I THE CROWD IN THE STREET To occidental
travellers the most vivid impression produced by a
first contact with the Near East is the surprise of
being in a country where the human element increases
instead of diminishing the delight of the eye.
After all, then, the intimate harmony
between nature and architecture and the human body
that is revealed in Greek art was not an artist’s
counsel of perfection but an honest rendering of reality:
there were, there still are, privileged scenes where
the fall of a green-grocer’s draperies or a
milkman’s cloak or a beggar’s rags are
part of the composition, distinctly related to it
in line and colour, and where the natural unstudied
attitudes of the human body are correspondingly harmonious,
however humdrum the acts it is engaged in. The
discovery, to the traveller returning from the East,
robs the most romantic scenes of western Europe of
half their charm: in the Piazza of San Marco,
in the market-place of Siena, where at least the robes
of the Procurators or the gay tights of Pinturicchio’s
striplings once justified man’s presence among
his works, one can see, at first, only the outrage
inflicted on beauty by the “plentiful strutting
manikins” of the modern world.
Moroccan crowds are always a feast
to the eye. The instinct of skilful drapery,
the sense of colour (subdued by custom, but breaking
out in subtle glimpses under the universal ashy tints)
make the humblest assemblage of donkey-men and water-carriers
an ever-renewed delight. But it is only on rare
occasions, and in the court ceremonies to which so
few foreigners have had access, that the hidden sumptuousness
of the native life is revealed. Even then, the
term sumptuousness may seem ill-chosen, since the
nomadic nature of African life persists in spite of
palaces and chamberlains and all the elaborate ritual
of the Makhzen, and the most pompous rites are likely
to end in a dusty gallop of wild tribesmen, and the
most princely processions to tail off in a string of
half-naked urchins riding bareback on donkeys.
As in all Oriental countries, the
contact between prince and beggar, vizier and serf
is disconcertingly free and familiar, and one must
see the highest court officials kissing the hem of
the Sultan’s robe, and hear authentic tales
of slaves given by one merchant to another at the
end of a convivial evening, to be reminded that nothing
is as democratic in appearance as a society of which
the whole structure hangs on the whim of one man.
II AID-EL-KEBIR In the verandah of
the Residence of Rabat I stood looking out between
posts festooned with gentian-blue ipomeas at the first
shimmer of light on black cypresses and white tobacco-flowers,
on the scattered roofs of the new town, and the plain
stretching away to the Sultan’s palace above
the sea.
We had been told, late the night before,
that the Sultan would allow Madame Lyautey, with the
three ladies of her party, to be present at the great
religious rite of the Aid-el-Kebir (the Sacrifice of
the Sheep). The honour was an unprecedented one,
a favour probably conceded only at the last moment:
for as a rule no women are admitted to these ceremonies.
It was an opportunity not to be missed, and all through
the short stifling night I had lain awake wondering
if I should be ready early enough. Presently
the motors assembled, and we set out with the French
officers in attendance on the Governor’s wife.
The Sultan’s palace, a large
modern building on the familiar Arab lines, lies in
a treeless and gardenless waste enclosed by high walls
and close above the blue Atlantic. We motored
past the gates, where the Sultan’s Black Guard
was drawn up, and out to the msalla, a sort
of common adjacent to all the Sultan’s residences
where public ceremonies are usually performed.
The sun was already beating down on the great plain
thronged with horsemen and with the native population
of Rabat on mule-back and foot. Within an open
space in the centre of the crowd a canvas palissade
dyed with a bold black pattern surrounded the Sultan’s
tents. The Black Guard, in scarlet tunics and
white and green turbans, were drawn up on the edge
of the open space, keeping the spectators at a distance;
but under the guidance of our companions we penetrated
to the edge of the crowd.
The palissade was open on one
side, and within it we could see moving about among
the snowy-robed officials a group of men in straight
narrow gowns of almond-green, peach-blossom, lilac
and pink; they were the Sultan’s musicians,
whose coloured dresses always flower out conspicuously
among the white draperies of all the other court attendants.
In the tent nearest the opening, against
a background of embroidered hangings, a circle of
majestic turbaned old men squatted placidly on Rabat
rugs. Presently the circle broke up, there was
an agitated coming and going, and some one said:
“The Sultan has gone to the tent at the back
of the enclosure to kill the sheep.”
A sense of the impending solemnity
ran through the crowd. The mysterious rumour
which is the Voice of the Bazaar rose about us like
the wind in a palm-oasis; the Black Guard fired a
salute from an adjoining hillock; the clouds of red
dust flung up by wheeling horsemen thickened and then
parted, and a white-robed rider sprang out from the
tent of the Sacrifice with something red and dripping
across his saddle-bow, and galloped away toward Rabat
through the shouting. A little shiver ran over
the group of occidental spectators, who knew that the
dripping red thing was a sheep with its throat so
skilfully slit that, if the omen were favourable,
it would live on through the long race to Rabat and
gasp out its agonized life on the tiles of the Mosque.
The Sacrifice of the Sheep, one of
the four great Moslem rites, is simply the annual
propitiatory offering made by every Mahometan head
of a family, and by the Sultan as such. It is
based not on a Koranic injunction, but on the “Souna”
or record of the Prophet’s “custom”
or usages, which forms an authoritative precedent
in Moslem ritual. So far goes the Moslem exegesis.
In reality, of course, the Moslem blood-sacrifice
comes, by way of the Semitic ritual, from far beyond
and behind it, and the belief that the Sultan’s
prosperity for the coming year depends on the animal’s
protracted agony seems to relate the ceremony to the
dark magic so deeply rooted in the mysterious tribes
peopling North Africa long ages before the first Phoenician
prows had rounded its coast.
Between the Black Guard and the tents,
five or six horses were being led up and down by muscular
grooms in snowy tunics. They were handsome animals,
as Moroccan horses go, and each of a different colour,
and on the bay horse was a red saddle embroidered
in gold, on the piebald a saddle of peach-colour and
silver, on the chestnut, grass-green encrusted with
seed-pearls, on the white mare purple housings, and
orange velvet on the grey. The Sultan’s
band had struck up a shrill hammering and twanging,
the salute of the Black Guard continued at intervals,
and the caparisoned steeds began to rear and snort
and drag back from the cruel Arab bits with their
exquisite niello incrustations. Some
one whispered that these were His Majesty’s
horses and that it was never known till
he appeared which one he would mount.
Presently the crowd about the tents
thickened, and when it divided again there emerged
from it a grey horse bearing a motionless figure swathed
in blinding white. Marching at the horse’s
bridle, lean brown grooms in white tunics rhythmically
waved long strips of white linen to keep off the flies
from the Imperial Presence, and beside the motionless
rider, in a line with his horse’s flank, rode
the Imperial Parasol-bearer, who held above the sovereign’s
head a great sunshade of bright green velvet.
Slowly the grey horse advanced a few yards before
the tent; behind rode the court dignitaries, followed
by the musicians, who looked, in their bright scant
caftans, like the slender music-making angels
of a Florentine fresco.
The Sultan, pausing beneath his velvet
dome, waited to receive the homage of the assembled
tribes. An official, riding forward, drew bridle
and called out a name. Instantly there came storming
across the plain a wild cavalcade of tribesmen, with
rifles slung across their shoulders, pistols and cutlasses
in their belts, and twists of camel’s-hair bound
about their turbans. Within a few feet of the
Sultan they drew in, their leader uttered a cry and
sprang forward, bending to the saddle-bow, and with
a great shout the tribe galloped by, each man bowed
over his horse’s neck as he flew past the hieratic
figure on the grey horse.
The Sultan of Morocco under the green umbrella (at
Meknez, 1916)]
Again and again this ceremony was
repeated, the Sultan advancing a few feet as each
new group thundered toward him. There were more
than ten thousand horsemen and chieftains from the
Atlas and the wilderness, and as the ceremony continued
the dust-clouds grew denser and more fiery-golden,
till at last the forward-surging lines showed through
them like blurred images in a tarnished mirror.
As the Sultan advanced we followed,
abreast of him and facing the oncoming squadrons.
The contrast between his motionless figure and the
wild waves of cavalry beating against it typified the
strange soul of Islam, with its impetuosity forever
culminating in impassiveness. The sun hung high,
a brazen ball in a white sky, darting down metallic
shafts on the dust-enveloped plain and the serene white
figure under its umbrella. The fat man with a
soft round beard-fringed face, wrapped in spirals
of pure white, one plump hand on his embroidered bridle,
his yellow-slippered feet thrust heel-down in big
velvet-lined stirrups, became, through sheer immobility,
a symbol, a mystery, a God. The human flux beat
against him, dissolved, ebbed away, another spear-crested
wave swept up behind it and dissolved in turn; and
he sat on, hour after hour, under the white-hot sky,
unconscious of the heat, the dust, the tumult, embodying
to the wild factious precipitate hordes a long tradition
of serene aloofness.
III THE IMPERIAL MIRADOR As the last
riders galloped up to do homage we were summoned to
our motors and driven rapidly to the palace.
The Sultan had sent word to Mme. Lyautey that
the ladies of the Imperial harem would entertain her
and her guests while his Majesty received the Resident
General, and we had to hasten back in order not to
miss the next act of the spectacle.
We walked across a long court lined
with the Black Guard, passed under a gateway, and
were met by a shabbily dressed negress. Traversing
a hot dazzle of polychrome tiles we reached another
archway guarded by the chief eunuch, a towering black
with the enamelled eyes of a basalt bust. The
eunuch delivered us to other negresses, and we entered
a labyrinth of inner passages and patios, all murmuring
and dripping with water. Passing down long corridors
where slaves in dim greyish garments flattened themselves
against the walls, we caught glimpses of great dark
rooms, laundries, pantries, bakeries, kitchens, where
savoury things were brewing and stewing, and where
more negresses, abandoning their pots and pans, came
to peep at us from the threshold. In one corner,
on a bench against a wall hung with matting, grey
parrots in tall cages were being fed by a slave.
A clan of mountaineers and their caïd]
A narrow staircase mounted to a landing
where a princess out of an Arab fairy-tale awaited
us. Stepping softly on her embroidered slippers
she led us to the next landing, where another golden-slippered
being smiled out on us, a little girl this one, blushing
and dimpling under a jewelled diadem and pearl-woven
braids. On a third landing a third damsel appeared,
and encircled by the three graces we mounted to the
tall mirador in the central tower from which
we were to look down at the coming ceremony.
One by one, our little guides, kicking off their golden
shoes, which a slave laid neatly outside the door,
led us on soft bare feet into the upper chamber of
the harem.
It was a large room, enclosed on all
sides by a balcony glazed with panes of brightly-coloured
glass. On a gaudy modern Rabat carpet stood gilt
armchairs of florid design and a table bearing a commercial
bronze of the “art goods” variety.
Divans with muslin-covered cushions were ranged against
the walls and down an adjoining gallery-like apartment
which was otherwise furnished only with clocks.
The passion for clocks and other mechanical contrivances
is common to all unmechanical races, and every chief’s
palace in North Africa contains a collection of time-pieces
which might be called striking if so many had not ceased
to go. But those in the Sultan’s harem
of Rabat are remarkable for the fact that, while designed
on current European models, they are proportioned
in size to the Imperial dignity, so that a Dutch “grandfather”
becomes a wardrobe, and the box-clock of the European
mantelpiece a cupboard that has to be set on the floor.
At the end of this avenue of time-pieces a European
double-bed with a bright silk quilt covered with Nottingham
lace stood majestically on a carpeted platform.
But for the enchanting glimpses of
sea and plain through the lattices of the gallery,
the apartment of the Sultan’s ladies falls far
short of occidental ideas of elegance. But there
was hardly time to think of this, for the door of
the mirador was always opening to let in another
fairy-tale figure, till at last we were surrounded
by a dozen houris, laughing, babbling, taking
us by the hand, and putting shy questions while they
looked at us with caressing eyes. They were all
(our interpretess whispered) the Sultan’s “favourites,”
round-faced apricot-tinted girls in their teens, with
high cheek-bones, full red lips, surprised brown eyes
between curved-up Asiatic lids, and little brown hands
fluttering out like birds from their brocaded sleeves.
In honour of the ceremony, and of
Mme. Lyautey’s visit, they had put on their
finest clothes, and their freedom of movement was somewhat
hampered by their narrow sumptuous gowns, with over-draperies
of gold and silver brocade and pale rosy gauze held
in by corset-like sashes of gold tissue of Fez, and
the heavy silken cords that looped their voluminous
sleeves. Above their foreheads the hair was shaven
like that of an Italian fourteenth-century beauty,
and only a black line as narrow as a pencilled eyebrow
showed through the twist of gauze fastened by a jewelled
clasp above the real eye-brows. Over the forehead-jewel
rose the complicated structure of the headdress.
Ropes of black wool were plaited through the hair,
forming, at the back, a double loop that stood out
above the nape like the twin handles of a vase, the
upper veiled in airy shot gauzes and fastened with
jewelled bands and ornaments. On each side of
the red cheeks other braids were looped over the ears
hung with broad earrings of filigree set with rough
pearls and emeralds, or gold loops and pendants of
coral, and an unexpected tulle ruff, like that of
a Watteau shepherdess, framed the round chin above
a torrent of necklaces, necklaces of amber, coral,
baroque pearls, hung with mysterious barbaric amulets
and fétiches. As the young things moved
about us on soft hennaed feet the light played on shifting
gleams of gold and silver, blue and violet and apple-green,
all harmonized and bemisted by clouds of pink and
sky-blue, and through the changing group capered a
little black picaninny in a caftan of silver-shot purple
with a sash of raspberry red.
But presently there was a flutter
in the aviary. A fresh pair of babouches
clicked on the landing, and a young girl, less brilliantly
dressed and less brilliant of face than the others,
came in on bare painted feet. Her movements were
shy and hesitating, her large lips pale, her eye-brows
less vividly dark, her head less jewelled. But
all the little humming-birds gathered about her with
respectful rustlings as she advanced toward us leaning
on one of the young girls, and holding out her ringed
hand to Mme. Lyautey’s curtsey. It
was the young Princess, the Sultan’s legitimate
daughter. She examined us with sad eyes, spoke
a few compliments through the interpretess, and seated
herself in silence, letting the others sparkle and
chatter.
Conversation with the shy Princess
was flagging when one of the favourites beckoned us
to the balcony. We were told we might push open
the painted panes a few inches, but as we did so the
butterfly group drew back lest they should be seen
looking out on the forbidden world.
Salutes were crashing out again from
the direction of the msalla: puffs of
smoke floated over the slopes like thistle-down.
Farther off, a pall of red vapour veiled the gallop
of the last horsemen wheeling away toward Rabat.
The vapour subsided, and moving out of it we discerned
a slow procession. First rode a detachment of
the Black Guard, mounted on black horses, and, comically
fierce in their British scarlet and Meccan green,
a uniform invented at the beginning of the nineteenth
century by a retired English army officer. After
the Guard came the standard-bearers and the great
dignitaries, then the Sultan, still aloof, immovable,
as if rapt in the contemplation of his mystic office.
More court officials followed, then the bright-gowned
musicians on foot, then a confused irrepressible crowd
of pilgrims, beggars, saints, mountebanks, and the
other small folk of the Bazaar, ending in a line of
boys jamming their naked heels into the ribs of world-weary
donkeys.
The Sultan rode into the court below
us, and Vizier and chamberlains, snowy-white against
the scarlet line of the Guards, hurried forward to
kiss his draperies, his shoes, his stirrup. Descending
from his velvet saddle, still entranced, he paced
across the tiles between a double line of white servitors
bowing to the ground. White pigeons circled over
him like petals loosed from a great orchard, and he
disappeared with his retinue under the shadowy arcade
of the audience chamber at the back of the court.
The Sultan entering Marrakech in state]
At this point one of the favourites
called us in from the mirador. The door
had just opened to admit an elderly woman preceded
by a respectful group of girls. From the newcomer’s
round ruddy face, her short round body, the round
hands emerging from her round wrists, an inexplicable
majesty emanated; and though she too was less richly
arrayed than the favourites she carried her headdress
of striped gauze like a crown.
This impressive old lady was the Sultan’s
mother. As she held out her plump wrinkled hand
to Mme. Lyautey and spoke a few words through
the interpretess one felt that at last a painted window
of the mirador had been broken, and a thought
let into the vacuum of the harem. What thought,
it would have taken deep insight into the processes
of the Arab mind to discover; but its honesty was
manifest in the old Empress’s voice and smile.
Here at last was a woman beyond the trivial dissimulations,
the childish cunning, the idle cruelties of the harem.
It was not a surprise to be told that she was her son’s
most trusted adviser, and the chief authority in the
palace. If such a woman deceived and intrigued
it would be for great purposes and for ends she believed
in; the depth of her soul had air and daylight in it,
and she would never willingly shut them out.
The Empress Mother chatted for a while
with Mme. Lyautey, asking about the Resident
General’s health, enquiring for news of the war,
and saying, with an emotion perceptible even through
the unintelligible words: “All is well
with Morocco as long as all is well with France.”
Then she withdrew, and we were summoned again to the
mirador.
This time it was to see a company
of officers in brilliant uniforms advancing at a trot
across the plain from Rabat. At sight of the figure
that headed them, so slim, erect and young on his splendid
chestnut, with a pale blue tunic barred by the wide
orange ribbon of the Cherifian Order, salutes pealed
forth again from the slope above the palace and the
Black Guard presented arms. A moment later General
Lyautey and his staff were riding in at the gates
below us. On the threshold of the inner court
they dismounted, and moving to the other side of our
balcony we followed the next stage of the ceremony.
The Sultan was still seated in the audience chamber.
The court officials still stood drawn up in a snow-white
line against the snow-white walls. The great dignitaries
advanced across the tiles to greet the General, then
they fell aside, and he went forward alone, followed
at a little distance by his staff. A third of
the way across the court he paused, in accordance with
the Moroccan court ceremonial, and bowed in the direction
of the arcaded room; a few steps farther he bowed
again, and a third time on the threshold of the room.
Then French uniforms and Moroccan draperies closed
in about him, and all vanished into the shadows of
the audience hall.
Our audience too seemed to be over.
We had exhausted the limited small talk of the harem,
had learned from the young beauties that, though they
were forbidden to look on at the ceremony, the dancers
and singers would come to entertain them presently,
and had begun to take leave when a negress hurried
in to say that his Majesty begged Mme. Lyautey
and her friends to await his arrival. This was
the crowning incident of our visit, and I wondered
with what Byzantine ritual the Anointed One fresh
from the exercise of his priestly functions would be
received among his women.
The door opened, and without any announcement
or other preliminary flourish a fat man with a pleasant
face, his djellabah stretched over a portly front,
walked in holding a little boy by the hand. Such
was his Majesty the Sultan Moulay Youssef, despoiled
of sacramental burnouses and turban, and shuffling
along on bare yellow-slippered feet with the gait
of a stout elderly gentleman who has taken off his
boots in the passage preparatory to a domestic evening.
The little Prince, one of his two
legitimate sons, was dressed with equal simplicity,
for silken garments are worn in Morocco only by musicians,
boy-dancers and other hermaphrodite fry. With
his ceremonial raiment the Sultan had put off his
air of superhuman majesty, and the expression of his
round pale face corresponded with the plainness of
his dress. The favourites fluttered about him,
respectful but by no means awestruck, and the youngest
began to play with the little Prince. We could
well believe the report that his was the happiest harem
in Morocco, as well as the only one into which a breath
of the outer world ever came.
Moulay Youssef greeted Mme. Lyautey
with friendly simplicity, made the proper speeches
to her companions, and then, with the air of the business-man
who has forgotten to give an order before leaving his
office, he walked up to a corner of the room, and while
the flower-maidens ruffled about him, and through
the windows we saw the last participants in the mystic
rites galloping away toward the crenellated walls
of Rabat, his Majesty the Priest and Emperor of the
Faithful unhooked a small instrument from the wall
and applied his sacred lips to the telephone.
IV IN OLD RABAT Before General Lyautey
came to Morocco Rabat had been subjected to the indignity
of European “improvements,” and one must
traverse boulevards scored with tram-lines, and pass
between hotel-terraces and cafes and cinema-palaces,
to reach the surviving nucleus of the once beautiful
native town. Then, at the turn of a commonplace
street, one comes upon it suddenly. The shops
and cafes cease, the jingle of trams and the trumpeting
of motor-horns die out, and here, all at once, are
silence and solitude, and the dignified reticence
of the windowless Arab house-fronts.
We were bound for the house of a high
government official, a Moroccan dignitary of the old
school, who had invited us to tea, and added a message
to the effect that the ladies of his household would
be happy to receive me.
The house we sought was some distance
down the quietest of white-walled streets. Our
companion knocked at a low green door, and we were
admitted to a passage into which a wooden stairway
descended. A brother-in-law of our host was waiting
for us; in his wake we mounted the ladder-like stairs
and entered a long room with a florid French carpet
and a set of gilt furniture to match. There were
no fretted walls, no painted cedar doors, no fountains
rustling in unseen courts: the house was squeezed
in between others, and such traces of old ornament
as it may have possessed had vanished.
But presently we saw why its inhabitants
were indifferent to such details. Our host, a
handsome white-bearded old man, welcomed us in the
doorway, then he led us to a raised oriel window at
one end of the room, and seated us in the gilt armchairs
face to face with one of the most beautiful views
in Morocco.
Below us lay the white and blue terrace-roofs
of the native town, with palms and minarets shooting
up between them, or the shadows of a vine-trellis
patterning a quiet lane. Beyond, the Atlantic
sparkled, breaking into foam at the mouth of the Bou-Regreg
and under the towering ramparts of the Kasbah of the
Oudayas. To the right, the ruins of the great
Mosque rose from their plateau over the river; and,
on the farther side of the troubled flood, old Sale,
white and wicked, lay like a jewel in its gardens.
With such a scene beneath their eyes, the inhabitants
of the house could hardly feel its lack of architectural
interest.
After exchanging the usual compliments,
and giving us time to enjoy the view, our host withdrew,
taking with him the men of our party. A moment
later he reappeared with a rosy fair-haired girl, dressed
in Arab costume, but evidently of European birth.
The brother-in-law explained that this young woman,
who had “studied in Algeria,” and whose
mother was French, was the intimate friend of the
ladies of the household, and would act as interpreter.
Our host then again left us, joining the men visitors
in another room, and the door opened to admit his wife
and daughters-in-law.
The mistress of the house was a handsome
Algerian with sad expressive eyes, the younger women
were pale, fat and amiable. They all wore sober
dresses, in keeping with the simplicity of the house,
and but for the vacuity of their faces the group might
have been that of a Professor’s family in an
English or American University town, decently costumed
for an Arabian Nights’ pageant in the college
grounds. I was never more vividly reminded of
the fact that human nature, from one pole to the other,
falls naturally into certain categories, and that Respectability
wears the same face in an Oriental harem as in England
or America.
My hostesses received me with the
utmost amiability, we seated ourselves in the oriel
facing the view, and the interchange of questions and
compliments began.
Had I any children? (They asked it all at once.)
Alas, no.
“In Islam” (one of the
ladies ventured) “a woman without children is
considered the most unhappy being in the world.”
I replied that in the western world also childless
women were pitied.
(The brother-in-law smiled incredulously.)
Knowing that European fashions are
of absorbing interest to the harem I next enquired:
“What do these ladies think of our stiff tailor-dresses?
Don’t they find them excessively ugly?”
“Yes, they do;” (it was
again the brother-in-law who replied.) “But
they suppose that in your own homes you dress less
badly.”
“And have they never any desire
to travel, or to visit the Bazaars, as the Turkish
ladies do?”
“No, indeed. They are too
busy to give such matters a thought. In our
country women of the highest class occupy themselves
with their household and their children, and the rest
of their time is devoted to needlework.” (At
this statement I gave the brother-in-law a smile as
incredulous as his own.)
All this time the fair-haired interpretess
had not been allowed by the vigilant guardian of the
harem to utter a word.
I turned to her with a question.
“So your mother is French, Mademoiselle?”
“Oui, Madame.”
“From what part of France did she come?”
A bewildered pause. Finally,
“I don’t know . . . from Switzerland, I
think,” brought out this shining example of the
Higher Education. In spite of Algerian “advantages”
the poor girl could speak only a few words of her
mother’s tongue. She had kept the European
features and complexion, but her soul was the soul
of Islam. The harem had placed its powerful imprint
upon her, and she looked at me with the same remote
and passive eyes as the daughters of the house.
After struggling for a while longer
with a conversation which the watchful brother-in-law
continued to direct as he pleased, I felt my own lips
stiffening into the resigned smile of the harem, and
it was a relief when at last their guardian drove
the pale flock away, and the handsome old gentleman
who owned them reappeared on the scene, bringing back
my friends, and followed by slaves and tea.
V IN FEZ What thoughts, what speculations,
one wonders, go on under the narrow veiled brows of
the little creatures destined to the high honour of
marriage or concubinage in Moroccan palaces?
Some are brought down from mountains
and cedar forests, from the free life of the tents
where the nomad women go unveiled. Others come
from harems in the turreted cities beyond the
Atlas, where blue palm-groves beat all night against
the stars and date-caravans journey across the desert
from Timbuctoo. Some, born and bred in an airy
palace among pomegranate gardens and white terraces,
pass thence to one of the feudal fortresses near the
snows, where for half the year the great chiefs of
the south live in their clan, among fighting men and
falconers and packs of sloughis. And still
others grow up in a stifling Mellâh, trip
unveiled on its blue terraces overlooking the gardens
of the great, and, seen one day at sunset by a fat
vizier or his pale young master, are acquired for
a handsome sum and transferred to the painted sepulchre
of the harem.
Worst of all must be the fate of those
who go from tents and cedar forests, or from some
sea-blown garden above Rabat, into one of the houses
of Old Fez. They are well-nigh impenetrable, these
palaces of Elbali; the Fazi dignitaries do not welcome
the visits of strange women. On the rare occasions
when they are received, a member of the family (one
of the sons, or a brother-in-law who has “studied
in Algeria”) usually acts as interpreter; and
perhaps it is as well that no one from the outer world
should come to remind these listless creatures that
somewhere the gulls dance on the Atlantic and the wind
murmurs through olive-yards and clatters the metallic
fronds of palm-groves.
We had been invited, one day, to visit
the harem of one of the chief dignitaries of the Makhzen
at Fez, and these thoughts came to me as I sat among
the pale women in their mouldering prison. The
descent through the steep tunnelled streets gave one
the sense of being lowered into the shaft of a mine.
At each step the strip of sky grew narrower, and was
more often obscured by the low vaulted passages into
which we plunged. The noises of the Bazaar had
died out, and only the sound of fountains behind garden
walls and the clatter of our mules’ hoofs on
the stones went with us. Then fountains and gardens
ceased also, the towering masonry closed in, and we
entered an almost subterranean labyrinth which sun
and air never reach. At length our mules turned
into a cul-de-sac blocked by a high building.
On the right was another building, one of those blind
mysterious house-fronts of Fez that seem like a fragment
of its ancient fortifications. Clients and servants
lounged on the stone benches built into the wall;
it was evidently the house of an important person.
A charming youth with intelligent eyes waited on the
threshold to receive us; he was one of the sons of
the house, the one who had “studied in Algeria”
and knew how to talk to visitors. We followed
him into a small arcaded patio hemmed in by
the high walls of the house. On the right was
the usual long room with archways giving on the court.
Our host, a patriarchal personage, draped in fat as
in a toga, came toward us, a mountain of majestic
muslins, his eyes sparkling in a swarthy silver-bearded
face. He seated us on divans and lowered his
voluminous person to a heap of cushions on the step
leading into the court, and the son who had studied
in Algeria instructed a negress to prepare the tea.
Across the patio was another
arcade closely hung with unbleached cotton. From
behind it came the sound of chatter, and now and then
a bare brown child in a scant shirt would escape,
and be hurriedly pulled back with soft explosions
of laughter, while a black woman came out to readjust
the curtains.
There were three of these negresses,
splendid bronze creatures, wearing white djellabahs
over bright-coloured caftans, striped scarves
knotted about their large hips, and gauze turbans
on their crinkled hair. Their wrists clinked
with heavy silver bracelets, and big circular earrings
danced in their purple ear-lobes. A languor lay
on all the other inmates of the household, on the
servants and hangers-on squatting in the shade under
the arcade, on our monumental host and his smiling
son; but the three negresses, vibrating with activity,
rushed continually from the curtained chamber to the
kitchen, and from the kitchen to the master’s
reception-room, bearing on their pinky-blue palms trays
of Britannia metal with tall glasses and fresh bunches
of mint, shouting orders to dozing menials, and calling
to each other from opposite ends of the court; and
finally the stoutest of the three, disappearing from
view, reappeared suddenly on a pale green balcony
overhead, where, profiled against a square of blue
sky, she leaned over in a Veronese attitude and screamed
down to the others like an excited parrot.
In spite of their febrile activity
and tropical bird-shrieks, we waited in vain for tea;
and after a while our host suggested to his son that
I might like to visit the ladies of the household.
As I had expected, the young man led me across the
patio, lifted the cotton hanging and introduced
me into an apartment exactly like the one we had just
left. Divans covered with striped mattress-ticking
stood against the white walls, and on them sat seven
or eight passive-looking women over whom a number
of pale children scrambled.
The eldest of the group, and evidently
the mistress of the house, was an Algerian lady, probably
of about fifty, with a sad and delicately-modelled
face; the others were daughters, daughters-in-law
and concubines. The latter word evokes to occidental
ears images of sensual seduction which the Moroccan
harem seldom realizes. All the ladies of this
dignified official household wore the same look of
somewhat melancholy respectability. In their stuffy
curtained apartment they were like cellar-grown flowers,
pale, heavy, fuller but frailer than the garden sort.
Their dresses, rich but sober, the veils and diadems
put on in honour of my visit, had a dignified dowdiness
in odd contrast to the frivolity of the Imperial harem.
But what chiefly struck me was the apathy of the younger
women. I asked them if they had a garden, and
they shook their heads wistfully, saying that there
were no gardens in Old Fez. The roof was therefore
their only escape: a roof overlooking acres and
acres of other roofs, and closed in by the naked fortified
mountains which stand about Fez like prison-walls.
After a brief exchange of compliments
silence fell. Conversing through interpreters
is a benumbing process, and there are few points of
contact between the open-air occidental mind and beings
imprisoned in a conception of sexual and domestic
life based on slave-service and incessant espionage.
These languid women on their muslin cushions toil
not, neither do they spin. The Moroccan lady knows
little of cooking, needlework or any household arts.
When her child is ill she can only hang it with amulets
and wail over it, the great lady of the Fazi palace
is as ignorant of hygiene as the peasant-woman of the
bled. And all these colourless eventless
lives depend on the favour of one fat tyrannical man,
bloated with good living and authority, himself almost
as inert and sedentary as his women, and accustomed
to impose his whims on them ever since he ran about
the same patio as a little short-smocked boy.
The redeeming point in this stagnant
domesticity is the tenderness of the parents for their
children, and western writers have laid so much stress
on this that one would suppose children could be loved
only by inert and ignorant parents. It is in
fact charming to see the heavy eyes of the Moroccan
father light up when a brown grass-hopper baby jumps
on his knee, and the unfeigned tenderness with which
the childless women of the harem caress the babies
of their happier rivals. But the sentimentalist
moved by this display of family feeling would do well
to consider the lives of these much-petted children.
Ignorance, unhealthiness and a precocious sexual initiation
prevail in all classes. Education consists in
learning by heart endless passages of the Koran, and
amusement in assisting at spectacles that would be
unintelligible to western children, but that the pleasantries
of the harem make perfectly comprehensible to Moroccan
infancy. At eight or nine the little girls are
married, at twelve the son of the house is “given
his first negress”; and thereafter, in the rich
and leisured class, both sexes live till old age in
an atmosphere of sensuality without seduction.
Women watching a procession from a roof]
The young son of the house led me
back across the court, where the negresses were still
shrieking and scurrying, and passing to and fro like
a stage-procession with the vain paraphernalia of a
tea that never came. Our host still smiled from
his cushions, resigned to Oriental delays. To
distract the impatient westerners, a servant unhooked
from the wall the cage of a gently-cooing dove.
It was brought to us, still cooing, and looked at
me with the same resigned and vacant eyes as the ladies
I had just left. As it was being restored to its
hook the slaves lolling about the entrance scattered
respectfully at the approach of a handsome man of
about thirty, with delicate features and a black beard.
Crossing the court, he stooped to kiss the shoulder
of our host, who introduced him as his eldest son,
the husband of one or two of the little pale wives
with whom I had been exchanging platitudes.
From the increasing agitation of the
negresses it became evident that the ceremony of tea-making
had been postponed till his arrival. A metal
tray bearing a Britannia samovar and tea-pot was placed
on the tiles of the court, and squatting beside it
the newcomer gravely proceeded to infuse the mint.
Suddenly the cotton hangings fluttered again, and a
tiny child in the scantest of smocks rushed out and
scampered across the court. Our venerable host,
stretching out rapturous arms, caught the fugitive
to his bosom, where the little boy lay like a squirrel,
watching us with great sidelong eyes. He was the
last-born of the patriarch, and the youngest brother
of the majestic bearded gentleman engaged in tea-making.
While he was still in his father’s arms two more
sons appeared: charming almond-eyed schoolboys
returning from their Koran-class, escorted by their
slaves. All the sons greeted each other affectionately,
and caressed with almost feminine tenderness the dancing
baby so lately added to their ranks; and finally, to
crown this scene of domestic intimacy, the three negresses,
their gigantic effort at last accomplished, passed
about glasses of steaming mint and trays of gazelles’
horns and white sugar-cakes.
VI IN MARRAKECH The farther one travels
from the Mediterranean and Europe the closer the curtains
of the women’s quarters are drawn. The only
harem in which we were allowed an interpreter was
that of the Sultan himself, in the private harems
of Fez and Rabat a French-speaking relative transmitted
(or professed to transmit) our remarks; in Marrakech,
the great nobleman and dignitary who kindly invited
me to visit his household was deaf to our hint that
the presence of a lady from one of the French government
schools might facilitate our intercourse.
When we drove up to his palace, one
of the stateliest in Marrakech, the street was thronged
with clansmen and clients. Dignified merchants
in white muslin, whose grooms held white mules saddled
with rose-coloured velvet, warriors from the Atlas
wearing the corkscrew ringlets which are a sign of
military prowess, Jewish traders in black gabardines,
leather-gaitered peasant-women with chickens and cheese,
and beggars rolling their blind eyes or exposing their
fly-plastered sores, were gathered in Oriental promiscuity
about the great man’s door; while under the
archway stood a group of youths and warlike-looking
older men who were evidently of his own clan.
The Caid’s chamberlain, a middle-aged
man of dignified appearance, advanced to meet us between
bowing clients and tradesmen. He led us through
cool passages lined with the intricate mosaic-work
of Fez, past beggars who sat on stone benches whining
out their blessings, and pale Fazi craftsmen laying
a floor of delicate tiles. The Caïd is a
lover of old Arab architecture. His splendid
house, which is not yet finished, has been planned
and decorated on the lines of the old Imperial palaces,
and when a few years of sun and rain and Oriental neglect
have worked their way on its cedar-wood and gilding
and ivory stucco it will have the same faded loveliness
as the fairy palaces of Fez.
In a garden where fountains splashed
and roses climbed among cypresses, the Caïd himself
awaited us. This great fighter and loyal friend
of France is a magnificent eagle-beaked man, brown,
lean and sinewy, with vigilant eyes looking out under
his carefully draped muslin turban, and negroid lips
half-hidden by a close black beard.
Tea was prepared in the familiar setting;
a long arcaded room with painted ceiling and richly
stuccoed walls. All around were ranged the usual
mattresses covered with striped ticking and piled with
muslin cushions. A bedstead of brass, imitating
a Louis XVI cane bed, and adorned with brass garlands
and bows, throned on the usual platform; and the only
other ornaments were a few clocks and bunches of wax
flowers under glass. Like all Orientals,
this hero of the Atlas, who spends half his life with
his fighting clansmen in a mediaeval stronghold among
the snows, and the other half rolling in a 60 h.p.
motor over smooth French roads, seems unaware of any
degrees of beauty or appropriateness in objects of
European design, and places against the exquisite mosaics
and traceries of his Fazi craftsmen the tawdriest
bric-a-brac of the cheap department-store.
While tea was being served I noticed
a tiny negress, not more than six or seven years old,
who stood motionless in the embrasure of an archway.
Like most of the Moroccan slaves, even in the greatest
households, she was shabbily, almost raggedly, dressed.
A dirty gandourah of striped muslin covered
her faded caftan, and a cheap kerchief was wound above
her grave and precocious little face. With preternatural
vigilance she watched each movement of the Caïd,
who never spoke to her, looked at her, or made her
the slightest perceptible sign, but whose least wish
she instantly divined, refilling his tea-cup, passing
the plates of sweets, or removing our empty glasses,
in obedience to some secret telegraphy on which her
whole being hung.
The Caïd is a great man.
He and his famous elder brother, holding the southern
marches of Morocco against alien enemies and internal
rebellion, played a preponderant part in the defence
of the French colonies in North Africa during the
long struggle of the war. Enlightened, cultivated,
a friend of the arts, a scholar and diplomatist, he
seems, unlike many Orientals, to have selected
the best in assimilating European influences.
Yet when I looked at the tiny creature watching him
with those anxious joyless eyes I felt once more the
abyss that slavery and the seraglio put between the
most Europeanized Mahometan and the western conception
of life. The Caid’s little black slaves
are well-known in Morocco, and behind the sad child
leaning in the archway stood all the shadowy evils
of the social system that hangs like a millstone about
the neck of Islam.
Presently a handsome tattered negress
came across the garden to invite me to the harem.
Captain de S. and his wife, who had accompanied me,
were old friends of the Chief’s, and it was owing
to this that the jealously-guarded doors of the women’s
quarters were opened to Mme. de S. and myself.
We followed the negress to a marble-paved court where
pigeons fluttered and strutted about the central fountain.
From under a trellised arcade hung with linen curtains
several ladies came forward. They greeted my
companion with exclamations of delight; then they led
us into the usual commonplace room with divans and
whitewashed walls. Even in the most sumptuous
Moroccan palaces little care seems to be expended
on the fittings of the women’s quarters:
unless, indeed, the room in which visitors are received
corresponds with a boarding-school “parlour,”
and the personal touch is reserved for the private
apartments.
The ladies who greeted us were more
richly dressed than any I had seen except the Sultan’s
favourites, but their faces were more distinguished,
more European in outline, than those of the round-cheeked
beauties of Rabat. My companions had told me
that the Caid’s harem was recruited from Georgia,
and that the ladies receiving us had been brought up
in the relative freedom of life in Constantinople;
and it was easy to read in their wistfully smiling
eyes memories of a life unknown to the passive daughters
of Morocco.
They appeared to make no secret of
their regrets, for presently one of them, with a smile,
called my attention to some faded photographs hanging
over the divan. They represented groups of plump
provincial-looking young women in dowdy European ball-dresses;
and it required an effort of the imagination to believe
that the lovely creatures in velvet caftans,
with delicately tattooed temples under complicated
head-dresses, and hennaed feet crossed on muslin cushions,
were the same as the beaming frumps in the photographs.
But to the sumptuously-clad exiles these faded photographs
and ugly dresses represented freedom, happiness, and
all they had forfeited when fate (probably in the
shape of an opulent Hebrew couple “travelling
with their daughters”) carried them from the
Bosphorus to the Atlas.
As in the other harems I had
visited, perfect equality seemed to prevail between
the ladies, and while they chatted with Mme. de
S. whose few words of Arabic had loosed their tongues,
I tried to guess which was the favourite, or at least
the first in rank. My choice wavered between the
pretty pale creature with a ferronnière across
her temples and a tea-rose caftan veiled in blue gauze,
and the nut-brown beauty in red velvet hung with pearls
whose languid attitudes and long-lidded eyes were
so like the Keepsake portraits of Byron’s Haidee.
Or was it perhaps the third, less pretty but more
vivid and animated, who sat behind the tea-tray, and
mimicked so expressively a soldier shouldering his
rifle, and another falling dead, in her effort to
ask us “when the dreadful war would be over”?
Perhaps ... unless, indeed, it were the handsome octoroon,
slightly older than the others, but even more richly
dressed, so free and noble in her movements, and treated
by the others with such friendly deference.
I was struck by the fact that among
them all there was not a child; it was the first harem
without babies that I had seen in that prolific land.
Presently one of the ladies asked Mme. de S. about
her children, in reply, she enquired for the Caid’s
little boy, the son of his wife who had died.
The ladies’ faces lit up wistfully, a slave was
given an order, and presently a large-eyed ghost of
a child was brought into the room.
Instantly all the bracelet-laden arms
were held out to the dead woman’s son; and as
I watched the weak little body hung with amulets and
the heavy head covered with thin curls pressed against
a brocaded bosom, I was reminded of one of the coral-hung
child-Christs of Crivelli, standing livid and
waxen on the knee of a splendidly dressed Madonna.
The poor baby on whom such hopes and
ambitions hung stared at us with a solemn unamused
gaze. Would all his pretty mothers, his eyes seemed
to ask, succeed in bringing him to maturity in spite
of the parched summers of the south and the stifling
existence of the harem? It was evident that no
precaution had been neglected to protect him from
maleficent influences and the danger that walks by
night, for his frail neck and wrists were hung with
innumerable charms: Koranic verses, Soudanese
incantations, and images of forgotten idols in amber
and coral and horn and ambergris. Perhaps they
will ward off the powers of evil, and let him grow
up to shoulder the burden of the great Caïds of
the south.