SUEZ TO ADEN.
Amongst the travellers who came dropping
in at the hotel, was the Portuguese governor of Goa
and his suite, consisting of four gentlemen, the private
and public secretaries, an aide-de-camp, and the fourth
holding some other appointment. They came by the
French steamer, which had left Marseilles on the day
of our departure. The governor, a fine old soldier,
and a perfect gentleman, proved a great acquisition
to our party; and knowing the state of Goa, and the
disappointment he would in all probability sustain
upon arriving at the seat of his government in the
present low condition to which it is reduced, we could
not help feeling much interested in his welfare.
This gentleman, who inherited the title of baron, and
was moreover an old general officer, had mixed in
the very best society, and was evidently well acquainted
with courts and camps; he spoke several languages,
and in the course of his travels had visited England.
His retinue were quiet gentlemanly men, and the young
aide-de-camp, in particular, made himself very agreeable.
There were two other travellers of
some note at Suez, who had put up at Hill’s
Hotel; one, an American gentleman, who had come across
the desert for the purpose of looking at the Red Sea.
I saw him mounted upon a donkey, and gazing as he
stood upon the shore at the bright but narrow channel,
so interesting to all who have read the history of
the Israelites, with reverential feelings. I
felt a strong inclination to accost him; but refrained,
being unwilling to disturb his reveries with what
he might have thought an impertinent interruption.
It was evidently a last look, for he was veiled for
the journey, and at length, tearing himself away,
he turned his donkey’s head, and struck into
the desert. The other traveller was a young Scotsman,
who proposed to go as far as Aden in the Berenice,
on his way to Abyssinia, trusting that a residence
of some months in Egypt would enable him to pass for
a Turk. He had no very precise object in view,
but intended to make an attempt to explore the sources
of the Nile.
There was nothing in Suez that could
make a longer stay desirable, and we quitted it without
regret. My journey through Egypt had been much
too rapid for me to presume to give any decided opinion
concerning the strongly agitated question respecting
the merits of the Pasha’s government. It
is very evident that he has not learned the most instructive
lesson of political economy, nor has yet understood
that the way to render himself powerful is to make
his subjects rich; nevertheless, though his exactions
and monopolies may be felt at present as very serious
evils, yet, in establishing manufactories, and in
embodying a national force, there can be no doubt that
he has sown the seeds of much that is good; and should
his government, after his death, fall into the hands
of people equally free from religious prejudices,
we may reasonably hope that they will entertain more
enlarged and liberal views, and thus render measures,
now difficult to bear, of incalculable advantage to
the future prosperity of the country.
The British Consul politely offered
to conduct myself and my female friends on board the
steamer; he accordingly called for us, and I bade,
as I hoped, a last adieu to Suez, it being my wish
and intention to return home by way of Cosseir.
Previous to our embarkation, a series of regulations
had been placed in our hands for the engagement of
passages in the Honourable Company’s armed steamers,
with instructions to passengers, &c.
Upon repairing to our cabin, Miss
E. and myself were surprised and disappointed at the
miserable accommodation it afforded. The three
cabins allotted to the use of the ladies had been appropriated,
in two instances, to married couples, and we were
obliged to put up with one of smaller size, which
had the additional inconvenience of opening into the
public saloon. There were no Venetian blinds to
the door, consequently, the only means of obtaining
a free circulation of air was to have it open.
A locker with a hinged shelf, which opened like a
shutter, and thus afforded space for one mattress to
be placed upon it, ran along one side of the cabin,
under the port-hole, but the floor was the only visible
means of accommodation for the second person crammed
by Government regulation into this den. There
was not a place in which a wash-hand basin could be
put, so awkwardly were the doors arranged, to one
of which there was no fastening whatsoever. Altogether,
the case seemed hopeless, and as cock-roaches were
walking about the vessel by dozens, the prospect of
sleeping on the ground was anything but agreeable,
especially with the feeling that we were paying at
the rate of four pounds a day for our accommodation.
We were, however, compelled to postpone
our arrangements, by a summons to dinner; and in the
evening, when repairing again to the cabin, I found
my mattress placed upon two portmanteaus and a box.
Of course, no attention was paid to the inequalities
of the surface, and I endeavoured, by folding my fur
cloak and a thick dressing-gown under my sheet, to
render this miserable apology for a bed tenable.
Hitherto, our berth-places in the Government-steamers
had been very comfortable; though small, they answered
the purpose of sleeping and of washing, while the
larger cabin into which they opened, and which was
set apart for the ladies, enabled us all to complete
our toilets without inconvenience. A sail had
been hung before the door by way of curtain, but the
heat was still difficult to bear, and we found that
we had adventured upon the Red Sea at least a month
too soon. The next morning, the captain, hearing
that I had, as might have been expected, passed a
wretched night, kindly sent his cot for my future
accommodation; after the second night, however, the
servants thinking it too much trouble to attend to
it properly, the ropes gave way, and it came down.
The cabin being much too small to allow it to remain
hanging all day, I at first trusted to the servants
to put it up at night; but, after this accident, and
finding them to be incorrigibly stupid, lazy, and
disobliging, I contented myself with placing the cot
upon two portmanteaus, and thus forming a bed-place.
Subsequently, one of the passengers having kindly
adjusted the ropes, Miss E. and myself contrived to
sling it; a fatiguing operation, which added much to
the discomforts of the voyage. The idea of going
upon the quarter-deck, or writing a letter, which
might perhaps be handed up to Government, to make
a formal complaint to the captain, was not to be thought
of, and seeing the impossibility of getting any thing
properly done by the tribe of uncouth barbarians dignified
by the name of servants, the only plan was to render
myself quite independent of them, and much did we
miss the activity, good humour, and readiness to oblige
manifested by our Egyptian attendant, Mohammed.
Where a wish to please is evinced, though wholly unattended
by efficiency in the duties undertaken by a servant,
I can very easily excuse awkwardness, forgetfulness,
or any other fault; but the wretched half-castes, who
take service on board the Government steamers, have
not even common civility to recommend them; there
was not a passenger in the vessel who did not complain
of the insults to which all were more or less subjected.
Where the blame lay, it is difficult
to state exactly; no one could be more kind and obliging
than the captain, and it was this disposition upon
his part which rendered us all unwilling to worry him
with complaints. The charge of a steamer in the
Red Sea seems quite enough to occupy the commandant’s
time and attention, without having the comforts of
seven or eight-and-twenty passengers to look after;
but these duties might have been performed by a clever
and active steward. Whether there was a personage
on board of that designation, I never could learn;
I asked several times to speak with him, but he never
in a single instance attended the summons.
We had no reason to complain of want
of liberality on the part of the captain, for the
table was plentifully supplied, though the cooks,
being unfortunately most worthy of the patronage of
that potentate who is said to send them to our kitchens,
generally contrived to render the greater portion
uneatable. The advantage of rising from table
with an appetite is one which I have usually tried
on board ship, having only in few instances, during
my numerous voyages, been fortunate enough to find
food upon which I dared to venture.
The more I have seen of government
ships, the more certain I feel that they are not adapted
to carry passengers. The authorities appear to
think that people ought to be too thankful to pay an
enormous price for the worst species of accommodation.
The commandants have not been accustomed to attend
to the minutiae which can alone secure the comfort
of those who sail with them, while the officers, generally
speaking, endeavour to show their contempt of the service
in which they are sent, against their inclination,
by neglect and even rudeness towards the passengers.
While on board the Berenice,
the following paragraph in a Bombay newspaper struck
my eye, and as it is a corroboration of the statements
which I deem it to be a duty to make, I insert it in
this place. “The voyager (from Agra) must
not think his troubles at an end on reaching Bombay,
or that the steam-packets are equal to the passenger
Indiaman in accommodation. In fact, I cannot conceive
how a lady manages; we have, however, five. There
are only seven very small cabins, into each of which
two people are crammed; no room to swing cats.
Eight other deluded individuals, of whom I am one,
are given to understand that a cabin-passage is included
in permission to sleep on the benches and table of
the cuddy. For this you pay R extra.
The vessel is dirty beyond measure, from the soot,
and with the difficulty of copious ablution and private
accommodation, is almost worse, to a lover of Indian
habits, than the journey to Bombay from Agra upon
camels. No civility is to be got from the officers.
If they are not directly uncivil, the passengers are
luckier than we have been. They declare themselves
disgusted with passenger ships, but do not take the
proper way of showing their superiority to the duty.”
The only officer of the Berenice
who dined at the captain’s table was the surgeon
of the vessel, and in justice to him it must be said,
that he left no means untried to promote the comfort
of the passengers. It is likewise necessary to
state, that we were never put upon an allowance of
water, although, in consequence of late alterations
made in the dockyard, the vessel had been reduced to
about half the quantity she had been accustomed to
carry in iron tanks constructed for the purpose.
Notwithstanding this reduction, we could always procure
a sufficiency, either of hot or cold water, for ablutions,
rendered doubly necessary in consequence of the atmosphere
of coal-dust which we breathed. Not that it was
possible to continue clean for a single hour; nevertheless,
there was some comfort in making the attempt.
There were eight cabins in the Berenice,
besides the three appropriated to ladies; these were
ranged four on either side of the saloon, reaching
up two-thirds of the length. The apartment, therefore,
took the form of a T, and the upper end or cross was
furnished with horse-hair sofas; upon these, and upon
the table, those passengers slept who were not provided
with cabins. Many preferred the deck, but being
washed out of it by the necessary cleaning process,
which took place at day-break, were obliged to make
their toilettes in the saloon. This also
formed the dressing-place for dinner, and the basins
of dirty water, hair-brushes, &c. were scarcely removed
from the side-tables before the party were summoned
to their repast. The preparations for this meal
were a work of time, always beginning at half-past
one; an hour was employed in placing the dishes upon
the table, in order that every thing might have time
to cool.
The reason assigned for not putting
Venetian blinds to the cabin-doors was this:
it would injure the appearance of the cabin an
appearance certainly not much improved by the dirty
sail which hung against our portal. The saloon
itself, without this addition, was dingy enough, being
panelled with dark oak, relieved by a narrow gilt cornice,
and the royal arms carved and gilded over an arm-chair
at the rudder-case, the ornaments of a clock which
never kept time. All the servants, who could
not find accommodation elsewhere, slept under the table;
thus adding to the abominations of this frightful
place. And yet we were congratulated upon our
good fortune, in being accommodated in the Berenice,
being told that the Zenobia, which passed us
on our way, had been employed in carrying pigs between
Waterford and Bristol, and that the Hugh Lindsay
was in even worse condition; the Berenice being,
in short, the crack ship.
Every day added to the heat and the
dirt, and in the evening, when going upon deck to
inhale the odours of the hen-coops, the smell was
insufferable. When to this annoyance coal-dust,
half an inch deep, is added, my preference of my own
cabin will not be a subject of surprise. With
what degree of truth, I cannot pretend to say, all
the disagreeable circumstances sustained on board the
Berenice were attributed to the alterations
made in the docks. Previously to these changes,
we were told, the furnaces were supplied with coal
by a method which obviated the necessity of having
it upon deck, whence the dust was now carried all
over the ship upon the feet of the persons who were
continually passing to and fro.
Occasionally, we suffered some inconvenience
from the motion of the vessel, but, generally speaking,
nothing more disagreeable occurred than the tremulous
action of the engines, an action which completely
incapacitated me from any employment except that of
reading. The only seats or tables we could command
in our cabin consisted of our boxes, so that being
turned out of the saloon at half-past one, by the
servants who laid the cloth for dinner, it was not
very easy to make an attempt at writing, or even needle-work.
Doubtless the passengers from Bombay could contrive
to have more comforts about them. It was impossible,
however, that those who had already made a long overland
journey should be provided with the means of furnishing
their cabins, and this consideration should weigh
with the Government when taking money for the accommodation
of passengers. Cabins ought certainly to be supplied
with bed-places and a washing-table, and not to be
left perfectly dismantled by those occupants who arrive
at Suez, and who, having previously fitted them up,
have a right to all they contain.
The miserable state of the Red Sea
steamers, of course, often furnished a theme for conversation,
and we were repeatedly told that their condition was
entirely owing to the jealousy of the people of Calcutta,
who could not endure the idea of the importance to
which Bombay was rising, in consequence of its speedy
communication with England. Without knowing exactly
where the fault may lie, it must be said that there
is great room for improvement. In all probability,
the increased number of persons who will proceed to
India by way of the Red Sea, now that the passage
is open, will compel the merchants, or other speculators,
to provide better vessels for the trip. At present,
the price demanded is enormously disproportioned to
the accommodation given, while the chance of falling
in with a disagreeable person in the commandant should
be always taken into consideration by those who meditate
the overland journey. The consolation, in so fine
a vessel as the Berenice, consists in the degree
of certainty with which the duration of the voyage
may be calculated, eighteen or twenty days being the
usual period employed. In smaller steamers, and
those of a less favourable construction, accidents
and delays are very frequent; sometimes the coal is
burning half the voyage, and thus rendered nearly
useless to the remaining portion, the vessel depending
entirely upon the sails.
During the hot weather and the monsoons,
the navigation of the Red Sea is attended with much
inconvenience, from the sultriness of the atmosphere
and the high winds; it is only, therefore, at one season
of the year that travellers can, with any hope of comfort,
avail themselves of the route; it must, consequently,
be questionable whether the influx of voyagers will
be sufficiently great to cover the expense of the
vessels required. A large steamer is now building
at Bombay, for the purpose of conveying the mails,
and another is expected out from England with the
same object.
The shores of the Red Sea are bold
and rocky, exhibiting ranges of picturesque hills,
sometimes seceding from, at others approaching, the
beach. A few days brought us to Mocha. The
captain had kindly promised to take me on shore with
him; but, unfortunately, the heat and the fatigue
which I had sustained had occasioned a slight attack
of fever, and as we did not arrive before the town
until nearly twelve o’clock, I was afraid to
encounter the rays of the sun during the day.
We could obtain a good view of the city from the vessel;
it appeared to be large and well built, that is, comparatively
speaking; but its unsheltered walls, absolutely baked
in the sun, and the arid waste on which it stood,
gave to it a wild and desolate appearance.
We were told that already, since the
British occupation of Aden, the trade of Mocha had
fallen off. It seldom happens that a steamer passes
down the Red Sea without bringing emigrants from Mocha,
anxious to establish themselves in the new settlement;
and if Aden were made a free port, there can be little
doubt that it would monopolize the whole commerce
of the neighbourhood. The persons desirous to
colonize the place say, very justly, that they cannot
afford to pay duties, having to quit their own houses
at a loss, and to construct others, Aden being at
present destitute of accommodation for strangers.
If, however, encouragement should be given them, they
will flock thither in great numbers; and, under proper
management, there is every reason to hope that Aden
will recover all its former importance and wealth,
and become one of the most useful dependencies of the
British crown.
We were to take in coals and water
at Aden, and arriving there in the afternoon of Saturday,
the 19th of October, every body determined to go on
shore, if possible, on the ensuing morning. By
the kindness of some friends, we had palanquins
in waiting at day-break, which were to convey us a
distance of five miles to the place now occupied as
cantonments. Our road conducted us for a mile
or two along the sea-shore, with high crags piled
on one side, a rugged path, and rocks rising out of
the water to a considerable distance. We then
ascended a height, which led to an aperture in the
hills, called the Pass. Here we found a gate
and a guard of sepoys. The scenery was wild, and
though nearly destitute of vegetation a
few coarse plants occurring here and there scarcely
deserving the name very beautiful.
It would, perhaps, be too much to
designate the bare and lofty cliffs, which piled themselves
upwards in confused masses, with the name of mountains;
they nevertheless conveyed ideas of sublimity which
I had not associated with other landscapes of a similar
nature. The Pass, narrow and enclosed on either
side by winding rocks, brought us at length down a
rather steep declivity to a sort of basin, surrounded
upon three sides with lofty hills, and on the fourth
by the sea.
Cape Aden forms a high and rocky promontory,
the most elevated portion being 1,776 feet above the
level of the sea. This lofty headland, when viewed
at a distance, appears like an island, in consequence
of its being connected with the interior by low ground,
which, in the vicinity of Khora Muckse, is quite a
swamp. Its summits assume the aspect of turretted
peaks, having ruined forts and watch-towers on the
highest elevations. The hills are naked and barren,
and the valley little better; the whole, however,
presenting a grand, picturesque, and imposing appearance.
The town of Aden lies on the east side of the Cape,
in the amphitheatre before mentioned. A sketch
of its history will be given, gathered upon the spot,
in a subsequent paper, the place being sufficiently
interesting to demand a lengthened notice; meanwhile
a passing remark is called for on its present appearance.
At first sight of Aden, it is difficult
to suppose it to be the residence of human beings,
and more especially of European families. The
town, if such it may be called, consists of a few scattered
houses of stone, apparently loosely put together,
with pigeon-holes for windows, and roofs which, being
flat, and apparently surrounded by a low parapet,
afford no idea of their being habitable. It is
difficult to find a comparison for these dwellings,
which appeared to be composed of nothing more than
four walls, and yet, to judge from the apertures,
contained two or more stories. The greater number
were enclosed in a sort of yard or compound, the fences
being formed of long yellow reeds; the less substantial
dwellings were entirely made of these reeds, so that
they looked like immense crates or cages for domestic
fowls.
My palanquin at length stopped at
a flight of steps hewn out of the rock; and I found
myself at the entrance of a habitation, half-bungalow,
half-tent; and certainly, as the permanent abode of
civilized beings, the strangest residence I had ever
seen. The uprights and frame-work were made of
reeds and bamboos, lined with thin mats, which had
at one time been double; but the harbour thus afforded
for rats being found inconvenient, the outer casing
had been removed. Two good-sized apartments,
with verandahs all round, and dressing and bathing-rooms
attached, were formed in this way; they were well
carpeted and well furnished, but destitute both of
glass windows and wooden doors; what are called in
India jaumps, and chicks of split bamboo, being
the substitutes.
Government not yet having fixed upon
the site for the station intended to be established
at Aden, none of the European inhabitants have begun
to build their houses, which, it is said, are to be
very solidly constructed of stone; at present, they
are scattered, in Gipsy fashion, upon the rocks overlooking
the sea, and at the time of the year in which I visited
them they enjoyed a delightfully cool breeze.
What they would be in the hot weather, it is difficult
to say. The supplies, for the most part, come
from a considerable distance, but appear to be abundant;
and when at length a good understanding shall have
taken place between the British Government and the
neighbouring sheikhs, the markets will be furnished
with every thing that the countries in the vicinity
produce.
The garrison were prepared, at the
period of our arrival, for the outbreak which has
since occurred. It is melancholy to contemplate
the sacrifice of life which will in all probability
take place before the Arabs will be reconciled to
the loss of a territory which has for a long time
been of no use to them, but which, under its present
masters, bids fair to introduce mines of wealth into
an impoverished country. The Pasha of Egypt had
long cast a covetous eye upon Aden, and its occupation
by the British took place at the precise period requisite
to check the ambitious designs of a man thirsting for
conquest, and to allay the fears of the Imaum of Muscat,
who, naturally enough, dreaded encroachments upon
his territory.
Aden had hitherto agreed very well
with its European residents. The sepoys, servants,
and camp-followers, however, had suffered much both
from mental and bodily ailments. They were deprived
of their usual sources of amusement, and of their
accustomed food, and languished under that home-sickness,
which the natives of India feel in a very acute degree.
The greater number of servants were discontented, and
anxious to return to their native country. This
natural desire upon their part was highly resented
by their masters, who, instead of taking the most
obvious means of remedying the evil, and employing
the natives of the place, who appeared to be tractable
and teachable enough, abused and threatened to beat
the unfortunate people, convicted of what self-love
styles “ingratitude.”
In a very clever work, I have seen
the whole sum of the miseries of human life comprised
in one word, “servants;” and until we can
procure human beings with all the perfections of our
fallen nature, and none of our faults, to minister
to our wants and wishes, the complaint, so sickening
and so general, and frequently so unjust, will be
reiterated. Anglo-Indians, however, seem to be
more tormented by these domestic plagues than any
other set of people. The instant a stranger lands
upon Asiatic ground, we hear of nothing else.
It is considered to be polite conversation in the
drawing-room, aid delicate-looking women will listen
with the greatest complacence to the most brutal threats
uttered by their male associates against the wretched
people whom hard fate has placed about their persons.
By some mischance, these very individuals are equally
ill-served at home, the greater number who return
to England being either rendered miserable there, or
driven back to India in consequence of the impossibility
of managing their servants. As far as my own
experience goes, with the exception of the people
in the Berenice, who were not in the slightest
degree under the control of the passengers, or, it
may be said, attached to them in any way, I have always
found it easy, both at home and abroad, to obtain
good servants, at least quite as good as people, conscious
of the infirmities of humanity in their own persons,
have a right to expect. My simple rule has been,
never to keep a person who did not suit me, and to
treat those who did with kindness and indulgence.
The system has always answered, and I am probably
on that account the less inclined to sympathize with
persons who are eternally complaining.
There may be some excuse at Aden for
the conversation turning upon domestic matters of
this kind, and perhaps I do the station injustice
in supposing that they form a common topic. With
the exception of those persons who take pleasure in
the anticipation of the improvement of the surrounding
tribes, there is very little to interest European
residents in this arid spot. Should, however,
the hopes which many enlightened individuals entertain
be realized, or the prospect of their fulfilment continue
unclouded, those who now endure a dreary exile in
a barren country, and surrounded by a hostile people,
will or ought to derive much consolation from the
thought, that their employment upon a disagreeable
duty may prove of the utmost benefit to thousands
of their fellow-creatures. It is pleasant to look
forward to the civilization of Abyssinia, and other
more remote places, by means of commercial intercourse
with Aden.