in inverse proportion to the sine of anomaly. Therefore, as radius 3438 is to the differenr e between
sama and vishama
propofed,
20', so
is
the sine of
zc"
(= '^
which,
from
Then, 59' 40". 1 4, leaves 13 of the great circle q6o is to the epicycle 13 59' 40", so is the to its correspondent sine in the
as the circumference circumference of the sine of anomaly 60' epicycle h c ; which, as was observed, is considered as equal to Im, or the angle of equation 2' 19" 56'" true sine of
(==
*3
l.
),
which,
in the
Hindu canon of
sines,
lis the same'as its arc, and is therefore the equation of the mean ro the true place in \\ of anomaly, to be ad-
ded
and subtracted
V
>
14'
of anomaly.
8" and
^iili^^^^^ = i>9}tobeded^ted *
,
The
sine
qj^
in
sama.
14
-
49"= 13
58'
is
OF THE HINDUS.
253
For
I
the
same
-2
in
14 of anomaly.
7
The
and
sine of 140,
*
jf.
S3
1.
3 b --
-7
J^
The
36%
sine
4*
A
For the same>
in
two
20'
sines of
anomaly.
;
=
aic.
2978
n"
2Q78'X 9/
34 , 8
i7
</
//
and
14
17',
Io"x 297S*
113' 25"
of
the
moon moon
in i in
of anomaly.
are
sama
32
difference 20'.
to be deducted
The
sine of
The parldhi degrees of mvishama 31, 40', the JYlo i is 6o'arid -=2i" 3435
-
=
21
31
equation required.
in ten degrees
of anomaly.*">
The
sine
i97'-^r--3'
in three sines
and^^'
The
sine
20',
of anomaly.
the radius or
343s', and
,
1^0 =
or
= 302
25
the
sine
the greatelt
angle of equation, equal to the radius of the epicycle in this point of anomaly, the arc corresponding with which is 302' 45", the equation required.
For the equation of the mean to the true motion in these several points of anomaly, say, as radius 3438 is to the mean motion, so is the co-sine c b of the
anomalistic angle gac in the epicycle, to the difference between the mean and apparent motion, or
the
equation required,
to
be
254
three sines
of anomaly
six,
and subtracted
in the last
three.
The Example, for the sun, in 5 14' of anomaly. co-sine of 5 14' in the Hindu canon is 3422' 17" $2'". The paridhi circle in this point, found before, is 13
5 co-sine
is
8'
* -**^^'
48" the
to
8''
the
sun's
mean motion
is
59"
per danda, so
radius 3438 59/ 8" per day, or 132' 48", the co-sine cb
'
17" per day, The motion of the sun's apsis is so slow per danda. as to be neglected in these calculations ; but that of
or 2" 17'"
the mooasis considered, in order to know her mean motion from her apogee, which is 783' 54".
In this manner
may be determined
the equation of
the mean to the true anomaly and motion for each degree of the quadrant ; and which will be found to
The
following
from
that
book
IS
OF
THE HINDUS.
2 55
***
Solar Equations,
Ravi fhala
Eq. of the
mean
true
to the
F.tj.
of the
to
mean
the
pLue.
motion.
true place.
20
2
2
4 40
7
18 18 18
17
1,7
3
3
9 *9 Ji 37 13 56 16 15 18 33
9
to
t i
2
2
17
34 35 3^
37 3* 59 \o
4'
2 16 2 16
2
20
51
15
12
14
l
23 7 25 23 27 39 29 5 5 32 10
14
14.
2
2
2 2
*3 13 12
1
42
43
44
45
ID
17
I
34 24 3 6 37 38 39
1 41 43 12 45 22
2
2
11
46
4
7
2
2
10
9
8
7
'9
20
2
I
+3 49 5
5>
22
2
47 3 1 49 39
5
1
6 6
5
52
47
53
5-i
^4
2
5
26
27
1
53 53 55 57 1 58
2
2
2 2
1
1
58
55 56
57 5S
2S
29
1
1
1
4
6
53 3
2
30
57 56
59
60
2?6
*#
the
vicar, to the
ntfan to
the true
>r.oiion.
true place
s?
f
3
4
5
io 16
21
4<3
66 39 69 3 3? OQ 33 33
2
2
6
7
a
9 6 9 .8 34 26 36 '6 9 J 5 r 3 54 6 9 *3 ^6
J
2
3
9 io
1
4 37 12 o 9 4 2 29 68 54 47 44 68 43 2S ** 58 8 1 oS 1 5
3 7
33
39
3
3
40
41
12
J
14
5
16
17 18
2 3 67 40 7 13 45 67 18 53 66 66 24 29 5 66
3 8
53
5
42 43
3 3
i?
44
4 5
3
3
55
3 54 49 46 74 34 39
38
+6 18 47
3 38 2 3 4r 58
3
3
34
9 6: 57 48
iq
20
2
I
22
39 10 65 36 49 44 9 65 4 5 49 17 64 50 5i 54 3 64 24 5 2
3 63 56 53 3 47 *3 24 54 8 3 5 62 53 5 5 *3 22 02 22 56 61 4 57 18
3
3
3
55 4*
59
2
23 24 25 26
5*
4 4
5 IX
4 4
4
7 2S
14
22 47 61 '5 5S
27 32
3
5
2y
3
60
3 5 59 59 5^ 60
4 17 4 19 46 35 48 89 22 29 >4- 48190 4.
38 47 37 5|87 36 51 8'8
t
*
'
OF THE HINDU*.
257
Having
and the place of the node determined by the explained, it is easy to judge, from the position
latter,
moon, methods
in which case ; moon's synodical month, must be computed from thence,, to determine the time counted from midnight oi her full or change; Her distance in longitude from the sun, divided by 720, the minutes contained in a tifhi, or the thirtieth part of 360 the quotient shows the tifhi she has passed, and the fraction, if any, the^eart performed of the next ^vhich, if it be the fifteenm, the difference between that ^fraction and 72c' is the distance she has to go to her opposition, which will be in time proportioned to her actual motion and that being determined, her lono-itude, the longitude of the sun., and place of the node may be known for the instant of full moon, or middle The Hindu method of computof the lunar eclipse. ing these particulars is so obvious in the accompanyino instance, as to require nofu;-ths%uescription here ; and the same may be said with respect to the declination of the sun and the latitude of the moon.
the
or date of the
It is evident from what has been explained, that the pandits, learned in the Jyotish Sastfa, have truer notions of the form of the earth and the economy of the universe, than are ascribed to the Hindus in general: and that they must reject the ridiculous belief of the com-
mon Brahmens, that eclipses are occasioned by the intervention of the monster Rahu, with many other particulars equally unscientific and absurd. But, as this
belief
is
contained in the Vcdas zwd^Puranas, the divine authority of which writings no devout Hindu can dispute theastronomers have some of them cautiously explained such passages in those writings as disagree with the
258
principles of their
own
tion was impossible, have apologized, as well as they could, for propositions necessarily established in the
by observing, that certain tmngs, as " might have been so formerly, " and may be so still ; but for astronomical purposes, *( astronomical rules must be followed." Others have, withabolderspirit,attacked andrefutedunphilosophkal, opinions. Bhascara argues, that it is more reasonable to suppose the earth to be self-balanced in infinite space, than that it should be supported by a series of animals, with nothing assignable for tlmlast of them to rest upon ; And Nerasinha, in his commentary, shows that by Rahie^ and Cctit) the head and tail of the, monster, in the sense they generally bear, could only be meant the position of the moon's nodes and the quantity of her latitude, on which eclipses do certainly depend ; but he does not therefore deny the reality of Rahu and Cetu: en the contrary, he says, that their actua^xistence and presence in eclipses ought to be believed, and may be maintained as an article of faith, without any prejudice The following Sloca, to which a liteto astronomy. ral translation is annexed, was evidently written by a Jyotlshy and is well known to the Pandits in genepractice of
it,
ral
sac-
"
in
them
is
Conten-
tion only.
Fruitful
is
The argument
ft
OF
THE HINDUS*
259
paper will without it be sufficiently prolix, T shali nexf proceed to show how the astronomical Pandits determine the moon's distance and diameter, and other
requisites tor the prediction of a lunar eclipse.
earth they consider as spherical, and imagine diameter divided into 1600 equal parts, or Yojanas. circle's circumference An ancient met] was to multiply the diameter by three ; but this being not qui r e enough, the Munis directed that it should be multiplied by the square root of ten. This gives for. the equatorial circumference of the earth in round numbers 50(59 Yojanas, as it is determined in the Surya Siddhanta. In the table of sines, however found in the same book, the radius being made to consist of 3438 equal parts or minutes, of which equal- parts the quadrant contains 5400, implies the knowledge of a much more accurate ratio of the diameter to the circumference; for by the first i: is as 1. to 3. 1627.&C. by the last, as 1. to 3. 14136; and it is determined by the most approved labours of the Europeans, as 1. to 3. 141 59, &c. In the Pur anas the circumference of the earth is declared to be 500,000,000 Yojans and, to account for this amazing difference the commentator before quoted thought, " the YojaH " stated in the Surya Siddhanta contained each '* 100,000 of those meant in the Puranas ; or pera haps, as some suppose, the earth was really of that size in some former Cod.pa. Moreover, others say, u that from the equator south ward. the earth increa" ses in bulk hc.vcver, for astronomical purposes, *' the dimensions given by Surya must be assumed.'* The equatorial circumference bein - assigned, the circumference of a circle of longitud in any latitude is determined. As radius 3438 is to the Lambajya or sine of the polar distance, equal to the completement of the latitude to nmetv degrees, so is 'the equaits
.
The
_,
Vol. U.
26o
torial
required.
Of a variety of methods for finding the latitude of a place, one is by an observation of the palabha, or shadow, projected from a perpendicular Gnomon when the sun is in the equator. The Sancu, or Gnomon, is twelve anguhs, or digits, in length divided, each into sixty v'mgulas ; and the shadow observed at v A Benares is 5, 45. Then, by the proportion of a v A right angled triangle V12. ^ + 5,45. 13 18 the acsha carna (hypotenuse) or distance from the top of the Gnomon to the extremity of the shadow ; which take as radius, and the projected shadow will be the sine of the zenith distance, in this case, equal to the latkude of the place 3 438 X A 1487, the arc corre-
'
^=
18
13
is
25
26'
the latitude
3101"
3101' 57",
5/+5059
3S
_^^
is
The
longitude
tion of lunar eclipses calculated for the first meridian, which the Surya Siddlmta describes as passing over
Lanca, Rohitaca, Avanti, and Sannihita-saras. Avanfi " now called Ujjayis said by the commentator to be
jni" or Ougehi, a place well known to the English in The distance of Benares the Mahratta dominions. from this meridian is said to be sixty-four Yojan cast-
ward
and
is
as
4565
^Benares,
sixty-four
to sixty
Danda
>
Yojan to o, 50, the difference of longitude in time, which marks the time after midnight, when, strictly speaking, the astronomical clay begins
OF THE HINDUS.
at Benares *.
261
A
for
total
happen
tion
ac
gave
Lanca, and
'"^
M = sixty-four
Yojana,
surface.
the difference
According
to
RenncVs map,
in
Ouge'm, and agreeably to the longitude assigned to Benares, the equinoctial point Lanca falls in the Eastern Ocean, southward from Ceylon and the Maldha Islands. Lanca is fabulously represented as one of four cities built by Devatas, at equal distances from each other, and also from Sumeru and Badavcanal, the
whose walls are of gold, &c. his famous devotions, in reward of which he received the astronomical revelations from the sun, recorded in the Surya Siddhanta, the commentator observes, " be performed " those devotions in Salmala, a country a little to the ie eastward of Lanca: the dimensions of Lanca are <f equal to one twelfth part of the equatorial circumfe" rence of the earth," &c. Hence, perhaps on inquiry, may be found whether by Salmah is not meant In the history of the war of Rama with RaCeylon. wan, the tyrant of Lanca, the latter is said to have married the daughter of an Asura, named Meya ; but
north and south and with respect
poles,
to
Meya\ performing
my purpose.
For the dimensions of the moon's cacsha (orbit) the is more particular than is ne~
li
* " This day (astronomical Jay) is accounted to begin at midnight under the refba (meridian) of Lanca ; and at all places " east or west of that meridian, as much sooner or latter as s their " desantcra (longitude) reduced to time, according to the Surya
u
u
*! *
(i
Siddhanta, Brahma Siddbanta, Vasishtha Siddbanta, Soma Siddbanta, Parasero Siddbanta, and Aryabbatla. According to Brabmagupta and others, it begins at sunrise ; according to the Romaca and others, it begins at noon ; and according to the Anha
Siddbanta, at sunset."
(7ha on
262
himself of the methods used by European astrono^ meisto determine the moon's horizontal parallax. la general terms, it is to observe the moon's altitude, and thence, with other requisites, to compute the time
of her ascension from the sensible cshit'ija, or horizon, and her distance from the sun when upon the rational
horizon, by which to find the time of her passage from the one point to the other ; or, in other words, * to find the difference in time between the meridian to which the eye referred her at rising, and the meridian
*
upon
;'
in
semidiameter or 800 Yojan : and by proportion, as that time is to her periodical month, so is 800 Yojan to the circumference of her cacsha, 324000 Yojan. The errors arising from refraction, 'and their taking the moon's motion as along the sine instead of its arc, may here be remarked ; but it does not seem that they had any idea of the first *, and the latter they perhaps thought too inconsiderable to be noticed.: Hence it appears that they made the horizontal parallax 53' 20" and her distance from the earth's centre 5T570 Yojan; for
ir j" / i o j caoo is to the radius s J J 20 : and as 00 or *>* 3438', fo is one -fourth of her orbit 81000 Yojan to
i8oV 1600
32AOCO
..i
=s= c 2
Ol
pute the mean distance of the moon about 240000, which is something above a fifteenth part more than the Mndvs found it so long ago as the time of Meya 9 the author of the Surya Siddhanta*
By move
the
are supposed to
-
dimensions
* But they are not wholly ignorant of optics : they know the angles of incidence and reflection to be equal, and compute the place of a star or planet, as it would b seen reflected from water or a minor.
OF THE HINDUS.
263
fcnown, those of the other planets are determined, according to their periodical revolutions, by proportion.
As the sun's revolutions in a Mala Yi>g 4320000 are to the moon's revolutions in the same cvcie S15333^> so is her orbit 324000 Yojan to the sun's orbit 433 1500
Yojan-,
bits
and
in the
same manner
All true distance and magof the other planets. nitude derivable from parallax, is here out of the question ; but the Hindu hypothesis will be found to ans.ver their
eclipses,
cc.
it is
directed
upon
being
rate,
or
at a
mean
by
then,
; which cf the sun of the moon, 480 Yojan. These 6500 Yojan; dimensions are increased or di .d as they approach the lower or higher ap<is, in proportion as their apparent motion exceeds or falls short of the mean, for the purpose of computing the diameter of the earth's
shadow at the moon, on principles which may perhaps be made more inteiiigible by a figure.
diameter be fa=jrfc=cd j the disthe earth AB 5 and her diameter CD. By this system, which supposes all the planets moving at the same rate, the dimensions of the sun's orbit will exceed the moon's, in proportion as his period in time exceeds hers let his distance be AE, and part of his orbit. According to the foregoing computation also, the sun's apparent diameter/ i, at
earth's
Let the
tance of the
moon from
EFG
this distance
from the earth, is 6500 Yojan ; or rather, diameter subtends when viewed in three signs of anomaly, would be 6500 parts of the
S3
264
circumference of a circle consisting of 4331500, and described round die earth as a centre with a radius equal to his mean distance, which is properly all that is meant by the "olshcambha , and which, therefore, is increased or diminished according to his equated moThis in three signs of anomaly is equivalent to tion. 32' 24"; for, as 4331500 to 360% so 6500 to 32' 24".
The Europeans
cacsha of the
juris,
is
In
mean
moon, or
is
found, as 4331 500 n, 0, of use in solar eclipses ; but this I am endeavouring to explain is a lunar one. It is evident that the diameter of the earth's shadow at the moon will be c, dy cy a 4- />, d9 or a b when her distance is e ; and that c a and ^^ will be found by the following proportion : is tofig h=f g + hi, so is Ae to c a -\-b d. as But it has been observed that and/ / are proportioned by the Hindus according to the moon's distance e, the apparent motion of the sun and moon, and the angles subtended by their diameters. The Hindu rule therefore states, As the sun's inshcambha or diameter is to the moon's, so is the difference of the diameters of the sun and earth, in Ycjans, to a fourth number, equal to ca 4- b d to be subtracted from the suchk or hn=cd to find a b ; also, that the number of Yojans, thus determined as the diameters of the moon and shadow, may be reduced to minutes of a great circle by a divisor of fifteen. For, as the minutes conincluded in this angle,
to
324000, so
6500
to
486 Yojan or
Ak
Ak
tained in
36o=2i6oo,
is
are to the
:2400c, so
one minute to
fifteen Yojan,
The diameter of the moon's disk, of the earth's shadow, and the place of the node being found, for the instant of opposition or full moon, the remaining
OF
THE HINDUS.
265
no respect that I know of from the method of European astronomers to compute a lunar eclipse. The translation of the Forpart of the operation differs in
mula
is
as
shadow is always six signs " distant from Surya ; and Chandra is eclipsed when<c ever at the purnima the pata is found there; as is " also Szirya, whenever at the end of the amavasya the " pata is found in the place of Surya ; or, in either " case, when the pata is nearly so situated. At the *' end of the amavasya tifhi the signs, degrees, <c and minutes of Surya and Chandra are equal ; and <( at the end of the purnima tifhi the difference is exfollows
'
The
earth's
actly six signs; take therefore the time unexpired of either of those tifhis, and the motion for that *' time add to the madhyama, and the degrees and mi" nutes of Surya and Chandra will be equal. For *' the same instants of time compute the place of the ** pata in its retrograde motion, and, if it should be in *' conjunction with Surya and Chandra, then, as from tc the intervention of a cloud, there will be an obscuu rity of Surya or of Chandra. Chandra, from the " west, approaches from the earth's shadow, which on " entering, he is obscured. For the instant of the puri*' nima, from the half sum of the chandramana and the f tamoliptamana subtract the vicshepa, the remainder is " the cftchanna. If the ch'channa is greater * than the " grahyamarui, the eclipse will be total ; and if less, the " eclipse will be proportion-ably less. The grahya and " grahaca deduct and also add ; square the difference " and the sum severally ; subtract the square of the " vicshepa from each of those squares, and the square " root of each remainder multiply by sixty ; divide (< each product by the difference of the gati of Surya
<c
S 4
266
*
and Chandra
the
first
" duration of the eclipse in dandas and pahs and the " second quotient will be half the vimardardha dura" tion in dandas and pahs" occ. The cticharma, or
portion of the disk eclipsed, is here found in degrees and minutes of a great circle it ma)' also be estimated in digits ; but the angidas or digits of the
:
in different
books.
The beginning, middle, and end of the eclipse may now be suposed found for the time in Hindu
hours;
when
it
will
happen
after
civil clay,
it is further necessary to" compute the length of the artificial day and night; and, for this purjpose,
be
known
rn
equinox frbm the first of mt ha, the sun's right recension and declination; which several requisites shall be mentioned in their order.
Respecti rig the precession of the equinoxes and place of the cohire, the following is a translation of all I caa find op the subject in the Surya Siddhanta and
its
commentary
Text.
'.<
The ayanansa moves eastward thirty times twenty in each Alalia Yug by that number (600) " multiply the ahapgaua (uumber of mean solar days " for which the calculation is made) and divide the " product by the sa-van days in a Vug, and of the quo<c ticnt take the l>hu/a, which multiplv by three, and ' divide the product by ten; the quotienr is the ayan" a sa. With the avanans a correct thsgraka, cranti, "
;
*'
" "
the clihaya* cliuradula, and other requisites to find the push ti and the two vishuvas. When the carna
is
less
OF
'*
THE HINDUS.
;
267
eastward,
and
the ayanansa
; but some persons say, the meaning is bhaganas only, and accordingly that there " are 30,000 bhaganas. Also tfiat Bhascar Acharya " observes, that, agreeably to what has been delivered " by Surya, there are 30,000 bhaganas of the ayanansa '* in a Calpa. This is erroneous ; for it disagrees " with the Sasfras of the Rishis. The SacaJya San" hita states that the bhaganas of the Crantt pata in
Maha Yug
li
thirty
<c
Maha Yug
are
600 eastward.
The same
:
is
ob-
"
iC
"
"
"
"
<c
*c
" "
<%
"
" "
'*
" "
"
" " "
M " found by
Shhlhanta ; and the rule for determining the ayanansa is as follows The expired years divide by 600, of the quotient make the bhja, which multiply by three, and divide the product by ten. The meaning of Bhascar, Acharya was not, that Snrya gave 30,000 as the bhaganas, of the ayanansa in a Calpa, the name he used being Saura not Surya, and applied to some other book. From the naiansa is known the crantyansa, and from the crantijya the bhujajya, the arc of which is the bhajansa of Surya, including the ayanansa this for the first three months ; after which, for the next three months, the place of Surya, found by this mode of calculation, must be deducted from six signs. For the next three months the place of Surya must be added to six signs, and for the last three months the place of Surya must be deducted from twelve signs. Thus, from the shadow may be computed the true place of Surya. For the same instant of time compute his place by the ahargana, from which will appear whether the ayanansa is to be added or subtracted. If the place
the ahargana
be
less
268
** I*
" found by
"
tc
"
'.'
(t
" "
the shadow, the ayanansu must be added. AcIn the present time the ayanansa is added. cording to the author of the Varasanluta, it was said to have been formerly deducted * ; and the southern ayana of Surya to have been in the first half of the nacshatra Aslesha \ ; and the northern ayana in the beginning of Dhanishia : that in his time the southern ayana was in the beginning of Cacara, or Cancer ; and the northern in the beginning of Macara, or Capricorn.
" 600, the saura years in the same H one bhagana of the ayanansa
tx
contains
7,200 years. Of a bhagana there are four padas. a First pada, when there was no ayanansa j but the u ayanansa beginning from that time and increasing, It it was added. It continued increasing 1800 years;
ii
when
grees.
it
became
at its
"
Second pada
After
* " It was said to have been formerly rina." In the Hindu specious arithmetic, or algebra, dhana signifies affirmation or addition, and rina negation or subtraction the sign of the latter i3 a point placed over the figure, or the quantity noted <!own ; thus, four added to seven, is equal to three. See the bija ganita, where the mode of computation is explained thus: " When a man has four pieces of money, and owes seven of the same value, his circumstances reduced to the form of an equation, or his books balanced, show a deficiency of three pieces."
:
f Thif describes the place of the solstitial eolure ; and, according to this account of the ayanansa, the equinoctial eolure must then have passed through the tenth degree of the nacshatra Bbarani and the 3 20' of Visac'ba. The circumstance, as it is mentioned in the Vara Sanbita, is curious and deserving of notice. I shall only observe here, that, although it does not disagree with the present system of the Hindus in regard to the motion of the equinoctial points, yet the commentator on the Varasanbita supposes that it must have been owing to some preternatural cause. The place here described of the eolure, is on comparison of the Hindu and European spheres about 3 40' eastward of the position, which it is supposed by Sir Isaac Neivton, on the authority of Eudoxusy to have had in the "primitive sphere at the time of the Argonautic expedition.
OF THE HIKDUS.
'
269
but the amount was still added, until, at the end years more, it was diminished to nothing. M Third pa da : The ay anon sa for the next 1800 years f* was deducted; and the amount deducted at the " end of that term was twenty-seven degrees. Fourth " pa da : The amount deduction diminished ; and at M the end of the next term of 800 years, there was M nothing either added or subtracted. The Muriis % " having observed these circumstances, gave rules ac** cordinglv the savan days of a Ma ha Yug if in '* there are 600 bhaganas, what will be found in the <l ahargana proposed ? which statement will produce
" of 1800
M
u
cc
bhaganas,
sines,
Sec;
reject
the bhaganas,
" padas in the bhagana ; for if in 90 there is a cer" tain number found as the bhuja, when the bhuja " degrees are twenty-seven, what will be found? " and the numbers twenty-seven and ninety used in " the computation being in the ratio of three to ten,
'
ct
**
u
te
l(
" There is another method of computing the ayanansa The crantl-pata-gati is taken at one minute per year ; and according to this rule the ayanansa increases to twenty-four degrees ; the time necessary for which, as one pada is 1440 years. This is ihe gad of the nacshatras of the crant'i mandala*
:
narl ?nan-
"
but
it
has been
* This can happen only when there is no ayanansa. The nari mandala is the equator. The yoga ftar of Revati is in the last of Mina (Pisces) or, which is the same, in the first of Mesba (Aries) and has no latitude in the Hindu tables. Hence, from the ayanansa and time of the beginning of the Hindu year, may be known their zodiacal stars. Revati is the name of the twenty-seventh lunar mansion, which comprehends the- lad 13 20' of Mina. When the ajanansa v/as o, as at the creation, the beginning of the
ifO
*'
*'
observed to vary twenty- seven degrees north and south. The same variation is observed in the other
it is therefore rightly said, : that the chacra moves eastward. The chdera means all the The planets are always found in the nacslmtras. nacshairas, and the cranti-pata-gati is owing to
**
*
*'
nacshatras
**
*'
and hence
it is
observed
*<
"
the text, that the pa fa draws chandra to a distance equal to the cranli degrees,"
Here, to my apprehension, instead of a revolution cf the equinoxes through all the signs in the course of the Platonic year , which would carry the first of Vaiscch through all the seasons, is clearly implied a libration of those points from the third degree of Pisces to the twenty-seventh of Aries, and from the third of Virgo to the twenty-seventh of Libra, and back again in 7200 years; but, as this must seem to Europeans an extraordinary circumstance to be stated in so ancient a treatise as the Su/ya Siddhanta, and believed by Hindu astronomers ever since, 1 hope the above quotations may attract the attention of those who are qualified for a critical examination of them, and be compared with whatever is to be found in other Sastras, on the same subject. Whatever may be the result of such an investigation, there is no mistaking the rule for determining the ayanansa, which was at the beginning of the present year 19 21', and consequently the vernal equinox in Pisces io 39' of the Hindu sphere; or, in other words, the sun entered Mesha or Aries, and the Hindu year began when he was advanced 19 21' into the northern signs, according to European expression.
Call Tug, &c. the colure passed through the yoga star of Rcvati* tins passage Revati applies either to the paris plain, that in ticular yoa star of that name or to the last, or twenty-seventh hfar mansion, in which it is situated. (See a former note.) la ah uaahatra, or planetary mansion, there is one itar called the
It
yoga, whose latitude, longitude, and righc ascension the Hindus fcave determined and inserted in their agronomical tables.
F THE HINDUS,
2?I
ayanansa added to the sun's longitude in the gives his distance from the vernal equinox of the sum take the bhuja ; that is, if ic exceeds three sines, subtract it from six sines ; if it exceeds six sines, subtract six from it; and if it exThe quanceeds nine sines, subtract it from twelve. tity so found will be the sun's distance from the nearest
fibula sphere,
:
The
to the
greatest declination
24
so
is
from
the nearest equinoctial point to the declination sought which will agree with the table of declination in present use, to be found in the tables oi Macaranda,
and
calculated
for the
several
n43', 20
and equator 24 The co-sines of the same in the Hinducanon are 3366', 32iy'and 3141'; -ind, as the co-sine of the declination for one sine, is to the co-sine of the greateft declination, so is the sine of 30 to the sine
.
of the right ascension for a point of the ecliptic at that disance from either of the two vishuvas, or equinoctialpoints. In this manner is found the right ascension for the twelve signs of the ecliptic, reckoned from the
vernal equinox
'
and
also,
of triangles,
Hhulu books,
following
on suppoA V sition that the palabha or equinoctial shadow is 5 30. By the Lagna oiLanca* MadJiyama, or mean Lagna y the Hindus mean those points of the equator which rise respectively with each thirtieth degree of the ecliptic counted from Aries in a right sphere, answering to the right ascension in any latitude j by
which
is
the
Lagna of a particular place, the oblique ascension, or the divisions of the equator which rise in succession with each sign in an oblique sphere, and by the chafer
tjZ
7/y.
<y-.
Vol, 2,
Tie Jim
'
^
\
\
\^
//
27.
-1
Jft r
a
/,,'//
//
27,
2o/'
1/
# St ^ # ~x ^ $x at _L *n ^ *
"5T
dKJ
16
It
.3p
^ ^ ^ # 46 & 12 e n fi i
J*T
"$
OF THE HINDUS.
273
of the sun,
first
of
as here
represented in the
signs.
Hindu
By
that,
and by considering
when
the
moon, and nodes, it appears sun comes to the sign Tula, Libra,
corresponding with the month of Cartic, the descending node will have gone back to Aries ; and that consequently a lunar eclipse may be expected to happen at the end of the purnima tifhi, or time of full moon,
in that
month.
FIRST OPERATION.
To
find the
creation to
number of mean solar days from the some part of the purnima tifhi in Cartic y
Years expired of the Calpa to the end of the Satya Yug, 1970784000 Deduct the term of Brahma's employ-
ment
in the creation,
17064000
From
the creation,
when
the planetary
motions began, to the end of the Satya Yug, 1953720000 1296000 Add the Treta Yug, Divapar Yug, 864000 Present year of the Call Yug, 4890
From
Or
1955884890
-
Add
23470618680
72
*
-
23470618680
274
0N
ASTRONOMICAL COMPUTATIONS
a Yug, 51840000, are to the lunar months in thatqcle, 1593336, so intercalary are the solar months 23470618687, to their corresponding intercalary lunar months 72 1384677 ; which
As thesolar months in
added
together, give
24192003364
lunations.
This
multiplied by thirty produces 725760100920 tifhis, or lunar days, from the creation to the new moon in Cart'ic. ; to which add fourteen tifhis for the same, to the purmma tifhis in thai month
number
725760100034.
the
Then,
is
as the
number of
tifhis in
a Yog, 1603000080,
mean
solar
days
that
cycle (called
cshaya
25082252, so are 725760100934 tifhis, to their excess in number over the solar days 135601 7987, which subtracted, leaves. 714404082947, as the number of mean solar days from the creation, or when the planetary motions began, to a point of time which
tifhis)
1
meridian of Lanca, in Cartic*. The first day after the creation being Ravi-var, or Sunday, divide the number of days by seven for the day of the week, the remainder after the division being two, marks the day Soma-var, or Monday.
will
fir ft
moon
SECOND OPERATION.
For the mean longitude of the sun, moon, and
Say, as the number of mean the ascending node. solar days in a Malm Yug is to the revolutions of any planet in that cycle, so are the days from the creation to even revolutions, which reject, and the
fraction, if any, turned into sines,
&c
is
the
mean
longitude required.
* In the year of the Call Tug 4891, corresponding with 1196 Bengal style, and with the month of OBohcr or November (hereafter to be determined) in the year of Christ 1789,
F THE HINDUS.
275
st.
Of
the Sifn.
Revolutions,
Sines,
714404082947 X 4320OOO
1577917828
'
U95584890)
the
6 22 44
" " 2 12
2d.
714404083947 x 5775333^ 1577917828
Of
Moon.
o 21 21 58
S6
(26147888255)
3d.
Of
the
Moon's Apogee.
(32I03446o)
714404082947x488203
1577917828
31
I3 3S
**
o 37 37 52 28 9
6
3
4th.
Of
the
(105147017)
4 27 49 4 8
1577917828
714404082947x4
1577917828
__
37 52 28
4 29 27 40 28
5th.
7 14404082947x387,
Of
_(
,75
2 17 17 15
-*
1577917828
Vol.
If.
276
Mif longitude
^/"Lanca.
Q
/
equator east.
"
'//
Of the
Sun,
Moon,
Node,
Sun's Apogee,
21 44 2 12 21 21 58 56 29 2J 40 28
17
7
I J
27
17
15
Moon's Apogee,
4 inconsiderable 9
3
9 34
21
2
11
6 21 42 35 12
2
25
4 29 27 36
17 17 16 8 57 7
THIRD OPERATION.
For the equated longitude of the Sun and Moon,
Sec.
1
st.
Of
the Sun.
The mean
1
2'"; of the
42' 35" longitude of the sun is 6' 21 apogee 2 17 17 15, the difference, or
4=
mean anomaly,
signs
25' 20";
its
complement
%
to
25 34' 40'', This may either the equation for which is required. be taken from the foregoing table, translated from Macaranda, or calculated in the manner explained as
i
follows
30" to be subtracted from the paridhi degrees 14' 30" 13 SI 3~> tne circumin soma ; 14 this point of anomaly ; and ference of the epicycle in
14'
--^.
equation, considered as equal to its arc, or i 48' 6", to be deducted from the mean, for the true longitude ;
* This longitude, assigned to Bhagalpur, is erroneous but the error does not in the leaft affect the main object of the paper.
;
OF
1
THE HINDUS.
277
6 21 42 35"i 29" for midnight agreeing with mean time; but as, in this point of anomaly, the true or apparent ink night precedes that estimated for mean time, for which the computation has been made, a proportionable quantity must be deducted from the staR place, which is thus found Say, as the minutes contained in the ecliptic
48' 6"--^ 6 s 19 54'
i
mean motion in one day 59' 8", so mean to his true place 180' 6",
//
is
to
'
and 6
54'
29"
i3 =
//
59
^*
distance
The
is
!MI^L_l_*LiiLi
t jj e co . s i n e of the epicycle, and y4 6" equation, to be added to the mean $1_A24 j x for the true motion, 59' 8" x 1 16" ==60' 24" per day,
1941' o"
and
'
'
Of
the
Moon.
o 21
s
2'
=3'
57",
her motion in the difference of time between the mean and true midnight o 5 21 1' 25" 3' 57" o 20 58
which the anomalistic equation is to be found. Place of the apogee 11 7 8' $$" and the moon's distance from it r 13 49' 33". The
for
s
28 mean longitude,
plained
its arc,
Q
210' the or 3 30 = 0 3
^ =
sine
By
13'
51-, and
*
g6
39
of the angle of equation equal to 30" to be subtracted, o 20' 5$" 28"' 1 Y 2S' 28'" the moon's true place, agree-
2
*
,
i
-78
The
co-sine of her
epicycle
31
46' 9",
and
-^V*^' ^ =
Circumference
47" co-sine in the epicycle. The moon's mean motion from her apogee is 79c/ 35" 6' 41" 78^
54", and
8'
Z^L"^' 4fc9
'
mean
to her true motion, to be subtracted, 790. 35 74- 4 2 tne moon's true motion per day, 49 53 or 740" 42'" per danda.
For the place of the moon's apogee reduced to the apparent midnight. The motion of the apogee rs
6
t'
"
=n
is 3' 1
41
s
per day.
7
8'
ic8'
55"
^
6"x
its
6' 41*'
.
=2 n
/r >
on/
7
it
57
its
place.
Its
and
2
10
*'^""
"
=4
1",
and
36"-
27' 35"
place.
The true longitude and motion, therefore, for the apparent time of midnight at Bhagalpur, 7 14404082947 solar days after the creation, or commencement of the
planetary motions, will be
Longitude.
Of
the Sun,
Moon,
60 24 19 54 11 28 28 740 42 17 17 ^[inconsiderable 6 41 3 SS 7
17
2 9
2 7
35
11
FOURTH OPERATION.
Having
the longitude
and motion
full
moon.
OF THE HINDUS.
279
The moon's
s
leaves 5 27 34' 17", or 10654 17", which, divided by 720', the minutes in a mean tit'hi, quotes four-
teen even tit'his expired, and the fraction, or remainder 574' 1 7", is the portion expired of the 15th, or
purnima tit' hi, which subtracted from 720', leaves 145' 43" remaining unexpired of the same; which, divided by the moon's motion per danda from the sun, will give the time remaining unexpired from midnight
to the instant of the full
sion as the
moon
with as
much
preci-
sun's 740''
Hindu astronomy requires. Deduct the motion 60" 24"' per danda from the moon's 42'", the remainder 680" 8'", is the moon's mo-
by this divide the part remaining ; unexpired of the purnima tifhl 145' 43".
D
;
>; 5
therefore 12 dandas,
51 pahs after midnight will be the end of the purnima tit' hi, or instant of opposition
FIFTH OPERATION.
Having the instant of opposition as above, to find the true longitude and motion of the sun and moon, the latitude of the latter, and the place of the node.
D.
P.
'Add
place,
the
mean motion
found
of each for 12 51 to the mean before for the true midnight ; and for the
mean
places so found,
equations.
the third
is
compute again the anomalistic This being but a repetition of operation, unnecessary to be detailed. The several
t3
280
longi-
tude/or mid-
tude at full
moon.
Of the
Sun,
=1 42
17
6 21
Much,
Moon's Apogee, Moon's Node,
20 58 28
7
54 17
23
7
47 47
10 21
47 506 20 7 40 20 20 7
8 55 11
29 27 35
4 29 28 16
?>e motion at full moon.
60'
24'
Mean
motion.
Equation.
Of
the Sun,
59
Moon,
790
S 35
I'
16" 28
47
743
appears that, at the opposition, the be near her descending node ; for, 4 29 28' 16" x 6 10 29 28' 16", the place of the descending node in antecedenlia^ and i2 io 29 28' 31' 44" its longitude according to the 1 6"=: i o order of the signs, and i o 31' 44" 20 7' 27"= io 24' 17'' the moon's distance from her descending node, which, being within the limit of a lunar eclipse, shows that the moon will be then eclipsed. For her latitude at this time, say, as radius is to the
it
s
4 30' or 270', so the sine of her distance from the node 620' 57", to
(=^^)'
SIXTH OPERATION.
From the element? now found, to compute the diameters of the moon and shadow, and the duration
of the eclipse.
Tojatt.
The
is
OP
Sun's
THE HINDUS.
-
8l
59'
mean motion,
8"
Moon's,
Sun's true motion,
-
79 35 6o 24
74-3 7
Moon's,
Moon's
latitude,
48 45
As
the moon's
1
ter, so is
mean motion is to her mean diameher true motion to her true diameter for the
Y
:A
time of opposition
divided by
fifteen,
As
so
is
the sun's
his
true
e
of oppofition
-X|^ = 6639
mean motion
mean motion is to his mean diameter, motion to his diameter at the inftant Y
14 Yojan.
to the earth's dia-
As
the moon's
is
meter, so is the moon's equated motion to the Suchi, or a fourth number, which muft be taken as the earth's diameter, for the purpose of proportioning its shadow to the moon's distance and apparent diameter
j,6ooxt43'7"
= 1303
-
Of
'
the earth,
6639 14 1503 56
Difference,
5039 14
As
the sun's
mean diameter
is
to
is the difference above 5039 number, which deducted from the Suchi, or equated
meter, so
y
shadow
at
y
9 6
the
moon,
4* ox
!^
= 372.
7,
and
T4
2$2
1503. 56
by
fifteen,
Yojan,
which divided
circle for the
75'
great
same.
From
the half
7 ^ *7
sum
* *
moon
and shadow
is the Chch anna, or portion of the moon's diameter eclipsed, 4' 1" of a great circle, 2?d by the nature of a right angled
triangle, the sq -.art root of the difference of the so res of the moon's latitude, and the half sum of the diameters of the shadow and moon, wl'l be the path of the moon's centre, from the beginning to the middle of the eclipse.
of the shadow
-
is,
j 27
30
5
Sum,
105 32
Half sum,
52 46
The moon's
latitude
is,
48 45
2 20' 1 1" which, divided x 48. 45 2 52. 46 by the moon's motion from the sun, quotes the half
a.r,d_pa/as,
or
;
Hindu
which
mean
solar
is
hours,
IV
'
2&
gg^^"
V
46 25
whole duration of the the moon's latitude being greater than the differ nee between the semidiaineters of the moon's disk and the earth's shadow.
doubled,
3
%^
50, the
SEVENTH OPERATION.
To
find the position
and thence
OF
THE HINDUS
2S3
of day and night, and rhe time counted from sunrises, or hour of the cjvil day when the eclipse win happen,
1st.
For the ayanansa or distance of the vernal equi7 the ist of Mesha. J2i!24^?
nox from
8*
1
= (271650)
the ayan-
Periods.
30" 5 2'" of v ich take the bhujd 8 s 4 3 1 ' 30" 52'" =2 4 3i'3o" 52 'which multiply by three, and 5t * 3 19 21' 27" divide by ten,
'
**?
1
dhsa, which in th
present age
longitude, to
f*
id his
distance
nox.
The
and Cs 19
his distance
2c/.
= js
is
6s 19
9
54'
15'
1",
38"
Foif'the
right
sun's
ascension,
place
is
and
ys 9
ascensional difference.
The
15' 38", and 15' 38" his distance from 15 9 the autumnal equinox; the sine of which is 2174' 41", and as radius is to the sine of the greatest declination
24
termed
the paramapacramajya
1397',
so
is
14
53', (
noctial
a v shadow
is
3433
.
=083 40
^
is?
is
).
Theequi-
at
BhagaJpur
toxhe
equinoctial sha-
a
"
v
"*
"^,J
=405'
1".
And
as the
co-sine
of the declination is to radius, so is the cshitijya to the sine of the chara, or ascensional difference,
4
I
3
3t
f^ -=^4i9
its
arc
is
sional difference.
3 d.
284
they should
viculas
;
time.
A
1
sy*
and each
600
A nacshatra day
solar
'
the length of the solar day by civil account from sunrise to sunrise, sydereal time 21669. 3 respirations. From one-fourth of this deduct the ascensional difference, the sun ajLpg declined towards the south pole, for the semi|P#nal arc; and add it for the the former is 4997' 19", and the seminocturnal arc 11"; which may be reduced to da&kis or latter 5837' Hindu hours by a division of 360. Hence half the v r> p p v d day is 13 52 $z, and half the night 16 12 52. The whole day added to half the night shows the hour
:
counted from
the preceding
sunrise
to
midnight
at midnight unex43 58 38, to which add the time the hour of the civil pired of the purnima titlii, for day corresponding with the middle of the eclipse. The hour from midnight to the end of the ptrmma-
OF THE HINDUS.
D tifhii* already found 12
to
p
*Z$
reduce
it
DP
#
DP
21600'x 59 d
equal to 2
8", so p
is
51 solar hours.
D V P
From the preceding sunrise to midnight is, 43 59 At midnight will remain of the purnima 12
~l
M4
SI
Hour
of the
civil
day
at the
-
the eclipse,
middle of 1 , b o j
1
Deduct
46 25
55
5 35 3 3 2 5
286
full moon and the duration of the found by this computation, differ considerThe Siddhanta ably from the Nautical Almanac. Rahasya and Grahalaghava, comparatively modern treatises, are nearer the truth, yet far from correct. The Hindus., in' determining these phenomena, are satisfied when within a few minutes of the true.time,
The
eclipse,
OF
THE HINDUS*
this eclipse
287
A comparative statement of
the Nautical
as predicted in
it
made
by different
Hindu
XVI.
ON THE
and industrious M. Montucla seems to treat with extreme contempt) that the Indian division of the Zodiac was not borrowed from the Greeks or Arabs, but, having been known in this country from time immemorial, and being the same in part with that used by other nations of the old Hindu race, was probably invented by the first progenitors of that race before their dispersion. lC The Indians," he says, " have two " divisions of the Zodiac ; one, like that of the " Arabs, relating to the moon, and consisting of " twenty-seven equal parts, by which they can teli " very nearly the hour of the night ; another relating
"
" " " " " "
to the to
syfti,
which they have given as many names, correspending with those which we have borrowed from
the Greeks.*' All that
is
"
It
" "
highly probable that they received them at some time or another by the intervention of the Arabs ; for no man, surely, can persuade himself, that it is the ancient division of the Zodiac formed, according to some anchors, by the forefathers of mankind,
is
" and still preserved among the Hindus." Now I undertake to prove, that the Indian Zodiac was not borrowed mediately or directly from the Arabs or Greeks ; and, since the solar division ot it in India is the same in substance with that used in Greece, we may reasonably conclude, that both Greeks and Hindus received it from an older nation, who first gave names to the
29O
ON THE ANTIQUITY OF
whom
and Hindus*
as their similarity in
had a
common
descent.
4.
>
" the time when Indian astronomy received its most " considerable improvement, from which it has now, " as he imagines, wholly declined, was either the. " age when the Arabs, who established themselves *' in Persia and Sogdiana, had a great intercourse " with the Hindus, or that, when the successors of " Chengiz united both Arabs and Hindus under one
The same
"
"
vast dominion."
It is
to correct the
cited, nor to
passage last-
defend the astronomers of India from the charge of gross ignorance in regard to the figure of the earth and the distances of the heavenly bodies a charge, which Montucla very boldly makes on the authority, I believe, of father Souciet. I will only remark, that, in our conversations with the Pandits, we must never confound the system of the Jyautishicas, or mathematical astronomers, with that of the Pauranicas, or poetical fabulists ; for to such a confusion alone must we impute the many mistakes of Europeans on the subject of Indian science. A venerable
:
now
nanagar
and
to the inquiries,
w hich
r
that,
as
soon as he left me, I committed it to writing. " Pauranies," he said, " will tell you, that our earth is *c a plane figure studded with eight mountains, and " surrounded by seven seas of milk, nectar, and
" The
which we inhabit which eleven smaller islands, to is one of seven " isles are subordinate; that a God, riding on a huge elephant, guards each of the eight regions ; and
other
fluids;
"
that
the
part
* f
29I
rises and gleams ip. the but we believe the earth to be shaped like? u a Cadamba fruit, or spheroidal, and admit only four " oceans of salt water, all which we name from the four ' cardinal points, and in which are many great pen" insulas, with innumerable islands. They will tell you 'J that a dragon's head swallows the moon, and thus M causes an eclipse; but we know that the supposed " head and tail of the dragon mean only the nodes, or u points formed by intersections of the ecliptic and " moon's orbit. In short, they have imagined a ' syftem which exists only in their fancy ; but wc " consider nothing as true without such evidence as " cannot be questioned." I could not perfectly understand the old Gymnosophist, when he told me that the Rasichacra, or Circle of Signs (for so he called the Zodiac) was like a Dlmstura flower; meaning the Datura, to which the Sanscrit name has been softened, and the flower of which is conical, or shaped At firft I thought that he alluded to a like a funnel. projection of the hemisphere on the plane of the colure, and to the angle formed by the ecliptic and equator ; but a younger aftronomer, named Vtnayaca3 who came forward to see me, assured me that they
that a
mountain of gold
centre
meant only
the circular
;
or the base
of the cone and that it was usual among their ancient writers to borrow from fruits and flowers their appellations of several plane and solid figures.
From the two Brahmans, whom I have just named, learned the following curious particulars ; and you
wrote them
in their
accuracy in repeating them, since presence, as well as corrected what I had written, till they pronounced it perfect. They divide a great circle, as we do* into three hundred and sixty degrees, called by them ansas, or por* tions ; of which they, like us, allot thirty to each of the twelve signs, in this order
I
may depend on my
Vol.
II.
2^2
ON THE ANTIQUITY OP
Crab.
The figures of the twelve asterisms, thus denominated with respect to the sun, are specified by Sripeti, author of the Retnamala, in Sanscrit verses ; which I produce as ray vouchers in the original, with a verbal
translation
:
canyacaiva.
Tula tulabhrit pretimanapanir Dhanur dhanushman hayawat parangah Mrigananah syan hiacaro'tha cumbhah
Scandhe nero rictaghatam dadhanah,
Anyanyapuchch'habhimuc'ho
hi
minah
Matsyadvvayam swast'halacharinomi.
*'{
tl
*'
M
4<
The ram, bull, crab, lion, and scorpion, have the fithe pair gures of those five animals respectively are a damsel playing on a viua, and a youth wielding a mace; the virgin stands on a boat in water, holding in one hand a lamp, in the other an ear oi rice-corn ; the balance is held by a weigher with a
r<
:
-,
whose
293
-,
"
like
those of a horse
the sea-
"
"
**
empties it ; and all these are supposed to to each other's tail as suit their several natures." be in such places
:
the ewer is a ; shoulder of a man, who \\\zfish are two with their heads turned
of an antelope
the
each of the twenty-seven lunar stations, which they call meshatras, they allow thirteen ansas and one-third, or thirteen degrees twenty minutes ; and their names appear in the order of the signs, but without any regard to the figures of them.
To
Aswini.
^94-
0N THE ANTIQUITY OF
,
Hindus
number
or not acquired by them, they fixed on the twenty-seven, and inserted Abhijit for some
purpose in their nuptial ceremonies. drawing, from which the plate was engraved, The seems intended to represent the figures of the twentyseven constellations, together with Abhijit > as they are described in three itanzas by the author of the
astrological
Ketnamala
j.
2.
Crudhyatcesarivicramena sadrisam,
sayyasamanam
param-,
Anyad
dentivilasavat st'hitamatah
sringatacavyacti
bham.
4,
"
M ed
'*
"
the head of an antelope, a gem, a arrow, a wheel, another house, a bedhouse, an stead, another bedstead, a hand, a pearl, a piece of coral, a festoon of leaves, an oblation to the
carriage,
a rich ear-ring, the tail of a fierce lion, a
" Gods,
295
*c
" "
**
image, another couch, and a smaller sort of tabor ; such are the figures of Asvuini and the rest in the
circle of lunar constellations."
has very
ill
represented
and he has transposed the two Asharas as well as the two Bhadrapads ; but his figure of Abhijit, which looks like our ace of hearts, has a resemblance to the kernel of the trafia ; a curious
of the figures
;
mod
Sanscrit
In another water-plant described in a separate essay. book the figures of the same constellations are
thus varied
tail.
A couch.
or bbaga.
Two stars S. to N.
Two, N.
to S.
winnowing
fan-.
Another.
A hand. A pearl.
Red
saffron.
An
arrow.
fefroon.
snake.
boar's head.
A Fish.
twelve of the afterisms juft enumerated are derived the names of .the twelve Indian months, in the usual form of patronymics ; for the Pauranics, who
From
reduce all nature to a syftem of emblematical mythology, suppose a celestial nymph to preside over each of the constellations, and feign that the God Soma, or Lunus, having wedded twelve of them, became the father of twelve Genii, or months, who are named after their several mothers .5 but the Jyautish'h
296
cas assert, that,
ON THE ANTIQUITY OF
when
was arrange d
by former astronomers, the moon was at the full in each month on the very day when it entered the
nacshatra, from which that month is denominated. The manner in which the derivatives are formed, will
best appear
their
several constellations
Aswina.
Cartica.
Chaitra.
8. Vaisac'ha.
Margasirsha.
4.
Jyaisht'ha.
Pausha.
Ashara.
Sravapa.
12. Bhadra.
Magha.
Phalguna.
The third month is also called Agrahayana (whence the common word Agran is corrupted) from another
name of
Mrigasiras.
Nothing can be more ingenious than the memorial which the Hindus have a custom of linking together a number of ideas otherwise unconnected, and of chaining, as it were, the memory by a regular measure thus by putting teeth for thirty-two, Rudra for eleven, season for six, arrow or element for five, ocean, Feda, or age, for four, Rama, fire, or qualify for three, eye, oxCumara for two, and earth ox moon for one, they have composed four lines, which express
verses, in
:
the
number
of
stars
in
asterisms
Vahni
tri
ritwishu
ganendu critagnibhuta,
297
three, one ; five, two; five, one, one; u four, four, three eleven, four, and three ; three, " four, an hundred ; two, two, thirty-two. Thus have
three, three,
six
c<
" M
as they appear,
the stars of the lunar constellations, in the order been numbered by the wise.'*
was correctly repeated to me, the two Asharas are considered as one asterism, and AbliijH as three feparate stars ; but I suspect an error in the third line, because divibana, or two and five would suit the metre as well as bdhlrama ; and because there were only three Vedas in the early age, when, it is probable, the stars were enumerated, and the technical verse composed.
If the stanza
lunar stations, or mansions, and a quarter are we see, with one sign ; and nine stations By counting, therefore, correspond with four signs. thirteen degrees and twenty minutes from the first star
co-extensive,
in the head of the Ram, inclusively, we find the whole extent of Aszuini, and shall be able to ascertain the other stars with sufficient accuracy ; but first let us exhibit a comparative table of both Zodiacs, denoting the mansions, as in the Varanes Almanac, by the first letters or syllables of their names
Two
29&
ON THE ANTIQUITY OF
Solar
Months.
Asterisms,
1
I
Mansions.
Aswin
Cartic
Mesh
Vrish
fA + bh +
\J1
i
+ +
ro
a
Agrahayan
*Mit'hun
Carcat 4.
M A+
Paush
[JL
4 + M + 2L 4 + 9.
si.
Magh
P'halgun
Chaitr
Sinh
~m
+ PU +
Canya
Tula
Vrischic,
Vaisac'h
Jaisht'h
.7 +
18,
Dban
Macar
>
Tmu + pu + -1
4 <
Ashar
Sravan
Cumbh
Mia
12.
T
2
+
4"T"
S
S s
Bhadr
*a
1*4-
+ + ^T 4
<
dh
27,
r.
Hence we may
readily
know
:
man-
Lunar
Stan.
and near the head. Three in the tail. Six of the pleiads. Five in the head and neck. Three in or near the feet, pei baps in the Galaxy.
'Three in
pneon
the knee.
299
~3
o
in
30O
ON THE ANTIQUITY P
Wherever the Indian drawing differs from the memorial verse in the Retnamala, 1 have preferred the authority of the writer to that of the painter, who has drawn some terrestrial things with so little similitude, that we must not implicitly rely on his representation of objects merely celestial. He seems particularly to have erred in the stars of Dhanishfa.
For the
assistance of those
who may be
inclined
which the nacshatras extend respectively from the first star in the asterism of Aries, which we now see near the beginning of the sign Taurus, as it was placed
in the ancient sphere.
N.
I.
D.
M.
ST.
D.
133
.
M. N.
20'.
D.
M.
20'. 40'.
I46 3 .
160
1
1
.
40'.
o'.
256
26<5.
aSo
293
.
c.
20'.
73 8 6.
20'.
40'.
o'.
306
320 333
.
40.
c'.
200
XXIV.
213.
20'.
XXV.
20'.
226
40'"
o'.
240
40'.
.
o.
The
of
in
column are in the fignsLeo ; those of the second, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Firgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius; and those of
asterisms of the first
third,
in
the
We
cannot err
much
therefore,
in
any
series
of three constellations; for, by counting T3 20' forwards and backwards, we find the spaces occupied by the two extremes, and the intermediate space belongs
$Ot
of course to the middlemost. It is not meant that the division of the Hindu Zodiac into such spaces is
exact to a minute, or that every star of each asterism must necessarily be found in the space to which it be-
longs ; but the computation will be accurate enough for our purpose, and no lunar mansion can be very remote from the path of the moon. How Father Souciet could dream that Visafha was in the Northern
I can hardly comprehend ; but it surpascomprehension that M. Bailly should copy his dream, and give reasons to support it ; especially as
Crown,
ses all
four stars, arranged pretty much like those in the I?idian figure, present themselves obviously near the Ba lance, or the Scorpion. 1 have not the boldness to exhibit the individual starsin each mansion, distinguished in Bayer's, method, by Greek letters, because, though I have little doubt that the five stars of AsIcs/ia, in the form of a wheel, are *, y, , a, e, of the Lion, and those of Mula y, e, o, <p, t, c, v, o, |, w, of the Sagittary : and though I think many of the others equally clear,
yet,
stars in a
mansion
is
less
than three, or even than four, it is not easy to fix on them with confidence; and I must wait, until some young Hindu astronomer, with a good memory and good eyes, can attend my leisure on serene nights at the proper seasons, to point out in the firmament itself the several stars of all the constellations for which he can find names in the Sanscrit language. The only stars, except those in the Zodiac, that have yet been
distinctly
named
to
Septarshi,
Dhruva,
Arundhali, llsh/.-upaJ, Matrhnandel ; and, in the southern hemisphere, Agastya, or Canopus. The twenty-seven Yoga stars, indeed, have particular names, in the order of the nacshafras, to which they belong; and since we learn* that the Hindus have
* See p, 270.
302
ON THE ANTKVUITV OF
latitiule,
determined the
longitude,
and
right ascension
of each, it might be useful to exhibit the list of them : but at present I can only subjoin the names of twenty-
Vishcambha.
Priti.
Ganda.
Vriddhi.
Parigha.
Siva.
Ayushnat,
Dhruva.
Vyaghata,
Siddha.
Sauhhagya
Sobhana.
Sadhya.
Suhha.
Sucra.
Hershana,
Fi/jra.
Atiganda.
Sucarman.
Dhriti.
Sula.
Asrij.
Brahman,
Indra.
Vyatipata.
Variyas.
in
Vaidhritn
Having shown
the Zodiacal stars with respect to the sun and moon, let us proceed to our principal subject, the antiquity of that double arrangement. In the first place, the Brahmans were always too proud to borrow their science from the Greeks, Arabs, Moguls, or any nation of
Mlechclihas, as they call those who are ignorant of the Vedas, and have not studied the language of the Gods. They have often repeated to me the fragment
now
use proverbially, na
yai\anatparah, or no base creature can beloiver than Yavan ; by which name they formerly meant an Ionian
or Greek, and
now mean
man.
When
mentioned
times, and in fevcral places, the opinion ot Montucla, they could not prevail on themselves to oppose it by serious argument j but some laughed heartily ; others,
with a sarcastic smile, said it was a pleasant imagination ; and all seemed to think it a notion bordering on phrenzy. In fact, although the figures of the
i
w3 s;
Sv
7,>
% KM
^
F**^
\K>
^
s
ft i
St.
M
s
bo l^
THE INDIAN ZODIAC.
twelve Indian signs bear
for a
3O3
wonderful resemblance
much
varied
mere copy, and the nature of the variation proves them to be original ; nor is the resemblance more extraordinary than that, which has ofren been observed, between our Gothic days of the week and those of the Hindus, which are dedicated to the same luminaries, and (what is yet more singular) revolve in the same order Ravi, the Sun ; Soma, the Moon Mangala y Tuisco ; Budha, Woden ; Vrihaspati, Thor ; Sucra, Freya ; Sani, Sater yet no man ever imagined that the Indians borrowed so remarkable an arrangement from the Goths or Germans. On the planets I will
:
only observe, that Sucra, the regent of Venus, is, like all the rest, a male deity, named also Usanas, and believed to be a sage of infinite learning; but Zohrah,
the Naliid of the Persians,
is a goddess like the Freyaour Saxon progenitors. The drawing, therefore, of of the planets, which was brought into Bengal by Mr. Johnson, relates to the Persian system, and represents the genii supposed to preside over them,, exactly as they are described by the poet Hatifi: " He bedecked " the firmament with stars, and ennobled this earth " with the race of men ; he gently turned the auspi" cious new moon of the festival, like a bright jewel, " round the ancle of the sky ; he placed the Hindu " Saturn on the seat of that restive elephant, the re^ " volving sphere, and put the rainbow into his hand, *< as a hook to coerce the intoxicated beast he made ; " silken strings of sun-beams for the lute of Venus 5 *' and presented Jupiter, who saw the felicity of true " religion, with a rosary of clustering pleiads. The " bow of the sky became that of Mars when he ws$ " honoured with the command of the celestial host; " for God conferred sovereignty ontheSun; and squaN drons of stars were his army."
3O4
ON THE ANTIQUITY OF
of the lunar constellation',
Bharani and Abhljit, indicate a simplicity of manners peculiar to an ancient people j and they differ entirely from those of the Arabian system, in which the very first asterism appears in the dual number, because it consists only of two stars. Menzil, or
the place of alighting, properly signifies a station or stage, and thence is used for an ordinary day's journey j
and
moon ;
THE INDIAN ZODIAC.
3C5
Vcdangas y one of which is the astronomical Saslra, Were not then commercial, and, most probably, neither could nor would have conversed with Arabian
merchants. The hostile irruption of the Arabs into Hindustan, in the eighth century, and that of the Moguls under Chenglz, in the thirteenth, were not likely to change the astronomical system of the Hindus ; but the supposed consequences of modern revolutions arc out of the question ; for, if any historical records be true, we know with as positive certainty, that Amarsihn
and Calidas composed their works before the birth of Christ, as that Menander and Terence wrote before that important epoch. Now the twelve signs and twentyseven mansions are mentioned, by the several names
before exhibited, in a Sanscrit vocabulary by the first of those Indian authors ; and the second of them frequently alludes to Rohini and the rest by name in his Fatal Ring, his Children of the Sun, and his Birth
of Cumara; from which poem I produce two lines, that not seem to be collected from mere conversation
my evidence may
:
Yogam
"
gatasuttarap'halganishu.
When
moon."
This testimony being decisive against the conjecture M. Montucla, I need not urge the great antiquity Menus Institutes, in which the twenty- seven asterisms are called the daughters of Dacsha and the consorts of Soma, or the Moon j nor rely on the testimony of the Brahmans, who assure me with one voice, that the names of the Zodiacal stars occur in the Vedas ; three of which I firmly believe, from internal and external evidence, to be more than three thousmid
of of
306
Having therefore proved what I engaged to prove, I will close my essay with a general observation. The result of Newton s researches into the his:ory of the primitive sphere was, " that the practice of obser" ving the stars began in Egypt in the days of Amnion, " and was propagated thence by conquest in the reign ts of his son Sisac, into Afric, Europe, and Asia ; " since which time Atlas formed the sphere of the Ly<e bians ; Chiron, that of the Greeks ; and the ChaU " deans, a sphere of their own." Now I hope, on some other occasions, to satisfy the public, as I have perfectly satisfied myself, that " the practice of ob" serving the stars began, with the rudiments of civil " society, in the country of those whom we call ChaU " deans ; from which it was propagated into Egypt, " India, Greece, Italy, and Scandinavia, before the " reign of Sisac or Sacya, who by conquest spread a tl new system of religion and philosophy from the cc Nile to the Ganges about a thousand years before <c Christ ; but that Chiron and Atlas were allegorical
years old.
**
" place
or mythological personages, and ought to have in the serious history of our species.'*
no
XVII.
COMMUNICATED BY JOHN
SHOR.E, ESQ_.
THE kingdom
east of
of 'Nepal
is
Patna, at the distance of ten or eleven The common road to it days journey from that city. lies through the kingdom of Macwartyur ; but the missionaries and many other persons enter it on the Bett'ta Within the distance of four days journey quarter. from Nepal the read is good in the plains of Hindustan, but in the mountains it is bad, narrow, and dangerous. At the foot of the hills the country is called lerlam; and there the air is very unwholesome from the middle of March to the middle of November ; and people in their passage catch a disorder, called in the language of that country AuJ, which is a putrid fever, and of which the generality of people who are attacked with it die in a few days; but on the plains there is no apprehension of it. Although the road be very narrrow and inconvenient for three or four days at the pasEes of the hills, where it is necessary to cross and recrcss the river moie than fifty times, yet, on reaching the interior mountain before you descend, you have an agreeable prospect of the extensive plain of Nepal, resembling an amphitheatre covered with populous towns and villages the circumterer.ee of the plain is about 200 a little irregular, and surrounded by hills on all sides, so that no person can enter or come out of it witho-jt passing the mountains.
:
30S
AN ACCOUNT OF
There are three principal cities in the plain, each of which was the capital of an independent kingdom , the principal city of the three is situated to the northward of the plain, and is called Cafhmandu: it contains about 18,000 houses; and this kingdom from south to north extends to the distance of twelve or thirteen days journey as far as the borders of Tibet* The and is almost as extensive from east to west. king of Gafhmanda has always about fifty thousand soldiers in his service. The second city to the southwest of Cafhmandu is called Lel'it Pattan> where I resided about four years ; it contains near 24,000 houses ; the southern boundary of this kingdom is at the distance of four days journey, bordering on the kingdom of Macwanfur. The third principal city to the east of Lelit Pal tan is called B'hatgan ; it contains about 12,000 families, extends towards the east to the distance of five or six days journey, and borders upon another nation, also independent, called
Ciratas,
who profess no
religion.
many
considerable towns or fortresses, one of which is Timi> and another Cipoli, each of which contains about 3,ooo houses, and is very populous. All those towns,, both great and small, are well built ; the houses are constructed of brick, and are three or four stories
high
well
The streets of all their towns are paved with brick or stone, with a regular declivity
to carry off the water.
capital towns there are also
from which the water passes through several stonecanals for the public benefit. In every town there are
large square varandas, well built, for the accommodation of travellers and the public; These varandas are called Pall ; and there are also many of them, as well
as wells, in different parts
3O9
There are also, on the outside of the great towns, small square reservoirs of water, faced with brick, with a good road to walk upon, and a large flight of steps for the convenience of those who choose to bathe. A piece of water of this kind on the outside of the city uf Cafhmandu, was at least 200 feet long on each side of the square ; and every part of its workmanship had a good appearance.
the more of two kinds ar.cie.it is \ rotessed by many people who call themselves Baryesu : they pluck out all the hair from their heads ; their dress is of coarse red woollen cloth, and they wear a cap of the same they are considered as people of the religious order ; and their religion prohibits hem from marrying, as it is with the Lamas of Thibet, from which country their religion was originally brought ; but in Nepal they do not observe this rule, except at their discretion. They have large monasteries, in which every one has a separate apartment, or place of abode; they observe also particular festivals, the principal of which is called Yatra in their language, and continues a month or longer, according to the pleasure of the king. The ceremony consists in drawing an idol, which at Leht Vattan is called Saghero *, in a large and richly ornamented car, covered with gilt copper round about the idol stand the king and the principal Baryesus; and in this manner the vehicle is almost every day drawn through some one of the streets of the city by the inhabitants, who run about beating and playing upon every kind of instrument their country affords, which make an inconceiveable noise.
religion of JSepal
is
:
:
1
The
* I s'lfp^se a name of Bhaga-jat <-*r C--isbr.fi; but Bba-ga Mabaa'eva, and Bajri, or Fairi, means the Thunderer.
is
giO
AN ACCOUNT OF
dther religion, the
The
is
that of the
Brahmens, and
difference that in the hitter country, the Hindus being mixed with the Mohammedans, their religion also abounds with many prejudices, and is not strictly observed; whereas in Nepal, where
there are no Muselmans (except one Cashmirian merchant) the Hindu religion is practised in its gTearest
purity.
Every day of the month they class under its proper name, when certain sacrifices are to be perprayers- offered
ples.
The
towns than, I believe, are to populous and most flourishing cities of Christendom ; many of them are magnificent according to their ideas of architecture, and constructed at a very considerable expence ; some of them have four or five square cupolas ; and in some of the temples two or three of the extreme cupolas, as well as the doors and windows of them, are decorated with gilt copper.
their
In the city of Lelit Vat tan the temple of Bagliero was contiguous to my habitation, and was more valuable, on account of the gold, silver, and jewels it contained, than even the house of the king. Besides the
large temples, there are also many small ones, which have stairs, by which a single person may ascend on the outside all around them ; and some of those small
temples have four sides, others six, with small stone or marble pillars, polished very smooth, with two or three pyramidal stories, and all their ornaments well gilt and neatly worked, according to their ideas of and I think, that, if Europeans should ever go taste:
little temples, the great coort ofLelit Pattdn, before the royal palace. On the outside of some of their temples there are also
especially
might take some models from those from the two which are in
from twenty to
TE KINGDOM OF NEPAL.
thirty feet high,
3II
of their temples have a good stone staircase in the middle of the four squares, and at the end of each flight of stairs there are lines cut out of stone on both sides. Round about their temples there are also bells, which the people ring on particular occasions ; and when they are at prayers, many cupolas are also quite filled with
perbly
gilt.
little bells,
hanging by cords
in the inside,
about the
distance of a foot from each other, which make a great noise on that quarter where the wind conveys
the sound.
There
are
To the eastward of Cafhmandu, at the distance of two or three miles, there is a place called Tolu, by which there flows a small river, the water of which is
esteemed holy, according to
their superstitious ideas
;
and
when they
this place
are thought to
At
a temple, which is not inferior to the best and They also have richest in any of the capital cities. it on tradition, that, at two or three places in Nepal, valuable treasures are concealed under ground. One of those places they believe is Tolu ; but no one is
there
is
permitted to make use of them except the king, and Those treasures, they that only in cases of necessity. say, have been accumulated in this manner: When any temple had become very rich from the offerings of the people, it was destroyed, and deep vaults dug under ground, one above another, in which the gold, silver, gilt copper, jewels, and every thing of value were deposited. When I was in Nepal, Gainprejas, king of Gafhmandu, being in the utmost distress for money to pay his troops, in order to support himself against Pfifhwinarayan, ordered search to be made for the treasures of Tolu ; and, having dug to a considerable depth under ground, they came to the first
^12
vault
;
AN ACCOUNT
from which
his people
gilt
OP
lac of rupees in
took to the value of a copper, with which Gainprejdf paid his troops, exclusive of a number of smali ngurej in cxoid, or gilt copper, which the people \\ ao had
;
made the search had privately carried off; and this because one evening as I was walkI know very well
country alone, a poor man, whom I met ing on the road, made me an offer of a figure of an idol in geld, or copper gilt, which might be five or six sicca weight, and which he cautiously preserved unThe peoder his arm ; but I declined accepting it. of Gainprejas had not completely emptied the ple first vault, when the army of PrifJrwinarayan arrived at Tolu, possessed themselves of the place where the treasure was deposited, and closed the door of the vault, having first replaced all the copper there had
in the
To
which there
is
a magnificent
tem-
No one of the missionaries ever entered into this ple. castle, because the people who have the care of it
have such a scrupulous veneration
for this temple, that
it
to
But when I to their false deities, never entered it. being in the possession of the was at Nepal, this castle people of Gore ha, the Commandant of the castle and of the two forts which border on the road, being a
friend of the missionaries, gave me an invitation to his house, as he had occasion for a little physic for himself and some of his people. I then, under the
entered the castle people durst not oblige me several times, and the One day, when I was at the to take off my shoes. Commandant's house, he had occasion to go into the varanda, which is at the bottom of the great court
protection of the
Commandant,
313
where all the chiefs dependent were assembled, and where also was collected the wealth of the temple; and, wishing to speak to me before I went away, he called me into the varanda. From this incident 1 obtained a sight of the temple, and then passed by the great court it is entirely marble almost which was in front blue, but interspersed with large flowers of bronze well disposed, to form the pavement of the great courtyard, the magnificence of which astonished me ; and I do not believe there is another equal to it in Europe.
upon
cities
Besides the magnificence of the temples, which their and towns contain, there are many other rarities.
side of the royal garden, there
At Cafhmandu, on one
is
which is one of their idols, This idol is of blue stone, crowned and sleeping on a mattress of the same kind of stone ? and the idol and mattress appear as floating upon the water. This stone machine is very large: I believe it to be eighteen or twenty feet long, and broad in proportion ; but well worked, and in good repair.
a large fountain, in
called Nurayan.
-
In a wall of the royal palace of Cafhmandu-, which is built upon the court before the palace, there is a great stone of a single piece, which is about fifteen feet long, and four or five feet thick on the top of this great stone there are four square holes at equal distances from each other. In the inside of the wall
:
they pour water into the holes, and in the courthole having a closed canal, every person may draw water to drink. At the foot of the stone is a large ladder, by which people ascend to drink j but the curiosity of the stone consists in its being quite covered with characters of different languages cut upon it. Some lines contain the characters of the language of the country; others the characters of
side, each
x4
314
AN ACCOUNT OF
Tibet, others Persian, others Greek, besides several others of different nations ; and in the middle there is a line of Roman characters, which appears in this
INTER LHIVERT but form pone of the inhabitants have any knowledge how they came there, nor do they know whether or not any European had ever been in JSepal before the mission;
AVTOMNEW
who
aries,
present century.
They
are manifestly
names of
them.
There
viandu a
is
also to the
upon which
are
some tombs
of the Lamas of Tibet, and other people of high rank of the same nation. The monuments are constructed after various forms; two or three of them are pyramidal, very high and well ornamented ; so that they have a verv good appearance, and may be seen at a
considerable distance. Round these monuments are remarkable stones covered with characters, which
probably are the inscriptions of some of the inhabitThe ants of Tibet, whose bones were interred there. of Nepal not only look upon the hill as sacred, natives but imagine ir is protected by their idols ; and, from this erroneous supposition, never thought of stationing troops there for the defence of it, although it be a post of great importance, and only at a short mile's but during the time of hostidistance from the city ofPrit'hwinarayan's troops being purlities a party
:
sued by those of Gainprejas, the former, to save themselves, fled to this hill, and, apprehending no danger from its guardian idols, they possessed themselves of it, and erected a fortification (in their own In digging the ditches style) to defend themselves. the fort, which were adjoining to the tombs, round t'hey found considerable pieces of gold, with a quantity of which metal the corpses of the grandees of Tibet
THE KINGDOM
are always interred
OF NEPAL.
315
I
and when the war was ended, ; myself went to see the monuments upon the hills.
I believe that the kingdom of Nepal is very ancient, because it has always preserved its peculiar language ant independence ; but the cause of its ruin is the
dissention
which subsists a>"nong the three kings. After the death of their sovereign, the nobles of Lelit Pattan nominated for :heir king Gainprejas, a man possessed of the greatest influence in Nepal; altho*
years afterwards they removed him from his government, and conferred it upon the king of Bhatgan; but he also a short time afterwards was deposed ; and, after having put to death another king who succeeded him, they made an offer of the government to Prifhwhtarayan who had already commenced war. Priflnvinarayan deputed one of his brothers, by name Delmerden Sah, to govern the kingdom of Lelit Pa/tan, and he was in the actual government of it when I arrived at Nepal; but the nobles perceiving that Prifhwinarayan still continued to in* terrupt the tranquillity of the kingdom, they disclaimed all subjection to him, and acknowledged for their sovereign Delmerden Salt, who continued the war
some
afterwards they
Prifhwmaraydn : but some years even deposed Delmerden Sah, and elected in his room a poor man of Lelit Pattan, who was of royal origin.
in order to
possessing himself of the country, he was obliged to desist, and to take measures for the defence of his
own possessions; so that the king of Gorc'/ia, although he had been formerly a subject of Gainprejas, taking advantage of the dissentions which prevailed among
the other kings of Nepal, attached to his party
many
316
an account or
and
also
augment
their
4
*
authority
and im-
portance ; and if any of them were guilty of a breach of faith, he seized their country as he had done to the kings of Marecajis, although his relations.
king of Gore ha having already possessed himmountains which surround the plain of Nepal, began to descend into the flat country, imagining he should be able to carry on his operations with the same facility and success as had attended him on the hills; and, having drawn up his army before a town, containing about 8000 houses, situate upon a hill called Cirtipu?\ about a league's distance from Caf/wianJu, employed his utmost endeavours to get
self of all the
The
possession of
it.
The
no support from the king of LeJit Pattan, to whom they were subject, applied for assistance to Gainprejas, who immediatly marched with his whole army to their relief, gave battle to the army of the king of Gorc'ha, and obtained a complete victory. A brother of the king of Gotcha was killed on the field of battle ; and the king himself, by the assistance of good bearers, narrowly escaped with his life, by fleeing into the
After the action, the inhabitants of ClrtU pur demanded Gainprejas for their king, and the nobles of the town went to confer with him on the business, but, being all assembled in the same apart-
mountains.
ment with the king, they were all surprised and seized by his people. After the seizure of those persons, Gainprejas, perhaps to revenge himself of these nobles for havino- refused their concurrence to his nomination as
king, privately caused some of them to be put to death ; another, by name Danuvanta, was led through the city in a woman's dress, along with several others, clothed in a ridiculous and whimsical manner, at the expence of the nobles of Lelit Pattaru They were
317
then kept in close confinement for a long time. At last, after making certain promises, and interesting all the principal men, of the country in their behalf,
Gairiprejas set
them
at liberty.
The
ability to
stationed
any intercourse with Nepal; and his orders were most rigorously obeyed, for every person who was found in the road, with only a little salt or cotton about him, was hung upon a tree; and he caused all the inhabitants of a neighbouring village to be put to death in a most cruel manner (even the women and children did not escape) for having supplied a little cotton to the inhabitants of Nepal ; and, when I arrived in that country at the beginning of 1760, it was a most horrid spectacle to behold so many people hanging on the trees in the road. However the king of Gore ha being also disappointed in his expectations of gaining his end by this project, fomented dissentions among the nobles of the three kingdoms of Nepal, and attached to his party many of the principal ones, by holding forth to them liberal and enticing promises ; for which purpose he had about 2000 Brahmens in his service. When he thought he had acquired a party sufficiently strong, he advanced a second time with his army to Cirtipur, and laid seige to it on the north-west quarter, that he might avoid exposing his army between the two cities.oiCafhmahM and Lelit Pattan. After a siege of several months, the king of Gorc'ha demanded the regency of the town of Cirtipur^ when the commandant of the town, seconded by the approbation of the inhabitants, dis-' patched to him by an arrow a very impertinent and exasperating answer. The king of Gord'ha was so much enraged at this mode of proceeding, that he gave imto prevent
mountains
318
AN ACCOUNT
OF
mediate orders to all his troops to storm the town on but the inhabitants bravely defended it, so every side that all the efforts of his men availed him nothing ; and, when he saw that his army had failed of gaining the precipice, and that his brother, named Suruparatna, had f lien wounded by an arrow, he was obliged to raise the siege a second time, and to retreat with his army from Cirtipur. The brother of the king was atterwards cured of his wound by our father Michael An:
gelo,
who
is
at present in Bettia.
After the action, the king of Gore ha sent his army king of Lamji (one of the twenty-four kings who reign to the westward of Nepal) bordering upon his own kingdom of Gorc'ha. After many desperate engagements, an accommodation took place with the king of Lamji : and the king of Gorc'ha collecting all his forces, sent them for the third time to besiege Cirtipur ; and the army on this expedition was commanded by his brother Suruparatna. The inhabitants of Cirtipur defended themselves with their usual bravery, and, after a siege of several months, the
against the
three kings of Nepal assembled at Cafhmandu to march a body of troops to the relief of Cirtipur. One day in the afternoon they attacked some of the Tanas of the
Gcrc'hians, but did not succeed on forcing them, because the king of Gorc'has party had been reinforced by many of the nobility, who, to ruin Cainprejas, were The inhabitants willing to sacrifice their own lives. of Cirtipur having already sustained six or seven
siege, a noble of Lelit Pattim, called Dauuvanta, fled to the Gorc'ha party, and treacherously introduced their army into the town. The inhabitants might still have defended themselves, having many other fortresses in the upper parts of the town to retreat to ; but the people at Gore ha having pub-
months
lished
a general amnesty, the inhabitants, greatly exhausted by the fatigues of a long siege, surrendered
319
themselves prisoners upon the faith of that promise. In the mean time the men of Gore ha seized all the gates and fortresses within the town; but two days afrerwards Prifhwmarayan, who was at JSavacuta (a long day's journey distant) issued an order to Suruparatna his brother, to put to death all the principal inhabitants of the town, and to cut off the noses and lips of every one, even the infants, who were not found in the arms of their mothers ; ordering at the same time all the noses and lips, which had been cut off, to be preserved, that he might ascertain how many souls there were, and to change the name of the town into NaskatapHr, which signifies the town of cut -noses. The order was carried into execution with every mark of horror and cruelty, none escaping but those who could play on wind instruments ; although father Michael Angeh, who, without knowing that such an inhuman scene was then exhibited, had gone to the house of Suruparatna, and interceded much in favour of the poor inhabitants. Many of them put an end to their lives in despair ; others came in great bodies to us in search 0/ medicines ; and it was most shocking to see so many living people with their teeth and noses resembling the skulls of the deceased.
After the capture of Cirtlpur, Prit'hw'marayan dispatched immediately his army to lay siege to the great city of Leht Pattah. The Gorcliians surrounded hair the city to the westward with their Ta?ias ; and, my house being situated near the gate of that quarter, I was obliged to retire to Cat'Jimanrfu, to avoid being exposed to the fire of the besiegers. After many engagements between the inhabitants of the town of Le~ lit Pattern and the men of Gorc'ha, in which much blood was spilt on both sides, the former were disposed to surrender themselves, from the fear of having their noses cut off, like those dJTUirUpur^ and also their right hands a barbarity the Gore hums had threatened them with, unless they would surrender within
:
320
AN ACCOUNT OF
One night all the Gorch'ians quitted the five days. siegeof LelU Pattan to pursue the English army, which, under the command of Captain Kiriloch, had already taken SiduU, an important fort at the foot of the Nepal
hills, which border upon the kingdom of Tirhut : but Captain Kinloch not being able to penetrate the hills, either on the Siduli quarter or by the pass at Hereapur, in the kingdom of Macwanpur, the army of Gore' ha returned to Nepal to direct their operations against the city of Cafhmandu, where Gainprejas was, who had applied for succour to the English. During the siege of Cafhmandu the Brahmens ot Gorc'ha came almost every night into the city, to engage the chiefs of the people on the part of their king and the more effectually to impose upon poor Gainprejas, many ofthe principal Brah?nens went to his house, and told him to persevere with confidence, that the chiefs of the Gorc'ha army were attached to his cause, and that even they themselves would deliver up their kingPrif hwinarajan Having by these artifices procured an to his hands. opportunity of detaching from his party all his principal subjects, tempting them with liberal promises according to their custom, one night the men of Gorc'ha entered the city without opposition, and the wretched Gainprejas, perceiving he was betrayed, had scarce time to escape with about three hundred of his best and most faithful Hindustani troops towards Leht Pattan which place however he reached the same night.
;
'>
king of Gore ha having made himself master of in the year i 768, persisted in the attempt of possessing himself also of the city of Lelif Pattan, promising all the nobles that he would suffer them to remain in the possession of their property, that he would even augment it; and because the nobles of Lelit Pattan placed a reliance on the faith of his promises, he sent his domestic priest to make this protestation; that, if he
The
Cafhmandu
%2\
curses
his family
so that the unhappy Gainprejas and the king of Lelit Pattern, seeing that the nobility were disposed to render themselves subject
king of Gore ha, withdrew themselves with king of Bliatgan. When the city of Lelit Pattan became subject to the king of Gore* ha, he continued for some time to treat the nobility with great attention, and proposed to appoint a viceroy of Two or three months the city from among them. afterwards, having appointed the day for making his formal entrance into the city of Lelit Pattan, he made use of innumerable stratagems to get into his possession the persons of the nobility, and in the end succeeded. He had prevailed upon them to permit their sons to remain at court as companions of his son ; he had dispatched a noble of each house to Navacut, or
to the
their people to the
Fort, pretending that the apprehensions he entertained of them had prevented his making a public
New
and the remaining nobles town, where they went to meet him agreeably to a prior engagement. Afterwards he entered the city, made a visit to the temple of Baghero adjoining to our habitation, and passing in triumph thro' the city amidst immense numentrance
into
the
city
bers of soldiers
royal palace
;
who composed
his train,
tion in the mean time parties of his soldiers broke open the houses of the nobility, seized all their effects, and threw the inhabitants of the city into the utmost
consternation.
all
the nobles
who
power to be put to death, or rather their bodies to be mangled in a horrid manner, he departed with a design of besieging B'hatgan and we obtained permission, through the interest of his son, to
were
in his
;
retire
with
all
English,
322
AN ACCOUNT
OF
At the commencement of the year 1 769, the king of Gore ha acquired possession of the city of B hatgan, bv the same expedients to which he owed his former successes ; and on his entrance with his troops into the citv, Gaitiprejas, seeing he had no resource left to save
the king of Gore ha, and, at a s^all distance from his palanquin, received a wound in his foot, which a few T he king of days afterwards occasioned his d.ath. JLelitPattan was confined in irons till his death; and the king of B' hatgan, being very far advanced m fears, obtained leave to go and die at Benares. A short time afterwards the mother or Gamprejas also procured the same indulgence, having from old age already lost her eye sight ; but before her departure they took from her a necklace of jewels 'as she herself told me) when she arrived at Patna with the widow of her grandson : and I could not refrain from tears, when I beheld the misery and disgrace of this blind and unhappy queen.
king of Gore'ha, having thus in the space of four conquest of Nepal, made himself master also of the country cf the Ciratas to the east of it, and of other kingdoms, as far as the borders of Cock After his decease, his eldest son Pratap Sink Bihar. held the government of the whole country but scarcely two years after, on Pratap <wA's death, a younger
:
The
name Bahadur Sah, who resided then at Bettia with his uncle Dehnerdcn Sah, was invited to and the beginning of his accept of the government government was marked with many massacres. The royal family is in the greatest confusion, because the
brother, by
:
queen
.son,
government in the name of her she had by Pratap Sink ; and perhaps the oath violated by PriPfavinarayan will in the progress of time have its effect. Such have been the successors of the kingdoms of Nepal, of which Prit'hw'maray&ri
lays claim to the
whom
possession.
XVIII.
JOHN WILLIAMS,
ESQ^.
following ftatement of fads relative to the cure of persons bitten by snakes, selected from a number of cases which have come within my own knowledge, require no prefatory introduction, as it points out the means of obtaining the greateft self-
THE
human mind is capable of experiencThat of the preservation of the life of a fellowcreature, and snatching him from the jaws of death, by a method which every person is capable of availing Eau de Luce, I learn from many comhimself of. munications which I have received from different parts
gratification the
ing,
of
tr;e
alkali spirit
its
composition, it may not be so powerful, yet, as it rauft be given with water, it only requires to encrease the dose in proportion ; and, so long as it retains its milky white colour, it is sufficiently effisential oils in its
cacious.
From
part bitten
the effect of a ligature applied between the and the heart, it is evident that the poison
diffuses itself over the body by the returning venous blood ; destroying the irritability, and rendering the system paralytic. It is therefore probable that the volatile caustic alkali, in resisting the disease
of the poi-
much
as a specific in destroying
its quality, as by counteracting the effect on the system, by stimulating the fibres, and preserving that ir-
ritability
which
it
tends to destroy.
Vol.
II.
$i4
ON THE CURE OF
CASE
I.
In the month of August 1780, a servant of mine -was bitten in the heel, as he supposed, by a snake ; and in a few minutes was in great agony, with convulsions
Having
eff.-cts
of volatile
gave him about forty drops of Eau de Luce in water, and applied some of it to the part bitten. The dose was repeated every eight or ten minutes, till a small phialful was expended": it was near two hours before it could be said he was out of danger. A numbness and pricking sensation was perceived extending itself up to the knee, where a ligature was applied so tight, as to stop the returning venous b^ood, which seemingly checked the progress of the The foot and leg, up to where deleterious poison. the ligature was made, were stiffand painful for several fiaysj and, which appeared very singular, were covered with a branny scale.
such cases,
the
first
case in which
tried the
effects of the volatile alkali, and, apprehending that the essential oils in the composition of Eau de Luce, though made of the strong caustic volatile spirit, would considerably diminish its powers, I was induced, the next opportunity that offered, to try the effects of pure
volatile caustic
alkali
spirit,
and accordingly
sal
pre-
ammoniac of
country.
CASE
In July 1782, a
lived in
II.
Prayers and superstitious incantaby the Brahner.s abo-.'t her, till rts were practised became speechless and convulsed, with locked
32$
her mouth. On being informed of the accident, T immediately sent a servant with a bottle of the volatile caustic alkali spirit, of which he poured about a teaspoonful, mixed with water, down her throat, and applied some of it to the part bitten. The dose was repeated a few minutes after, when she was evidently better, and in about half an hour was perfectly re1
covered.
This accident happened in a small hut, where I saw* the snake, which was a middle-sized Cobra de CaThe Brahmens would not allow it to be killed. pello.
Jn the above case, no other means whatever were used
for the recovery of the patient than are here recited.
CASE.
A woman-servant
Benares, was
bitten in the foot
HI.
gentleman
for
at
in the family of a
by
a Cobra de Capello.
applied to
me
sixty
applied some of
the above case,
after it
I
was not witness to the deleterious efon the patient ; but saw the snake
was
killed.
CASE
bitten by a
IV.
In July 1784, the wife of a servant of mine was Cobra de Capello on the out-side of the little toe of her right foot. In a few minutes she became convulsed, particularly about the jaws and: throat, with a continued gnashing of the teeth. She at first complained of a numbness extending from the 2
326
ON THE CURE OF
ligature was applied to the drops of the volatile caustic spirit were given to her in water, by forcing open her mouth, which was strongly convulsed: in about seven minutes the dose was repeated, when the convulsions left her; and in three more she became sensible, and spoke to those who attended her. A few drops of the spirit had also been applied to the wound. The snake was killed and brought to me, which proved to be a Cobra de Capello.
About
sixty
CASE
As
is
it is
V,
venom of snakes
at
any
month of
hot,
for
when
no
having
fallen
:
of notice
bitten
by a snake on the
leg,
the accident happened in the evening, he could not see what species of snake it was.
As
immediately tied a ligature above the part bitten but was in a few minutes in such exquisite torture from pain, which extended up his body and to his head, that he soon became dizzy and senseless. On being informed of the accident, I sent my servant with a phial of the volatile caustic alkali, who found him, when he arrived, quite torpid, with the saliva running out of his mouth, and his jaws so fast locked, as to render it necessary to use an instrument to open them, and administer the medicine. About forty drops of the volatile caustic spirit were given to him in water, and applied to the wound and the same dose repeated a few minutes after. In about half an hour he was per",
He
327
I examining on one could discover the marks of three flings ; two side, and one on the other and, from the distance they were asunder, I should judge it a large snake. More than ten minutes did not appear to have elapsed from the time of his being bitten till the medicine was administered. The wounds healed immediately, and he was able to attend to his duty the next day. Though the specie&of snake was not ascertained, yet I judge, from the flow of saliva from the mouth, convulsive spasms of the jaws and throat, as well as from the marks of three fangs, that it must have been a Cobra de Capello and, though I have met with five and
On
of that species, I never observed the marks of more than two having been applied in biting in any other case which came within my knowledge.
six fangs of different sizes in snakes
CASE
VI.
In September 1786, a servant belonging to Captain who was then at Benares, was bitten in the He saw the snake leg by a large Cobra de Capello. coming towards him, with his neck spread out in a
very tremendous manner, and endeavoured to avoid ; but, before he could get out of his way, the snake seized him by the leg, and secured his hold for some time, as if he had not been able to extricate his Application was immediately made to his masteeth. ter for a remedy, who sent to consult me; but, before I arrived, had given him a quantity of sweet oil, which he drank. So soon as I saw him, I directed the usual dose of volatile caustic alkali to be given, which fortunately brought away the oil from his stomach, or it is probable that the stimulating effect of the volatile spirit would have been so much blunted by it, as to have become inefficacious a second dose was immediately administered, and some time after, a third,
him
328
ON THE CURE OF
recovered in the course of a few hour?.
The man
oil
is
As
frequently administered as a remedy in the bite of snakes, I think it necessary to caution against the u:e of it with the volatile alkali, as it blunts the sti-
spirit,
and renders
it
useless.
Of the numerous species of snakes which I have met with, not above six were provided with prisonous fangs; though I have eXimined^nany which have
been considered by the natives as/dangerous, without being able to discover any thing noxious in them.
The following
,of
is
effect
species or the
Boa,
ich
I
:
CASE
On
to
VII.
the
6th Septejnber 1788, a man was brought bitten by a snake, with the marks
of two fangs on two of his toes ; he was said to have been bitten above an hour before I saw him he was perfectly sensible, but complained of great pain in I immethe parts bitten, with an unusual languor. diately gave him thirty drops of the volatile caustic alkali spirit in water, and applied some of it to the wounds. In a few minutes he became easier, and in about half an hour was carried away by his friends, with perfect confidence in his recovery, without having taken a second dose cf the medicine, which indeed did not appear to have been necessary ; but, whether from the effect of the bite of the snake, or the motion of the dooly on which he was carried, I know not but. he became sick at the stomach, threw up the medicine, and died in about a quarter of an hour after. The man said that the snake came up to him
:
329
while he was sitting on the ground ; and that he put himawav with his hand once, but that he turned about and bit him, as described. 1 he snake was brought to me, which I examined it was about two feet and a half long, of a lightish brown colour on the back, a white belly, and annulated from end to end with 208 abdominal, and forty-six tail scuta. I have met with se:
veral of
in length
them from thirteen inches to near three feet it had two poisonous fangs in the upper
:
jaw, which lay naked, with their points without the upper lip. It does not spread its neck, like the Cobra de Capello) when enraged ; but is very active and quick in its motion.
have seen instances of persons bitten by snakes, so long without assistance, that, when they have been brought to me, they have not been able to swallow, from convulsions of the throat and fauces, which is, I observe, a constant symptom of the bite of the Qobra de Cafiello: and indeed I have had many persons brought to me who had been dead some time ; but never knew an instance of the volatile caustic alkali failing in its effect, where the patient has been able to swallow it,
I
Y4
XIX.
ASIATIC SOCIETY.
tract of a letter
honour to present you with an exfrom Mr. Alexander Davidson, late Governor of Madras, giving an account of some Roman Coins and Medals lately found near Nelore, together with a drawing of them, copied from one transmitted by Mr. Davidson which, I imagine, may be
I
HAVE
the
-,
servant.
DAVIS.
March io 7
1788.
12, 1787.
his plough was obstructed by some, he dug, and discovered the remains of a small Hindu temple, under which a little pot was found with Roman coins and medals of the second
century.
He sold them as old gold ; and many no doubt were melted, but the Nawab Amirul Umara recovered upwards of thirty of them. This happened while I was governor; and I had the choice of two out of the whole. I chose an Adrian and Faustina.
Some of
the Trojans were in
good
preservation.
:
Many of the
they were
all
of the purest gold, and many of'them as fresh and beautiful as if they had come from the mint but yesterday. Some were much defaced and perforated, and had probably been worn as orna-
information respecting them from the young if my name be necessary to authenticate the facts I have related, you have my permission to use it.
my
Nawab ; and
XX.
ON TWO HINDU
FESTIVALS,
AND THE
INDIAN SPHINX.
BY THE LATE COLONEL PEARSE,
MAY
12,
1785.
leave to point out to the Society, the Sunday before last was the festival of
BEG
all
that
Bha-
'vani,
which
is
annually
celebrated by
the
Gopas
and
other Hindus
cattle for
use or profit. On this feast they visit gardens, erect a pole in the fields, and adorn it with pendants and garlands. The Sunday before last was our first of May, on (vhich the same rites are performed by the same class of people in England, where it is well known to be a relique of ancient superstition in that country : it should seem, therefore, that the religion of the east and the old religion of Britain had a strong affinity. Bhavani has another festival ; but that is not kept by any one set of Hindus in particular, and this is appropriated to one class of people. This is constantly held on the ninth of Baisac'h ; which does not always fall on our first of May, as it did this year. Those members of the Society who are acquainted
with, the rules which regulate the festivals, may be able to give better information concerning this point. I only mean to point out the resemblance of the rites
performed here and in England, but must leave abler hands to investigate the matter further, if it should be thought deserving of the trouble. I find that the festival which I have mentioned, is one of the most
ancient
among
the Hindus,
334
II.
oN
During the
of every class, one subject of diversion is to send people on errands and expeditions, that are to end in disappointment, and raise a laugh The Huli is alat the expence of the person sent. ways in March, and the last day is the greatest holiday. All the Hindus who are on that day at Jaggannafh, are entitled to certain distinctions, which they hold to be of such importance, that I found it expedient to stay there till the end of the festival ; and I am of opinion, and so are the rest of the officers, that I saved above five hundred men by the delay. The origin of the Hull seems lost in antiquity ; and I have not been able to pick up the smallest account
reign
among Hindus
of
it.
May-day show any affinity between England in times past and that of the Hindus in these times, may not the custom of making sffril-foo/sy on the first of that month, indicate some
If the rites of
the religion of
I have never yet heard any actraces of the Huli P count of the origin of the English custom ; but it is unquestionably very ancient, and is still kept up even in great towns, though less in them than in the country. With us it is chiefly confined to the lower classes of people ; but in India high and low join in it ; and the late Shujaul Dau/ah, lam told, was very fond of making Huli fools, though he was a Muselman of the highest rank. They carry it here so far, as to send letters making appointments, in the names of persons who, it is known, must be absent from their house at the and the laugh is always in proportion time fixed on
;
At Jagannafh I found the Sphinx of the Eyp*> and presen: the Society with a drawing of it. Murari Pandit, who was deputy Faujdar of Balasor, attended my detachment on the part of the Mahrattas,
III.
flans,
335
He
the principal Fan/Jar, and is much of the a man of learning, and very intelligent. From him I learned that the Sphinx, here called Singh, is to appear at the end of the world, and, as soon as he is born, will prey on an elephant. He is, therefore, figured seizing an elephant in his claws ; and the elephant is made small, to show that the Singh, even a moment after his birth, will be very large in proporis
now
gentleman
tion to
it.
When
told
Murari
worshipped
God by
a black
tongue, and that they adored birds diately exclaimed, " their religion then was the same " with ours ; for we also chuse our sacred bulls by the (l same marks ; we reverence the hansa, the garura, and " other birds; we respect the pippal and the i<ata
" among trees, and the tulast among shrubs; but as " for onions (which 1 had mentioned) they are eaten " by low men, and are fitter to be eaten than wor" shipped."
but a Lion, such as Mr. Hastings kept near his garden. The Huli, called Holaca in the Vedas, and P'halgutsai-a in common Sanscrit books, is the festival of the vernal season, or JSauruz of the Persians.
A.A.JL.
A SHORT DESCRIPTION OF
CARNICOBAR,
BY MR. G. HAMILTON.
THE
island, of which I propose to give a succinct account, is the northernmost of that cluster in the Bay of Bengal, which goes by the name of t\\z<Nicobars. It is low, of a round figure, about fort}' miles rn circumference, and appears at a distance as if entirely cohowever, there are several wel] vered with trees
:
upon
it.
The
soil
is
black kind of clay, and marshy. It produces in great abundance, and with little care, most of the tropical fruits, such as pine-apples, plantains, papayas, cocoanuts, and areca-nuts ; also excellent yams, and a root
called cachu.
only four-footed animals upon the and an animal of the lizard kiad, but large, called by the natives tolonam; these frequently carry off fowls and chickens. The only kind of poultry are hens, and those not in great
island are hogs, dogs, large rats,
The
plenty.
different kinds
abundance of snakes, of many and the inhabitants frequently die of The timber upon the island is of many their bites. sorts, in great plenty, and some of it remarkably large,
are
;
There
The natives are low in stature, bur very well made, and surprizingly active and strong; they are coppercoloured, and their features have a cast of the Malay,
quite the reverse of elegant.
ticular, are
The women,
in par-
extremely ugly. The men cut their hair short, and the women have their heads shaved quite bare, and wear no covering but a short petticoat, made of a sort of rush or dry grass, which reaches halfway down the thigh. This grass is not interwoven, but hangs round the person something like the thatching of a house. Such of them as have received presents
3S3
A SHORT DESCRIPTION
of cloth-petticoats from the ships, commonly tie them round immediately under the arms. The men wear nothing but a narrow strip of cloth about the middle, in which they wrap up their privkies so tight, that The ears of there hardly is any appearance of them. both sexes are pierced when young, and by squeezing into the holes large plugs of wood, or hanging heavy weights of shells, they contrive to render them They are natuwide, and disagreeable to look at. rally disposed to be good humoured and gay, and are very fond of sitting at table with Europeans, where and they they eat every thing that is set before them They do not care much for eat most enormously. wine, but will drink bumpers of arrack as long as they can see. A great part of their time is spent in feastWhen a feast is held at any viling and dancing. lage, every one that chuses goes uninvited, for they At those feasts they are utter strangers 10 ceremony. eat immense quantities of pork, which is their favourTheir hogs are remarkably fat, being fed ite food. upon the cocoa-nut kernel and sea-water indeed all their domestic animals, fowls, dogs, he. are fed upon the same. They have likewise plenty of small sea-fish, which they strike very dexterously with lances, wading They are sure of killinto the sea about knee deep.
;
:
fish
at ten
pork almost raw, giving it only a hasty They roast a fowl, by rungrill over a quick fire. ning a piece of wood through it, by way of spit, and holding it over a brisk fire, until the feathers are burnt off, when it is ready for eating, in their taste. They never drink water ; only cocoa-nut milk and a liquor called soura, which oozes from the cocoa-nut
They
eat the
off the
young
sprouts or flowers.
it is used, and which quality they add then it is intoxicating, to much by their method of drinking it, by sucking After eating, the it slowly through a small straw.
This they
suffer to
ferment before
OF
CAH\T ICOJ3AR,
339
go
to dancing,
smoking
The
dancers,
while performing, sing some of their tunes, which are far from wanting harmony, and to which they keep exact time. Of musical instruments they have only one kind, and that the simplest. It is a hollow bamboo about 2| feet long and three inches in diameter ; along the outside of which there is stretched from end to end a single string made of the threads of a split cane ; and the place under the string is hollowed a This instrument little, to prevenc it from touching. upon in the same manner as a guitar. It is is played capable of producing but few notes ; the performer however makes it speak harmoniously, and generally accompanies it with the voice.
What they know of physic is small and simple. I had once occasion to see an operation in surgery performed on'the toe of ayoung girl, who had been stung by a scorpion or centipee. The wound was attended with a considerable swelling, and the little patient seemed in great pain. One of the natives produced the under jaw of a small fish, which was long, and planted with two rows of teeth as sharp as needles taking this in one hand, and a small stick by way of
hammer
in the other, he struck the teeth three or four times into the swelling, and made it bleed freely the toe was then bound up with certain leaves, and next
:
villages of fifteen or
upon the beach in twenty houses each ; and each house contains a family of twenty persons and upwards. These habitations are raised upon wooden pillars, about ten feet from the ground ; they are round and, having no windows, look like bee - hives, covered with
Their houses
are generally built
Vol.
II,
34
thatch.
A SHORT DISCRETION
The entry is through a trap - door below, where the family mount by a ladder, which is drawn up at night. This manner of building is intended to secure the houses from being infested with snakes and rats ; and for that purpose the pillars are bound round with a smooth kind of leaf, which prevents animals from being able to mount; besides which, each pillar has a broad round flat piece of wood near the top of it, the projecting of which effectually prevents the further progress of such vermin as may have passed the leaf. The flooring is made with thin strips of bamboos, laid at such distances from one another as to leave free admission for light and air and the inside is neatly finished and decorated with fishing lances, nets, &c.
The
known
have
is
art
to
is
;
got from the ships that come to trade in cocoaIn exchange for their nuts (which are reckoned the finest in this part of India) they will accept of but few articles ; what they chiefly wish for is cloth of different colours, hatchets and hanger-blades, which they use in cutting down the nuts. Tobacco and arrack they
nuts. are very fond of; but expect these in presents.
They
any
have no money of
their
own, nor
value to the coin of other countries, further than as they happen to fancy them for ornaments ; the young
strings
of dollars about
However, they are good judges of gold and silver ; and it is no easy matter to impose baser metals upon them as such.
They purchase a much larger quantity of cloth This is than is consumed upon their own island. Choury is a small intended for the Choury market. island to the southward of theirs, to which a large fleet of their boats sails every year about the month of November, to exchange cloth for canoes ; for they
OF CARNICOBAR.
341
cannot make these themselves. This voyage they perform by the help of the sun and stars, for they know nothing of the compass. In their disposition there are two remarkable qualiOne is their entire neglect of compliment and ceremony, and the other, their aversion to dishonesty.
ties.
Carnicobarian travelling to a distant village upon business or amusement, passes through many towns If in his way without perhaps speaking to any one.
he is hungry or tired, he goes up into the nearest house, and helps himself to what he wants, and sits till he is rested, without taking the smallest notice of any of the family, unless he has business or news to commuTheft or robbery is so very rare amongst nicate. them, that a man going out of his house, never takes away his ladder, or shuts his door, but leaves it open for any body to enter that pleases, without the least apprehension of having any thing stolen from him. Their intercourse with strangers is so frequent, that they have acquired in general the barbarous language of the Portuguese, so common over India ; their own tongue has a sound quite different from most others, their words being pronounced with a kind of stop,
The few folor catch in the throat, at every syllable. lowing words will serve to shew those who are acquainted with other Indian languages, whether there is any similitude between them.
Kegonia
Kecanna.
Chu.
Ayelaur.
-dpp
To To
To
eat,
Gwa.
Okk.
T'oivla.
drink,
Yams,
weep,
Poing.
canoe,
A pine-apple, Frwig,
342
A SHORT DESCRIPTION
house,
fowl,
A A A
Jlbanum.
To
sleep,
Loom hum,
T'amam.
hog,
Hayam. Hown.
Ka.
dog,
Fire,
T amia.
y
Fish,
Rain,
Koomra.
but they believe fear. In every village there is a high pole erected with long strings of ground-rattans hanging from it, which, it is said, has the virtue to keep him at a distance. When they see any signs of an approaching storm, they imagine that the Devil intends them a visit; upon which many superstitious ceremonies are performed. The people of every village march round their own bounnotion of a
;
They have no
God
him from
daries,
split at
and
fix
up
at different distances
small sticks
they put a piece of cocoa-nut, a wisp of tobacco, and the leaf of a certain plant. Whether this is meant as a peace-offering
the top,
into
split
which
him away,
possessed
moveable thing he buried with him ; and his death is mourned by the whole village. In one view, this is an excellent custom, seeing it prevents all disputes about the property of the deceased amongst his relations. His wife must conform to custom, by having a joint cut off from one of her fingers ; and, if she refuses this, she must submit to have a deep notch cut in one of the pillars of her house.
and
in short every
is
was once present at the funeral of an old woman, When we went into the house, which had belonged to the deceased, we found it full of her female relations some of them were employed in wrapping up the
I
OF
CARMKOBA*.
343
corpse In leaves and cloth, and others tearing to pieces In another the cloth which had belonged to her. house hard by, the men of the village, with a great many others from the neighbouring towns, were sitting drinking soura and smoking tobacco. In the mean time tw o stout young fellows were busy digging a grave in the sand near the house. When the woman had done with the corpse, they set up a most hideous howl, upon which the people began to assemble round the grave, and four men went up into the house to bring down the body; in doing this they were much interrupted by a young man, son to the deceased, who endeavoured with all his might to prevent them, but finding it in vain, he clung round the body, and was carried to the grave along with it there, after a violent struggle, he was turned away, and conducted back to the house. The corpse now put into the grave, and the lashings which bound the legs and arms cut, all the live stock which had been the property of the deceased, consisting of about half a dozen hogs and as many fowls, was killed, and flung in above it. man then approached with a bunch of leaves stuck upon the end of a pole, which he swept two or three times gently .^long the corpse, and then the grave was filled up. During the ceremony, the women continued to make the most horrible vocal concert imaginable the men said nothing. few days afterwards, a kind of monument was erected over the grave, with a pole upon it, to which long strips of cloth of different colours were hung.
all
r
Polygamy is not known among them ; and their punishment of adultery is not less severe than effectual. They cut, from the man's offending member, a piece of the foreskin proportioned to the frequent commission or enormity of the crime.
There seems
lity.
to subsist
among them
3
a perfect equalittle
344
more
respect paid to them ; but there is no appearance Their society seems of authority one over another.
bound
ferred
ties.
rather by mutual obligations continually conthe simplest and best of all and received
:
The
inhabitants of the
Andamans
are said to be
people of Carnicobar have a tradition among them, that several conoes came from Andaman many years ago, and that the crews were all armed, and committed great depredations, and killed several of the Nicobarians. It appears at firft remarkable, that there should be such a wide difference between the manners of the inhabitants of islands so near to one another j the Andamans being savage Cannibals^ and the others, the most harmless inoffensive people possible. But it is accounted for by the following historical anecdote, which, I have been assured, is Shortly after the Portuguese had dismatter of fact. covered the passage to India round the Cape of Good Hope, one of their ships, on board of which were a number of Mozambique negroes, was lost on the Andaman islands, which were till then uninhabited. The the blacks remained on the island and settled there Europeans made a small shallop, in which they sailed to Pegu. On the other hand, the Nicobar islands were peopled from the opposite main and the coast of Pegu ; in proof of which, the Nicobar and Pegu languages are said, by those acquainted with the latter, to have much resemblance.
Cannibals.
:
The
XXII.
THE
not the only, obstacle to the progress of knowledge in these provinces, except in those branches of it which belong immediately to our several professions, is our want of leisure for general researches ; and, as Archimedes, who was happily
greatest-, if
master of his time, had not space enough to move the greatest weight with the smallest force, thus we, who have ample space for our inquiries, really want " Give me a place to time for the pursuit of them. iC stand oa, said the great mathematician, and I will " move the whole earth :" Give us time, we may say,
we
will transfer to
Europe
and
literature of Asia.
" Not
to have despaired," however, was thought a degree of merit in the Roman General, even though he was defeated; and, having some hope that others may
occasionally find
least in
more
leisure
than
it
will ever, at
this
country, be
my
lot to enjoy, I
take the
liberty to propose a
may
be derived.
Some hundreds of plants, which are yet imperfectly known to European botanists, and with the virtues of
which they are wholly unacquainted, grow wild on the plains and in the forests of India. The Amarcosh, an excellent vocabulary of the Sanscrit language, contains in one chapter the names of about three hundred medicinal vegetables
;
the Medini
may com-
Z4
346
prize
THE DESIGN
many more
;
OF A TREATISE
tionary of Natural Productions, includes, I believe, a far greater number ; the properties of which are distinctly related in medical tracts of
approved authority. on the plants of India, should be to write their true names in Roman letters, according to the most accurate orthography, and in Sanscrit preferably to any vulgar dialect
step, in
compiling a
treatise
because a learned language is fixed in books, while popular idioms are in constant fluctuation, and will not perhaps, be understood a century hence by the inhabitants of these Indian territories, whom future botanists may consult on the common appellations of trees and flowers. The child! sh denominations of plants from the persons who first described them, ought wholly to be rejected ; for Champaca and H'mna seem to me not only more elegant, but far properer, designations of an Indian and an Arabian plant, than Michelia and JLawsoma ; nor can I see without pain, that the great Swedish botanist considered it as the supreme and only reward of labour in this part of natural history, to preserve a name by hanging it on a blossom, and that he de lared this mode of promoting and adorning botany, worthy of being continued with holy reverence, though so high an honour, he says, ought to be conferred with chaste reserve, and not prostituted for the purpose of conciliating the good-will, or eternizing the memory, of am but his chosen followers ; no, not even of saints. His list of an hundred and fifty such names, clearly shows that his excellent works are the true basis of his just celebrity, which would have been feebly supported by the stalk of the Littpcea. From what proper name but it the Plantain is called Musa, I do not know seems to be the Dutch pronunciation of the Ara;
bic word for that vegetable, and ought not, therefore, to have appeared in his list ; though, in my opinion, it As to the is the only rational name in the muster-roll.
system of Lmn<iis, it is the system of Nature, subordinate indeed to the beautiful arrangement of natural
; ;
ON THE VLu
orders, of
NTs
- >
OF INDIA.
347
which may
which he hath given a rough sketch, and but the hereafter, perhaps, be completed
:
number, length, and position of the stamens and pistils, and of those classes into kinds and species, according to certain marks of discrimination, will ever be found the clearest and most convenient of methods, and should therefore be studiously observed in the work which I now suggest; but [ must be forgiven, if I propose to reject the Linn&an appellations of the twenty-four classes, because, although they appear to be Greek (and, if they really were so, that alone might be thought a sufficient objection) yet in truth they are not Greek, nor even formed by analogy to the language of Grecians ; for Polygamos, Monandros, and the rest of that form, are both masculine and feminine ; Polyandra, in the abstract, never occurs, and Polyandrion means a public cemitery j dicecia and hiacus are not found in books of authority nor, if they were, would they be derived from dis, but from dia, which would include the tri&cia ; let me add
and
ill
distin-
guished by their appellations, independently of other exceptions to them, since the real distinction between them consists not so much in the number of their (tamens, as in the place where they are inserted ; and that the fourteenth and fifteenth are not more accurately discriminated by two words formed in defiance of grammatical analogy, since there are but two powers, or two diversities of'length in each of those classes. Calycopolyandros might, perhaps, not inaccurately denote a flower of the twelfth class ; but such a compound would still savour of barbarism or pedantry and the best way to amend such a system of words is to efface it, and supply its place by a more simple Numerals nomenclator, which may easily be found. may be used for the eleven first classes, the former of two numbers being always appropiated to the stamens, and the latter to the pistils. Short phrases, as on th
- of
548
'
THE
DESIC^
C.
y. t
TREATISE
two
long, four long from
one base, from two or many bases, with anthers connected, on the pistils, in two flowers, in two distinct plants, mixed, concealed, or the like, will answer every pur-
pose of discrimination
but
do not
offer this as
perfect substitute for the words, which I condemn. The allegory of sexes &nd nuptials, even if it were complete, ought, I think, to be discarded, as unbecoming the gravity of men, who, while they search for truth, can have no business to inflame their imaginations
and, while they profess to give descriptions, have noFew passages in Aloisia, thing to do with metaphors.
the most impudent book ever composed by man, are more wantonly indecent than the hundred- forty-sixth number of the Botanical Philosophy, and the broad
comment of its grave author, who dares, like Oc lavim in his epigram, to speak with Roman simplicity ; nor can the Linncean description of the Arum, and many other plants, be read in English without exciting ideas which the occasion does not require. Hence
that no well-born and well-educated woman can be advised to amuse herself with botany as it is now explained, though a more elegant and delightful study, or one more likely to assist and embellish other female accomplishments, could not possibly be recommended.
it is
When the Sanscrit names of the Indian plants have been correctly written in a large paper-book, one page being appropriated to each, the fresh plants themselves, procured in their respective seasons, must be concisely, but accurately, classed and described; after which their several uses in medicine, diet, or manufactures, may be collected with the assistance of Hindu physicians, from the medical books in Sanscrit, and their accounts either disapproved or established by repeated experiments, as fast as they can be made with exactness.
OK THE
Indian plants
;
i*
L ANTF
I
INDIA.
349
By way of example,
but
1
am
of which
MUCHUCUNDA.
Twenty, fron One Base.
;
Cal.
Five-parted, thicl
leafleats
oblong.
Cor.
St am.
five
From
shorter,
sterile.
stamens longer.
Pist.
Style cylindric.
Perk.
Seeds.
Uses.
Leaves.
flower, steeped i whole night in a glass of waforms a cooling mucilage, of use in virulent gonorrhoeas, The Muohucunda, called also Pichuca, is its calyx is covered with an exquisitely fragrant odoriferous dust ; and the dried flowers in fine powder, taken as snuff, are said, in a Sanscrit book, almost instantaneously to remove a nervous head-ach.
ter,
One
Note.
This plaat
differs a little
fetes of Linnteus.
II.
BILVA, or
MALURA.
md
One.
Many on
Cal.
the Receptacle,
Four or
35O
THE
T>I.ilG1V O.
-u or *
TAEATtSE
Four or five petals j mostly reflex. Cor, Forty to forty - eight filaments ; anthers Stam. mostly erect. Pist. Germ> roundish; Style smooth, short ; Stigma clubbed. A spheroidal berry, very large; manyPeric,
seeded.
Seeds,
Toward
the :urface
ovate,
in
a pellucid
mucus.
Leaves. Ternate ; corrmon petiole long; leaflets subovate j obtusely notdied with short petioles ; some almost lanced. Armed with sha-p thorns. Stem,
Uses.
taste
The
fruit
nutritious,
warm,
:
cathartic
its
in
aperient
and detersive
bitual costiveness,
for
some
This fruit is called Srip'hala, because it Note, sprang, say the Indian poets from the milk of Sri, the Goddess of Abundance, wlo bestowed it on mankind at the request of Iswara, vhence he alone wears a chaplet of Btlva flowers : to him only the Hindus offer them ; and, when they see any of them fallen on the ground, they take them up with reverence,
and
of
that
carry
them
to his temple.
I
From
the
I
could inspect,
belonged to the same class with the Durio, because the filaments appeared tc be distributed in five sets ; but in all that I have since examined, they are
perfectly distinct.
III.
SRINGATACA.
Four and One.
Cal.
Cor,
Fou
petals.
3$I
Anthers kidrey-shaped.
Genu roundish
Stigma clubbed.
Style long, as
the
fila-
ments
Nut with four opposite angles (two of them Seed. sharp thorns) formed by the Calyx. Leaves. Those which float on the water are rhomboidal ; the two upper sides unequally notched,
up by
ders.
the two lower, right lines. Their petioles buoyed spindle-shaped spongy substances, not bladRoot.
Uses,
and delicacy, mucus, secreted by minute glands, covers the wet leaves, which are consifresh kernel, in sweetness
The
dered as cooling.
Note.
riicus.
It
IV.
UT
ARA
J A.
Perk.
two seeds.
Stem.
Uses.
Armed.
The
one of them, bruised and given in two ; doses, will, as the Hindus assert, cure an intermittent
nic
since
fever.
V.
MADHUCA.
Many,
not
(See Vol.
1.
page 300J
Cal.
leaved.
352
One-petaled. Tube inflated, fleshy. Bor* Cor. der nine) or ten, parted. Anthers from twelve to twenty-eight, erect, St am.
acute, subvillcus.
Pist.
Germ roundish
;S tyle long,
awl-shaped.
Peric.
A
The
Leaves.
Uses.
yielding,
an inebriating spirit, which, if the sale of it were duly restrained by law, might be applied to good purposes. A useful oil is expressed from the
by
distillation,
seed.
Note.
It
Such would be the method of the work which 1 recommend but even the specimen which I exhibit, might, in skilful hands, have been more accurate.
;
Engravings of the plants may be annexed ; but I have more than once experienced, that the best anatomical and botanical prints give a very inadequate, and sometimes a very false notion of the objects which they were intended to represent. As we learn a new language by reading approved compositions in it with the aid of a Grammar and Dictionary, so we can
only study with effect the natural history of vegetables by analysing the plants themselves with the Philosophia Botanica, which is the Grammar, and the Genera et Species Plantarum, which may be considered as the
Dictionary of that beautiful language, in which Nature would teach us what plants we must avoid as noxious,
as salutary
for that
of plants are in some degree connected with the natural orders and classes of them, a number of instances would abundantly prove.
the qualities
XXIII.
General Carnac
most willingly
present to you
my obser-
animals, of which we have a print, with a very short account, in the First Volume of the Transactions of the Asiatic Society. The animal, from which that likeness has been taken, was sent by Mr. Leslie, from Chitra, to the President Sir William Jones. It is distinguished in the Transactions by a name, which I do not at present remember 5 but probably the animal is of the same genus with the Manis, as described in the former edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, or, perhaps, not different from the Pangolin of Bujfon.
The
of
makes
it
unnecessary for
its
me
to
external figure
and appearance. There are on each foot five claws, of which the outer and inner are small when compared with the other three. There are no distinct toes; but each nail is moveable by a joint at its root. This creature is extremely inoffensive it has no teeth; and its feet are unable to grasp. Hence it would appear
:
it
nied
the powers
some regard
354
its
oh THE DISSECTION
fellow-creatures.
The
;
nails
are
well
adapted
ground
its
terous in eluding
holes and
among
rocks, that
is
extremely
difficult
to procure one.
is
though apparently not at all suited to any purposes of mastication, may, by increasing the surface of the palate, extend the sense of taste.
The
oeso-
phagus admitted my fore-finger with ease. The tongue at the bottom of the month is nearly about the size of the little finger, from whence it tapers to a point.
The
animal
at pleasure
protrudes this
member
arises
a great
way from
belly,
the mouth.
The tongue
from the
ensiform cartilage, and the contiguous muscles of the and passes in form of a round distinct muscle from over the stomach, through the thorax, immediately under the sternum ; and interior to the windWhen dissected out, the tongue pipe in the throat. could be easily elongated so as to reach more than the There is length of the animal, exclusive of its tail. a cluster of salivary glands seated around the tongue,
mouth. These will necessarily be it enters the compressed by the action of the tongue, so as occasionally to supply a plentiful flow of their secretion.
as
The stomach
is
cartilaginous,
and analogous
to that
It was filled with of the gallinaceous tribe of birds. and gravel, which in this part of the small stones
The incountry, are almost universally calcareous. the stomach was rough to the feel, and ner surface of formed into folds, the interstices of which were The guts were filled filled with a frothy secretion. pulp, in which, however, were interspersed with a sandy No vestiges of any ania few distinct small stones. vegetable food could be traced in the whole mal or The gall-bladder was distended with a f>rima via*
OF
fluid,
THE PANGOLIN.
35$
resembling of beer.
in
The
its
The
Forcibly struck with the phenomena which this my imagination at once overleaped the boundaries by which science endeavours to circumscribe the production* and the ways of Nature ; and believing with Buffon, que tout ce qui did not hesitate to conjecture that this >peut etre est, animal might possibly derive its nourishment from mineral substances. This idea I accordingly hazarded in an address to Colonel Kyd. The spirit of inquiry, natural to that gentleman, could be ill satisfied byideas thrown out apparently at random ; and he soon called on me to explain my opinion, and its foundation.
quadruped exhibited,
Though we have perhaps no clear idea of the manner in which vegetables extract their nourishment from earth, yet the fact being so, it may not be unreasonable to suppose that some animal may
derive nutriment by a process somewhat similar. It appears to me, that facts produced by Spallanzani directly invalidate the experiments, from which he has
drawn the inference, that fowls swallow stones merely from stupidity ; and that such substances are altogether unnecessary to those animals. He reared fowls, without permitting them ever to swallow sand or stones ; but he also established the fact, that car-
nivorous animals may become frugivorous j and herbivorous animals may come to live on flesh. A woodpidgeon he brought to thrive on putrid meat. The experiment on fowls, then, only corroborates the proof, that we have it in our power by habits to alter the natural constitution of animals. Again the eminent investigator of truth found, that fowls died when fed
Vol,
II,
Aa
$$b
0K THE DISSECTION
stones alone ; but surely that fact is far short of proving that such substances are not agreeable to the original purposes of nature in the digestive process of When other substances shall have these animals. been detected in the stomach ot this animal, my inference, from what I have seen, must necessarily fall to the ground. But if, like other animals with muscular and cartilaginous stomachs, this singular quadruped consumes grain, it must be surprising that no veftige of such food was found present in [he whole alimentary canal, since in that thinly inhabited country, he wild animals are free to feed without intrusion from man. Nor can it be inferred from the structure of the stomach, that this animal lives on ants or on insects. Animals devoured as^ food, though of considerable size and solidity, with a proporrionably small extent of surface to be acted on by the gastric juice and the action of the stomach, are readily dissolved find digested by animals possessing not a cartilaginous, but a membranaceous stomach ; as for instance, a frog in that of a snake,
i
on
Jn the stomach many minerals are soluble, and the most active tlvmgs which we can swallow. Calcareous
subsianccs are readily acted on. Dr. Priestly has asked, " May nrt phlogistic matter be the most es<' senti.il part of the food and support of both vege'' animal table and bodies?" I confess, that Dr. Priesttys finding cause to propose the question, inclines me to suppose that the affirmative to it may Earth seems to be the basis of all animal be true. master. The growth of the bones must beattended with a constant supplv ; and in the human species there is a copious discharge of calcareous matter thrown out by the kidneys and salivary glands. May not the quadruped in question derive phlogiston from earth? salt, from mineral substances? And, as it is not deprived c; the power of drinking water,
OP THE PANGOLIN.
357
what
else
is
poreal machine
Considering the scaly covering of this animal, we conceive that it may be at least necessary for its existence, on that account, to imbibe a greater proportion of earth than is necessary to other animals. It may deserve consideration, that birds are covered with feathers, which in their constituent principles approach to the nature of horn and bone. Of these animals the gallinaceous tribe swallow stones ; and the carnivorous take in the feathers and bones of their prey the latter article is known to be soluble in the membranaceous stomachs ; and hence is a copious supply of the earthy principles. In truth, I do not know that any thing is soluble in the stomach of animals, which may not be thence absorbed into their circulating system ; and nothing can be so absorbed without affecting the whole constitution.
may
to the Colonel
have here stated is all that I could advance but my opinion has been since not a ; little confirmed, by observing the report of experiment's by M. BruquateUi of Pavia, on the authority of M. CrelU by which we learn, that some birds have
I
What
so great a dissolvent
dissolve in
their
power
shells.
stomachs
rock-crystal, cal-
I beg only farther to observe, that some things in Buffons description of the Pangolin, not apparently quite applicable to this animal, might have been owing to his description being only from the view of a dried preparation, in which the organs of generation would be obliterated, and the dugs shrivelled away so as to be imperceptible; else that elegant philosopher co&|d not have asserted that, " tons les anhnaux qua-
"impedes,
Aa
358
-
which is only in me the neof my superficial knowledge of In ingenuousness, however, I hope that I things. am not inferior to any man and I am proud to sub-
Excuse
my
prolixity,
cessary attendant
scribe myself,
Sir,
Your most
ADAM
Oya
>
BURT.
A Letter from
DEAR
SIR,
Doctor Anderso?i
to
male Lac insect having hitherto escaped the observation of naturalists, I send the enclosed description, made by Mr. William Roxburgh, surgeon on
this
THE
establishment,
in
and
botanist to the
Honourable
hopes you will give it a place in the publication of your Society, as Mr. Roxburgh's discovery will bring Lac a genus into the class Heiniptera of Linnceus.
Company,
Your
JAMES ANDERSON*
Port St. George, January 2, 1790.
A*3
Vol. 2.
F36/.
INSECT.
SOME
me
pieces
mimosa clnerea^ were broughc from the mountains on the 20th of last month. I kept them carefully, and to-day, the 4th of Decernbe?-, fou Keen days from the time they came from the hills, myriads of exceedingly minute animals were observed creeping about the lac and branches it adhered to, and more still issuing from small holes over the surface of the cells: other small and perforated excrescences were observed with a glass amongst the perforations, from which the minute insects issued, regularly two to each hole, and crowned with some very When the hairs were rubbed off, fine white hairs. two white spots appeared. The animals, when single, ran about pretty briskly; but in general they were so numerous as to be crowded over one another. The body is oblong, tapering most towards the tail, below laplain, above convex, with a double, or flat margin terally on the back part of the thorax are two small tuthe body behind the bercles, which may be the eyes
to small branches of
-
thorax
is
legs six
feelers
each ending in two hairs as long as the antennae ; rump, a white point between two terminal hairs, which are as long as the body of the animal ; the mouth I could not see. On opening the cells, the substance that they were formed of cannot be better described, with respect to appearance, than by saying it is like the transparent amber that beads are made of: the external covering of the cells may be about half a line thick, is remarkably strong and able to resist injuries ; the partitions are much thinner ; the cells are in general
Aa
362
irregular squares,
ON THE LACSHA,
pentagons, and hexagons, about an eighth of an inch in diameter, and \ deep ; they have no communication with each other all these I opened during the time the animals were issuing, contained in one-half a small bag filled with a thick red jellylike liquor, replete with what I take to be eggs ; these bags, or utriculi, adhere to the bottom of the cells, and
:
The other half of the cells have a distinct opening, and contain a white substance, like some few filaments of cotton rolled together, and numbers of the insects themselves ready to make their exit. Several of the same insects I observed to have drawn up their legs, and to lie flat ; they did not move on being touched, nor did they show any signs of life
hairs.
December 5. The same minute hexapedes continue from their cells in numbers ; they are more lively, of a deepened red colour, and fewer of the moissuino-
To-day I saw the mouth ; it is a flattionless sort. tened point, about the middle of the breast, which the little animal projects on being compressed.
December 6. The male insects I have found to-day. few of them are constantly running among the females most actively as yet they are scarce more, I imagine, than one to 5000 females, but twice their size. The head is obtuse ; eyes black, very large ; antenna? clavated, feathered, about f the length of the body be-
low the middle an articulation, such as those in the legs; colour between the eyes a beautiful shining green neck very short ; body oval, brown ; abdomen oblong, the length of body and head; legs six; wings membranaceous, four, longer than lhe body, fixed to the
OR LAC INSECT*
^
363
growing
broader for two-thirds of their length, then rounded ; the anterior pair is twice the size of the posterior ; a strong fibre runs along their anterior margins ; they lie flat, like the wings of a common fly, when it walks
or rests
;
no
hairs
it
springs
most
;
touched
mouth
verse.
in the
maxillse trans-
move about
on the 4th.
December 7. The small red insects still more numerous, and move about as before winged insects, There have been continue active. still very few, fresh leaves and bits of the branches of both mimosa cinerea and corinda put into the wide mouthed bottle with them they walk over them indifferently, without showing any preference, nor inclination to work nor copulate. I opened a cell whence I thought the winged flies had come, and found several, eight or ten, more they in it, struggling to shake off their incumbrances those utriculi mentioned on the 4th, were in one of which ends in two mouths, shut up with fine white hairs, but one of them was open for the exit of the flies ; the other would no doubt have opened in due time this utriculus I found now perfectly dry, and I .-divided into cells by exceeding thin partitions. imagine, before any of the flies made their escape, it might have contained about twenty. In these minute cells with the living flies, or whence they had made their escape, were small dry dark coloured compressed grains, which may be the dried excrements of the
:
flies.
but they geLacsha, from the multitude of small in* sects, who, as they believe, discharge it from their
nerally call
it
364
ON THE LACSHA, OR LAC INSECT. on which they Pippala near Crislmanagar, almost wholly destroyed by them.
at length destroy the tree
stomachs, and
form
is
their colonies.
A fine
now
XXV.
THE SEVENTH
ANNIVERSARY DISCOURSE,
DELIVERED 25 FEBRUARY,
l^QO.
BY THE PRESIDENT.
Gentlemen,
ALTHOUGH we
are at this
moment
considerably
nearer to the frontier of China than to the farthest limit of the British dominions in Hindustan, yet
the first step that we should take in the philosophical journey, which I propose for your entertainment at the present meeting, will carry us to the utmost verge of the habitable globe known to the best geographers of Old Greece and Egvpt ; beyond the boundary of whose knowledge we shall discern from the heights of the northern mountains an empire nearly equal in surface to a square of fifteen degrees ; an empire, of which I do not mean to assign the precise limits, but which we
may
embraced on two
tic isles
consider, for the purpose of this dissertation, as sides by Tartary and India, while
its other sides from various Asiaof great importance in the commercial system of Europe. Annexed to that immense tract of land is the peninsula of Corea, which a vast oval bason divides from Nifon, or Japan, a celebrated and imperial island, bearing in arts and in arms, in advantage of situation, but not in felicity of government, a pre-eminence among eastern kingdoms analogous to that of Britain
So many climates the nations of the west. are included in so prodigious an area, that while the principal emporium of China lies nearly under the
among
tropic,
its
366
its
fifteen
some of them
are exquisitely
cultivated,
others are barren and rocky, dry and unfruitful, with plains as wild or mountains as rugged as any in Scythia, and those either wholly deserted, or peopled by savage hordes, who, if they be not still independent, have been very lately subdued by the perfidy, ra:her than
the valour, of a monarch, who has perpetuated his own breach of faith in a Chinese poem, of which I
have seen a
translation.
China, concerning which I shall offer some new remarks, is well known to the people whom we call the Chinese ; but they never apply it (I speak of the learned among them) to themselves or to their
The word
country. Themselves, according to Father Visdelou> they describe as the people of Hun, or of some other illustrious family, by the memory of whose actions they flatter their national pride ; and their country
they call Chum- cue, ox the Central Kingdom, representing it in their symbolical characters by a parallelogram At other times they distinguish it exactly bissected. by the words Tien- hia, or What is under Heaven ; meaning all that is valuable on earth. Since they never name themselves with moderation, they would
have no right to complain, if they knew that European authors have ever spoken of them in the extreme* By some they have been of applause or of censure. extolled as the oldest and the wisest, as the most learned and most ingenious of nations ; whilst others have
derided their pretensions to antiquity, condemned their
government asabominable, and arraigned theirmanners as inhuman, without allowing them an element of science, or a single art for which they have not been indebted to some more ancient and more civilized race of men. The truth perhaps lies, where we usually find it,
ON THE CHINESE.
367
between the extremes ; but it is not my design to accuse or to defend the Chinese, to depress or to aggran1 shall confine myself to the discussion of dize them a question connected with my former discourses, and far less easy to be solved than any hitherto started " Whence came the singular people, who long had *c governed China before they were conquered by the " Tartars?" On this problem (the solution of which has no concern, indeed, with our political or commercial interests, but a very material connection, if I mistake not, with interests of a higher nature) four^ opinions have been advanced, and all rather peremptorily asserted than supported by argument and evidence. By a few writers it has been urged, that the Chinese are an original race, who have dwelt for
:
ages,
in the land which they by others, and chiefly by the missionaries, it is insisted that they sprang from the same stock with the Hebrews and Arabs ; a third assertion is that of the Arabs themselves and of M. Pauw, who hold it indubitable, that they were originally Tartars descending in wild clans from the steeps of Imaus ; and a fourth, at least as dogmatically pronounced as any of the preceding, is that of the Brahmens, who decide, without allowing any appeal from their decision, that the Chinas (for so they are named in Sanscrit) were Hindus of the Cshatriya, or military class, who, abandoning the privileges of their tribe, rambled in different bodies to the northand, forgetting by degrees the rites east of Bengal
if
now
possess
and
separate
principalities, which
were afterwards united in the plains and valleys, which are now possessed by them. If any one of the three last opinions be just, the first of them must necessarily be relinquished; but of those three, the first cannot possibly be sustained, because it rests on no firmer support than a foolish remark, whether
true or
Creation
false,
-
that
Sem
in Chinese
means
is
368
from a palm than a Chinese from an Arab. They are as the tea and the palm are vegetables; but human sagacity could not, I believe, discover any other trace of resemblance between them. One of the Arabs, indeed (an account of whose voyage to India and China has been translated by Renaudot) thought the Chinese not handsomer (according to his ideas of beauty) than the Hindus ; but even more like his own countrymen in features, habiliments, carriage, manners, and ceremonies and this may be true, without proving an actual resemblance between the Chinese and Arabs, except in dres and complexion. The next opinion is more connected with that of the Brahmens than M. Pomp, probably, imagined for, though he tells us expressly that by Scythians he meant the Turks, or Tartars, yet the Dragon on the standard, and some other peculiarities, from which he would infer a clear affinity between the old Tartars and the Chinese, belonged indubitably to those Scythians who are known to have been Goths ; and the Goths had manifestly a common lineage with the Iliudus, if his own argument, in the preface to his Researches on the Similarity of Language be, as all men agree that it is, irrefragable. That the Chinese were anciently of a Tartarian stock, is a proposition which I cannot otherwise disprove for the present, than by insisting on the total dissimilarity of the two races in manners and arts, particularly in the fine arts of imagination, which the Tartars, by
men, indeed,
their
own account,
never cultivated
but, if
first
we show
Chinese
strong
were actually of an Indian race, it will follow that M. Pauzv and the Arabs are mistaken. It is to the discussion of this new and, in my opinion, very interesting point, that I shall confine the remainder of my
discourse.
civil
ON THE CHINESE.
f*
*'
369
"
Many tamilies of the military class having gradually abandoned the ordinances of the Veda, and the company of Brahmens, lived in a state of degraas the people of Pundraca and Odra, those Dravira and Camboia, the Yavanas and Sacas, the Paradas and Pahla-vas, the Chinas, and some other nations." A full comment on his text would
"
*'
dation
ot
t(
"
here be superfluous ; but, since the testimony of the Indian author, who, though certainly not a divine personage, was as certainly a very ancient lawyer, moralist, and historian, is direct and positive, disinterested and unsuspected, it would, I think, decide the ques-
word China
I
whom
have
se-
They
assure
me,
Menu
settled in a fine
to the east
and
country of Camarup
and Nepal.', that they have long been, and still are, famed as ingenious artificers ; and that they had themselves seen old Chinese idols, which bore a manifest relation to the primitive religion of India before Buddha's appearance in it. A well-informed Pandit showed me a Sanscrit book in Cashmirian letters, which, he said, was revealed by Siva himself, and entitled Sactisangama : he read to me a whole chapter of it on the
heterodox opinions of the Chinas, who were divided, says the author, into near two hundred clans. I then laid before him a map of Asia and, when I pointed to Cashmir, his own country, he instantly placed his finger on the north-western provinces of China, where the Chinas, he said, first established themselves ; but he aided, that Mahachina, which was also mentioned in his book, extended to the eastern and southern
;
oceans.
pire, as
em*
Menu
was not formed when the laws of were collected; and for this belief, so repugnant
I
we now
am bound
to offer
my
reasons.
and chronology
2^0
be hardy sceptics to doub: it) the poems of Ca/idas were composed before the beginning of our era. Now it is clear, from internal and external evidence, that the Ramayan and Mahahharat were considerably older than the productions of that poet; and it appears from the style and metre of the Dherma Sastra, revealed by Menu, that it was reduced to writing long before the age of Falmic or Vyasa, the second of whom names shall not, therefore, be thought it with applause.
We
extravagant
if
we
tween a thousand and fifteen hundred years before Christ ; especially as Buddha, whose age is pretty well ascertained, is not mentioned in them ; but, in the twelfth century before our era, the Chinese empire was at least in its cradle. This fact it is necessary to prove ; and my first witness is Confucius himself. I know to what keen satire I shall expose myself by citing that philosopher, after the bitter sarcasms of M. Pauw against him and against the translators of his
mutilated,
scruple the
book
entitled
Lun
the original with a verbal translation, and which I know to be sufficiently authentic for my present purpose. In the secoud part of it Con fu-tsu declares, that !' Altho' he, like other men, could relate, as mere lessons " of morality, the histories of the first and second im" perial houses, yet, for want of evidence, he could f give no certain account of them. " Now, if the Chinese themselves do not even pretend that any historical monument existed in the age of Confucius, pre-: ceding the rise of their third dynasty, about eleven hundred years before the Christian epoch, we may justly conclude that the reign of Vuvam was in the infancy of their empire, which hardly grew to maturity till some ages after that prince; and it has been asserted
that
no
ON THE CHINESE.
evince
37 t
Saviour, that a small kingdom was erected in the proof She?i-si, the capital of which stood nearly in the thirty -fifth degree of northern latitude, and about jive degrees to the west of Si-gan : both the country and its metropolis were called Chin ; and the dominion of its princes was gradually extended to the east and west. A king of Chin, who makes a figure in the Shahnamah among the allies of Afrasiyah, was, I presume, a sovereign of the country just mentioned ; and the river of Chin, which the poet frequently names as the limit of his eastern geography, seems to have been the Yellow River, which the Chinese introduce at the beginning of their fabulous annals. I should be tempted to expatiate on so curious a subject, but the present occasion allows nothing superfluous, and permits me only to add, that Manjrukhan died in the middle of the thirteenth century, before the city of Chin, which was afterwards taken by Kublai, and that the poets of Iran perpetually
allude to the districts around
it
with Chegil and Khoten, for a number of musk animals roving on their hills. The territory of Chin, so called by the old Hindus, by the Persians, and by the Chinese (while the Greeks and Arabs were obliged by their defective articulation to miscall it Sin) gave its name to a race of emperors, whose tyranny made their memory so unpopular, that the modern inhabitants of China hold the word in abhorrence, and speak of themselves as the people of a milder and more virtuous dynasty ; but it is highly probable that the whole nation descended from the Chinas of Menu, and, mixing with the Tartars (by whom the plains of Honau and the more southern provinces were thinly inhabited) formed by degrees the race of men whom we now see in possession of the noblest empire in
Asia.
sult
In support of an opinion, which I offer as the reof long and anxious inquiries, I ihould regularly
II,
Vol.
B b
372
proceed to examine the language and letters, religion a "sd philosophy of the present Chinese, and subjoin some remarks on their ancient monuments, on their sciences, and on rheir arts, both liberal and mechanical ; but their spoken language not having been preserved by the usual symbols or articulate sounds, must have been for many ages in a continual flux; their letters, jf -ve may so call them, are merely the symbols of ideas; their popular religion was imported from India in an age comparatively modern ; and their philosophy seems yet in so rude a state as hardly to deserve the appellation; they have no ancient monuments, from which their origin can be traced even by plausible conjecture; their, sciences are wholly exotic ; and their mechanical arts have notlvng in them characteristic of a particular family ; nothing which any set of men, in a country so highly favoured by nature, might not have discovered and improved. They have indeed both national music and national poetry, and both of them t --atifully pathetic ; but of painting, sculpture, or architecture, as arts of imagination, they seem (like other Instead, therefore, of enAsiatics) to have no idea. larging separately on each of those heads, I shall
briefly inquire,
how
far
which
have advanced.
The declared and fixed opinion of M.De Guignes, on the subject before us, is nearly connected with that of the Bmhmans : he maintains, that the Chinese were emigrants from Egypt; and the Egyptians, or Ethiopians (for they were clearly the same people) had indubitably a common origin with the old natives of India,
as the affinity of their languages and of their institu-
both religious and political, fully evince; but China was peopled a few centuries before our era by a colony from the banks of the Nile, tho' neither Persians nor Arabs, Tartars nor Hindus, ever heard of such an emigration, }s 3 paradox, which the bare authority
tions,
th&x.
ON THE CHINESE.
evenofsolearnedaman cannot support; and,
373
since rea-
son grounded on facts can alone decide such aquestion, we have a right to demand clearer evidence and stronger The arguments than any that he has yet adduced. hieroglyphics of Egypt hear, indeed, a strong resemblance to the mythological sculptures and paintings of India, but seem wholly dissimilar to the symbolical
system of the Chinese, which might easily have been invented (as they assert) by an individual, and might very naturally have been contrived by the first Chinas, or. outcast Hindus, who either never knew, or had forgotten, the alphabetical characters of their wiser ancestors. As to the table and bust of Isis, they seem to be given up as modern forgeries ; but, if they were indisputably genuine, they would be nothing to the purpose for the letters on the bust appear to have been designed as alphabetical ; and the fabricator of
;
them
(if
since two or three of them are exsame with those on a metal pillar yet standing in the north of India, In Egypt, if we can rely on the testimony of the Greeks, who studied no language but their own, there were two sets of alphabetical characters; the one popular , like the various letters used in our Indian provinces; and the other sacerdotal, Ijke the De-vanagari, especially that form of besides which they had it which we see in the Peda two sorts of sacred sculpture ; the one simple, like the figures of Buddha and the three Ramas ; and the other allegorical, like the images of Ganesa, or Divine Wisdom, and Isani, or Nature, with all their emblematical accompaniments but the real character of the Chinese appears wholly distinct from any Egyptian
commonly happy,
actly the
writing, either mysterious or popular: and, as to the fancy of M. cle Guignes, that the complicated symbols of China were at first no more than Phenipian mono-
grams,
let
Bbz
374
ters
ocular proof that the few radical characof the Chinese were originally (like our astronomical and chymical symbols) the pictures or outlines of visible objects, or figurative signs for simple ideas, which they have multiplied by the most ingenious combinations and the liveliest metaphors ; but, as the system is peculiar, I believe, to themselves and the Japanese, it would be idly ostentatious to enlarge on it at present ; and, for the reasons already intimated, it neither corroborates nor weakens the opinion which The same m:y as truly be I endeavour to support. for, independently of said of their spoken language its constant fluctuation during a series of ages, it has the peculiarity of excluding four or five sounds which other nations articulate, and is clipped into monosyllables, even when the ideas expressed by them, and the written symbols for those ideas, are very comThis has arisen, I suppose, from the singular plex. of the people ; for, though their common habits tongue be so musically accented as lo form a kind of recitative, yet it wants those grammatical accents, without which all human tongues wdu-Jd appear monosyllabic. Thus Amitd) with an accent on the first syllable, and means, in thfe Sanscrit laifgiidge, immeasurable the natives of Bengal pronounce it Omito ; but when the religion ol Buddha, the son of Maya, was carried hence into China, the people of that country, unable to pronounce the name of their new God, called him Foe, the son otMo-ye^ and divided his epithet Amita into three syllables O-mi-to, annexing to them certain ideas of their own, and expressing them in writing may judge from this by three distinct symbols. instance, whether a comparison of their spoken tongue with the dialects of other nations can lead to any cer; ;
We have
We
tain conclusion
as to
their origin
which I have given, supplies me with an argument from analogy, which I produce as conjectural only, but which appears more and more plausible the oftener I
i
ON THE CHINESE.
consider
ir.
375
of the Hindus is unquestionbut the great progenitor of ably the Foe ot China the Chinese is also named by them Fo-hi, where the r seems, a victim. Now second monosyllable si ancestor of that military tribe, whom the Hindus the
;
.
The Buddha
call the Chandravansa, or Children of the Moo?i, was, according to their Puranas or legends, Buddha, or the gei ius of the planet Mercury, irom whom, in the fifth degree, descended a prince named Druhya; whom
in exile to
the
east
or"
Hin-
" May thy progeny be " ignorant of the Veda" The name of the banished prince could not be pronounced by the modern Chinese;
dustan, with this imprecation,
and, though I dare not conjecture that the last syllable of it has been changed into Yao, I may nevertheless observe that Yao was the fifth in descent from Fo hi , or at least the fifth mortal in the first imperial dynasty ; that all Chinese history before him is considered by the Chinese themselves as poetical or fabulous;
that his father Ti-co, like the Indian king Yayati,
the
first
prince
who married
several
women
Fo-hi, the head of their race, appeared, say the Chinese, in a province of the west, and held his court in the territory of Chin, where the rovers, mentioned by the Indian legislator, are supposed to have settled.
Another circumstance in the parallel is very remarkAccording to Father De Premare, in his tract on Chinese Mythology, the mother of Fo-hi was the Daughter of Fleavcn, surnamed Flower-loving; and as the nymph was walking alone on the bank ot a rk with a similar name, she found herself on a sudden encircled by a rainbow ; soon after which she became pregnant, and at the end of twelve years was delivered of a son radiant as herself, who, among other titles, had that of Sui, or Star of the Year. Now, in the mythological system of the Hindus, the nymph Rohh who presides over the fourth lunar mansion, was the
able
:
favourite mistress of
Soma, or the
Moon, among
Bb 3
376
whose numerous
we
find
Cwnudanayaea,
bt"
Delighting in a species of water-flower that blossoms at night ; and their offspring was Budha, regent of a
planet,
and called
also,
Rauhineya, or aumya.
sionary explains the
but an exact resemblance between two such fables could not have been expected ; and it is sufficient for my purpose The God that they seem to have a family-likeness. Budha, say the Indians, married Ila, whose father was preserved in a miraculous ark from an universal deluge. Now, although I cannot insist with confidence, that the rainbow in the Chinese fable alludes to the Mosaic narrative of the flood, nor build any solid argument on the divine personage Niii-va, of whose character, and even of whose sex, the historians of
and separating
the lower age of mankind ; that the division of time y from which their poetical history begins, just preceded
the appearance ofFo-hi on the mountains of Chin ; but that the great inundation in the reign of Yao was either confined to the lowlands of his kingdom, if the whole account of it be not a fable, or, if it contain any allusion to the flood of Noah, has been ignorantly mis-
The
first
for no
ON THE CHINESE.
government can long
justice
subsist without equal justice,
377
and
cannot be administered without the sanctions of religion. Of the religious opinions entertaincv, by Confucius and his followers, we may glean a general notion from the fragments of their works translated by
Couplet.
They
Supreme
a demonstration of his being and of his providence from the exquisite beauty and perfection of the celestial bodies, and the wonderful order of nature in the whole fabric of the visible world. From this belief they deduced a system of ethics, which the philosopher sums up in a few words at the close of the Lun-yu: *< He," says Confucius, " who will be fully " persuaded that the Lord of Heaven governs the " universe, who shall in all things chuse moderation*
" who
fi
shall perfectly
among them
to his
own species, and so act and manners may conknowledge of God and man, may be
his
know
that
his life
and
above the common herd of the race." But such a religion and such morality could never have been general and we find that the people of China had an ancient system of ceremonies and superstitions, which the government and the philosophers appear to have encouraged, and which has an apparent affinity with some parts of the oldest: Indian worship. They believed in the agency of genii,
-,
or tutelary spirits, presiding over the stars and the clouds, over lakes and rivers, mountains, valleys, and woods, over certain regions and towns, over all the ele-
ments (of which, like the Hindus, they reckoned five) and particularly over fire, the most brilliant of them. To those deities they offered victims on high places a and the following passage from the Shi-cm, or Book of Odes, is very much in the style of the Brahmans : *' Even they, who perform a sacrifice with due reve*'
"
rence, cannot perfectly assure themselves that the divine spirits accept their oblations; and far less can they, who adore the Gods with languor and oscitancy,
Bb
378
"
between the religion of Menu and that of the Chinas, he names among the apostates from it. M. Le Gentil observed, he says, a strong resemblance between the funeral rites of the Chinese and the Sraddha of the Hindus and M. Ballly, after a learned investigation, concludes, that " Even the puerile and absurd stories " of the Chinese fabulists, contain a remnant of an" cient Indian history, with a faint sketch of the first " Hindu ages." As the Bauddhas, indeed, were Hindus, it may naturally be imagined that they carried into China many ceremonies practised in their own country ; but the Bauddhas positively forbade the immolation of cattle ; yet we know that various animals, even bulls and men, were anciently sacrificed by the Chinese ; besides which we discover many singular marks of relation between them and the old Hindus : as in the remarkable period of four hundred and thirty-* tivo thousand, and the cycle of sixty years ; in the
whom
-,
number
nine
in
many
and great festivals, especially at the solstices and equinoxes ; in the just-mentioned obsequies consisting: of rice and fruits offered to the manes of their ancestors ; in the dread of dying childless, lest such offerings should be intermitted ; and, perhaps, in their common abhorrence of red objects, which the Indians carried so far, that Menu himself, where he allows a Brahmen to trade,
port
"'
if
life,
of red cloths, whether linen or woollen, or made " of woven bark." All the circumstances, which have Been mentioned under the two heads of Literature and Religion, seem collectively to prove (as far as such a question admits proof) that the Chinese and Hindus were originally the same people; but having been separated near four thousand years, have retained few
strong features of their ancient consanguinity, especially as ihz Hindus have preserved their old language and
ON THE CHINESE.
ritual, while the Chinese very
379
soon lost both ; and the Hindus have constantly intermarried among themselves, while the Chinese, by a mixture of Tartarian blood from the time of their first establishment, have at length formed a race distinct in appearance both from Indians and Tartars.
similar diversity has arisen, I believe, from similar causes, between the people of China and Japan ; on the second of which nations we have now, or soon shall have, as correct and as ample instruction as can possiblv be obtained without a perfect acquaintance with the Chinese characters. Kcempfer has taken from
M. Ttts'm&h the honour of bein^ the first : and he from Kcempfer that of being the only European who, by a long residence in Japan, and a familiar intercourse with the principal natives of
it,
and
civil
Romans' used to say of our own ishnd)fro?u the rest of the world. The works of those illustrious travellers will confirm and embellish each other ; and when M. Titsingh shall have acquired a knowledge of Chinese, to which a part of his leisure in Java will be devoted, his precious collection of books in that language, on the laws and revolutions, the natural productions, the arts, manufactures, and sciences of Japan, will be in his hands an inexhaustible mine of new and important information. Both he and his predecessor assert with confidence, and, I doubt not, with truth, that the Japanese would resent, as an insult on their dignity, the bare suggestion of their descent from the Chinese, whom they surpass in several of the mechanical arts, and, what is of greater consequence, in military spirit; but they do not, I understand, mean to deny that they are a branch of the same ancient stem with the people of China ; and, were that fact ever so warmly contested by them, it might be proved by an invincihistory of a country secluded (as the
380
"ble
on the
just reasoning.
it seems inconnever appear to have been conquerors or conquered, should have adopted the whole system of Chinese literature with all its inconveniences and intricacies, if an immemorial connexion had not subsisted between the two nations, or, in other words, if the bold and ingenious race who peopled Japan in the middle of the thirteenth cen-
In the
first
place,
who
tury before Christ, and, about six hundred years afterwards established their monarchy, had not carried with them the letters and learning which they and the Chinese had possessed in common ; but my
principal
argument
is,
that the
Hindu
or Egyptian
idolatry has prevailed in Japan from the earliest ages ; and among the idols worshipped, according to
K<empfer, in that country before the innovations of Sacya or Buddha, whom the Japanese also called Amida, we find many of those which we see every day in the temples of Bengal ; particularly the goddess ivith many arms, representing the powers of nature ; in Egypt named Isis, and here Isani or Isi; whose image, as it is exhibited by the German traveller, all the Brahmans to whom I showed it, immediately recog-
nized with a mixture of pleasure and enthusiasm. It is very true that the Chinese differ widely from the natives of Japan in their vernacular dialects, in external manners, and perhaps in the strength of their mental faculties ; but as wide a difference is observable among all the nations of the Gothic family ; and we might account even for a greater dissimilarity, by considering the number of ages during which the several swarms have been separated from the great InThe dian hive, to which they primarily belonged. the idea of polished modern Japanese gave Kampfer Tartars ; and it is reasonable to believe, that the people of Japan,
who were
originally
ON THE CHINESE.
tial class,
381
and advanced farther eastward than the Chithem, insensibly changed their features and characters by intermarriages with various Tartarian tribes, whom they found loosely scattered over their isles, or who afterwards fixed their abode in them.
nas, have, like
Having now shown in five discourses, that the Arabs and Tartars were orignally distinct races, while the Hindus, Chinese, and Japanese proceeded from another ancient stem, and that all the three stems may be traced ro Iran, as to a common centre, from which
highly probable that they diverged in variousdirections about four thousand years ago, I may seem to have accomplished my design of investigating the oriit is
gin of the Asiatic nations ; but the questions which I undertook to discuss, are not yet ripe for a strict analytical
argument and it will first be necessary to examine with scrupulous attention all the detached or insulated races of men, who either inhabit the borders of India, Arabia, Tartary, Persia, and China, or are interspersed in the mountainous and uncultivated parts
;
of those extensive regions* To this examination I shall, at our next annual meeting, allot an entire discourse; and if, after all our inquiries, no more than three primitive races can be found, it will be a subsequent consideration whether those three stocks had one common root ; and, if they had, by what means that root was preserved amid the violent shocks which our whole globe appears evidently to have sustained.
XXVI.
found
in
a Cave
near Islamabad.
ESQ_.
the 14th of Maglia 904, Chandi Lah Raja*, by the advice of Bowangari Rauli, who was thfe director of his studies and devotions, and in conformity to the sentiments of twenty-eight other Raidis, formed the design of establishing a place of religious worship; for w'jch purpose a cave was dug, and paved with bricks, three cubits in depth.,, and three cubits also in diameter ; in which were deposited one hundred and twenty brazen images of small dimensions, d. -nominated Tahmudas ; also, twenty brazen images larger than the former, denominated Languda ; there was likewise a large image of stone call Langu* dagari, with a vessel of brass, in which were deposited two of the bones of Thacur. On a silver plate were inscribed the Hauca, or the mandates of the deity; with that also styled Taumah Chucksowna Tahma, to the study of which twenty-eight Raulis devote their time and attention ; who, having celebrated the present work of devotion with festivals and rejoicings, erected over the cave a place of religious worship for
ON
God
^nd
Buddha Avatar
to instruct
birth and origin the following is a relation When, JBuddha Avatar descended from the region of souls, in/
* Perhaps Sandilyab.
384
the
AN INSCRIPTION IN A CAVE
month of Magh, and entered
the wife
the body of Mahaof Sootah Dannah, Raja of Caila% 7 her womb suddenly assumed the appearance of clear transparent crystal, in which Buddha appeared, beautiful as a flower, kneeling and reclining on his hands. After ten months and ten days of her pregnancy had elapsed, Mahamaya solicited permission from her in conformity husband, the Raja x to visit her father to which the- roads were directed to be repaired and made clear for her journey ; fruit-trees were planted,
j)ni\r n
:
water- vessels placed on the road-side, and great illuminations prepared for the occasion. Mahamaya then
commenced her journey, and arrived at a garden adjoining to the road, where inclination led her to walk and gather flowers. At this time, being suddenly attacked with the pains of child-birth, she laid hold on the trees for support, which declined their boughs at the instant, for the purpose of concealing her person, while she was delivered of the child ; at which juncture Brahma himself attended with a golden vessel in
his hand,
it
on which he laid the child, and delivered by whom it was committed to the charge of a female attendant ; upon which the child, alighting from her arms, walked seven paces, whence, it was taken up by Mahamaya and carried to her house, and, on the ensuing morning, news were circulated of a At this time child being born in the Raja's family. Tapasvui Muni, who, residing in the woods, devoted
to Indra,
his time to the worship of the deity, learned by inspiration that Buddha was come to life in the Raja's pa-
he flew through the air to the Raja's residence, lace where, sitting on a throne, he said, " 1 have repaired *' hither for the purpose of visiting the child." Buddha was accordingly brought into his presence. The Muni observed two feet fixed on his head, and, divining something both of good and bad import, begau The Raja then questo weep and laugh alternately. tioned him with regard to his present impulse, to whom
:
he answered,
'
must not
reside in the
same place
NEAR ISLAMABAD.
38$
when he shall arrive at the rank of " Avatar; this is the cause of my present affliction ; M but I am even now affected with gladness by his
with Buddha
presence,
as
I
*' '
transgressions."
purpose of calculating the destiny of the child ; whom divined, that, as he had marks on his hands resembling a wheel, he would at length become a Raja Chacraverti : another divined, that he would arrive at the dignity of Avatar.
for the
three of
at
had a daughter named Vasuhe had engaged not to give in marriage to any one, till such time as a suitor should be found who could brace a certain bow in his possession,
whom
which hitherto many Rajas had attempted to accomplish without effect. Sacya now succeeded in the attempt, and accordingly obtained the Raja's daughter in marriage, with whom he repaired to his own place of residence.
One day
as certain mysteries
he formed the design of relinquishing his dominion 5 at which time a son was born in his house, whose name was Raghu. Sacya then left his palace with only one attendant and a horse, and, having crossed the river Ganga, arrived at Balucali, where, having directed his servant to leave him and carry away his horse, he laid aside his armour.
the world was created, there appeared five which Brahma deposited in a place of safety; three of them were afterwards delivered to the three to Sacya, who hcurs, and one was presented
flowers,
When
3$6
AN INSCRIPTION
it
IN A
CAVE
and adopted
discovered, that
traveller
one day passed by him with eight bundles of grass on his shoulders, and addressed him, saying, ** A
long period of time has elapsed since I have seen the T'hacur; but now since I have the happiness <c to meet him, I beg to present him an offering, conc Sacya accordsisting of these bundles of grass." At ingly accepted of the grass, and reposed on it. that time there suddenly appeared a golden temple, containing a chair of wrought gold ; and the height of the temple was thirty cubits, upon which Brahma alighted, and held a canopy over the head of Sacya: at the same time Indra descended, with a large fan in his hand, and Naga, the Raja of serpents, with shoes in his hand, together with the four tutelar deities of the four corners of the universe ; who all attended to do him service and reverence. At this time likewise the chief of Asurs with his forces arrived, riding on an elephant, to give battle to Sacya ; upon which
lf
"
Brahn/a, Jndra, and the other deities deserted him Sacya, observing that he was left and vanished. alone, invoked the assistance of the earth ; who, attending at his summons, brought an inundation over all the ground, whereby the Asur and his forces were vanquished, and compelled to retire.
At this time five holy scriptures descended from above, and Sacya was dignified with the title of Buddha Avatar. The scriptures confer powers of knowledge and retrospection, the ability of accomplishing the impulses of the heart, and of carrying into effecc the words of the mouth. Sacya resided here, without breaking his fast, twenty-one days, and then returned
to his
own
NEAR ISLAMABAD.
3S7
reads the Carle, his body, apparel, and the of his devotions must be purified ; he shall be thereby delivered froin the evil machinations of demons and ot his enemies ; and the ways of redemption shall be open to him. Buddha Avatar instructed a certain iiauli, by name Anguh Mala, in the writings of the Carte, saying, " wnuever shall read and study
Whoever
place
them, his soul shall not undergo a transmigration :" and the scriptures were thence called Anguli Mala. There were likewise five other books of the Cane, denominated Vachanam, wnich if any one peruse, he shall therefore be exempted from poverty and the machinations of his enemies ; he shall also be exalted to dignity and honours, and the length of his days shall be protracted. The study of the Car'ic heals afflictions and pains of the body 5 and whoever shall have faith therein, Heaven and bliss shall be the reward of his
piety.
Vol,
II.
Cc
XXVII.
A SUPPLEMENT
ingenious associate Mr. Samuel Davis (whom with respect and applause, and who will soon, I trust, convince VI Badly that it is very possible for an European to translate and explain the Surya SidJhanta) lavoured me lately with a copy, taken by
1
i
OURname
his Pandit, of the original passage, mentioned in his paper on the Astronomical Computations of the Hindus concerning the places of the colures in the time of Varaha, compare.! with their position in the age of a certain Muni, or ancient Indian philosopher; and the passage appears to afford evidence of two actual observations, which will ascertain the chronology of the Hindus, if not by rigorous demonstration, at least by a near approach to it.
from which the been transcribed, is unhappily so incorrect (if the transcript itself was not hastily made) that every, line of it must be disfigured by some gross error ; and my Pandit, who examined the passage carefully at his own house, gave it up as inexplicable ; so that, if I had not studied the system of Sanscrit prosody, I should have laid it aside in despair but though it was written as prose, without any sort of distinction or punctuation, yet,
the
Varaliisanhita,
The copy of
me had
when
I read it aloud, my ear caught, in some sentences, the cadence of verse, and of a particular metre, called
is
Arya, which
C 2
390
in the four divisions of limes, or syllabic moments, which every stanza consists. By numbering those moments and fixing their proportion, was enabled to restore the text of Varaha, with the perfect assent of the
I
learned
Brahmen who
I
it
attends
me
sistance,
also corrected
the
comment,
seems, was a son of the author, together with three curious passages, which are cited Another Pandit afterwards brought me a copy in it. of the whole original work, which confirmed my conjectural emendations, except in two immaterial sylla-
Bhattotpala, who,
and except that the first of the six couplets in is quoted in the commentary from a different work, entitled P anchasiddhantica five of them were composed by Varaha himself; and the third chapter
bles,
the text
of
them.
ful to give
produce the original verses, it may be useyou an idea of the Arya measure ; which will appear more distinctly in Latin than in any modern language of Europe :
Before
I
Tigridas,apros,t.hoas, tyrannos,pessimamonstra,venemur:
The couplet might be so arranged as to begin and end with the cadence of an hexameter and pentameter, six moments being interposed in the middle of the long, and seven in that of the short hemistich
:
Thoas, aprd?,
Die
Since the Arya measure, however, may be almost inthe couplet would have a form completely Roman, if the proportion of syallabic instants^
finitely varied,
ON INDIAN CHRONOLOGY.
in
391
long and short verses, were twenty-four to twenty, instead of thirty to twenty seven :
the
Venor
apros tigridasque,
et,
now
pean which
characters,
are the
exhibit the five stanzas of Varaha in Eurowith an etching of the two first,
nagarl
Asleshardhaddacshinamuttaramayananraverdhanisht'hadyan
Nunan
Durast'hachihnavedyadudaye'stamaye'piva sahasransoh,
Aprapya macaramarco
yamyan,
Of
translation
most scrupulously
literal
the southern solstice was once in the middle o^Aslesha ; the northern in the first degree of " Dhanishfha, by what is recorded in former Sastras. " At present, one solstice is in the first degree of Car" cala, and the other in the first of Macara. That " which is recorded not appearing, a change must
*'
" Certainly
CC3
39-
" "
"
"
*
" "
<c
have happened ; and the proof arises from ocular demonstrations; that is, by observing the remote object and its marks at the rising or setting of the sun, or by the marks in a large graduated circle, or the shadow's ingress and egress. The: sun, by turning back without having reached Macara, destroys the south and the west; by turning back without having reached Careata, the north and
east.
"
By returning when he has just p ssed the solstitial point, he makes wea'th secure and " grain abundant, since, he moves thus according to " nature ; but the sun, by moving unnaturally, ex" cites terror."
" winter
Now the Hindu astronomers agree, that the ist of January 1790, was in the year 4891 of the Caliyuga, or their fourth period ; at the beginning of which, they say, the equinoctial points were in the first degrees of Mesha and Tula but they are also of opinion; that the vernal equinox oscillates from the third of Mina to the twenty-seventh of Mesha, and back again in 7200 years, which they divide into four padas, and consequently that it moves in the two intermediate padas from the first to the twenty-seventh of Mesha and back
;
again in
in the
their ecliptic
first
first
of Asvchi,
beginning of every such oscillaVaraha, surnamed Mihira, or the Sun, tory period. from his knowledge of astronomy, and usually distinguished by the title of Ac.harya, or teacher of the Veda, lived, confessedly, when the Caliyuga was far advanced ; and, since by actual observation he found the solstitial points in the first degrees of Carcata and Macara, the equinoctial points were at the same time in the first of Mesha and Tula ; he lived, therefore, in the year 3600 of the fourth Indian period, or 1291 years before the ist of January 1790, that is, about the This date corresponds with the year 499 of our era.
ON TNDIAN CHRONOLOGY.
393
myahansa, or precession, calculated by the rub of the Surya SUdhauta for 19 21' 54" would be the precession of the equinox in 1291 years, according to the Hindu computation of 54" annually, which gives us but, by the original of the Indian Zodiac nearly Newton's demonstrations, which agree as well with the phenomena as the varying density of our earth will admit, the equinox recedes about 50" every year, and has receded 17 $$' 50" since the tim" of Varaha.; which gives us more nearly in our own sphere the first degree of M-jsha in that of the Hindus. By the observation recorded in older Sastras, the equinox had gone back 23 20 '; or about 1680 years had intervened between the age of the Muni and that of the modern the former observation, therefore, must astronomer have been made about 2971 years before the 1st of January 1 790 ; that is, 1 181 before Christ.
-,
come now to the commentary, which contains information of the greatest importance. By former Sastras are meant, says Bhattotpala, the books of Parasara and of other Munis ; and he then cites from the Parasari Sndiita the following passage, whi eh
is
We
in
mod
;1
.ted prose,
:
and
in a style
much
resembling
Sravishtadyat paushnardhantan charah sisiro ; vasantah paushnardhat rohinyantan ; saumyadyadasleshardhantan grishmah ; pravri dasleshardfcaf hastantan ; chitradyat jyesht'hardhantan sarat ; hemanto jyesht'hardhat vaishnavantan.
iC
is from the first of Dha* middle of Revati that of Vasanta fro 11 the middle of Revati to the end of Rohinii that of Grishna from the beginning of Mrigasiras to :he middle of Ashsha that of Versha from the middle of Aslesha to the end of Hasta ; that
The
season of Sisira
to the
" nishCha
-,
u
*'
11
'?
194
" of Sara d from the first of Chiira to the middle of " Jyeshfha that of Hemanta from the middle of
;
'*
This account of the six Indian seasons, each of which is co-extensive with two signs, or four lunar stations and a half, places the solstitial points, as Varaha has asserted, in the first degree of Dhanishfka, and the middle, or 6 40', of Aslesha, while the equinoctial points were in the tenth degree of Hharani and 3 20' of Visafha ; but, in the time ot Varaha y the solstitial colure passed through ihe tenth degree of Punarvasu and 3 20' of Uttarashara, while the equinoctial colure cut the Hindu ecliptic in the first of Aswini and 6 40' of Chitra, or the Yoga and onlystar of that mansion, which, by the way, is indubitably the Spike of the Virgin, from the known longitude of which all other points in the Indian Zodiac may be computed. It cannot escape notice, that Parasara does not use in this passage the phrase at present^ which occurs in the text of Varaha ; so that the places of the colures might have been ascertained before his time, and a considerable change might have happened in their true position without any change in the phrases by which the seasons were distinguished, as our popular language in astronomy remains unaltered, though the Zodiacal asterisms are now removed a whole sign from the places where they have left their names. It is manisest, nevertheless, that Parasara must have written within twelve centuries before the beginning of our era ; and that single fact, as we shall presently show, leads to very* momentous consequences in regard to the system of Indian
history
and
literature.
On the comparison which might easily be made between the colures of Parasar and those ascribed by
ON INDIAN CHRONOLOGY.
Eudoxus
to Chiron, the
1
395
supposed
assistant
and instrucj
because
the whole Argonautic story (which neither was, according to Herodotus, nor, indeed, could have been
originally Grecian) appears, even
poetical
;
when
stripped of
its
and fabulous ornaments, extremely disputable and whether it was founded on a league of the Helladian princes and states for the purpose of checking, on a favourable opportunity, the overgrown power
of Egypt, or with a view to secure the commerce of the Euxine and appropriate the wealth of Colchis ; or, as
am disposed to believe, on an emigration from Africa and Asia of that adventurous race, who had first been established in Chaldea whatever, in short, gave rise to the fable, v/hich the old poets have so richly embellished, and the old historians have so inconsiderately adopted, it seems to me very clear, even on the principles of Newton, and on the same authorities to which he refers, that the voyage of the Argonauts must have preceded the year in which his calculations led him to place it. Battus built Cyrene, says our great philosopher, on the scite of Ira sa, the city of Antaeus, in the year 633 before Christ; yet he soon afterwards calls Euripylus, with whom the Argonauts had a conference, king of Cyrene ; and in both passages he cites Pindar , whom I acknowledge to have been the moft learned, as 'veil as the sublimed of poets. Now, if I understand Pindar (which I will not assert, and I neither possess nor remember at present the Scholia, which I formerly perused) the fourth Pythian Ode begins with a short panegyric on Arcesitas of Cyrene', iC where," says the bard, " the priestess, who sat near the golden u eagles of Jove, prophesied of old, when Apollo was " not absent from his mansion, that Bat/us, the cole" nizer of fruitful I^ybia, having just left the sacred " isle (Thera) should build a city excelling in cars, " on the splendid breast of earth, and, with the se" venteenth generation, should refer to himself the " Therean prediction of Medea which that princess of '* the CoJchiam, that impetuous daughter of AZttes,
I
-,
39&
breathed from her immortal mouth, and thus delivered to the half-divine mariners of the warrior " Jason.' From this introduction to the noblest and most animated of the Argonantic poems, it appears that fiften complete generations had intervened between the voyage of Jason and the emigration of Battus-; so that, considering th^ee generations as equal to an hundred* or a?i hundred and twenty years, wnich Newton admits to be the Grecian mode of con, putt rg them, we must also place that voyage a: least jive or six hundred years before the time fixed by Newton himself, according to his own computation, for the building of Cyrene ; that- is, eleven or twelve hundred and thirty-three years be>re (Christ : an age very near on a medium to that of Parasara. If the poet means afterwards to say, as I undei stand him, that Arcesilas, his contemporary, was the eighth in descent from Bat11
3
"
tats,
we shall nearly draw the same conclusion, without having recourse to the unnatural reckoning of thirtythree or forty years to a generation ; for Pindar was forty years old when the Persians, having crossed the Hellespont, were nobly resisted at Thermopylae, and gloriously defeated at Salamis. He was bom, therefore, about the sixty-fifth Olympiad, or five hundred and twenty years before our era ; so that, by allowing more naturally fix or seven hundred years to twentythree
generations,
we may
at
medium
place
the
The
we
description of the old colures by Eudoxus, if implicitly rely on his testimony and on that of Hip-
par elms, who was, indisputably, a great astronomer for the age in which he lived, affords, I allow, sufficient evidence of some rude observation about 937
years before
dinal points
the Christian epoch and, if the carhad receded from those colures 3 6 29'
;
ON INDIAN CHRONOLOGY.
10"
at
597
the beginning of the year 1690, and 37 52' 30" on the first of January in the present year, rhcy
20" between the observaand that recorded by Eu~ or, in other words, 244 years must have doxus elapsed b- tween the two observations But this dis-
quisition having
1
little
proceed to the
last
Parana Mihira, which, although merely astrological, and consequently absurd, will give occasion to remarks They imply, that when the of no small importance. solstices are not in the first degrees of Carcata and Macara, the motion of the sun is contrary to narure ; and being caused, as the commentator intimates, bysome utpata, or preternatural agency, must necessarily be productive of misfortune ; and this vain idea seems to indicate a very superficial knowledge even of the system which Varaha undertook to explain rjut he might have adopted it solely as a religious tenet, on the authority of Gaiga, a priest of eminent sanctity, who expresses the same wild notion in the follow;
ing couplet
Ynda
Asleshan dacshine'praptastadavidyanmahadbhayan.
"
When
Dha~
" nishfha
" reached
the northern
in
or not
jislesha
the southern,
"
feel great
apprehension of danger,"
the
solstices
would indicate
approaching calamity Yaaaprapto vaishnavantutn, he, udanmarge prefadyate dacshine ashsham va s mahabhdyaya ; that is, " When, having reached the '* end cS Sravana\ in the northern path, or half of j* he still advances, it is a " Aslesna in the s " cause of great fear." This notion, possibly, had
398
its
rise
before
cardi-
nal points had been observed ; but we may also remark, that some of the lunar mansions were considered
as inauspicious,
the
and others as fortunate ; thus Menu, Indian lawgiver, ordains, that certain rites shall be performed under the influence of a happy JSacshatra ; and, where he forbids any female name
first
the most
as
learned
commentator
gives
examples
of ill-omened names, appearing by design to skip over others that must first have occurred to him. Whether Dhanishfha and Aslesha were inauspicious or prosperous, I have not learned j but, whatever might be the ground of Varaha'% astrological rule, we may collect from his astronomy, which was grounded oh observation, that the solstice had receded at least 20' between his time and that of Parasara ; for, 2 though it refers its position to the signs, instead of the lunar mansions, yet all the Pandits with whom 1 have conversed on the subject, unanimously assert, that the first degrees of Mesha and Aswini are coincident. Since the two ancient sages name only the lunar asterisms, it is probable, that the solar division of the Zodiac into twelve signs was not generally used in
their days
j
Surya Sidahanta, that the lunar month, by which all religious ceremonies are still regulated, was in use before the
solar.
When M.
Bailly asks
"
Why
the
" Hindus
(i
in the year
of Christ
which his calculations also had led him, we answer, Because in that year the vernal equinox was found by observation in the origin of their ecliptic; and since they were of opinion that it must have had the same position in the first year of the Caliyuga, they were induced by their erroneous theory to fix the beginning of their fourth period 3600 years before the time of Varaha, and to account for Parasara\ observation, by, supposing an utpata, or prodigy.
" 409
ON INDIAN CHRONOLOGY.
399
To
what purpose,
it
may be
a^ked, have
we
ascer-
Who was
was Garga?
What
mankind ? 1 am happy in being able to answer those questions with confidence and precision.
dia or of
named
All the Brahmens agree, that only one Parasara is in their sacred records ; that he composed the
astronomical book before cited, and a law-tract, which is now in my possession ; that he was the grandson of Vasishfha, another astronomer and legislator, whose
the preceptor of he wa^the father of Vyasa, by whom the Vedas were arranged in the form which they now bear, and whom Crishna himself names with exalted praise in the Gita ; so that, by the admission of the Pandits themselves, we find only three generations between two of the Ramas, whom they consider as incarnate portions of the divinity ; and Parasara might have lived till the beginning of the Caliyuga, which the mis:aken doctrine of an oscillation in the cardinal points has compelled the Hindus
still
works
are
extant, and
;
who was
that
to
place
early.
This
error,
added
to their fanciful arrangement of the four ages, has been the source of many absurdities ; for tr^ey insist
whom they cannot but allow to have been contemporary with Ramachandra, lived in the age of Vyasa, who consuked him on the composition of the Mahabharat, and who was personally known to Bala-ramd, the brother of Crishna. When a very learned Brahmen had repeated to me an agreeable story of a conversation between Valmic and Jyasa, I expressed my surprize at an interview between two bards, whose ages were separated by a period of 864,000 years ; but he soon reconciled himself to so monstrous an anachronism, by observing that the longevity of the
that Valm'iC)
4 CO
Munis was
roc to
cles
objection equally
is
chronological system.
It
agreed by all, that the lawyer Yagyawa\cya was an attendant on the court of Janaca, whose daughter Sita was the constant but unfortunate wife of the great Ratori,, the hero or almic% poem ; but that lawyer himself, a: the very openiivj; of his work, which now lies before me, names both Parasara ;.uid Vyasa among twenty authors, whose tracts form the body of By the way, since Vas'ishtha is original Indian law. more than once named in the Manavisanhita, we mav be certain that the laws ascribed to Menu, in whatever age they might have been first promulgated, could not have received the form in which we now The age see them, above three thousand years ago. and functions of Garga lead to consequences yet more interesting he was confessedly the purohita, or officiating priest, of Cr'ishna himself, who, when only a herdsman's boy at Mafhara, revealed his divine character to Garga, by running to him with more than mortal benignity on his countenance, when the priest had invoked Narayan. His daughter was eminent for her piety and her learning, and the Brahmens without considering the consequence of admit, admission, that she is thus addressed in the their Yata urdhzvan no va samopi, Gargi, esha Veda itself dyaraurdhanan tafiati, dya va bhanin tapati, adityo bhumya subhran tapat^xtcan tapatl, antaran tapatyanantaran tapatl ; or, " That Sun, O daughter of " Garga, than which nothing is higher, to which no44 thing is equal, enlightens the summit of the sky ; " with the sky enlightens the earth ; with the earth " enlightens the lower worlds; enlightens the higher '.' worlds, enlightens other worlds; it enlightens the
"
breast, enlightens
all
From
ON INDIAN CHRONOLOGY.
these concessions, which they unanimously
4O1
make, we
may
reasonably infer that, if Vyasa was not the composer of the Vtdas, he added at least something of his own to the scattered fragments of a more ancient work,
or perhaps to the loose traditions which he had col-
but whatever be the comparative antiquity ; of the Hindu scriptures, we may safely conclude that the Mosaic and Indian chronologies are perfectly consistent ; that Menu, son of Brahma was the Adima, or first created mortal, and consequently ojr Adam ; that Menu, child of the Sun, was preserved with seven others in a bahitra, or capacious ark, from an universal deluge, and must therefore be our Noah ; that Hiranyacasipu, the giant with a golden axe, and Vali, or Bali, were impious and arrogant monarchs, and most probably our Nimrod and Belus ; that the three Ramas, two of whom were invincible warriors, and the third not only valiant in war but the patron of agriculture and wine, which derives an epithet from his name, were different representations of the Grecian Bacchus, and either the Rama of scripture, or his colony personified, or the Sun first adored by his idolatrous family ; that a considerable emigration from Chaldea into Greece, Italy, and India, happened about twelve centuries before the birth of our Saviour; that Sacya, or Sisak, about two hundred years after Vyasa, either in person or by a colony from Egypt, imported into this country the mild heresy of the ancient Bauddhas ; and that the dawn of true Indian history appears only three or fourcenturies before the Christian era, the preceding ages being clouded by allegory or fable.
lected
As
rit
I a specimen of that fabling and allegorizing spiwhich has ever induced the Brahmens to disguise
their
whole system of history, philosophy, and religion, produce a passage from the Bhagavat, which, howI ever ftrange and ridiculous, is very curious in itself, and closely connected with the. subject of this essay.
402
It
is
A SUPPLEMENT TO
taken from the
THE ESSAY
fifth Scandha, or section, which modulated prose. " There are some," says the Indian author, " who, for the purpose of meCl ditating intensely on the holy son of Vasudeva, ima** gine yon celestial sphere to represent the figure of " that aquatic animal which we call Sisamara : its head " being turned downwards, and its body bent in a
is
written in
" circle, they conceive Dk'ruva, or " be fixed on the point of its tail
<c (i
the pole-star, to
;
on the middle
Prejapati, Agni,
others, Dhatri
Sepiarshis, or
Jndra, Dherma, and on its base two " and Vidhatri : on its rump are the
**
f
" " vasu and Pushxa gleam respectively on its right and '* left haunches Ardra and Aslcsha on its right and left " feet, or fins Abhijit and Utlarashad'ha in its right
:
seven stars of the Sacata, or Wain ; on its back the path of the Sun, called Aja-vitdii, or the Series of Kids; on its belly the Gang a of the sky Punarj
tc
" *
nostrils; Srai-ana and Purvashad'ha in its and left eyes ; Dhanishfha and Mula on its Eight constellations, belonging right and left ears.
and
left
right
"
**
tf 4
"
"
'
"
"
" "
'
Magha, Puryap'halguni, Hasta, C/utra, S-zvati, flsadha, Anuradha, may be conceived in the ribs of its left side; and as many asterisms, connected with thewinter solstice, MrigasirtiSyRohini, Cn/tica^Bharani, Asr jo'ini y Revatiy Uttarabhadrapada, Purvabhadrapada , may be imagined on the ribs of its right side in an inverse order. Let Satabhisha and Jycsht'ha be placed on its right and left shoulders. In its upper jaw is in its mouth the plaAgastya, in its lower Yama gala ; in its part or generaion, Sanaisnet Man
to
the
summer
solstice,
Uttaraplhdguni)
chara
;
on
its
hump,
Vrihaspati\ in
;
its
bread, the
Moon; Sun " in its navel, Usanas ; on its two nipples, the two As "tvmasi in its ascending and descending breaths, * Budka in ail its limbs, Cetus> ; on its throat, Rahu " or comets; and in in hair, or bristles, the whole
tf
in its
heart,
Narayan
ON INDIAN CHRONOLOGY.
43
" multitude of
hog or porpoise, which we frequently have seen ing in the Ganges, yet susmar, which seems derived from the Sanscrit, means in Persian a large The passage just exhibited may neverthe/ zard". less relate to an animal of the cetaceous order, and possibly to the dolphin of the antients. Before I leave the sphere of the Hindus, I cannot help mentioning a In the Sanscrit language Ricsha means singular fact a constellation, and a bear, so that Maharcsha may de:
Etymonote .either a great bear or a great asterism. logist 1 may, perhaps, derive the Megas arctos of the Greeks from an Indian compound ill understood ; but I will only observe, with the wild American, that a bear with a 'very long tail could never have occurred
to the imagination of
any one who had seen the aniI may be permitted to add, on the subject or mal. the Indian Zodiac, that, if I have erred in a former essay, where the longitude of the lunar mansions is computed from the first star in our constellation of the Ram, I have been led into an error by the very learned and ingenious M. Bailly, who relied, I pre-
sume, on the authority of M. Le Gentil. The origin of the Hindu Zodiac, according to the Surya Siddhanta 9 must be nearly v 19 21' 54", in our sphere, and the longitude of Chitra, or the Spike, must of course be 199 21' 54" from the vernal equinox; but since difficult by that computation to arrange the it is twenty-seven mansions and their several stars, as they are delineated and enumerated in the RetnamaJa, I must for the present suppose with M. Bailly, that the Zodiac of the H'mdus had two origins, one constant and the other variable ; and a farther inquiry into the subject must be reserved for a season of retirement and leisure.
v
Vol,
II.
P. /n-T
4^
m ip^f^/^frr/^^]mt^rj?^ ^^ . ^rm&f^iHmmi
j?Jsp/.
(r*
^^^mW^m^^fmi^mri^
XXVIII.
is painful to meet perpetually with words that convey no distinct ideas ; and a natural desire of avoiding that pain excites us often to make inquiries, the result of which can have no other use than to give Ignorance is to the mind what us clear conceptions. extreme darkness is to the nerves both cause an and we naturally love knowledge uneasy sensation; as we love light, even when we have no design of applying either to a purpose essentially useful. This is intended as an -apology for the pains which have been taken to procure a determinate answer to a question of no apparent utility, but which ought to be readily answered in India *' What is Indian Spikenard ?" All agree that it is an odoriferous plant, the best sort of which, according to Ptolemy, grew about Rangamritica or Rangamati, and on the borders of It is mentioned by the country now called Butan. Diotcorides, whose work I have not in my possession but his description of it must be very imperfect,^ ince neither Liunaus nor any. of his disciples pretend to class it with certainty ; and, in the latest botanical work that we have received from Europe, it is marked as unknown. 1 had no doubt, before I was personally acquainted with Korrtig, that he had ascertained it ; but he assured me that he knew not what the Greek writers meant by the nard of India ; he had found, indeed, and described a sixth species of the nardus, which is called Indian in the Supplement
JT
Dda
4g6
on the spikenard
to Lhtrueus't but the nardus is a grass which, though it bear a spike, no man ever supposed to be the true
Spikenard, which the great botanical philosopher himself was irxlined to think a species of Andropogon, and places in his Materia Medira, but with an expression Since the of doubt, among his polygamous plants. death of Koenig 1 have consulted every botanist and physician with whom 1 was acquainted, on the subject before us ; but all have confessed without reserve, though not without seme regret, that they were ignorant what was meant by the Indian Spikenard.
In order to procure information from the learned natives, it was necessary to knew the name of the plant The Very word nard ocin some Asiatic language. the Song &f Solomon; but 'the name and the curs in
the Hebre-iv lexicographers thing were both exotic both to be Indian ; but the word is in truth imagine Persian, and occurs in the following distich of an old
:
poet
An chu
bikbest, in
shafcest, in
cbu bar,
An
It is
1
Mara r&tans the stem, or, as Anju explains it, the pith; but it is manifestly a part of a vegetable, and neither the root, the fruit, nor the branch, which are all separately named. The Arabs have borrowed the word nard but in the sense, as we learn from the Kantis, of
a compdw
in old Persian, the
urgucnt.
Whatever
it
signified
which, like an ear or spike, has long been sub-v.:: sumh stituted for it ; and there can be no doubt that, by ntmbul of India the MusehnanS understand the with the nard of Ptolemy and the Nart or Spikenard', of Galen; who, by the way,
Arabic
wordy//;///'///,
Or THE AMTIENTS.
407
seen,
was deceived by the dry specimens -which he had and mistook them for roots.
A
who
it as an ingredient in Indian perfumes, had for some time almost convinced me that the true Spikenard was the Cetaca, or Pandanus of our botanists : his words are, Swnbul panj berg dared, Cfik dirazii an dah angoshtestu pahnai, seh, or, " The swnbul has five leaves, ten fingers long, and t(
frequently mentions
three broad.'*
Now
well
knew
easily have mistaken a thyrsus for a single flower I had seen no blossom, or assemblage of blossoms, of such dimensions, except the male Cetaca ; and, though the Persian writer describes the female as a different plant, by the vulgar name Cyor-a, yet such a mistake might naturally have been expected in such a work but what most confirmed my opinion, was the exquisite fragrance of the Cetaca-flower, which to my sense far surpassed the richest perfumes of Europe or Asia. Scarce a doubt remained, when 1 met with a description of the Cetaca by For* kohl, whose words are so
botanist,
and might
:
which we are
apt to form of Spikenard that I give you a literal translation of them " The Pandanus is an incomparable H plant, and cultivated for its odour, which it breathes
:
',
*'
one or two Spikes, in a situation rahumid, would be suffi. ient to diffuse an odo" riferous air for a long time through a spacious
so richly, that
ther
so that the natives in general are not about the living plants, but purchase the <c spikes at a great price*'' I learned also, that a fragrant essential oil was extracted from the flowers and I procured from Banares a large phial of it, which was adulterated with sandal ; but the very adulteration convinced me, that the genuine essence must be valuable, from the great number of thyrsi that must be
" apartment;
"
solicitous
Dd 3
408
ON THE SPIKENARD
required in preparing a small quantity of it. Thus had I nearly persuaded myself, that the true nard was to be found en the banks of the Ganges, where the Hindu women roll up its flowers in their long black hair after bathing in the holy river; and I imagined,
that the precious alabaster-box
ture,
in
ivine, contained
poet offers to entertain his friend with a cask of old an essence of the same kind, though
its
degree of purity with the nard which but an Arab of Mecca, who saw in my study some flowers of the Cetaca, informed me that the plant was extremely common in Arabia, where it was named Cadhi; and several Mahomedans of rank and learning have since assured me, that the true name of the Indian Sumbul was not Cetaca, but Jatamansi. This was important information findandanus was not peculiar to in qr, therefore, that the Hindustan, and considering that the Sumbul of Abuldiffering in
I
had procured
it
in the precise
number of
leaves
on the
and
in the season
of
flowering, though the length and breadth corresponded very nearly, I abandoned my first opinion, and be-
gan to inquire eagerly for the Jatamansi, which grew, was told, in the garden of a learned and ingenious A fresh friend, and fortunately was then in blossom. plant was very soon brought to me. It appeared on inspection to be a most elegant Cyprus with a polished three-sided culm, an umbella with three or four dnsiform leaflets minutely serrated, naked proliferous peduncles, crowded spikes, expanded daggers; and its branchy root had a pungent taste with a faint aromatic odour \ but no part of it bore the least resemblance to the drug kno n in Europe by the appellation of Spikenard, and a Museltnan physician from Dehli assured me positively, that the plant was not Jatamansi. but Sud, as it is named in Arabic, which
I
\
tinguishes
particularly dis-
He produced on
OF THE ANTIENTS.
409
the next day an extract from the Dictionary of Natural History, to which he had referred ; and I present you with a translation of all that is material in it.
u
"
"
'*
i.
Sud has
and so fragrant
as
name of Subterranean
Mush :
rough
bid
at
its
"
*s
leek, but
some resemblance to that of a longer and narrower, strong, somewhat the edges, and tapering to a point. 2. Sumleaf has
is
and was called nard by Sumbul or " Nardin but, when the word stands alone, it means .*' the Sumbul of India, which is an herb without flower *' or fruit (he speaks of the drug only) like the tail
*'
means a
;
spike or ear,
11
the Greeks.
There
of an eimine, or of a small weasel, but not quite so and about the length of a finger. It is dark11 ish, inclining to yellow, and very fragrant ; it is " brought from Hindustan , and its medicinal virtue *' lasts three iyears." It was easy to procure the dry which corresponded perfectly with the deJatamansi, scription of the Sumbul; and, though a native Mus elman afterwards gave me a Persian paper, written by himself, in which he represents the Sumbul of India, the Sweet Sumbul* and the Jatamansi as three different plants, yet the authority of the Tohfatul Mumenin is decisive that the Sweet Sumbul is only another denomination of nard ; and the physician who produced that authority, brought, as a specimen of Sumbul, the very same drug which my Pandit, who is also a physician, brought as a specimen of the Jatamansi. Brahmen of eminent learning gave me a parcel of the same sort, and told me that it was used in their
**
r<
thick,
sacrifices
that, when fresh, it was exquisitely sweet, and added much to the scent of rich essences, in winch was a principal ingredient that the merchants it brought it from the mountainous country to the north -east of Bengal', that it was the entire plane,
; ;
Dd 4
4!0
ON THE SPIKENARD
not a part of it, and received its Sanscrit names from its resemblance to locks of hair ; as it is called Spikenard, I suppose, from its resemblance to a spike when it is dried, and not from the configuration of its flowers, which the Greeks, probably, never examined.
Persian author describes the whole plant as resembling the tail of an ermine ; and the Jatamansi, which is manifestly the Spikenard of our druggists,
The
has precisely that form, consisting of withered stalks and ribs of leaves, cohering in a bundle of yellowish
brown
capillary fibres,
be assured, that the nardus of Ptolemy, the Indian Sumbul of the Persians and Arabs, the Jatamansi of
the Hindus, and the Spikenard of our shops, ufi one and the same plant ; but to what class and genus it belongs in the Linnean system, can only be ascei :ained
by an inspection of
Dr. Patrick communicates with obliging faRussel, who always cility his extensive and accurate knowledge, informed me by letter, that " Spikenard is carried over the de" sert" (from I ndia, I presume) " to Aleppo, where
the fresh blossoms.
"
*'
*'
He
used in substance, mixed with other perfumes, and worn in small bags, or in the form of essence, and kept in little boxes or phials, like atar of roses." Indian nard is persuaded, and so am I, that the
it is
is
same vegetable.
Though diligent researches have been made at my request on the borders of Bengal and Behar, yet the Jatamansi has not been found growing in any part of the British territories, Mr. Saunders, who met with it in Bntan, where, as he was informed, it is very
common, and whence
to
it is brought in a dry Rangpur, has no hesitation in pronouncing
;
state
it a posnot
OF
essential character
THE ANTIENTS.
411
of the plant, which he examined, had no doubt that the Jatamansi was composit I and corymbifcrous with stamens connected by the anthers, and with female prolific florets, intermixed with hermaphrodites. The word Spike was not used by the antients with botanical precision, and the Stachys its.li is wmcillated with only two species out of fifteen, that could justify
fore concluded
its
generic appellation.
there-
Spikenard was a Baccharis, and that, while the philosopher had been searching for it to no purpose,
that the true
Trod on
called
it
suspected,
nevertheless,
that
the plant
which Mr.
Saunders described was not Jatamansi', because I knew that the people of Butan had no such name for it, but distinguished it by very different names in difparts of their hilly country I knew also that the Butias, who set a greater value on the drug than it seems, as a prefume, to merit, were extremely reserved' in giving information concerning it, and might be tempted, by the narrow spirit of monopoly, to mislead an inquirer for the fresh plant. The friendlyzeal of Mr. Purling will probably procure it in a state of vegetation ; for, when he had the kindness, at my
ferent
desire, to
make
inquiries for
it
among
the
Butan mer-
not be obtained without an order from their sovereign whom he immediately dispatched a messenger with an earnest request, that eight or ten of the growing plants might be sent to him at Rangput. Should the Devaraja comply with that request, and should* the vegetable flourish in the plain of Bengal, we shall have ocular proof of its class, order, genus, and species ; and if it prove the same with th$
the Devaraja, to
412
ON THE SPIKENARD
Jatarnansi of Nepal, which I now must introduce to your acquaintance, the question with which I began
this essay will
be satisfactorily answered.
Having
by the name
T
of Jatamansi,
mountains of Nepal,
requested
my
Mr. Law, who then resided at Goya, to procure some of the recent plants by the means of the Nepakse pilgrims ; who, being orthodox Hindus, and
friend
possessing
many
rare
books
in the Sanscrit
language,
the
true
were more
Jatarnansi,
likely than
the Butias to
know
by which name they generally distinguish it. Many young plants wer, accordingly sent to Gaya, with a. Persian letter specifically naming them, and apparently written by a man of rank and literature so that no suspicion of deception or of error can. be justly
;
entertained.
By
#// planted at Gaya, where they have blossomed, and at first seemed to flourish, F must therefore, describe
fa-
voured
racy
dice,
me with a drawing of it, andjn whose accuwe may perfectly confide; but, before I produce
1
the description,
must endeavour
to
remove
a preju-
are addicted to swear by every word of their master Linrueus, will hardly abandon, and which I, who love truth better than him, have abandoned with some reluctance. Nard has been generally supposed to be 2. grass; and the word stachys or spike, which agrees wuh the habit of that natural orThere der, gave rise, perhaps, to the supposition. which most travellers and some is a plant in Java, physicians call spikenard ; and the Governor of Chinsura, who is kindly endeavouring to procure it thence in a state fit for examination, writes me word, that a il Dutch author pronounces it a grass like the Cypiras, " but insists that what we call the spike is the fibrous W part above the root, as long as a man's little finger,
OF
THE ANTIENTS.
413
" of
" fragrant, and with a punge*nt, but aromatic scent." This is too slovenly a description to have been written by a botanist; yet I believe the latter part of it to be tolerably correct, and should imagine that the plane was the same with our Jatamansi, if it were not commonly asserted that the Javan spikenard was used as a condiment; and if a well informed man, who had seen it in the island, had not assured me that it was a sort of Pimento, and consequently a species of Myrtle, and of the order now called Hesperian. The resemblance before mentioned between the Indian sunibul and the Arabian Sud, or Cyprus, had led me to suspect that the true nard was a grass, or a reed ; and, as this country abounds in odoriferous grasses, I began to collect them from all quarters. Colonel Kyd obligingly sent me two plants with sweet-smelling roots ; and, as they were known to the Pandits, I soon found their names in a Sanscrit dictionary one of them is called gandliasaflii, and used by the Hindus to scent the red powder of Sapan, or Bakkam-wood, which they scatter in the festival of the vernal season ; the other has many names, and, among them, nagaramastac and gonarda; the second of which means rustling in the water; for all the Pandits insist that nard is never used as a noun in Sanscrit, and signifies, as the root of a verb, to sound, or to rustle. Soon after, Mr. Burrow brought me, from the banks of the Ganges near Heridwar, a very fragrant grass, which in some places covers whole acres, and diffuses, when crushed, so strong an odour, that a person, he says, might easily have smelt it, as Alexander is reported to have smelt the nard of Gedrosia from the back of an elephant its blossoms were not preserved, and it cannot, there:
fore, be described. From Mr. Blane of Lucnow, I received a fresh plant, which has not flowered at Calcutta ; but I rely implicity on his authority, and have
no doubt
that
it
is
a species of
Andropogon
it
has
4.T4
ON THE SPIKENARD
rather a rank aromatic odour, and, from the virtue ascribed to it of curing intermittent fevers, is known
by the Sanscrit name of jwarancusa, which literally means a fever-hook, and alludes to the iron-hook with which the elephants are managed. Lastly, Dr. Anderson of Madras, who delights in useful pursuits and
me with a complete specimen of the Andropogon Nardus, one of the most common grasses on the coast, and flourishing most luxuriantly on the mountains, never eaten by cattle, but extremely grateful to bees, and containing an essential oil, which, he understands, is extracted from it in many parts of Hindustan, and used as an atar, ox perfume. He adds a very curious philological remark, that, in the Tamul dictionary, most words beginning with nar have some relation to fragrance ; as narukeradu to yield an odour ; nartum plllu, lemon-grass ; nartei, citron ; narta manum, the wild orange-tree narum panel, the Indian Jasmin ; narurn allerl, a strong smelling flower ; and nartu, which is put tor nard in the Tamul version of our Scriptures; so that not only the nard of the Hebrezvs and Greeks, but even the copla narium of Horace, may be derived from an Indian root. To this I can only say, that I have not met with any such root in Sanscrit, the oldest polished language of India ; and that in Persian, which has a manifest affinity with it, nar means a pomegranate, and nargll (a word originally Sanscrit) a, cocoanut ; neither of which has any remarkable fragrance.
in assisting the pursuits of others, favoured
;
Such is the evidence in support of the opinion given by the great Swedish naturalist, that the true nard was a gramineous plant, and a species of Andropogon ; but since no grass, that I have yet seen, bears any resemblance to \X\QJatamansi, which 1 conceive to be the
nardus of the antients, I beg leave to express my dissent, with some confidence as a philologer, though with humble diffidence as a student in botany. I am not,
indeed, of opinion that the nardum of the
Romans
OF THE AJITIENTS.
415
essential oil of the plant from which was denominated, but am strongly inclined to believe that it was a generic word, meaning what we now call afar, and either the afar of roses from Cashmir and Persia, that of Cttaca, or Pandanus, from the western coast of India, or that of guru, or aloe-wood, from Asam or Cochinchina, the process of obtaining which is described by Abtdjazl, or the mixed perfume, called abir, of which the principal ingredients were yellow sandal, violets, orange-flowers, wood of aloes, rose-water, musk, and true Spikenard all those essences and compositions were costly; and, most of them being sold by the Indians to the Persians and Arabs, from whom, in the time of Octavius, they were received by the Sjrians and Romans, they must have been extremely dear at Jerusalem and at Rome. There might also have been a pure nardine oil, as Athentfus calls it ; but nardwn probably meant (and Koenig was of the same opinion) an Indian essence in general, taking its name from that ingredient which had, or was commonly thought to have, the most exBut I have been drawn by a pleasing quisite scent. greater length than I expected, and prosubject to a ceed to the promised description of the true nard or Jatamansi, which, by the way, has other names in the Amarcosh, the smoothest of which a.rejati/a and lomasa, both derived from words meaning hair. Mr. Burt, after a modest apology for his imperfect acquaintance with the language of botanists, has favoured me with an account of the plant, on the correctness of which I have a perfect reliance, and from which I collect the
AGGREGATE.
Cal.
Scarce any.
Cor.
One
petal.
Stam.
Pist.
Three
anthers.
Germ beneath.
One
style erect.
416
ON THE SPIKENARD
Seed solitary, crowned with a pappus. Root fibrous. Leaves hearted, fourfold ; radical leaves petioled.
It appears, therefore, to be the Protean plant, Valenan, a sister of the Mountain and Celtic Nard, and of a species which I should describe in the Linn<eanstyle, Valeriana Jatamansi floribus triandris, foliis cordatis qua terms , radicalibus petiolatis. The radical
from the ground and enfolding the plucked up with a part of the root, and, being dried in the sun, or by an artificial heat, are sold as a drug, which from its appearance has been called spikenard; though, as the Persian writer observes, it might be compared more properly to the tail of an ermine. When nothing remains but the dry fibres of the leaves, which retain their original form, they have some resemblance to a lock of hair, from which the Sanscrit name, it seems, is derived. Two mercantile agents from Butan on the part of the Devaraja were examined, at my request, by Mr. Harrington, and informed him that the drug, which the Bengalese called Jatamansi, " grew erect above the " surface of the ground, resembling in colour an ear " of green wheat; that, when recent, it had a faint *' odour, which was greatly increased by the simple " process of drying it; that it abounded on the hills, " and even on the plains, of Butan, where it was " collected and prepared for medicinal purposes."
leaves,
rising
young
stern, are
What
ture,
its
to be antispasmodic; and,
probably flourish
in a state
fit
so that
it
for experiment.
On
the description of
the Indian Spikenard, compared with the drawing, I must, observe, that, though all the leaves, as delineated, may not appear of the same shape, yet all of
OF
THE ANTIENTS.
Mr. Burt
assures
417
them
me
and petioled; and it is most probable, that the cauline and floral leaves would have a similar form in their state of perbut, unfortunately, the plants at Gaya fect expanbion are now shrivelled ; and they who seek farther information, must wait with patience until new stems and leaves shall spring from the roots, or other plants shall be brought from Nepal and Butan. On the proposed inquiry into the virLues of this celebrated plant, I must be permitted to say, that, although many botanists may have wasted their time in enumerating the qualities of vegetables, without having ascertained them by repeated and satisfactory experiments, and although mere botany goes no farther than technical arrangement and description, yet it seems indubitable that the great end and aim of a botanical philosopher is to discover and prove the several uses of the vegetable system
that the four radical leaves are hearted
;
and, while he admits with Hippocrates the fallaciousness of experience, to rely on experiment alone as the basis of his knowledge.
APPENDIX.
A
METEOROLOGICAL DIARY,
KEPT AT CALCUTTA,
By
HENRY
TRAIL,
Esq.
From
ist
REMARKS.
Weather, begun the the INist offollowing Diary of the change in the air was February 1784, every
greatest precision
three times
every day, and always nearly at the same hours, viz. at sun-rifing at three, or half past three o'clock in the
afternoon, and at eleven o'clock at night.
wind continued southerly, the Thermoplaced in a Verandah open to the Esplanade, meter was where there was at all times a free circulation of air ; and when the wind became northerly, the instrument was removed to the opposite side of the house, and equally exposed, as in the preceding part of the year.
While
the
The Barometer
place.
continued
always in
the
same
The Hygrometer made use of, was a bit of fine sponge, suspended in a scale (on the end of a steelyard) first prepared for more easily imbibing the moisture, by dipping it in a solution of Salt of Tartar, afterwards drying it well, and bringing it to an equilibrium by a weight in the opposite scale, at a time when the atmosphere appeared to have the least degree of moisture.
side, with the needle of the yard, pointed out the quantity of moisture gained or lost daily ^ but in the following Diary ihe degrees of moisture have seldom been taken down.
90 on each
4-22
APPENDIX.
fall of rain was likewise taken, and the quancubic inches daily noted down.
Every
tity
in
The
Here it may be remarked, that at sun-rising, there seldom or ever any wind ; but no sooner is the air a little rarefied by its rays, than a little breeze begins, and this generally increases till about noon, when again it begins to lose its force, and dies away, from
is
the
same
cause.
Moon
upon
mean temperature,
as well as
the weight of the atmosphere of each quarter, is marked down by taking in the three days preceding, and the three days after the change with the intermediate day. From these, the density is discovered, by the following rule given by Dr. Bradely, viz.
accurately
A,
meter
altitude of barometer
i
B, altitude of thermo-
D,
density.
B x 350
N-.
= D or density.
taken.
In this, the mean morning density is only However, the mean density for the whole may be found by the same rule.
B.
January
1,
1785.
From
an examination of one
year's observations
Moon
on
ing
it.
However,
any certain rule to be laid down regardit may be affirmed that the direc-
APPENDIX.
tion of the winds has
fail
4*3
more
effect
upon
it,
as
we never
to see the
from the
lowest of
NWj
all
mercury highest when the wind blows in a lesser degree from the N, and when it proceeds from the SE quarters.
424
APPENDIX.
S C O
uT
<U
G-
"G
.ti
<->
fa "3 G
rt
rt
u ^
CO
0<5
^
-A.
O C O 3 8
rt
4_
O
rt
I- -22
.O
D k.
<U
"a,
<t>
.2
o S
<u
4-1
go
W
-G
G 3
wmj
*t~
_D _G
G cJ O a U G JS O ~ rt
11
.
<
S
?3
'
'2
o u
, *
12
5 C
b O
>
bD o .G <U -G -=
<L>
CD
bX>
>^
^5
I 8
"
?
3 C m
CO
G
bo
5 ^ G
2
_G
<u rt
CO
oo
T3
-G
APPENDIX.
42S
OO
.-12
APPENDIX.
^*
W| hN
k*
c C
APPENDIX.
4*7
oo 3
8 5
O O O O
i
^2 2,S'2|
tfl
"3 "5 *5
%.
'
3 "
2 2 SB
-3
'-3
"
" S
fen
2HH
L>
H>
a Q 3
-2
5* " 2 a a a 5 J3 Ji a 3
jj .g
,s J3
tj-
-s,a
a a .5} a
wM^i'^-0li-
>-
l,-
OfJ^
,<"^
H 3 I
-v. I-
PI I 2 ^2
d
_
.
"
""
c/
<"1
"">
"
11
oooooooooooooooooooooocoooooooocoooooooooo,
r-oo oo r-oo oo oo oo oo oo f^ t- r-oo
o>
<^>"-oooooo
r-oo
_*
Sotir>.r--r-.
ko
OQO
is r~
<7>
i-o
c*
r- r- S> r>
t-~
N
S.(tfJ
CO
*J-
u-,o
^*.
wo
t--oo
-"
<*
oO
428
APPENDIX.
APPENDIX.
429
CO
43
APPENDIX.
APPENDIX.
43*
S o
V 3 O
.1
..
o o o \J
^ -3 -5
-3
id*
u 3 3
in
>
>
<;
co
>
U
'-5 '
-T-r-i
;*
; C 5 O O O
2 " "= ^ CJ
^ ^
c
uie-a
Mim<J-wwl^f*lroH<OOi-iOOM*<Ort
fl
t)
tl
WW
o
en
c +,
*
>u_
>i
6 6
^ odd
*i
*
6
*i
#
_,
o3
A.
^^
rt
^^i'^^^^^ax^x^^a^^a^S^^^a^x^c
sIeq
j
m +^so
r~gc
^C
- h
J7*^g ~
- S
<T
w n
432
APPENDIX.
-"i
c-
J
^ K
H
-S
'
6
<~
'
-' c-jf c
.a
OOKO'
~
t5
j
"a *a
'
o d
? - * S3
APPENDIX,
43:
V
* 44
>
> 6 o d d 6 o
r~
^.5
'fl ft ft ft ft ft
<u
3 o o o o o
c o o o
'-3
H^Gft^>H
**..*?
HE
W 2 N
-3 -S -5 3C
U -o S -3
-5 "5 -a
'-3
-3 ts
ffi
-a CJ
i-iMi-<MOO'-
,H
OOMroiHMri-0"-iw>-''-'x'-,-
0000'-'<
y~.
^1
*!
S>
fc^VO
cJ
H^O
wi-i^-dootid
L__
^"
>-*
*000
~>/~
s
"5
hi
\r
H O
rl
n
Days.
1
to
^}-
"".^
Mm
J>0 "
! Tj"
too
t^oo on
434
ji3
wioo *n oo r^oo
^
CO
APPENDIX.
435
r;
t:
3CCCOOOCOOOOOCCOCCOOOOOCOC
<
43 6
APPENDIX.
<3
APPENDIX.
437
^ a
43*
APPENDIX.
1
1
CO
^
CO
si
<*>
APPENDIX.
439
44
APPENDIX.
U
Mi
O
rt
TD
-
c E
C
.
C
.
-
<-2
en
bD
c s rt rt
Li
o > o
rt
o J3
->
<u
O O
bfi-3
s p
P9
.O
**-
rt
1
IT
^
u
OO t- 3
O
t-
CT-
'^^
_
'bb
< "HO
Bo,
'5
U o u
CO
in
oa r~ r^
oo
-3
5
o >
ri
c
'2
b
>
^3
m m O
o o ^
c--"
c o
QJ
C 5
'o
C,N
o
i
^ u c i E 5 - u
s = S 5
S
TO
.5 5
o5
!!*5
-3
Jx.
,2 *
- c
cs
=)
7^
/i
.=
"J
o O
.2
fi
"S
u S
u^
"d
fe
-
5
c
to
<
<
^a <-
Cu
rt
rt
>
APPENDIX.
-3
_c
44r
-o
.
.
.
.
)3
jj
fc
-'*j
,l>fcJW *"|r-*
I
^5 -5
'-5
-a CJ -3
UU
"5 -5 ~5 -5 -a -5 -3 -5 "3 -o
'-5
-5 CJ -5 *q -S *o *o
O *o -3 S
mOO
mOOO0
OOoOOOOOO'-'COO'-'OOOC
06COOOwOOOO"00000000>ifiiHiHWMOO
W ,_ w
ui*
tzJ
,.
s.
inuj
55
J5
fc
6 d
lOtototoioOCOOCOtotooOto'OiOOioOOO
O
ro to to to
to to O O to C
tr,
O
to to
to
OOOOO
OOOO ..rgrOW
i1 !
to
O to O
O to to . _
wi-J;
GOO
^
r^
rii
ro^r-vCOOvot^rovCO
On
c->
000
oo r^
t-~
r^oo CO 00
'
N C\ ^o\
tf<3
rn "+no C> w\ c^ o\
>
on
ro
o 'do
to
o"
r<;
ON CTNOO ON
t>
coo
m r-^00 00 ~ t
"-
t^oo 00 no on
onoo
o O
i*
O
rjC-* l~*
~<
CI
r*
on On
<
C
.-
Tj-O "lOO NO
on'""
On On CTnoo r^
00 C^OO 00
r"
Ntf-
#nJ
gg
of"
~oo iy 00 oc
.-x/
oc
*
_S
(-1
to
00 co
""no
*?
{
I
cocococccoccoooom
h H mtt
"">NO
"NoOrt>-''i'ocNO->->CO ^(MSwjoco
t-SO On
iN.tNoo
CN3o
o o
ro- co
(nN
O - N
(1 n+
sXeq
442
APPENDIX,
O a
T3 -^
.
i
g *
-S
*-*
as
3
"3
">
'-'
ft
<u<l>o<l'c-.
w O
CL, <~
^ u
C *2
*>
ili
CO
APPENDIX.
443
*-o
U -o ^^S
jGCOO>-CGOOOOOO ^--00
O O O O m
C - O
Ml
***
>
>
*2*s
"
oo
APPENDIX.
444
"
'I
>
t) <u
rt
-j
j -c
TO
o 2
-~ w
1>
<U
jC
a>
<u
tJ n
c
'
HI bi)
CO
to
!-
II
.
.y
c c o S
JtJ
^ ^
to
to
u .
*-
w WJ3
in
r^-o r-
" O O - c 6 6 O 6 .
13
r
,
H
a.
__ TO
JC
u ^ O d c c rf w E
j_
._
"d
\0
^.c
o"
ro ro
o O M 6 6 6 ^ r^i
o
.- S
O
_.
u
u
to
C
trf
v2
jC
to
cs
-^
" X
.2
c
>-.
to
- .^ r*~ rt
i3 I-
JJ
<J
c o
^
c
to
>,
v,
O ^
>^15
w ^
bD >>
t>
2 -
rc
^
c:
c/>
^"^ I
re
?,
ra
_ C - W o U ^d
rt
ri
c n ^ a
c3 <U
tn
crt
"
c O
r*
<y
-<
_
N^
^^
APPENDIX.
445
44-6
APPENDIX.
be o
<u
GO
b
?
J4
APPENDIX.
!
447
rjooodoocojotoeocgoojojooooooojc
"5 -3
'-5
U ~B -5 3 *5 -5 -5 -5
-5 -5 -5 "3 H5 -3 -3
^ *
-5 -5 -5 -3 -5 "5 -3 ^5 -5
-c
OOOOOOOOOOihOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOi-i
HiHHi.*4ctNN^i-rlNi-iHicli-Hi*Ni-ii-iHHr)HiNrlclf*lf">r<-
00OOOOO"'-<O>-'i- NO
l
O'-ii-iO0O'""-O0OOl-'O0C
II
Hm
>
>.
cr>
I.
^
K*
**
r*
S S5
e o o c
C"* **
r-*-
oco
M w m m
hi
ii
oooooooc^c^ooq
hi
nf
HiioooooqqqoNO 3\ o
n O H
f;
i-3
A..
'Z,
h<|*
-
5-\o to
r*i Ti-
wo vo
w-,\o
r-*:
ioo i^o
>e
lt.o
v^.
vc vo
o vo vo
r-
-O rj-
u~,VO
t-3C C*
siCed
448
APPENDIX.
03
^
<5S
C3
APPENDIX.
449
4SO
APPENDIX.
oo
APPENDIX.
.
45*
."Ot= 0030^C03rtoO.-31, Ti
. |J
.
>-
r)
rr
rt" -
i-
N " M
"~-
*>
""
rj
r-i
or^-^"
^N f^H
mr<*i^-^-
ri
r<
r*-*Tt-m*
rororor*
t*
O n
OC00OO>-iOO0'-O>-!T"O
W
uiefl
^OONmwOC
W>>W
W (d
CO
s ;
45*
APPENDIX.
CO
^
iV
^
5
e>
APPENDIX.
453
O O
'-5 '-5
r)O0OOO0
Q
-3 -5 ^5 -5
',
=
^
-5jj
30000COOn3rt3rt O 3 O O ^ 'J'JjUOUOt^t^ T 7
|3
-
jo
-"
O M
*-
ti
<
h
ci
if^-mM
tJ-tj-cc!<v->
CI
it
ro fO
Tj-
tf
r/, r(-
D O O
^t"
mC
<4-
n win N
CO000>iON'-i-^
f<)WlO0
WMH HMH
W
O
*-
OOO in N
>/->"i/-,
OOOOCCOio^
itfjttMfi..t
O O
O
it
*)
CO
cl
It
00
11
00 " n
CO
"-1 It
00 N
-
OOO
f*l
it
.-.
rt
OO h
u-i it
O
on co
"i
o o o
c">
**
ocoooooooooooo COO N N
^it
,
*1~' 3"'S}-oo^-^-io*f
"I
on
m
CI
*1-
O "i O30 00
O N
X OO OO
u-|
rt- -4-
k">o
N CO OO
N
o> CO CO
CM^O O
OC
~> + C\
O mo cooo O O OOO CO t^ CO CO
t^cj-
r-
'
>o 30 co
r-~ r-
00 00 00 00 00 00
O O N
CO
l
r-.
00 00 00 00
t-~ r--
o N o N
r-o
c 00
n o r-vo 00 000
n m in h-i co o 000 oc 00 00 00
r^\o n ~ vo n c^ r^ i^ t^ r^oo
6^
Sj
s
b>>
hi
454
APPENDIX.
o g
.5 >,
to
.
<u
CO
4-1
2
f^AO
0O0O0O
OnO-O^D
O u~
<L>
bo
(J
O^OO 00 On
O Cs
O
r,_,
O
t-U
so
OO t^OO (7vo> (^
tl
-a -a
"
.5
..
cry a s
y
.2
*
Ji
"
^
*
c
"
3 2 S _2'5 3
a eq
'SO
rt
rt
S T3 C C 2 5
r
,
r?
<3J
T3
c S.2
<" aj
r <u
5
y 55
*^
*-
O
4-1
)-.
*=
J
O c
^
-
a?
w'i
_ <*>
<u
-5
H.S
2
-o
APPENDIX.
455
=
3j?iJS.2.{.2JKSSS O tj tj O W O CJJ3 ^ -^ -S
r
03ce03"rt3-330CSnDK
'-a
ui
45 6
APPENDIX.
CO
^
CO t>0p
os os
*
^
&
^
f*4
\T
*
O
"*
^
co
APPENDIX.
0.1.-0
-'
!,'
.
457
'
-~
j -5 -5
'J
Cv -5
O -5 -^ -5 -5
-3 -5 -o
-5-5-5-5
-5 -5 -5 -5 -5
W
w M
u-i
ww
w N h o ?fc
-fc
t^
U~|
fi
u-t\o "O
00000 O
ro fO fO
oooooooooooooooooo O iot
-^- u-i trj^o
li^O
CO
ooooooooooooooooocoocoooocoooo t^^-thMfONiroro^Mi O ^ ^m
ro >-^0
PO io
i/-,vO
VO
O G
r*.
t-i
r^vD
"1
<->
"">
* ^OO OO VO
N
"1
MOO
"~i Tj-
._
<v-<x>
O O N
t>-
C^ rJ-OO t^ l^
vS vo'>S
t^^o
^^
""^
^^ f
<
TJ-OO
"?" '*"
<* r^OO
f^
1
f'Tfff
t^ t f- "~.\D
ri
t~~
"C "f1
>000 VO
"?"
"?"
"?
-<
-J
-v
r-y
5T r^ <i OO
32
.--.A
OOOG0OO0OOO00O000GOOO9OG0OOO0O0OOO
i-OO
oooooccoooooooooocoooo
ooooooooooooooooooooocoooooooooooo r^oooo
M
-siEQ
tnrf< U"|V t^OO
C*
I^OO OO OO 00 OO OO 00 oooo
.*l*-<MMMM>HH<*rtrl<tt
O * M
r*i
^- "ivo t-^OO C^
ro ^- vri^O r^oo
s
*
M h m
(?0
cr
45*
APPENDIX,
APPENDIX.
459
460
APPENDIX.
'
CO
j*
St
is
5)5
APPENDIX.
1
"
jfil
3-r
S 5 2 2 2 3 S
_
jg
-J;
-5
? 1 oC
2 2 2 2 2 2 2
'?
=1 -5 -5
"-S
^5
JJ 3O
2*
| |
-5
5*
'-5
5 |
^3
'-5
5*
-^
MD
">
*0
C N
"3" *"
'
sOVDvOOvCO
O O O
^^^^^
t^o o
<^
S" N
jt
t*
p*">
r^ r^
*j
1^ in in 10 'o
>no
c^^
S?S
3 5;^%^ ? S~
E W. 5 ? S o ^S < .
c S-S
'Tto
CO
rj- ir,>)
J^OO
O>0
S.CSQ
426
APPENDIX.
<u
-a
S."2
2
c
o c bb g
.
G
-
p> rt
<u
_g
C ulj
<u
G rt
CO
G <" I? CJ3 3
O
.G
-m
*""
bfl
!_
<u
2 G "O
o w)a, G O .
oo oo oo no
v-x
o o\ o
r rt
>o
n c
oo
jd
c3
IN
H C
^
CO
b. -2 P-.-O
C a ;: H u =
i,
en
1)
!-
JS JX jc
*-
2
rt
^ s
</>
nl
3
ts
'-
Oj2aj?,6sfi
Bq
is'
APPENDIX.
4^3
464
APPENDIX.
CO
o
O
g o
c
l~>
OU^TJX
1
CJ
'
o^
U^<<
i^O
APPENDIX.
46:
466
APPENDIX,
CO
<<*
i
rt
-
O
oo
-n v^>
oo
t- t~-
u-i
tJ-co oo
rf
co ve -o
I
<4>
NMO
00"0
|ti
-o -c
uuaor
APPf.NDIX,
467
46S
APPENDIX.
CO
470
APPENDIX.
the foregoing Diary of the Weather, it may in regard to the variation of the Baro-
From
be remarked
meter, that during the cold season, from November to March, the mercury is at its greatest height; and at the lowest during the rainy months of May, June, July,
August, and September. The variation of the Thermometer, or the difference between the temperature of mid-day and that of the morning and evening is very trifling, seldom exceeding 3 or 4 during the
rains, whereas,
is
8 or io.
ABSTRACT
K
of a
METEOROLOGICAL REGISTER,
kept
at Calcutta,
1784.
II.
A Synopsis
of the different Cases that may happen in deducing the Longitude of one Place from another, by
Means of Arnold's Chronometers, and of finding the Rates when the Difference of Longitude is given.
formerly the custom to give IT waswithout any investigation of rules for calculatheir principles; tion,
but the contrary method has so much taken place of late, that those who are not acquainted with the theory of a subject are seldom in a capacity of calculating at all ; and those who are acquainted with it, must either lose time by recurring thereto continually, or run the hazard of often making mistakes. Indeed, the use of practical rules is so obvious, that Newton has often given them when he has omitted their demonstrations and the want of them has been noted by Bacon among The Hindoos were so the deficiencies of learning.
particularly attentive in that respect, that they usually
gave two rules for the same operation ; one couched in the shortest terms possible, and often in verse, for the ease of the memory ; and the other more at length, It therefore is much to be wished as an explanation.
would revert to the ancient custom so far, as to pay some attention to the reduction of their knowledge to practice ; that people may not be under
that authors
want
to use
them.
is
The
that
I
following
one
drew up
for
my
474
situations of places
APPENDIX.
in India
;
and
I insert
it
on ac-
count of
its utility
and
easiness of application.
at the
place
at the
second place
T=Time
by the Watch
;
at the
places
the observa-
two places (found by taking the by the Watch, and correcting it acrate,
&c.)
r=Rate
APPENDIX.
apruiSuoq jo aauajajjip aqi si
47S
III.
MEMORANDUMS
CONCERNING
JN OLD
BUILDING
oi Egypt, as well as those latelydiscovered in Ireland (and probably too the Tower of Babel) seem to have been intended for nothing more ban images of Mahadeo,
THE pyramids
Two
of the Sakkard pyramids described by Normany of the small ones, usually built of mud in the villages of Beiigal. One of the pyramids of Dashour, drawn by Pocock, is nearly similar to that I am going to mention, except in the acuteness of the angle. Most of the Pagodas of the Carnatic are either complete or truncated pyramids ; and an old stone-builciing without any cavity, which 1 saw in Yatnheah, near the Catabeda river, on the Arracan coast, differed so little from a pyramid, that 1 did not suspect it was meant for the image of Seeva, till I was told it by the natives.
den, are, like
The largest building of the kind which I have yet seen in India, is about two days journey up the Gunduc river, near a place called Kessereah : it goes by the
Bheetn Sains Dewry , but seems evidently intended for the well-known image of Mahadeo ; having originally been a cylinder placed upon the frusr
name of
478
APPENDIX.
turn of a cone, for the purpose of being seen at a disIt is at present very much decayed; and it is tance. not easy to tell whether the upper part of the cylinder has been globular or conical ; a considerable quantity
of the outside
a
is
fallen
down, but
it still
may be
seen
the river.
went from the river to view it was so uncommonly hot, that the walk and a fever together obliged me to trust to the measurements of a servant. For want of a better instrument, he took the circumference of the cylindrical part, in length of a spear, and from that as a scale, and a sketch of the building taken at- a distance, I deduced the following dimensions. What dependence theremay be on his measures, I cannot determine ; but probably they are not very
day
I
The
erroneous.
64
65
feet
on which the
93 363
cylinder
placed,
at the base,
-
Both the cone and the cylinder were of bricks j those of the last were of different sizes, many of them two spans long and one broad ; others were of the common size, but thinner ; and they were well burnt, though bedded in mortar little better than mud. There did not appear any signs of the cylinder's being the conical part was overgrown with jungle; hollow but I broke through it in several places, and found it everywhere brick.
:
whether it be visible from the site of ths ancient city where the famous pillar of but have a faint idea that it S'weah stands, or not
I
do not
recollect
APPENDIX.
is.
479
What the intention of these extraordinary columns may have been originally, is perhaps not so easy to
at first sight it would seem that they were for holding inscriptions, because those or Betttah, Dehli, and lllahabad, have inscriptions (though in a character that has not been yet deciphered); but the pillar of Singeah seems to have none whatever, for some Bramins told me they attended at the time it h as dug to the foundation, near twenty tee: under ground, by a gentleman of 'Patna, who had hopes to have found some treasures; and that there were not the Probably least vestige of any inscription upon it. those pillars, Cleopatra's Needle, and the DeviTs Bolts, at Bo rough bridge, may all have the same religious
tell
:
origin.
may
apo-
logize for the diversity of the subject, in mentioning, that while I sat under the shade of a large tree near the pyramid, on account of the sultry hear, some of the people of the adjacent village came and played
there with cowries on a diagram,
that was
by placing
a kind of pentagon ; this brought to my recollection a circumstance told me by a gentleman in England, That an old piece of silver plate had been dug out of the earth with such a figure upon it ; the use of it was totally unknown, as well as rhe age ; and I was desired to find what geometrical properties the figure possessed. One, I remember, was, that if any number
of points whatever were placed in a circular order, and each two alternate points joined, then the sum of all the salient angles of the figure would be equa to two right angles when the number of points was odd ; but equal to four right angles when the number was Euclid's properties of the angles of the triangle even. trapezium, are particular cases of theses but I had. and
480
APPENDIX.
till
no
saw the use here made of it. It seems, however, an argument in favour of the identity of the Druids and Bram'ms as well as another well-known diagram, visually caiied the Walls of Troy, which was used
originally in the IT:v.doo astrology.
These
figures,
how-
much
higher source,
what Leibnitz had a distant idea of in his Analysis of Situation, Euclid in his Porisms, and Girard perhaps in his Restitution of them. In fact., as the modern Algebraist.- hive the advantage of transferring a great part of their labour from the head to the hands, so there is reason to believe that the Hindoos had mecha?iical methods of reasoning geome-
and to have
relation to
much more extensive than the elementary methods made use of at present; and that even their games were deduced from and intended perhaps to be examples of them but this deserves to be treated more at length elsewhere.
trically,
:
The same
apology
may
perhaps excuse
my men-
tioning here, that the idea of the JSile\ deriving its floods from the melted snows, as well as the Ganges,
appears to be rather imaginary they seem to be caused principally by the rains ; for the high hills beyond the
:
snow
all
the year,
and
therefore the
the enormous swell of the Ganges ; not to mention that the effect of a thaw seems different from what would arise from the mere difference of heat, and
therefore
season.
might partly take place in winter and the dry 1 hat the rains are sufficient for the purpose,
:
APPENDIX.
fifteen cose
481
a heavy shower
river
fell
distant
soon
after,
upon them
was in a time filled to the very banks, and continued so fhort for many days; and large trees were torn up by the roots, and came driving down with such force by the torrent, that my boat was often endangered. Now, on these hills there was actually no snow whatever ; and as the rise was obviously caused by the rains, it may reasonably be concluded that the same effect has the
for
same cause
in other places.
IV.
BY
The following
Apparent time
i-.-.
in the
4 34
APPENDIX.
Weather.
Moderate
ditto, ditto, ditto,
Im.orEm
'
"'
March, 15 8 36 36
19
7 54
22 10 34 41 31 7 1 J4
APPENDIX.
Apparent tikq
d
485
'
"
486
APPENDIX.
Those to the 31st of March 17 88, were observed with a glass made by lVatkins> that magnified abouc no times; those from thence to the 12th of May 1 790, were observed with one of Rmnsdeiis telescopes of the
sore lately
a glass
times,
made for the navy; and the remainder with made by Do!urad> that magnifies about eighty
conclude these observations with a remark highly concerns both the buyers and makers of telescopes ; namely, that the parts which compose the object glass of an Achromatic, are generally put together in such a manner that they cannot be taken asunder ; and the brass part that they are bedded in, shoots a number of chymical ramification^ between the glasses,
I shall
f bat
little
or no service.
easily re-
move by making the compound object glass capable of being taken to pieces, or the parts in some other substance not liable to this defect.
V.
Islands in the Bay of Bengal are, many of them, covered with shells and marine productions to a great height, and there are beds of large smooth pebbles near the Herdwar, some hundreds of feet above the present level of the Ganges; the sea has therefore gradually been retiring, and consequently the position of the Equator was formerly farther north than it is at present in this part of the earth and if a few similar observations were made in other countries, it is evident that the ancient situation of the pole upon the surface of the earth might be determined
:
THE
many
difficulties
and
paradoxes
also
it
geographical antiquities. For this purpose would be adviseable to have permanent meriin
dian lines drawn in high northern latitudes, to be compared in succeeding ages, and also to have marks cut upon rocks in the sea, to shew the proper level of the
water.
In the aforesaid position of the Equator, the sr'nds of Tartary were inhabitable and the Siberian climates temperate ; the deserts of the Lesser Bukharia were then part of the seat of the Paradise of Moses j and the four sacred rivers of Eden went through India, China, Siberia, and into the Caspian Sea, respectively. This appears from a Bramin map of the world in the
I
i
^88
APPENDIX.
Sanscrit language, which I met with about two years ago in the higher parts of fndia, together with a valuable treatise of geography upon the system or Boodh ;
both of which
subject, to
I communicated, with my idea on the Mr. IVdford, of the Bengal Engineers; and
to be favoured
and
Hindoo Geography.
From the aforesaid country the Hindoo religion prothere are signs of bably spread over the whole earth it in every northern country, and in almost every system of worship. In England it is obvious ; Stonehensre and the is evidently one of the temples of Boodh arithmetic, the astronomy, astrology, the holidays, games, names of the stars, and figures of the constellations, the ancient monuments, laws, and even the languages of the different nations, have the strongest marks of the same original. The worship of the sun and lire, human and animal sacrifices, &c. have apthe religious ceremonies parently once been universal of the papists seem in many parts to be a mere servile copy of those of the Goseigns and Fakeers the christian ascetics were very little different from their filthy original the Bvras'^ys, &c ; even the hell of the northern nations is not at all like the hell of the scripture, except in some few particulars ; but it is so
:
striking a likeness of the hell ot the Hindoos, that I should not at all be surprised if the story of the sol-
it
in Saint Patrick's
purgatory, described
Sanscrit, with the
Matthew Parish
to be merely a translation
from the
names changed. The different tenets of Popery and Deism have a great similarity to the two doctrines of Brahma and Boodh ; and as the Bramins were the authors of the Ptolemaic system, so the Boodhists appear to have been the inventors of the ancient Philolaic, or Cofer?iican i as well as of the doctrine of attraction ; and
APPENDIX.
the Eleusiuian mysteries
4#9
probably too the established religion of the Greeks and may only be varieties of the two different sects. That the Druids of Britain were Bramins is beyond the least shadow of a doubt; but that they were all murdered and their sciences lost, is out of the bounds of probability ; it is much more likely that they turned Schoolmasters, Freemasons,
and
Fortune-tellers,
and
in
this
way
part of their
as
we
find
they have done. An old paper, said to have been found by Locke, bears a considerable degree of internal evidence both of its own antiquity and of this idea ; and on this hypothesis it will be easy to account for many difficult matters that perhaps cannot so clearly be done on any other, and particulary of the great similarity between the Hindoo sciences and ours : a comparison
between our oldest scientific writers and those of the Hindoos will set the matter beyond dispute ; and fortunately the works of Bede carry us twelve hundred years back, which is near enough to the times of the Druids to give hopes of finding there some of their remains. I should have made the comparison myself, but Bede is not an author to be met with in this country ; however, I compared an astrolabe in the Nagry character (brought by Dr. Mackinnon from Jynagur) with Chaucer's description, and found them co agree most minutely even the center pin which Chaucer calls " the horses" has a horse's head upon it in the instrument; therefore if Chaucer's description should happen to be a translation from Bede, it will be a strong argument in favour of the hypothesis, for we then could have nothing from the Arabians. What Bungey and Swisse! may contain, will also deserve inquiry; and that the comparison may be the readier made, where the books are procurable, I mean very shortly to publish translations of the LeeJavotty and Beej Geneta, or the arithmetic and algebra of the Hindoos. Ii *
:
4QO
It is
APPENDIX.
much
to
many of the
best treatises of the Hindoos are lost, and that many By the help of a of those that remain are imperfect.
Piindit I translated part of the Bcej Ganeta near six
when no European but myself, I believe, even suspected that the Hindoos had any Algebra; but finding that my copy was imperfect, I deferred completing the translation, in hopes of procuring the remainder. I have since found a small part more, and have seen many copies; but from the plan of the work (which in my opinion is the best way of judging) they still seem to be all imperfect, though the copier generally takes care to put at the end of them that they are I have the same opinion of the Leelavatfy, complete. and for the same reason indeed, it is obvious that there must have been treatises existing where algebra was carried much farther ; because many of their rules in astronomy are approximations deduced from infinite series, or at least have every appearance of it; such, for instance, as finding the sine from the arc, and the contrary ; and finding the angles of aright angled triangle from the hypothenuse and sides, independent of tables of sines ; and several others of a similar nature, much more complicated. I have been informed by one of their Pundits, that, some time ago, there were other treatises of Algebra besides that just mentioned, and much mere difficult, though he had not
years ago,
:
(
seen
still
them
danger of perishing very soon, it is much to be wished that people would collect as many of the books of science as possible (their poetry is in no danger) and particularly those of the doctrine of Boodh, which perhaps may be met with towards Thbct. That many of their best books are depraved and lost is evident, because there is not now a
be existing,
in
it
is
possible they
may
single
to be
met with
had elements not long ago, and apparently more extensive than those of Euclid, is obvious and yet
ATPENDIX.
;
49I
frDm some of their works of no great antiquity the same remarks are applicable to their cosmographical remains, in some of which there are indications of an astronomy superior to that of the Soorya Siddhant, and
such popular
Till
treatises.
therefore find some of their more supemust be rather from the form and construction of their astronomical tables and rules, and
rior works,
it
we can
questions,
the properties implied in their accidental solutions of &c. that, we can judge what they formerly knew, than otherwise. That they were acquainted with a differential method similar to Newton's, J shall give
many
than
Hindoo astronomy, which 1 began more years ago, but was prevented from finishing, by a troublesome and laborious employment that for two years gave me no leisure whatever j and which (though the small time I had to spare since has been employed in writing a comment on the works of Newton, and explaining them to a very ingenious na tive who is translating them into Jlrabic) I hope ere long to have an opportunity of completing. At preples of the
the construction of
some
tables,
which
first
led
:
me to
it is the klea of their having a differential method part of one, out of a number of papers that were written in the latter part of the year 1783 and the begin-
784, and of which several copies were taken by different people, and some of them sent to England. This particular extract was to investigate the rules at pages 2/53, 254, and 255 of Mons. GentiPs Voyage, of which the author says, " Je n'ai pu savoir sur quels " principes cette table est fondee," &c. and is as fol-
ning of
lows
in the
manner explained
in
"
ii
492
<c
.*
and afterwards taking the differences algebraically, and re" ducing them to puis of a Gurry, as in the follow" ing table, the principles of the method will be
"
evident.
APPENDIX,
493
"
by adding of the differences, the arcs themmay be found nearly ; the reason will appear " from the following investigation. Let N be the equa" torial shadow of the Bramlns in Bmrles, then 720 the " length of the Gnomon, or twelve On vies, will be to N
that,
"
selves
'*
" and radius to the tangent of the latitude as the tangent " of the declination to the sine of the ascensional dif" ference consequently 720 is to N as the tangent of " declination to the sine of the ascensional difference. " Now if the declinations for one, two, and three sines
;
'
be substituted
we
M of
"
*
the three ascensional differences in terms of and known quantities ; and, if these values be substituted in the
" from
i(
'*
the sine,
if
and
each
for finding the arc get the arcs in parts of the radius ; of these be multiplied by 36C0 and
Newtonian form
we
"
t*
"
I
divided by 6,28318, the values comes out in puis of a Gurry if N be in Bingks, but in parts of a Gurry if N be in Ongles j and by taking the doubles, ?et we O the values nearly as follows : J
Fakes.
\
Difference.
p,oooco
N N
nearly,
1-3
~\
the values
nearly,
nearly,
Ui led by the
J Bramins.
" Now, because the values in the first column are " doubles of the ascensional differences for one, two, " and three sines, their halves are the ascensional dif" ferences in parts of a Gurry, supposing N to be " in Ongles; and if each of these halves be mulit
by sixty, the products, namely, 9,9168 N, 17,9784 N, and 21,2580 N will be the same in puis of a Gurry ; and if to get each of these nearly in round numbers, the whole be multiplied by three, a and afterwards divided by three, the three products
tiplied
494
<s
ci
APPENDIX.
be 29,75
will
N",
which are
'
fifty -four N, and sixtynearly equal to thirty ; four N respectively; and hence the foundation of the
" Rramin
u "
evident, which directs to multiply shadow by thirty, fifty-four, and sixty-four respectively ; and to divide the products
rule
is
the
equatorial
and these parts three for the Chorardo in puis answer to one, two, and three signs of longitude " hum. the true equinox; and therefore th&Ayanongsh, " or Bramin precession of the equinox, mud be add" ed to find the intermediate Chorardo by propor:
" by
"
tion."
Though
the Bramin
results,
the agreement of this investigation with is no proof that the Hindus had
a strong suspicion cf
method, or Algebra, it gave me both; and yet, for at the time the name that Algebra went by in want of knowing Sanscrit I was near two years before 1 found a treatise on it, and 'even then I should not have known what to enquire for, if it had not come into my mind to ask
either the differential
;
how
Of the differential they investigated their rules. met with no regular treatise, but method, I have yet
for the
will
have no doubt whatever that there were such, reasons I before hinted at; and I hope others
be
more
it
than myself.
respect to the Binomial Theorem, the application of it to fractional indices will perhaps remain for ever the exclusive property of Newton ; but the fol-
With
lowing question and its solution evidently shew that the Hindoos understood it in whole numbers, to the and much better than as Briggs, full as well Dr. Hut ton, in a valuable edition of SherPascal. ivirfs tables, has lately done juftice to Briggs ; but Mr. Whitchell, who some years before pointed out Briggs as the undoubted inventor of the differential
APPENDIX.
495
method, said he had found some indications of the The meBinomial Theorem in much older authors. thod however by which that great man investigated
the powers independent of each other,
is
exactly the
same
as
that in
the
Sanscrit.
<(
now
these doors
" mav
opened by one at a time, or by two i( at a time, or by three at a time, and so on through ** the whole, till at last all are opened together. It is *' required to tell the numbers of times that this can " be done ?
Set
down
the
number of
"
*
in
and then
6 5
12345678
<c
"
"
il
<c
" "
'*
"
'
"
" " " " the same manner fifty-six is the number of fives that " can be opened twenty-eight the numjber of times " that six can be opened eight the number of times
: :
Divide the first number eight by the unit beneath and the quotient eio;ht shews the number of times that the doors can be opened by one at a time. Multiply this last eight by the next term seven ar.d divide the product by the two beneath it, and the result twenty eight is the number of times that two different doors may be opened ; multiply the last found twenty-eight by the next figure six, and divide the product by the three beneath it, and the quotient fifty-six shews the number of times that three different doors may be opened. Again, this nfty-six multiplied by the next five, and divided by the four beneath it, is seventy, the number of times that four different doors may be opened. In
it,
49$
APPENDIX.
seven can be opened
;
"
that
and
lastly,
one
is
the
" number of times the whole may " and the sum of all the different
The
demonstration
is
evident to mathematicians
tion shews the sum of the roots, therefore, in the n power of 1 + 1 where every root is unity, the coefficient shews the different dries that can be taken in
also, because the third term's coefficient is of the products of all the different twos of the roots, therefore when each root is unity the products of each two roots will be unity, and therefore the number of units, or the coefficient itself, shews the number of different fOaos that can be taken in n things. Again, because the fourth term is the sum of the products of the different threes that can be taken among the roots, therefore, when each root is unity, the product of each three will be unity, and therefore every unit in the fourth will shew a product of three different roots, and consequently the coefficient itself shews all the different threes that can be taken in 1 should not have added things ; and so for the rest.
ti
things
the
sum
;/.
this,
but that
to refer to
it.
P. S. There is an observation, perhaps worth remarking, with respect to the change of the poles; name.ly, that the small rock-oyflers are generally all dead within about a foot above high water-mark now possibly naturalists may be able to tell the age of such shells nearly by their appearance ; and if so, a pretty good eftimate may be formed of the rate of alteration ot the level of the sea in such places where they are ; for 1 made some astronomical observations on a rock in the sea near an ifland about seven miles to the south of the island of Cheduba^ on xheAracan coast, whose top was eighteen feet above high water-mark, and the whole rock covered with those shells fast grown to it, but all -of
;
APPENDIX.
497
ihose which were a foot above the high water-mark of that day, which was February 2,
The shells were evidently altered a little in 1788. proportion to their height above the water, but by no
means so much as to induce one to believe that the rock had been many years out of it. All the adjacent islands and the coast shewed similar appearances, and therefore it was evidently no partial elevation by subterranean fires, or any thing of that sort ; this is
from the island of Cheduha itself, in which there is a regular succession of sea-beaches and shells more and more decayed to a great height. By a kind of vague estimation from the trees and the coasts and shells, &c. (on which however there is not the least dependence) I supposed that the seami^hc
also apparent
be subsiding
year.
at
ADDITIONS.
Page
154.
Note.
;
The
gunja,
find,
is
the
if;
Abrus of our botanists and I venture to describe from the wild plant compared with a beautiful drawing of the flower magnified, with which by Dr. Anderson.
I
was favoured
Class XVII.
Cymbiform
nerved.
Order IV.
Cor.
Awning
roundish,
pointed,
Wings lanced, shorter than the awning. Keel rather longer than the wings.
Stam. Filaments nine, some shorter ; united in two top of a divided, bent, awl-shaped body.
sets at the
Pist.
Germ
Style very
mi-
nute at the bottom of the divided body. Stigma, to the naked eye, obtuse; in the microscope, feathered.
Per. legume. Seeds, spheroidal 3 black or white, or scarlet with black tips.
Leaves pinnated
odd
leaflet.
See the Plate Fig. 1. The female instate. 2. The egg, which produces the male. 3. The male insect. 4. The head with jointed antennas. The wings on one side. 5. The preceding figures are much magnified, but in just proportion. 6. piece of Lac, of its natural size. 7. The inside of the external coat of the cells. 8. One of the utriculi. The two last figures are a little magnified.
sect in
its
Page 361.
larva
New