The Mussulmauns have permission from
their Lawgiver to be pluralists in wives, as well
as the Israelites of old. Mahumud’s motive
for restricting the number of wives each man might
lawfully marry, was, say his biographers, for the
purpose of reforming the then existing state of society,
and correcting abuses of long standing amongst the
Arabians.
My authority tells me, that at the
period of Mahumud’s commencing his mission,
the Arabians were a most abandoned and dissolute people,
guilty of every excess that can debase the character
of man: drunkards, profligate, and overbearing
barbarians, both in principle and action. Mahumud
is said unvariedly to have manifested kindly feelings
towards the weaker sex, who, he considered, were intended
to be the companion and solace of man, and not the
slave of his ungovernable sensuality or caprice; he
set the best possible example in his own domestic circle,
and instituted such laws as were then needed to restrain
vice and promote the happiness of those Arabians who
had received him as a Prophet. He forbade all
kinds of fermented liquors, which were then in common
use; and to the frequent intoxication of the men,
were attributed their vicious habits, base pursuits,
and unmanly cruelty to the poor females. Mahumud’s
code of laws relating to marriage restricted them
to a limited number of wives; for at that period they
all possessed crowded harems, many of the inhabitants
of which were the victims of their reckless persecution;
young females torn from the bosom of their families
and immured in the vilest state of bondage, to be
cast out upon the wide world to starvation and misery,
whenever the base master of the house or tent desired
to make room for a fresh supply, often the spoils
of his predatory excursions.
By the laws of Mahumud his followers
are restrained from concubinage; they are equally
restricted from forced marriages. The number of
their wives must be regulated by their means of supporting
them, the law strictly forbidding neglect, or unkind
treatment of any one of the number his followers may
deem it convenient to marry.
At the period when Mahumud issued
these necessary laws for the security of female comfort
and the moral habits of the males, there existed a
practice with the Arabs of forcing young women to
marry against their inclination, adding, year by year,
to the many wretched creatures doomed, for a time,
to all the miseries of a crowded hut; and at last,
when tired of their persons or unable to provide them
with sustenance, turning them adrift without a home,
a friend, or a meal. To the present day the law
against forced marriages is revered, and no marriage
contract can be deemed lawful without the necessary
form of inquiry by the Maulvee, who, in the presence
of witnesses, demands of the young lady, ’whether
the contract is by her own free will and consent?’
This, however, I am disposed to think, in the present
age, is little else than a mere form of ‘fulfilling
the law’ since the engagement is made by the
parents of both parties, the young couple being passive
subjects to the parental arrangement, for their benefit
as they are assured. The young lady, from her
rigid seclusion, has no prior attachment, and she
is educated to be ‘obedient to her husband’.
She is taught from her earliest youth to look forward
to such match as her kind parents may think proper
to provide for her; and, therefore, can have no objection
to accepting the husband selected for her by them.
The parents, loving their daughter, and aware of the
responsibility resting on them, are cautious in selecting
for their girls suitable husbands, according to their
particular view of the eligibility of the suitor.
The first marriage of a Mussulmaun
is the only one where a public display of the ceremony
is deemed necessary, and the first wife is always
considered the head of his female establishment.
Although he may be the husband of many wives in the
course of time, and some of them prove greater favourites,
yet the first wife takes precedence in all matters
where dignity is to be preserved. And when the
several wives meet each have separate habitations
if possible all the rest pay to the first
wife that deference which superiority exacts from
inferiors; not only do the secondary wives pay this
respect to the first, but the whole circle of relations
and friends make the same distinction, as a matter
of course; for the first wife takes precedence in
every way.
Should the first wife fortunately
present her husband with a son, he is the undisputed
heir; but the children of every subsequent wife are
equals in the father’s estimation. Should
the husband be dissolute and have offspring by concubines which
is not very common, those children are
remembered and provided for in the distribution of
his property; and, as very often occurs, they are
cherished by the wives with nearly as much care as
their own children; but illegitimate offspring very
seldom marry in the same rank their father held in
society.
The latitude allowed by ‘the
law’ preserves the many-wived Mussulmaun from
the world’s censure; and his conscience rests
unaccused when he adds to his numbers, if he cannot
reproach himself with having neglected or unkindly
treated any of the number bound to him, or their children.
But the privilege is not always indulged in by the
Mussulmauns; much depends on circumstances, and more
on the man’s disposition. If it be the happy
lot of a kind-hearted, good man to be married to a
woman of assimilating mind, possessing the needful
requisites to render home agreeable, and a prospect
of an increasing family, then the husband has no motive
to draw him into further engagements, and he is satisfied
with one wife. Many such men I have known in
Hindoostaun, particularly among the Syaads and religious
characters, who deem a plurality of wives a plague
to the possessors in proportion to their numbers.
The affluent, the sensualist, and
the ambitious, are most prone to swell the numbers
in their harem. With some men, who are not highly
gifted intellectually, it is esteemed a mark of gentility
to have several wives.
There are some instances of remarkable
generosity in the conduct of good wives (which would
hardly gain credit with females differently educated),
not necessary to the subject before me; but I may here
add to the praise of a good wife among these people,
that she never utters a reproach, nor gives evidence
by word or manner in her husband’s presence that
she has any cause for regret; she receives him with
undisguised pleasure, although she has just before
learned that another member has been added to his
well-peopled harem. The good and forbearing wife,
by this line of conduct, secures to herself the confidence
of her husband; who, feeling assured that the amiable
woman has an interest in his happiness, will consult
her and take her advice in the domestic affairs of
his children by other wives, and even arrange by her
judgment all the settlements for their marriages,
&c. He can speak of other wives without restraint, for
she knows he has others, and her education
has taught her, that they deserve her respect in proportion
as they contribute to her husband’s happiness.
The children of her husband are admitted at all times
and seasons, without restraint or prejudice; she loves
them next to her own, because they are her husband’s.
She receives the mothers of such children without a
shade of jealousy in her manner, and delights in distinguishing
them by favours and presents according to their several
merits. From this picture of many living wives
in Mussulmaun society, it must not be supposed I am
speaking of women without attachment to their husbands;
on the contrary, they are persons who are really susceptible
of pure love, and the generosity of their conduct
is one of the ways in which they prove themselves devoted
to their husband’s happiness. This, they
say, was the lesson taught them by their amiable mother,
and this is the example they would set for the imitation
of their daughters.
I do not mean to say this is a faithful
picture of all the females of zeenahnah life.
The mixture of good and bad tempers or dispositions
is not confined to any class or complexion of people,
but is to be met with in every quarter of the globe.
In general, I have observed those females of the Mussulmaun
population who have any claim to genteel life, and
whose habits are guided by religious principles, evince
such traits of character as would constitute the virtuous
and thoroughly obedient wife in any country; and many,
whom I have had the honour to know personally, would
do credit to the most enlightened people in the world.
Should the first wife prove a termagant
or unfaithful rare occurrences amongst
the inmates of the harem, the husband has
the liberty of divorcing her by paying down her stipulated
dowry. This dowry is an engagement made by the
husband on the night of Baarraat (when the bridegroom
is about to take his bride from her parents to his
own home). On which occasion the Maulvee asks
the bridegroom to name the amount of his wife’s
dowry, in the event of separation; the young man is
at liberty to name any sum he pleases. It would
not prevent the marriage if the smallest amount were
promised; but he is in the presence of his bride’s
family, and within her hearing also, though he has
not yet seen her; it is a critical moment
for him, thus surrounded. Besides, as he never
intends to separate from the lady, in the strict letter
of the law, he cannot refrain from gratifying those
interested in the honour he is about to confer by
the value of the promised dowry, and, therefore, he
names a very heavy sum, which perhaps his whole generation
never could have collected in their joint lives.
This sum would of itself be a barrier to divorce;
but that is not the only object which influences the
Mussulmaun generally to waive the divorce; it is because
they would not publish their own disgrace, by divorcing
an unfaithful or undutiful wife.
If the first wife dies, a second is
sought after on the same principle which guided the
first ’a superior to head his house’.
In this case there would be the same public display
which marked the first wife’s marriage; all
the minor or secondary wives being introduced to the
zeenahnah privately; they are in consequence termed
Dhollie wives, or brought home under cover.
Many great men appear to be close
imitators of King Solomon, with whose history they
are perfectly conversant, for I have heard of the sovereign
princes in Hindoostaun having seven or eight hundred
wives at one time in their palaces. This is hearsay
report only, and I should hope an exaggeration.
The first marriage is usually solemnized
when the youth is eighteen, and the young lady thirteen,
or fourteen at the most; many are married at an earlier
age, when, in the opinion of the parents, an eligible
match is to be secured. And in some cases, where
the parents on both sides have the union of their
children at heart, they contract them at six or seven
years old, which marriage they solemnly bind themselves
to fulfil when the children have reached a proper
age; under these circumstances the children are allowed
to live in the same house, and often form an attachment
for each other, which renders their union a life of
real happiness.
There are to be found in Mussulmaun
society parents of mercenary minds, who prefer giving
their daughters in marriage as dhollie wives to noblemen
or men of property, to the preferable plan of uniting
them with a husband of their own grade, with whom
the girl would most likely live without a rival in
the mud-walled tenement; this will explain the facilities
offered to a sovereign or nobleman in extending the
numbers of his harem.
Some parents excuse themselves in
thus disposing of their daughters on the score of
poverty, and the difficulty they find in defraying
the expenses of a wedding: this I conceive to
be one great error in the economy of the Mussulmaun
people, unnecessary expense incurred in
their marriage ceremonies, which hampers them through
life in their circumstances. Parents, however
poor, will not allow their daughter to be conveyed
from their home, where the projected union is with
an equal, without a seemingly needless parade of music,
and a marriage-portion in goods and chattels, if they
have no fortune to give beside; then the expense of
providing dinners for friends to make the event conspicuous,
and the useless articles of finery for the girl’s
person, with many other ways of expending money, to
the detriment of the parents’ finances, without
any very substantial benefit to the young couple.
But this dearly-loved custom cannot be passed over;
and if the parents find it impossible to meet the
pecuniary demands of these ceremonies, the girl has
no alternative but to live out her days singly, unless
by an agent’s influence she is accepted as a
dhollie wife to some man of wealth.
Girls are considered to have passed
their prime when they number from sixteen to eighteen
years; even the poorest peasant would object to a wife
of eighteen.
There has been the same difficulty
to encounter in every age of Mussulmaun history in
Hindoostaun; and in the darker periods of civilization,
the obstacles to settling their daughters to advantage
induced the villagers and the uneducated to follow
the example of the Rajpoots, viz., to destroy
the greater proportion of females at their birth.
In the present age, this horrid custom is never heard
of amongst any classes of the Mussulmaun population;
but by the Rajpoot Hindoos it is still practised, as
one of their chiefs very lately acknowledged in the
presence of a friend of mine. I have often heard
Meer Hadjee Shaah declare that it was a common occurrence
within his recollection, among the lower classes of
the people in the immediate vicinity of Loodeeanah,
where he lived when a boy; and that the same practice
existed in the Oude territory, amongst the peasantry
even at a much later date. One of the Nuwaubs
of Oude, I think Asoof ood Dowlah, hearing
with horror of the frequent recurrence of this atrocity
in the remote parts of his province, issued a proclamation
to his subjects, commanding them to desist from the
barbarous custom; and, as an inducement to the
wicked parents to preserve their female offspring
alive, grants of land were to be awarded to every female
as a marriage-portion on her arriving at a proper
age.
It is generally to be observed in
a Mussulmaun’s family, even at this day, that
the birth of a girl produces a temporary gloom, whilst
the birth of a boy gives rise to a festival in the
zeenahnah. Some are wicked enough to say, ‘It
is more honourable to have sons than daughters’,
but I believe the real cause is the difficulty to
be encountered in settling the latter suitably.
The important affair of fixing upon
a desirable match for their sons and daughters is
the source of constant anxiety in the family of every
Mussulmaun, from the children’s earliest years
to the period of its accomplishment.
There is a class of people who make
it the business of their lives to negotiate marriages.
Both men and women of this description are of course
ingeniously expert in the art of talking, and able
to put the best colouring on the affair they undertake;
they occupy every day of their lives in roving about
from house to house, and, as they have always something
entertaining to say, they generally gain easy admittance;
they make themselves acquainted with the domestic
affairs of one family in order to convey them to another,
and so continue in their line of gossiping, until
the economy of every person’s house is familiar
to all. The female gossip in her researches in
zeenahnahs, finds out all the expectations a mother
entertains for her marriageable sons or daughters,
and details whatever she learns in such or such a zeenahnah,
as likely to meet the views of her present hostess.
Every one knows the object of these visits, and if
they have any secret that the world may not participate
in, there is due caution observed that it may not
transpire before this Mrs. Gad-about.
When intelligence is brought, by means
of such agency, to the mother of a son who happens
to be marriageable, that a lady of proper rank has
a daughter to be sought, she consults with her husband,
and further inquiries are instituted amongst their
several friends, male and female; after due deliberation,
the connexion being found desirable, the father will
consult an omen before negotiations are commenced.
The omen to decide the important step is as follows: Several
slips of paper are cut up, on half the number is written
‘to be’, on the other half, ‘not
to be’; these papers are mixed together and
placed under the prayer-carpet. When the good
Mussulmaun is preparing for his evening Namaaz he fails
not in his devotions to ask for help and guidance
in an affair of so much importance to the father as
the happiness and well-being of his son. At the
portion of the service when he bows down his head
to God, he beseeches with much humility, calling on
the great power and goodness of God to instruct and
guide him for the best interest of his child; and then
he repeats a short prayer expressive of his reliance
on the wisdom of God, and his perfect submission to
whatever may be His wise decree in this important business.
The prayer concluded, he seats himself with solemn
gravity on the prayer-carpet, again and again imploring
Divine guidance, without which he is sure nothing
good can accrue: he then draws one slip from under
his carpet; if ‘to be’ is produced, he
places it by his left side; a second slip
is drawn out, should that also bear the words ‘to
be’ the business is so far decided. He
then offers thanks and praises to God, congratulates
his wife on the successful issue of the omen, and discusses
those plans which appear most likely to further the
prospects of their dearly-loved son. But should
the second and third papers say ‘not to be’
he is assured in his heart it was so decided by ‘that
Wisdom which cannot err:’ to whom he gives
praise and glory for all mercies received at His hand:
after this no overture or negotiation would be listened
to by the pious father from the same quarter.
The omen, however, proving favourable,
the affair is decided; and in order to gain the best
possible information of the real disposition of all
parties concerned, a confidential friend is sent to
the zeenahnah of the young lady’s mother to
make her own observations on what passes within; and
to ascertain, if possible, whether the report brought
by the female agent was true or exaggerated; and finally,
to learn if their son would be received or rejected
as a suitor, provided advances were made.
The female friend returns, after a
day or two’s absence, to the anxious parents
of the youth, and details all she has seen or heard
during her visit. The young lady may, perhaps,
have been seen (this is not always conceded to such
visitors), in which case her person, her manners, her
apparent disposition, the hospitality and good breeding
of the mother and other members of the zeenahnah,
are described; and lastly, it is hinted that, all
other things suiting, the young lady being yet disengaged,
the projected offer would not be disagreeable to her
parents.
The father of the youth then resolves
on sending a male agent in due form to negotiate a
marriage, unless he happens to be personally acquainted
with the girl’s father; in which case the lady
is desired to send her female agent on the embassy,
and the father of the youth speaks on the subject
in the meantime to the girl’s father.
A very intimate friend of mine was
seeking for a suitable match for her son, and being
much in her confidence, I was initiated in all the
mysteries and arrangements (according to Mussulmaun
rule) of the affair pending the marriage of her son.
The young lady to be sought (wooed
we should have it), had been described as amiable
and pretty advantages as much esteemed as
her rank; fortune she had none worth mentioning,
but it was what is termed in Indian society a good
and equal match. The overture was, therefore,
to be made from the youth’s family in the following
manner:
On a silver tray covered with gold
brocade and fringed with silver, was laid the youth’s
pedigree, traced by a neat writer in the Persian character,
on richly embossed paper ornamented and emblazoned
with gold figures. The youth being a Syaad, his
pedigree was traced up to Mahumud, in both paternal
and maternal lines, and many a hero and Begum of their
noble blood filled up the space from the Prophet down
to the youthful Meer Mahumud, my friend’s son.
On the tray, with the pedigree, was
laid a nuzza, or offering of five gold mohurs, and
twenty-one (the lucky number) rupees; a brocaded cover,
fringed with silver, was spread over the whole, and
this was conveyed by the male agent to the young Begum’s
father. The tray and its contents are retained
for ever, if the proposal is accepted: if rejected,
the parties return the whole without delay, which
is received as a tacit proof that the suitor is rejected:
no further explanation is ever given or required.
In the present instance the tray was
detained, and in a few days after a female from their
family was sent to my friend’s house to make
a general scrutiny of the zeenahnah and its inmates.
This female was pressed to stay a day or two, and
in that time many important subjects underwent discussion.
The youth was introduced, and everything according
with the views entertained by both parties, the fathers
met, and the marriage, it was decided, should take
place within a twelvemonth, when the young lady would
have accomplished her thirteenth year.
‘Do you decide on having Mugganee
performed?’ is the question proposed by the
father of the youth to the father of the young maiden.
In the present case it was chosen, and great were
the preparations of my friend to do all possible honour
to the future bride of her son.
Mugganee is the first contract, by
which the parties are bound to fulfil their engagement
at an appointed time.
The dress for a bride differs
in one material point from the general style of Hindoostaunie
costume: a sort of gown is worn, made of silver
tissue, or some equally expensive article, about the
walking length of an English dress; the skirt is open
in front, and contains about twenty breadths of the
material, a tight body and long sleeves. The whole
dress is trimmed very richly with embroidered trimming
and silver riband; the deputtah (drapery) is made
to correspond. This style of dress is the original
Hindoo fashion, and was worn at the Court of Delhi
for many centuries; but of late years it has been
used only on marriage festivals amongst the better
sort of people in Hindoostaun, except Kings or Nuwaubs
sending khillauts to females, when this dress, called
a jhammah, is invariably one of the articles.
The costly dresses for the present
Mugganee my friend prepared at a great expense, and
with much good taste; to which were added a ruby ring
of great value, large gold ear-rings, offerings of
money, the flower-garlands for the head, neck, wrists,
and ankles, formed of the sweet-scented jessamine;
choice confectionery set out in trays with the pawns
and fruits; the whole conveyed under an escort of
soldiers and servants with a band of music, from the
residence of Meer Mahumud to that of his bride elect,
accompanied by many friends of the family. These
offerings from the youth bind the contract with the
young lady, who wears his ring from that day to the
end of her life.
The poorer sort of people perform
Mugganee by the youth simply sending a rupee in a
silk band, to be tied on the girl’s arm.
Being curious to know the whole business
of a wedding ceremony amongst the Mussulmaun people,
I was allowed to perform the part of ’officiating
friend’ on this occasion of celebrating the Mugganee.
The parents of the young lady having been consulted,
my visit was a source of solicitude to the whole family,
who made every possible preparation to receive me with
becoming respect; I went just in time to reach the
gate at the moment the parade arrived. I was
handed to the door of the zeenahnah by the girl’s
father, and was soon surrounded by the young members
of the family, together with many lady-visitors, slaves,
and women-servants of the establishment. They
had never before seen an English-woman, and the novelty,
I fancy, surprised the whole group; they examined my
dress, my complexion, hair, hands, &c., and looked
the wonder they could not express in words. The
young Begum was not amongst the gazing throng; some
preliminary customs detained her behind the purdah,
where it may be supposed she endured all the agony
of suspense and curiosity by her compliance with the
prescribed forms.
The lady of the mansion waited my
approach to the dulhaun (great hall) with all
due etiquette, standing to receive and embrace me on
my advancing towards her. This ceremony performed,
I was invited to take a seat on the musnud-carpet
with her on the ground; a chair had been provided for
me, but I chose to respect the lady’s preference,
and the seat on the floor suited me for the time without
much inconvenience.
After some time had been passed in
conversation on such subjects as suited the taste
of the lady of the house, I was surprised at the servants
entering with trays, which they placed immediately
before me, containing a full-dress suit in the costume
of Hindoostaun. The hostess told me she had prepared
this dress for me, and I must condescend to wear it.
I would have declined the gaudy array, but one of
her friends whispered me, ’The custom is of
long standing; when the face of a stranger is first
seen a dress is always presented; I should displease
Sumdun Begum by my refusal; besides, it
would be deemed an ill omen at the Mugganee of the
young Bohue Begum if I did not put on the Native
dress before I saw the face of the bride elect.’
These I found to be weighty arguments, and felt constrained
to quiet their apprehensions of ill-luck by compliance;
I therefore forced the gold dress and the glittering
drapery over my other clothes, at the expense of some
suffering from the heat, for it was at the very hottest
season of the year, and the dulhaun was crowded with
visitors.
This important point conceded to them,
I was led to a side hall, where the little girl was
seated on her carpet of rich embroidery, her face resting
on her knees in apparent bashfulness. I could
not directly ascertain whether she was plain, or pretty
as the female agent had represented. I was allowed
the privilege of decorating the young lady with the
sweet jessamine guinahs, and placing the ring
on the forefinger of the right hand; after which,
the ear-rings, the gold-tissue dress, the deputtah
were all in their turn put on, the offering of money
presented, and then I had the first embrace before
her mother. She looked very pretty, just turned
twelve. If I could have prevailed on her to be
cheerful, I should have been much gratified to have
extended my visit in her apartment, but the poor child
seemed ready to sink with timidity; and out of compassion
to the dear girl, I hurried away from the hall, to
relieve her from the burden my presence seemed to
inflict, the moment I had accomplished my last duty,
which was to feed her with my own hand, giving her
seven pieces of sugar-candy; seven, on this occasion,
is the lucky number, I presume, as I was particularly
cautioned to feed her with exactly that number of
pieces.
Returning to the assembly in the dulhaun,
I would have gladly taken leave; but there was yet
one other custom to be observed to secure a happy omen
to the young people’s union. Once again
seated on the musnud with Sumdun Begum, the female
slaves entered with sherbet in silver basins.
Each person taking sherbet is expected to deposit
gold or silver coins in the tray; the sherbet-money
at this house is collected for the bride; and when
during the three days’ performance of the marriage
ceremony at the bridegroom’s house sherbet is
presented to the guests, the money collected there
is reserved for him. The produce of the two houses
is afterwards compared, and conclusions drawn as to
the greatest portion of respect paid by the friends
on either side. The poor people find the sherbet-money
a useful fund to help them to keep house; but with
the rich it is a mere matter to boast of, that so
much money was collected in consequence of the number
of visitors who attended the nuptials.
After the Mugganee ceremony had been
performed, and before the marriage was solemnized,
the festival of Buckrah Eade occurred; in
the eleventh Letter you will find it remarked, the
bride and bridegroom elect then exchange presents; my
friend was resolved her son’s presents should
do honour to both houses, and the following may give
you an idea of an Eade-gift.
Thirty-five goats and sheep of the
finest breed procurable, which I succeeded in having
sent in their natural dress, instead of being adorned
with gold-cloth and painted horns: it was, however,
with some persuasion the folly of this general practice
was omitted in this instance.
The guinah or garland, of flowers
on a tray covered with brocade. The guinah are
sweet-scented flowers without stalks, threaded into
garlands in many pretty ways, with great taste and
ingenuity, intermixed with silver ribands; they are
formed into bracelets, necklaces, armlets, chaplets
for the head, and bangles for the legs. There
are people in Lucknow who make the preparing of guinahs
a profitable business, as the population is so extensive
as to render these flower-ornaments articles of great
request.
A tray filled with pawns, prepared
with the usual ingredients, as lime, cuttie (a
bitter gum), betel-nut, tobacco, spices, &c.; these
pawns are tied up in packets of a triangular form
and covered with enamelled foil of many bright colours.
Several trays of ripe fruits of the season, viz.,
kurbootahs (shaddock), kabooza (melons), ununas
(pine apple), guavers, sherreefha (custard-apple),
kummeruck, jarmun (purple olives), orme
(mango), falsah, kirhnee, baer, leechie,
ormpeach, carounder, and many other kinds
of less repute.
Confectionery and sweetmeats, on trays,
in all the varieties of Indian invention; a full-dress
suit for the young lady; and on a silver tray the
youth’s nuzza of five gold mohurs, and twenty-one
rupees.
The Eade offering of Meer Mahumud
was escorted by servants, soldiers, and a band of
music; and the young lady returned a present to the
bridegroom elect of thirty-five goats and sheep, and
a variety of undress skull-caps, supposed to be her
own work, in spangles and embroidery. I may state
here, that the Natives of India never go bare-headed
in the house. The turban is always worn in company,
whatever may be the inconvenience from heat; and in
private life, a small skull-cap, often of plain white
muslin, just covers the head. It is considered
disgraceful in men to expose the head bare; removing
the turban from the head of an individual would be
deemed as insulting as pulling a nose in Europe.
Whatever Eade or festival may occur
between the Mugganee and the final celebration of
nuptials, presents are always interchanged by the young
bride and bridegroom; and with all such observances
there is one prevailing custom, which is, that though
there should be nothing at hand but part of their
own gifts, the trays are not allowed to go back without
some trifling things to keep the custom in full force.