The various trades of a Native city
in Hindoostaun are almost generally carried on in
the open air. The streets are narrow, and usually
unpaved; the dukhauns (shops) small, with the whole
front open towards the street; a tattie of coarse
grass forming an awning to shelter the shopkeeper
and his goods from the weather. In the long lines
of dukhauns the open fronts exhibit to the view the
manufacturer, the artisan, the vender, in every variety
of useful and ornamental articles for general use
and consumption. In one may be seen the naunbye
(bazaar cook) basting keebaubs over a charcoal
fire on the ground with one hand, and beating off
the flies with a bunch of date-leaves in the other;
beside him may be seen assistant cooks kneading dough
for sheermaul or other bread, or superintending
sundry kettles and cauldrons of currie, pillau, matunjun,
&c., whilst others are equally active in preparing
platters and trays, in order to forward the delicacies
at the appointed hour to some great assembly.
The shop adjoining may probably be
occupied by a butcher, his meat exposed for sale in
little lean morsels carefully separated from every
vestige of fat or skin; the butcher’s assistant
is occupied in chopping up the coarser pieces of lean
meat into mince meat. Such shops as these are actually
in a state of siege by the flies; there is, however,
no remedy for the butcher but patience; his customers
always wash their meat before it is cooked, so he
never fails to sell even with all these disadvantages.
But it is well for the venders of more delicate articles
when neither of these fly-attracting emporiums are
next door neighbours, or immediately opposite; yet
if it even should be so, the merchant will bear with
equanimity an evil he cannot control, and persuade
his customers for silver shoes or other ornamental
articles, that if they are not tarnished a fly spit
or two cannot lessen their value.
The very next door to a working goldsmith
may be occupied by a weaver of muslin; the first with
his furnace and crucible, the latter with his loom,
in constant employ. Then the snake-hookha manufacturer,
opposed to a mixer of tobacco, aiding each other’s
trade in their separate articles. The makers
and venders of punkahs of all sorts and sizes, children’s
toys, of earth, wood, or lakh; milk and cream shops;
jewellers, mercers, druggists selling tea, with other
medicinal herbs. The bunyah (corn-dealer)
with large open baskets of sugar and flour, whose whiteness
resembles each other so narrowly, that he is sometimes
suspected of mixing the two articles by mistake, when
certain sediments in sherbet indicate adulterated
sugar.
It would take me too long were I to
attempt enumerating all the varieties exposed in a
Native street of shops. It may be presumed these
people make no mystery of their several arts in manufacturing,
by their choice of situation for carrying on their
trades. The confectioner, for instance, prepares
his dainties in despite of dust and flies, and pass
by at what hour of the day you please, his stoves
are hot, and the sugar simmering with ghee sends forth
a savour to the air, inviting only to those who delight
in the delicacies he prepares in countless varieties.
The most singular exhibitions in these
cities are the several shroffs (money-changers,
or bankers), dispersed in every public bazaar, or line
of shops. These men, who are chiefly Hindoos,
and whose credit may perhaps extend throughout the
continent of Asia for any reasonable amount, take
their station in this humble line of buildings, having
on their right and left, piles of copper coins and
cowries. These shroffs are occupied the whole day
in exchanging pice for rupees or rupees for pice, selling
or buying gold mohurs, and examining rupees; and to
all such demands upon him he is entitled to exact
a regulated per centage, about half a pice in a rupee.
Small as this sum may seem yet the profits produce
a handsome remuneration for his day’s attention,
as many thousands of rupees may have passed under
his critical eye for examination, it being a common
practice, both with shopkeepers and individuals, to
send their rupees to the shroff for his inspection,
always fearing imposition from the passers of base
coin. These shroffs transact remittances to any
part of India by hoondies, which are equivalent
to our bills of exchange, and on which the usual demand
is two and a half per cent at ninety days, if required
for any distant station.
The European order is here completely
reversed, for the shopkeeper sits whilst the purchasers
are compelled to stand. The bazaar merchant is
seated on the floor of his dukhaun, near enough to
the open front to enable him to transact business
with his customers, who, one and all, stand in the
street to examine the goods and to be served; let the
weather be bad or good, none are admitted within the
threshold of the dukhaun. In most places the
shops are small, and look crowded with the articles
for sale, and those where manufactories are carried
on have not space to spare to their customers.
Very few gentlemen condescend to make
their own purchases; they generally employ their confidential
domestic to go to market for them; and with the ladies
their women servants are deputed. In rich families
it is an office of great trust, as they expend large
sums and might be much imposed upon were their servants
faithless. The servants always claim dustoor
(custom) from the shopkeepers, of one pice for every
rupee they lay out; and when the merchants are sent
for to the houses with their goods, the principal
servant in the family is sure to exact his dustoor
from the merchant; and this is often produced only
after a war of words between the crafty and the thrifty.
The diversity of cries from those
who hawk about their goods and wares in streets and
roadways, is a feature in the general economy of the
Natives not to be overlooked in my brief description
of their habits. The following list of daily
announcements by the several sonorous claimants on
the public attention, may not be unacceptable with
their translated accompaniments.
’Seepie wallah deelie sukha’
(Moist or dry cuppers). Moist and dry cupping
is performed both by men and women; the latter are
most in request. They carry their instruments
about with them, and traverse all parts of the city.
The dry cupping is effected by a buffalo’s horn
and resorted to by patients suffering under rheumatic
pains, and often in cases of fever, when to lose blood
is either inconvenient on account of the moon’s
age, or not desirable by reason of the complaint or
constitution of the patient.
’Jonk, or keerah luggarny wallie’
(The woman with leeches). Women with leeches
attend to apply the required remedy, and are allowed
to take away the leeches after they have done their
office. These women by a particular pressure
on the leech oblige it to disgorge the blood, when
they immediately place it in fresh water; by this practice
the leeches continue healthy, and may be brought to
use again the following day if required.
’Kaan sarf kerna wallah’
(Ear-cleaner). The cleansing of ears is
chiefly performed by men, who collecting this article
make great profits from the sale of it, independent
of the sums obtained from their employers. It
is the chief ingredient in use for intoxicating elephants
previous to the furious contests so often described
as the amusement of Native Courts.
’Goatah chandnie bickhow’
(Sell your old silver trimmings). The several
articles of silver trimmings are invariably manufactured
of the purest metal without any alloy, and when they
have served their first purposes the old silver procures
its weight in current rupees.
’Tale kee archah wallah’
(Oil pickles). The method of pickling in
oil is of all others in most request with the common
people, who eat the greasy substance as a relish to
their bread and dhall. The mustard-oil used in
the preparation of this dainty is often preferred to
ghee in curries.
The better sort of people prefer water
pickle, which is made in most families during the
hot and dry weather by a simple method; exposure to
the sun being the chemical process to the parboiled
carrots, turnips, radishes, &c., immersed in boiling
water, with red pepper, green ginger, mustard-seed,
and garlic. The flavour of this water pickle is
superior to any other acid, and possesses the property
of purifying the blood.
’Mittie wallah’ (Man
with sweetmeats). The many varieties of
sweetmeats, or rather confectionery, in general estimation
with the natives, are chiefly composed of sugar and
ghee, prepared in countless ways, with occasional
additions of cocoa-nut, pistachias, cardimuns, rose-water,
&c., and constantly hawked about the streets on trays
by men.
’Kallonie wallah’
(Man with toys). Toys of every kind, of
which no country in the world I suppose exhibits greater
variety, in wood, lakh, uberuck (tulk), paper,
bamboo, clay, &c., are constantly cried in the streets
and roadways of a Native city.
’Punkah wallah’ (Vender
of fans). The punkahs are of all descriptions
in general use, their shape and material varying with
taste and circumstances, the general form resembling
hand-screens: they are made for common use of
date-leaf, platted as the common mats are; some are
formed of a single leaf from the tor-tree, large
or small, the largest would cover a tolerable sized
round table; many have painted figures and devices,
and from their lightness may be waved by children without
much labour. I have seen very pretty punkahs
made of sweet-scented flowers over a frame of bamboo.
This, however, is a temporary indulgence, as the flowers
soon lose their fragrance.
‘Turkaaree’, ’Mayvour’
(The first is vegetables; the last, fruit). Vegetables
of every kind and many sorts of fruits are carried
about by men and women, who describe the name and quality
of the articles they have to sell. It would occupy
too large a space to enumerate here the several productions,
indigenous and foreign, of the vegetable world in
India. The Natives in their cookery, use every
kind of vegetable and fruit in its unripe state.
Two pounds of meat is in general all that is required
to form a meal for twenty people, and with this they
will cook several dishes by addition of as many different
sorts of vegetables.
Herbs, or green leaves, are always
denominated saag, these are produced at all seasons
of the year, in many varieties; the more substantial
vegetables, as potatoes, turnips, carrots, &c., are
called turkaaree.
The red and green spinach is brought
to the market throughout the year, and a rich-flavoured
sorrel, so delicious in curries, is cultivated in
most months. Green peas, or, indeed, vegetables
in general, are never served in the plain way in which
we see them at our tables, but always in stews or
curries. The green mango is used invariably to
flavour their several dishes, and, at the proper season,
they are peeled, cut, and dried for the year’s
consumption. They dislike the acid of the lemon
in their stews, which is never resorted to when the
green mango or tamarind can be procured.
The fruits of India in general estimation
with the Natives are the mango and the melon.
Mangoes are luscious and enticing fruit; the Natives
eat them to an excess when they have been some hours
soaked in water, which, they say, takes away from
the fruit its detrimental quality; without this preparatory
precaution those who indulge in a feast of mango are
subject to fevers, and an increase of prickly heat,
(a fiery irritable rash, which few persons are exempt
from, more or less, in the hot weather); even biles,
which equally prevail, are less troublesome to those
persons who are careful only to eat mangoes that have
been well soaked in water. The Natives have a
practice, which is common among all classes, and therefore
worthy the notice of foreigners, of drinking milk immediately
after eating mangoes. It should be remembered
that they never eat their fruit after dinner, nor
do they at any time indulge in wine, spirits, or beer.
The mango in appearance and flavour
has no resemblance to any of the fruits of England;
they vary in weight from half an ounce to half a seer,
nearly a pound; the skin is smooth, tough, and of the
thickness of leather, strongly impregnated with a
flavour of turpentine; the colour, when ripe, is grass
green, or yellow in many shades, with occasional tinges
and streaks of bright red; the pulp is as juicy as
our wall-fruit, and the kernel protected by a hard
shell, to which fine strong silky fibres are firmly
attached. The kernel of the mango is of a hot
and rather offensive flavour; the poor people, however,
collect it, and when dried grind it into flour for
bread, which is more wholesome than agreeable; in seasons
of scarcity, however, it is a useful addition to the
then scanty means of the lower orders of the people.
The flavour of the fruit itself differs so much, that
no description can be given of the taste of a mango even
the fruit of one tree vary in their flavour.
A tope (orchard) of mango-trees is a little fortune
to the possessor, and when in bloom a luxurious resort
to the lovers of Nature.
The melon is cultivated in fields
with great ease and little labour, due care always
being taken to water the plants in their early growth.
The varieties are countless, but the kind most esteemed,
and known only in the Upper Provinces, are called
chitlahs, from their being spotted green on a
surface of bright yellow; the skin is smooth and of
the thickness of that of an apple; the fruit weighing
from half-a-pound to three pounds. The flavour
may be compared to our finest peaches, partaking of
the same moist quality, and literally melting in the
mouth.
The juice of the melon makes a delicious
cider; I once tried the experiment with success.
The Natives being prohibited from the use of all fermented
liquors, I was induced by that consideration to be
satisfied with the one experiment; but with persons
who are differently situated the practice might be
pursued with very little trouble, and a rich beverage
produced, much more healthy than the usual arrack that
is now distilled, to the deterioration of the health
and morals of the several classes under the British
rule, who are prone to indulge in the exhilarating
draughts of fermented liquors.
At present my list of the indigenous
vegetables of India must be short; so great, however,
is the variety in Hindoostaun, both in their quality
and properties, and so many are the benefits derived
from their several uses in this wonderful country,
that at some future time I may be induced to follow,
with humility, in the path trodden by the more scientific
naturalists who have laboured to enrich the minds of
mankind by their researches.
The natives are herbalists in their
medical practice. The properties of minerals
are chiefly studied with the view to become the lucky
discoverer of the means of transmuting metals; seldom
with reference to their medicinal qualities.
Quicksilver, however, in its unchanged state, is sometimes
taken to renew the constitution. One gentleman,
whom I well knew, commenced with a single grain, increasing
the number progressively, until his daily close was
the contents of a large table-spoon; he certainly
appeared to have benefited by the practice, for his
appetite and spirits were those of a man at thirty,
when he had counted eighty years.
’Muchullee’ (Fish). Fish
of several kinds are caught in the rivers and tanks;
the flavour I can hardly describe, for, since I knew
the practice of the Hindoos of throwing their dead
bodies into the rivers the idea of fish as an article
of food was too revolting to my taste. The Natives,
however, have none of these qualms; even the Hindoos
enjoy a currie of fish as a real delicacy, although
it may be presumed some of their friends or neighbours
have aided that identical fish in becoming a delicacy
for the table.
There are some kinds of fish forbidden
by the Mussulmaun law, which are, of course, never
brought to their kitchens, as the eel, or any other
fish having a smooth skin; all sorts of shell-fish
are likewise prohibited by their code. Those
fish which have scales are the only sort allowable
to them for food.
The rooey is a large fish, and
in Native families is much admired for its rich flavour;
the size is about that of a salmon, the shape that
of a carp; the flesh is white, and not unlike the
silver mullet. The scales of this fish are extremely
useful; which, on a tolerable sized fish, are in many
parts as large as a crown-piece, and of a substance
firmer than horn. It is not uncommon to see a
suit of armour formed of these scales, which, they
affirm, will turn the edge of the best metal, and from
its lightness, compared with the chain armour, more
advantageous to the wearer, though the appearance
is not so agreeable to the eye.
’Chirryah wallah’
(Bird-man). The bird-catcher cries his live
birds fresh caught from the jungles: they seldom
remain long on hand. I have before described
the practice of letting off the birds, in cases of
illness, as propitiatory sacrifices. The Natives
take delight in petting talking-birds, minas and parrots
particularly; and the bull-bull, the subzah,
and many others for their sweet songs.
The numberless varieties of birds
I have seen in India, together with their qualities,
plumage, and habits, would occupy too much of my time
at present to describe. I will here only remark
a few of the most singular as they appeared to me.
The butcher-bird, so called from its habit, is
known to live on seeds; yet it caters for the mina
and others of the carnivorous feathered family, by
collecting grasshoppers, which they convey in the
beak to the thorny bushes, and there fix them on sharp
thorns, (some of which are nearly two inches in length),
and would almost seem to have been formed by Nature
for this use only. The mina follows
his little friend’s flight as if in the full
assurance of the feast prepared for him.
The coel is a small black
bird, of extreme beauty in make and plumage; this
bird’s note is the harbinger of rain, and although
one of the smallest of the feathered race, it is heard
at a considerable distance. The coel’s food
is simply the suction from the petals of sweet-scented
flowers.
The lollah, known to many by the
name of haverdewatt, is a beautiful little creature,
about one-third the size of a hedge sparrow. The
great novelty in this pretty bird is, that the spots
of white on its brown plumage change to a deep red
at the approach of the rainy season; the Natives keep
them by dozens in cages with a religious veneration,
as their single note describes one of the terms in
use to express an attribute of the Almighty.
But enough I must hasten
to finish my list of popular cries by the Indian pedlars,
who roar out their merchandize and their calling to
the inmates of dwellings bounded by high walls, whose
principal views of the works of Nature and art are
thus aided by those casual criers of the day.
’Artush-baajie’ (Fireworks). Fireworks
are considered here to be very well made, and the
Native style much extolled by foreigners; every year
they add some fresh novelty to their amusing pastime.
They are hawked about at certain seasons, particularly
at the Holie (a festival of the Hindoos,) and
the Shubh-burraat of the Mussulmauns. Saltpetre
being very reasonable, fireworks are sold for a small
price. Most of the ingenious young men exercise
their inventive powers to produce novelties in fireworks
for any great season of rejoicing in their families.
’Chubbaynee’ (Parched
corn). The corn of which we have occasionally
specimens in English gardens, known by the name of
Indian corn, is here used as a sort of intermediate
meal, particularly amongst the labouring classes,
who cook but once a day, and that when the day’s
toil is over. This corn is placed in a sort of
furnace with sand, and kept constantly moved about.
By this process it is rendered as white as magnesia,
crisp, and of a sweet flavour; a hungry man could
not eat more than half-a-pound of this corn at once,
yet it is not as nutritious as barley or wheat.
I have never heard that the Natives use this corn
for making bread.
’Tumaushbeen’ (Wonder-workers). This
call announces the rope-dancers and sleight-of-hand
company; eating fire, swallowing pen-knives, spinning
coloured yarn through the nose, tricks with cups and
balls, and all the arts of the well-known jugglers.
I have seen both men and women attached to these travelling
companies perform extraordinary feats of agility and
skill, also most surprising vaultings, by the aid of
bamboos, and a frightful method of whirling round
on the top of a pole or mast. This pole is from
twenty to thirty feet high; on the top is a swivel
hook, which fastens to a loop in a small piece of
wood tied fast to the middle of the performer, who
climbs the pole without any assistance, and catches
the hook to the loop; at first he swings himself round
very gently, but increasing gradually in swiftness,
until the velocity is equal to that of a wheel set
in motion by steam. This feat is sometimes continued
for ten or fifteen minutes together, when his strength
does not fail him; but it is too frightful a performance
to give pleasure to a feeling audience.
’Samp-wallah’ (Snake-catchers). These
men blow a shrill pipe in addition to calling out
the honourable profession of snake-catcher. I
fancy it is all pretence with these fellows; if they
catch a snake on the premises, it is probably one
they have let loose secretly, and which they have
tutored to come and go at the signal given: they
profess to draw snakes from their hiding-place, and
make a good living by duping the credulous.
The best proof I can offer of the
impositions practised by these men on the weakness
and credulity of their neighbours, may be conveyed
in the following anecdote, with which I have been
favoured by a very intelligent Mussulmaun gentleman,
on whom the cheat was attempted during my residence
in his neighbourhood at Lucknow.
’Moonshie Sahib, as he is
familiarly called by his friends, was absent from
home on a certain day, during which period his wife
and family fancied they heard the frightful sound
of a snake, apparently as if it was very near to them
in the compound (court-yard) of the zeenahnah.
They were too much alarmed to venture from the hall
to the compound to satisfy themselves or take steps
to destroy the intruder if actually there. Whilst
in this state of mental torture it happened (as they
thought very fortunately) that a snake-catcher’s
shrill pipe was heard at no great distance, to whom
a servant was sent; and when the ladies had shut themselves
up securely in their purdahed apartment, the men servants
were desired to introduce the samp-wallahs into the
compound, to search for and secure this enemy to their
repose.
’The snake-catcher made, to
all appearance, a very minute scrutiny into every
corner or aperture of the compound, as if in search
of the reptile’s retreat; and at last a moderate
sized snake was seen moving across the open space
in an opposite direction to the spot they were intent
on examining. The greatest possible satisfaction
was of course expressed by the whole of the servants
and slaves assembled; the lady of the house was more
than gratified at the reported success of “the
charmers” and sent proofs of her gratitude to
the men in a sum of money, proportioned to her sense
of the service rendered on the occasion; the head samp-wallah
placed the snake in his basket, (they always carry
a covered basket about with them) and they departed
well satisfied with the profits of this day’s
employment.
’The Moonshie says, he returned
home soon after, and listened to his wife’s
account of the event of the morning, and her warm commendation
of the skilful samp-wallahs; but although the servants
confirmed all the lady had told her husband of the
snake-charmers’ diligence, still he could not
but believe that these idle fellows had practised an
imposition on his unwary lady by their pretended powers
in charming the snake. But here it rested for
the time; he could not decide without an opportunity
of witnessing the samp-wallahs at their employment,
which he resolved to do the next convenient opportunity.
’As might have been anticipated,
the very same snake-catcher and his attendant returned
to the Moonshie’s gateway a very few days after
their former success; Moonshie Sahib was at home,
and, concealing his real intentions, he gave orders
that the two men should be admitted; on their entrance,
he said to them, “You say you can catch snakes;
now, friends, if any of the same family remain of
which you caught one the other day in this compound,
I beg you will have the civility to draw them out from
their hiding-places."
’The Moonshie watched the fellows
narrowly, that they might not have a chance of escaping
detection, if it was, as he had always suspected, that
the snakes are first let loose by the men, who pretend
to attract them from their hiding-places. The
two men being bare-headed, and in a state of almost
perfect nudity (the common usage of the very lowest
class of Hindoo labourers), wearing only a small wrapper
which could not contain, he thought, the least of
this class of reptiles, he felt certain there could
not now be any deception.
’The samp-wallah and his assistant,
pretending to search every hole and crevice of the
compound, seemed busy and anxious in their employment,
which occupied them for a long time without success.
Tired at last with the labour, the men sat down on
the ground to rest; the pipe was resorted to, with
which they pretend to attract the snake; this was,
however, sounded again and again, without the desired
effect.
’From the apparent impossibility
of any cheat being practised on him, the Moonshie
rather relaxed in his strict observance of the men:
he had turned his back but for an instant only, when
the two fellows burst out in an ecstasy of delight,
exclaiming, “They are come! they are come!” and
on the Moonshie turning quickly round, he was not
a little staggered to find three small snakes on the
ground, at no great distance from the men, who, he
was convinced, had not moved from the place. They
seemed to have no dread of the reptiles, and accounted
for it by saying they were invulnerable to the snakes’
venom; the creatures were then fearlessly seized one
by one by the men, and finally deposited in their basket.
’"They appear very tame,”
thought the Moonshie, as he observed the men’s
actions: “I am outwitted at last, I believe,
with all my boasted vigilance; but I will yet endeavour
to find them out. Friend,” said he
aloud, “here is your reward,” holding
the promised money towards the principal; “take
it, and away with you both; the snakes are mine, and
I shall not allow you to remove them hence.”
’"Why, Sahib,” replied
the man, “what will you do with the creatures?
they cannot be worth your keeping; besides, it is
the dustoor (custom); we always have the snakes
we catch for our perquisite.” “It
is of no consequence to you, friend, how I may dispose
of the snakes,” said the Moonshie; “I
am to suppose they have been bred in my house, and
having done no injury to my people, I may be allowed
to have respect for their forbearance; at any rate,
I am not disposed to part with these guests, who could
have injured me if they would.”
’The principal samp-wallah,
perceiving it was the Moonshie’s intention to
detain the snakes, in a perfect agony of distress for
the loss he was likely to sustain, then commenced
by expostulation, ending with threats and abuse, to
induce the Moonshie to give them up; who, for his part,
kept his temper within bounds, having resolved in
his own mind not to be outwitted a second time; the
fellow’s insolence and impertinent speeches
were, therefore, neither chastised nor resented.
The samp-wallah strove to wrest the basket from the
Moonshie’s strong grasp, without succeeding;
and when he found his duplicity was so completely
exposed, he altered his course, and commenced by entreaties
and supplications, confessing at last, with all
humility, that the reptiles were his own well-instructed
snakes that he had let loose to catch again at pleasure.
Then appealing to the Moonshie’s well-known
charitable temper, besought him that the snakes might
be restored, as by their aid he earned his precarious
livelihood.
’"That they are yours, I cannot
doubt,” replied the Moonshie, “and, therefore,
my conscience will not allow me to detain them from
you; but the promised reward I of course keep back.
Your insolence and duplicity deserve chastisement,
nevertheless I promise to forgive you, if you will
explain to me how you managed to introduce these snakes.”
’The man, thankful that he should
escape without further loss or punishment, showed
the harmless snakes, which, it appears, had been deprived
of their fangs and poison, and were so well instructed
and docile, that they obeyed their keeper as readily
as the best-tutored domestic animal. They coiled
up their supple bodies into the smallest compass possible,
and allowed their keeper to deposit them each in a
separate bag of calico, which was fastened under his
wrapper, where it would have been impossible, the
Moonshie declares, for the quickest eye to discover
that anything was secreted.’
’Sickley ghur’ (Cutler
and knife-grinder). These most useful artisans
are in great request, polishing articles of rusty steel,
giving a new edge to the knives, scissors, razors,
or swords of their employer, in a masterly manner,
for a very small price.
’Dhie cuttie’ (Sour
curds). This article is in great request
by scientific cooks, who use it in many of their dainty
dishes. The method of making sour curd is peculiarly
Indian: it is made of good sweet milk, by some
secret process which I could never acquire, and in
a few hours the whole is coagulated to a curd of a
sharp acidity, that renders it equally useful with
other acids in flavouring their curries. The Natives
use it with pepper, pounded green ginger, and the
shreds of pumpkins or radishes, as a relish to their
savoury dishes, in lieu of chatnee; it is considered
cooling in its quality, and delicious as an accompaniment
to their favourite viands.
’Mullie’ (Clotted
cream). –This article is much esteemed
by the Natives. I was anxious to know how clotted
cream could be procured at seasons when milk from
the cow would be sour in a few hours, and am told
that the milk when brought in fresh from the dairy
is placed over the fire in large iron skillets; the
skin (as we call it on boiled milk) is taken off with
a skimmer, and placed in a basket, which allows all
the milk to be drained from it; the skin again engendered
on the surface is taken off in the same way, and so
they continue, watching and skimming until the milk
has nearly boiled away. This collection of skin
is the clotted cream of Hindoostaun.
’Mukhun’ (Butter). Butter
is very partially used by the Natives; they use ghee,
which is a sort of clarified butter, chiefly produced
from the buffalo’s milk. The method of
obtaining butter in India is singular to a European.
The milk is made warm over the fire, then poured into
a large earthen jar, and allowed to stand for a few
hours. A piece of bamboo is split at the bottom,
and four small pieces of wood inserted as stretchers
to these splits. A leather strap is twisted over
the middle of the bamboo, and the butter-maker with
this keeps the bamboo in constant motion; the particles
of butter swimming at the top are taken off and thrown
into water, and the process of churning is resumed;
this method continues until by the quantity collected,
these nice judges have ascertained there is no more
butter remaining in the milk. When the butter
is to be sold, it is beaten up into round balls out
of the water. When ghee is intended to be made,
the butter is simmered over a slow fire for a given
time, and poured into the ghee pot, which perhaps
may contain the produce of the week before they convey
it to the market for sale; in this state the greasy
substance will keep good for months, but in its natural
state, as butter, the second day it is offensive to
have it in the room, much less to be used as an article
of food.
’Burruff wallah’ (The
man with ice). The ice is usually carried
about in the evening, and considered a great indulgence
by the Natives. The ice-men bring round both
iced creams, and sherbet ices, in many varieties;
some flavoured with oranges, pomegranates, pine-apple,
rose-water, &c.
They can produce ices at any season,
by saltpetre, which is here abundant and procured
at a small price; but strange as it may appear, considering
the climate, we have regular collections of ice made
in January, in most of the stations in the Upper Provinces,
generally under the superintendence of an English
gentleman, who condescends to be the comptroller.
The expenses are paid by subscribers, who, according
to the value of their subscription, are entitled to
a given quantity of ice, to be conveyed by each person’s
servant from the deposit an hour before day-break,
in baskets made for the purpose well wadded with cotton
and woollen blankets; conveyed home, the basket is
placed where neither air nor light can intrude.
Zinc bottles, filled with pure water, are placed round
the ice in the basket, and the water is thus cooled
for the day’s supply, an indulgence of great
value to the sojourners in the East.
The method of collecting ice is tedious
and laborious, but where labour is cheap and the hands
plenty the attempt has always been repaid by the advantages.
As the sun declines, the labourers commence their work;
flat earthen platters are laid out, in exposed situations,
in square departments, upon dried sugar-cane leaves
very lightly spread, that the frosty air may pass
inside the platters. A small quantity of water
is poured into the platter; as fast as they freeze
their contents are collected and conveyed, during
the night, to the pit prepared for the reception of
ice. The rising sun disperses the labourers with
the ice, and they seek their rest by day, and return
again to their employ; as the lion, when the sun disappears,
prowls out to seek his food from the bounty of his
Creator. The hoar frost seldom commences until
the first of January, and lasts throughout that month.
’Roshunie’ (Ink). –Ink,
that most useful auxiliary in rendering the thoughts
of one mortal serviceable to his fellow-creatures through
many ages, is here an article of very simple manufacture.
The composition is prepared from lampblack and gum-arabic;
how it is made, I have yet to learn.
The ink of the Natives is not durable;
with a wet sponge may be erased the labour of a man’s
life. They have not yet acquired the art of printing,
and as they still write with reeds instead of feathers,
an ink, permanent as our own, is neither agreeable
nor desirable.
There is one beautiful trait in the
habits of the Mussulmauns: when about to write
they not only make the prayer which precedes every
important action of their lives, but they dedicate
the writing to God, by a character on the first page,
which, as in short-hand writing, implies the whole
sentence. A man would be deemed heathenish amongst
Mussulmauns, who by neglect or accident omitted this
mark on whatever subject he is about to write.
Another of their habits is equally
praiseworthy: out of reverence for God’s
holy name (always expressed in their letters) written
paper to be destroyed is first torn and then washed
in water before the whole is scattered abroad; they
would think it a sinful act to burn a piece of paper
on which that Holy name has been inscribed. How
often have I reflected whilst observing this praiseworthy
feature in the character of a comparatively unenlightened
people, on the little respect paid to the sacred writings
amongst a population who have had greater opportunities
of acquiring wisdom and knowledge.
The culpable habit of chandlers in
England is fresh in my memory, who without a scruple
tear up Bibles and religious works to parcel out their
pounds of butter and bacon, without a feeling of remorse
on the sacrilege they have committed.
How careless are children in their
school-days of the sacred volume which contains the
word of God to His creatures. Such improper uses,
I might say abuses, of that Holy Book, would draw
upon them the censure of a people who have not benefited
by the contents, but who nevertheless respect the
volume purely because it speaks the word ‘of
that God whom they worship’.
‘Mayndhie’ (A shrub). The
mayndhie and its uses have been so fully explained
in the letters on Mahurrum, that I shall here merely
remark, that the shrub is of quick growth, nearly
resembling the small-leafed myrtle; the Natives make
hedge-rows of it in their grounds, the blossom is
very simple, and the shrub itself hardy: the dye
is permanent.
’Sulmah.’ A
prepared permanent black dye, from antimony. This
is used with hair-pencils to the circle of the eye
at the root of the eye-lashes by the Native ladies
and often by gentlemen, and is deemed both of service
to the sight and an ornament to the person. It
certainly gives the appearance of large eyes, if there
can be any beauty in altering the natural countenance,
which is an absurd idea, in my opinion. Nature
is perfect in all her works; and whatever best accords
with each feature of a countenance I think she best
determines; I am sure that no attempt to disguise
or alter Nature in the human face ever yet succeeded,
independent of the presumption in venturing to improve
that which in His wisdom, the Creator has deemed sufficient.
It would occupy my pages beyond the
limits I can conveniently spare to the subject, were
I to pursue remarks on the popular cries of a Native
city to their fullest extent; scarcely any article
that is vended at the bazaars, but is also hawked
about the streets. This is a measure of necessity
growing out of the state of Mussulmaun society, by
which the females are enabled to purchase at their
own doors all that can be absolutely requisite for
domestic purposes, without the obligation of sending
to the markets or the shops, when either not convenient,
or not agreeable. And the better to aid both
purchasers and venders, these hawkers pronounce their
several articles for sale, with voices that cannot
fail to impress the inhabitants enclosed within high
walls, with a full knowledge of the articles proclaimed
without need of interpreters.