mzmz.":)^^ ) 'A J^ :j f^^ HE TE ~— -nTmimrrimiHMt i Illusjrated ■■■■■■■MnaMMiii <«pw«i»«IP>>«WMW^i»>iw«i » i i i« i Wfm % FT i»i IKL UBiiii iiiri in ii#w>»eaMtt—B«aai L lBRAg f 1 Front if pifce.] THE WHITE ELEPHANT; OB, THE HUNTERS OF AVA AND THE KING OF THE GOLDEN FOOT BT /WILLIAM DALTON, ACTHOB OP ".^HirWAE TIGKB," "THK 'WOLF-BOY OF CHINA," KTtt lafilfj |I[u9tniiujns by |)anboit Max. PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 188 0. A FEW WOEDS WITH :M1^ READEES. "While reserving as my own secret the means by which I became possessed of Harry Oliver's autobi- ography, I deem it my bounden duty to the kind friends who so warmly received The War Tiger and The Wolf-Boy of China^ to impress upon their minds that Harry's description of notable pei-soos, places, animals, plants, as well as the manners, cus- toms, and superstitions of the semi-barbarous Bur- mans, is substantially exact, as I myself have verified, by reference to the accounts given by ancient and modern travelers, among whom, for the reader's satisfaction or consultation, I may name, the old merchant Ralph Fitch, the envoys Symes, Crawford, and Yule, the missionaries Saggermano and Judson, and the British officers Cox and Snodgrass. William Dalton. CONTENTS. UBAPTVR I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X. XI. XII. XIII. XIV. XV. XVI. XVII. XVIII. XIX. XX. PAG] My PArKNTAGE AND EaULY ADVENTURES My FiR-jT Real Trouble 2S . I Get an Insight into Burmese Law, and am Put in the Stocks 89 Our Lives Saved BY A Cannon-Ball 52 I Witness a Terrible Scene, and Am Made a Pagoda Prisoner 6.3 I am Chased bt a Serpent, and Taken by the Enemy "5 Wherein I am nearly Bitten to Death, and Witness the Punishment of a Serpent by a Monkey 88 A Sad Story — Antelope Slaying — A Hermit's Cave 104 The Nine Princesses of the Silver Mountain 117 Chased BY A Crocodile. 129 I Hear the Story of a Despot, and Have an Adventure With Some Queer Fish 137 I Have A Misunderstanding With Some Bvffaloes 146 The White Ants Cause Naon to Meet With a Disaster.... 155 A Fight With a Tiger 168 A Wild Beast Combat — We Seek Shelter From the Monsoon ISO We A RE Seized By the Ene.my, But lim cued By Mikee. 196 A Kiii.vocEROS Hunt 211 MiKEE Has His Fortune Told by Thi Cuows, and Under- goes the Ordeal of Water 223 A Duel Between A Crocodile AND A Tiger 2>"!1 A Wonderful Cave, and a Brahmin Astrologer 241 6 CONTENTS. ClIAI'TIiK PAOB XXI. MiKKE Obtains News From the Nats About a TViiite £le- prkv.NT 254 XXII. I N'ap.kowlt Escape Falling Into tub LiON-'s Mouth 2(>4 XXIII. Ml KEE Proves Himself a Good Judue of Elei-iiants 2Ts XXIV. AHeruofWii.d Elri'iiants 2s!) XXV. We Catch A Lord White Elei'iiant 8i>2 XXVI. I AM Sent as Ambassador prom the Lord White Elephant. 309 XXVn. I Visit the Earth-Oil Wells, and Witness a Festival 316 S XVIII. I HAVE AN Adventure with a King whom I Find Apickback 303 XXIX. An Elephant Fight, and an Audience of the Golden Foot 3-IC XXX. An Interview WiTU the GoLi EN Foot — A Surprise 351 XXXL An Enemv Dkstbc nn>A:n>A IsiESD LiiojvBEBa. JW THE WHITE ELEPHANT. CHAPTER I. MT PARENTAGE AND EARLY ADVENTURES. My name is Oliver, Harry Oliver ; I was born in Rangoon, the chief sea-port of the Burman Empire, which, until the English annexed the great provinces of Arracan, Chittagong, Assam, and the kingdom of Pegu (no small portion, you will find, if you glance at the map of Asia), was the largest and most war- like of those nations which, although from being geographically situated between India and China, are known as Indo-Chinese kingdoms, are in fact near akin to the great Malayan race which originally peopled the greater portion of the lands in, and bor- dering, the mighty Pacific Ocean. My father, who for many years before my birth had been settled in Rangoon as a merchant, had by his large dealing in teak timber and the petroleum, or natural earth-oil of the country, not only realized a considerable proi^erty, but by his honest dealings and kindly manners acquired the respect of his fellow merchants and the regard of the King's brother, the Pi'ince of Prome, who, as lord, or what the Burmese b THE WHITE ELEPHANT. call "cater," of the largest teak forest, was the great- est timber merchant in the empire. As the prince resided chiefly at Ava, the capital, my father fre- quently visited his highness, Avith the double purpose of business and pleasure — namely, buying the before- mentioned productions, and hunting tigers and ele- phants in the wild coimtry to the west of the capital. The Burmese are one of the most 'warlike of Asiatic nations, and for centuries, so successful had they been in conquering neighboring states that their ar- rogance and belief in their invincibility knew no bounds ; indeed, jealous of the English power in In- dia (of the greatness of which they Avere as ignorant as of geography), they at one time entertained insane but serious notions not only of driving them from the great presidency of Bengal (a feat popularly sup- posed to be attended with no great difiiculty), but absolutely of marching an army into London, although how they were to pass across the ocean to the white clifls of Old England, Avas ncA-er very distinctly laid doAvn by the courtiers Avho propounded the plan. One • of tlie kingdoms with Avhich the " Golden P"'oot," as the King of Ava is termed, was at war, some years prior to the fiist Avar with the English, Avas Laos, a country situate betAveen Burma and Siam. At the time Avhen the contest betAveen the Burmese and tlie Laosians AA-as at its greatest height, my father happened to be paying a visit to the Prince of Prome at Ava. A party of Burmese soldiers succeeded in plundering one of the chief tOAvns of the enemy, and brougjit many prisoners to the capital. Among these MY PAKKNTAGE AND EAKLT ADVENTURES. 9 was a Laosian lady, whom my father purchased from her captors and married.— That lady was my mother. Such bemg my birth, you will not be astonished at finding the ease with which I made myself at home among the semi-barbarous Burmans, or took to an adventurous career, for you know " what is bred in the bone will not come out of the flesh." Neither must you be surprised at the adventures themselves ; for truly, I can verify of my own knowledge that not only are there many lands and peoples of which our all knowing countrymen are yet ignorant, but that every day strange adventures happen in various parts of the world to persons who having neither time, in- clination, nor taste to record them in book shape, a vast amount of entertainment, experience, and instruc- tion becomes lost to the world. As my father was determined that his son should grow up with the muscles and mind of an English- man, and far from the temptations and bad influence of Rangoon (which town is to China and Siam what Boulogne is to England— namely the rendezvous or depot for insolvent debtors who have run away from their creditors), he sent me to London, consigned to the care of his only parent, my grandmother ; not, however, wdthout a great, though loving battle, with my mother, who, at length gave her sanction to my departure, provisionally, that my native nurse should accompany me to England. Matters being thus arranged, the nurse was smug- gled on board the ship in a large earthenware jar, for it is against the law for a native woman to leave the couu- 10 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. try ; I followed, and after a rough and very long pas- sage — for steamships Avere then unknown — my nurse and myself were carefully packed in an old hackney- coach which stood in readiness in the East India Docks, and we were shortly afterward delivered over to the charge of my grandmother. Now although it may seem disrespectful on my part, I cannot but believe that my troubles dated from the time of my arrival ; for so great was my aged relative's dislike to foreigners, all of whom she thought to be created for the especial annoyance of Mr. and Mrs. John Bull, and to " that nasty negro- woman," as she persisted in calling my blotting-paper- tinted, but good-natured nurse, that to the time of my being sent " out of her way" (for that was the term she used for sending me to boarding-school), a day never passed without her giving me a good snubbing ; indeed, although I am bound to admit, it might have been in consequence of my undutiful and wild (for you will keep in memory that by birth I am half a savage) behavior, I never felt happy with my grandmother. One reason was, perhaps, that she persisted in calling my dear mother a black woman, although but for the peculiar twist of her short nose, and the tone of her voice, which made me understand that she intended it as an opprobrious epithet, I could not for the life of me comprehend Avhy a black woman should not be as good as a white woman. As, however, you will care less to hear of my childhood than the adventures of my youth, which it is my purpose to relate, I will simply inform you MY I-A.RENTAGK AND EARLY ADVENTURES. 11 tliat the few years passed in England were the niosi unhappy of my life ; therefore you may imagine my deUght when, on the very day I completed my thir- teenth year, the day after the "break-up" of the last half at "Marathon House," Fulham, I received a letter from my father, ordering me to return to Kan goon by the first outward-bound ship. Oh, how my heart bounded! It was the first "break-up" that I really enjoyed. How jolly I was when I made one of the fourth coach-load of boys going home for the hoUdays ! " Farewell hedges ! Farewell ditches I Farewell all the Fulham witches 1" Still rings in my ears, as on that cold winter's day, when these lines, which tradition stated to have been composed as a half-yearly anthem by some former head of the first form, were poured forth from the throats of my homeward bound schoolmates. Then the bustle of preparation for my voyage— the tedious three months to wait before I could get a ship. Then, when the day came for my departure, and the old hackney-coach that was to carry me, my old nurse, and the baggage to the dock, stood at the door, how my heart leaped for joy — indeed I almost loved my cross old grandmother — God bless the old lady's memory, for after all, perhaps it was her rheumatism that made her so queer-tempered. Once on board, and the white cliffs of England fading from my sight, my whole mind was bent for- ward, thousands of miles across the great ocean tc lii THE WHITE ELEPHiLNT. my father and mother's home, and for months my mind was thus stretched with anxiety, for in those days a voyage to the East was long and dangerous enough to form an epoch in a life. Tedious as our voyage would have been under ordinary circumstances, it was rendered doubly so, as when the ship arrived off Madras, the captain was induced to convey a large quantity of stores to the Great Andaman, an island, which at that time, had not been many years chosen as a settlement, or penal colony, to which to send convicts from Bengal. By the way, you may remember that this island was originally chosen as the place of banishment of the last of the Great Moguls, the aged king of Delhi, but who has since been transported to the opj)osite coast of Rangoon. Having shipped the stores, we again set sail, and in five days sighted the Great and Little Cocoa Islands, tAVO small tracts of land which, although abounding with luxuriant cocoa trees, are so flat and swampy and destitute of fresh water, that they are uninhabited.- Once, indeed, some adventurers settled upon one of the islands with the hope of making a for- tune by expressing oil from the coeoa-nut ; but the scheme was rendered abortive by the chmate, which speedily destroyed one half of the party, and drove the remainder from the island in despah*. Passing between the southernmost Cocoa and the north side of the Great Andaman, the captain, avIic had never before touched at the latter islands, ke])t a sharp look-out for the harbor, within which, upon a MY PAKENTx^GE AND EARL^ ADVENT JEE.S. lo small island, is situated the British settlement of Port Cornwallis. The next day, late in the afternoon, we made out an opening in the land, when the captain, notwith- standing it was not laid down in his chart, beheving it to be the harbor, sent out a boat-party of six Las- cars and two Europeans to make soundings, and sur- vey the Oldening. Scarcely, however, had the party proceeded half a mile from the ship than a nortli- east wind set in, which drove them forward witla fearful velocity. " That boat will never live in such a gale," said the captain, alarmed, and straining his eyes toward the littte craft, which, however, seemed to bear up bravely against the hurricane. " Hurrah ! they have made the hai'bor, if harbor it is," cried the mate. Suddenly the heavens grew dark as midnight; every object more than fifty yards from the ship be- came obscured from our view, so nothing could be done but to wait patiently the return of the boat party. Our curiosity was not to be gratified that night, for as hours passed, the boat remained absent ; that, however, was not to be wondered at, for so great Avas the darkness, and so strongly did the wind blow in shore that no boat could have reached the ship. All, tlien, we could do was to commiserate the poor fel- lows for the long night they would pass on land, at the risk of being overpowered by the savage natives, and await patiently the return of daylight. 1-i THE WPITE ELEPHANT. But imagine the consternation of all on board the next morning, when, although the winds had become hushed, and the sky clear — so clear that we could now with the naked eye trace the whole coast, nay, even the summit of the Saddle Peak Mountains, the dense forests, and moreover the small dark figures of the natives clambering among the rocks, no traces whatever of the boat or her crew were visible. Many were the surmises as to the cause. " The lubbers have deserted," said one sailor. " They have been dashed through some narrow chan. nel, and carried away by the current," said another. " These savage Andamanners are cannibals ; they eat men raw," said the mate. " Yes, without cooking, I've heerd say," put in the purser's mate, a young cockney on his first voyage. "The savages it is," exclahued the captain, thought fully; then adding to the mate, "Man a boat, Mr, Jones ; we may yet be in time to save the jDOor fel- lows." " Ay, ay, sir," replied the mate ; and in a minute or so a boat was alongside filled with a dozen men armed with cutlasses and pistols. This was the first occasion of my spirit taking fire ; for no sooner did I hear this order than ghding down the hatchways into my berth, I snatched u]) a double- barrelled gun, which I had bought as a present for my father, and had learned to use upon the voyage, nnd running up to the captain, said, as I touched my caj) after the fashion of the two midshipmen on board, "I join, sir." MV I'ARKNTAGE AND EARLY ADVKN'irUKS 15 " Go to your cabin, sir," was the disagrecaljle re- ply. "I ioin, sir," I repeated, for my blood was np. " Talvc this lad below," said the uncompromising ^ai^tain, as he went forward. That going forward, however, was my opportu- nity; for no sooner was his face turned from me than I was over the sides and in the boat, which was manned and awaiting the mate. " Blow me if this isn't mutiny," said Davis the cockswain ; but as he laughed, as if in admiration of my boldness, I took courage. "Let me lie down astern till Mr. Jones is on board," said I ; and the sailors, who always admire pluck, made way for me. Mr. Jones came into the boat, and I remained in the sternsheets without his knowledge till we liad reached within half a mile of the shore, when seeing it croAvded with natives, whose vociferations, antics, and the bows, spears, and other primitive weapons which they flourished defiantly, evinced sufficient proof of their hostile intentions, he said, " Look ahead, lads ; the varmint mean mischief" No sooner was this caution delivered than, burn- ing with indignation at the sight of the Avretches who I believed had killed and eaten the boat's crew, I was upon my knees with my gun hanging over the side. " Ho\\' came you here, you young rascal?" ex- claimed the mate, with an accompaniment that "made my ears tingle, and sent me full length in the bottoir of the boat. 16 THE WHITE ELKPHANT. You will think this rather a disgraceful commence- ment for one who was to become the hero of many adventures ; but in justification of Mr. Jones, I am bound to admit that I fully merited the punishment, for by an accident had my piece discharged, it would have brought our exjjedition to a premature termina- tion. As it was, by judiciously hiding the arms, and the waving of handkerchiefs as we reached the shore, the natives sufficiently understood our pacific intentions to so far alter their warlike attitude, that we hoped to effect a landing without molestation — a hope, how- ever, that became a little dimmed Avlien upon nearer view we saw what might have been easily mistaken for a tribe from Pandemonium. There, stretching almost in a straight line along the shore, stood some four or five hundred bipeds ; they could scarcely be likened to human beings, the tallest of whom did not reach five feet, perfectly naked, with skeleton limbs, large protuberant stomachs, high shoulders, great unshapely heads covered with woolly hair, dyed with red ochre, sooty black skins plastered over with nmd, flat noses, thick lips, and small red eyes which glistened over their famine-stricken coun- tenances ; moreover, armed with small bows of bam- boo and strings of the fibre of a tree, with reed ar- rows headed with fish-bone, spears of heavy Avood sharply pointed, and shields made of bark; all of Avhom, as we neared the shore, we could hear chatter ing together like so many monkeys. "Rest on your oars, my lads; the brutes mean MY PARENTAGE AND EARLY ADVENTURES. 17 mischief," said the mate, as he saw tliese armed sava- ges coming down to the water's edge. "Let's try 'em with this here; it's 2")retty," said the coelvswain, as he held up a tobacco-box of shining brass, " Or a knife," said a sailor. " Or a few buttons," said another ; each as he spoke holding the article above his head. " Ay, ay, presents it is, my lads," said the mate, collecting the articles named and leaping ashore. The hasty step Mr. Jones had taken was an impru- dent one ; for scarcely had his feet touched the shin- gles upon the beach than an arrow whistling within an inch of his head grazed the arm of a sailor behind, who smarting with pain and indignation, at once dis- charged his musket at one of the savages, who fell dead. The mate swore terribly at the sailor for his im- prudence. As for myself, I trembled for the conse- quences, now war had been declared, and we were in the midst of hundreds of enraged savages ; indeed our escape Avas miraculous. The scene that followed the report of the gun and the death of the savage, I can only compare to the sudden death from a fowling- piece of one of a flock of young rooks, who will hover and whirl above their dead companion for some time in consternation, regardless of the risk of losing their own lives. So it was with the savages, who evidently had never before heard the report of a gun, for at the sound they jilaced their fingers in their ears, and ap 2 18 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. peared half stunned ; then they hovered around tlieir fallen companion in wonderment at so singular a death ; but, as if suddenly comj^rehending that the man who could have killed him at so great a distance, and by means of a loud noise and a puff of smoke, could be no other than the malignant fiend of the storm, in whom they believed, the whole tribe took to their heels and fled as fast as their legs would carry them into the dense forest which skirts and partly covers the mountains. " It's lucky the brutes mistook you for the old 'un hisself, or that ere shot o' yours'd cost every man Jack on us the number of his mess," said an old sailor to the man who ha"d fired the gun. "Mayhaps because there isn't enough on 'em they have gone to fetch some of their relations to help 'em," said the cockswain, Davis. " No, no, the varmint have had such a fright with the gun they wont return in a hurry," replied the mate. " Howsomdever, we had better look pretty sharp, sir, as they may get over the novelty of the thing." " Right, Davis ; so just hold on with half a dozen of the lads while we search yonder bay — if bay it is," said the mate. " Bay !" said Davis, Avhile the men Avere preparing to follow. " To my thinking the skipper's out in his reckoning, for as far as I can make out, yonder open- ing is neither a harbor or a bay, but just a creek." "You are right, Davis ; it is neither, and it is a creek," replied the mate, looking through his glass MY I'AUENTAGE AND EAKLY ADVENTUKES. ID at the opening Avliich, as far as we could make out, appeared to be about a mile along the coast; addmg "then the boat-party must have lallen into the hands of these black devils. So forward, my lads ; as for YOU, youngster, as you seem fond of the smell of powder, you may stay with the boat, or follow, as you please." The latter being addressed to me, I chose to go with the search-party. In all, our number consisted of six well-armed men, for I counted myself as a man. We proceeded stealthily along the shore, keepmg a good lookout on all sides, till we had proceeded about half a mile, when, as the land abutted out to a great distance into the sea, and the mate wanted to make a short cut to the creek, he led us through a dense jungle. Clearing this without meetmg with any other obstruction than swarms of annoying m- sects, rotting trees, deep pools of pestilential water, a few snakes, and now and then a stray hog, we came to a clearing, when the mate cried out, _ "Keep a sharp lookout, my lads. Yonder is the lair of some wild beast." With fingers upon triggers we approached the place pointed out by the mate. It was not very in- geniously constructed, even for the work of a wild animal; for it consisted of only four sticks stuck in the ground, fastened at the top and crossed trans- versely by others, the whole being covered with leafy branches of the palm-tree. "This ain't the lair of no wild beast, but the hut of one of them savages," said a sailor, as we crept 20 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. Btealtliily into the place, adding with a shudder, aa he caught sight of a string of skulls and other hones suspended from the roof, " Lord have mercy on us ! The devils have made quick work with our mates. We hadn't need look any further. Lord have mercy upoii lis !" " Dick, you lubher, these are the hones of hogs and turtles," said the mate; adding "hoAvever, this hut will do for a rendezvous, so hoist a rag that we can all see, and let us search in different di- rections." Accordingly several handkerchiefs were tied to- gether and hoisted upon a long pole from the top of the hut. Two men were left in charge of the station two others proceeded to the east, while the mate and myself went in the direction of the creek, in search of the missing crew ; it being understood that the report of a gun should be the signal for the rallying together again of our whole party. Beating our way through the tall jungle, yet keep- ing as near the sea as possible, we continued our journey for some two hours ; and so Avild and deso- late was the surroundhig scenery that, but for positive evidence to the contrary, we should have concluded the island to have been uninhabited. At length, we reached the supposed creek ; it proved, however, to be a channel, Avhich, as it became wider as it ran in- land and stretched beyond our vision, we felt assured must run its course through the island. This was disheartening; still, reluctant to give up all hope of finding the missing party — who might" be restuig, MY PARENTAGE AND EARL'S ADVENTURES. 2} either as prisoners or guests, in some savage village yet to be discovered — we kept our course along the shore of the channel. As, however, Ave were mak- ing our way through some tall bamboo-shoots, tha mate called out, "Listen! — footstcijs! lie down." Simultaneously falling upon our hands and knees, through the canes Ave saw two savages approaching toward the channel: they Avere young Avomen, meagre and half famished in appearance, Avith baskets of a rough kind of AvickerAvork slung across their backs, and carrying in their hands short spears. Having reached the water's edge they crouched stealthily like cats, each poising her spear between her fingers, to Avhich Ave could noAV perceive it Avas attached by a fibrous string ; thus for some fcAV minutes each watched the leaping fish Avith gleaming eyes, and aAvaited the op- portunity of a good aim. At length a spear Avas darted forth, and a fish transfixed as it jumped from the water; and when, after this manner they had filled their baskets with a day's provision for their husbands and families, with lightened steps, and eyes glistening at the prospect of a meal (for it is only at certain seasons of the year that these poor and moi"e than half-starved Andamaners can procure even the luxury of fish), they left the creek. But they were hungered, and at a fcAV yards' distance stopped to prepare and indulge in a temporary meal. So col- lecting some dried underwood, and having, by means of a flint Avhich they carried Avith them, kindled a fire, the fish AS'as thrown into the flames ; but before it had time to become Avarmed throughout, the fam- 22 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. islied creatures snatched them out again and began to tear them with their claw-like fingers. Their evidently long-looked-for re2:»ast was, how- ever, suddenly interrupted by a dark-skinned man, who, darting forth from behind a crag of rock, with two rapid blows from a thick stick stretched the poor (ireatures upon the earth, after which he began to imfasten the baskets from their shoulders. Need I tell you my feluigs at that moment ? No — for right or wrong, and without stopping to consider the pru- dence of the act, I discharged my gun, when the fel- low giving one loud yell, fell stretched upon the earth. As for the mate, although he swore at my impru- dence, with one leap he bounded toward the fallen coward. At the moment of my firing, the women were about crawling upon their hands and feet, as ii by that means they could escape their enemy. The report of the gun, however, so shocked them that they fell fiat upon their faces, and thrust their fingers into their ears as if it had been the shock of doom. " Don't let them escape, yoimgster. Let them see we are friends — show them their fish," said the mate. Snatching up the basket of fish I ran forward to the poor creatures and held it forth, making signs for them to take it. Recovering from the shock they arose to their feet, and with eager staring eyes one ventui'ed to approach me, held out her hand, then withdrew, and it was not until after many efforts I could satisf) her of my friendly intentions. Indeed, MY PAKENTAGE AND EARLY ADVENTUKES 23 I believe they would have both scampered off had they not been convii>ced, by seeing their enemy with his arms bound by a neckerchief, dragged forward by the mate. Perceiving this, however, they capered about with joy and gratitude, uttering sounds more Hke those of wild beasts than any thmg human. « We must secure these women, for by their means we may discover the fate of the boat-party," said the mate. To talk about securing these two savages was one thine-, to do it another. Fortunately, however, the report of the gun had alarmed our party, whom at that moment we saw coming through the jungle. At their appearance the women trembled with fear, and would have escaped but for two words the prisoner spoke to them in their own languag&-if such mis- erable sounds could be called a language-and m another minute they were surrounded, so that they could not escape. When the prisoner saw himself surrounded by the Eno-Ush sailors, he trembled violently, and in suppli- cattng tones addressed the mate in a language then unknown to me. " Can any of you lads make out this fellow s hngo .'' said the mate. "Ay ay, sir; it is Hindoostanee. "Ive picked up enough to make him out," said a man named Thompson, who had been many years in the Indian navy. „,, " Ask him who he is, and how he came here ;- Taking time to remember words sufficient, Thomp 24 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. son put the question. Then, after a labored attempt on both sides to comprehend each other, he said, — "He says he's a Sepoy, from Bengal, unjustly transported to the British settlement, from which he managed to escape three months ago, since which he has been wandering about the jungle." "Ask him how far we are from the settlement." " Having put the question, Thompson replied, " All I can make out is, we are ten miles too far south." "Ask him if he knows any thing of the boat- party." Thompson obeyed; the man gesticulated vehe- mently. " What does the fellow mean by all those antics ?" said the mate. " Nothing, sir, 'cept he won't open his jaws any more without the sahib will promise not to give him up to the commander of the settlement." " Promise him, for we can't remain ashore all night." Thompson obeyed. " Now, what says he ?" added the mate. " Why, sir, that he seed the party enter the open- ing of the channel ; and that Avhen they entered, the gale blew so that the current must have swept them through the i)a8sage." "It is what I feared," said the mate; adding "ask him whether it isn't likely the savages may have fal- len upon them, and that they are hidden somewhere on this island." Having put the question, Thomj^son replied, MY PARENTAGE AND EAKLY ADVl-NTUKKS. JO " All I can make out of the nigger, sir, is, that p'raps they are and p'raps they ain't ; bv;t them two black gals is the wives of two chiefs ; and so lie says, if you takes 'em on board you can keep 'em there till you find out by dumb motions, when you can keep one on board and send t'other ashore, to bar- gain for giving up the boat's crew ; that is, if so be that the savages have got 'em." "A sensible suggestion it is," said the mate. "Now ask the rascal why he attacked these two women." Having again put the question, Thompson said, " He says he has been many days without food, or the means of procuring it, and that he did not intend to harm the women, but took the fish and spear in order to support himself for the futiu'e." "Down to the boat, then," said the mate, now convinced nothing more could be done. As for the women, when, in order to prevent their escape, we secured their arms, you cannot imagine their piteous cries ; turning, however, a deaf ear to their wailings we hastened to the boat, and having embarked our prisoners were soon again on board the ship. When the mate made his report, the captain, anxious to obtain information about the missing crew, attempted by a series of dumb motions, by kindness, by offers of fish and other food, and the aid of the Sepoy, to obtain some information from the two women about liis misshig men. "Whether from fear or obstinacy I know not, but that night they continued dumb. Hoping, therefore, better things the next 26 THE WFITE ELEPHANT. morning, the captain appropriated to their use a cabin next his own, and further ordered the wife of the steward to supply them plentifully with fish and cocoa-nut, and moreover, to stay with them till morn- ing. That night, as you may imagine, after my day's fatigue, I could have slept without turning in my berth. Before, however, the morning, there was a great commotion in the shij). The two savages had cunningly watched till the stewardess was asleep, when, running through the cajjtain's cabin, at one leap through the stern window they Avere overboard, and swimming to the shore, and of course, as no person on board wished to harm the poor creatures by firing shot, it was the last we saw of them ; and so we lost all chance of hearing of our lost shipmates, at least till some time after reaching Rangoon, when we were shocked to hear that when the boat entered the chan- nel the violence of the wind and the strength of tJie current swept her onward mto the Bay of Bengal, wnere eighteen days afterward she was picked up by a merchantman ; and it was discovered that two of the Lascars had been killed and eaten by their com- panions, an Incident which, for the sake of my own veracity, I must teU you is recorded in sober verita- ble history. The next day, by steering to the southward, we reached Chatliam Island, and a more beautiful spot I have never since seen. The scene is wild and incom- parably grand — the harbor is one vast sheet of water, landlocked upon all sides, but dotted with smaU MY PAKENTAGE AND EARLY ADVENTURES. 27 islands, while lofty mountains, clothed with impene- trable forests, and inhabited by none but monkeys, guanas, and many of the other animals common to tropical forests. At this settlement we were so hospitably received by the authorities that, having delivered the stores, it was with considerable regret we set sail for Ran- goon, at which city we arrived after a rough voyage of seven days 28 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. CHAPTER n. MY FIKST EEAL TKOUBLE. I SHALL never forget the sensation of pleasure 1 felt as our gallant ship anchored in Rangoon road- stead. I was about to rejoin my parents ; my heart bounded \vith delight. Would they be surprised at my manly appearance ? How great would be their joy ! Should I know them ; would they recognize their son? I would play them a trick; for when they came on board, as I felt sure they would, 1 would gaze at them and await their recognition. All this, however, was very foolish, as days must elapse before my eyes could rest upon them. Those days, however, passed ; but oh, how painful was the strain ujion my patience ! It was night Avhen we entered the roads ; lights were visible upon the beach. The next morning we could see the long streak of low land, but it was sick- ening to me to find the land was so much further off than it had appeared the previous evening. But pa- tience ; patience, indeed, for our captain kept us waiting for a pilot eight days — now standing off, now on, the shore, making short tacks in the daytime, and again anchoring during the night, and all uselessly, for notwithstanding our signal guns and colors, none came off. MY FIEST EKAL TROUBLE. 29 At length even the captahi's j>atience overcame liis caution ; the wind was fair, so sending a boat ashore and steering hy hxndinarks, we dashed across the sand bar and entered the Hangoou river, when our progress, altliough slow, was sure. The river was covered with boats, some hke those used by the South Sea islanders — long, narrow, with elevated stern ornamented with peacocks' ft-athera and the tails of Thibetan cows, affixed to long flexible painted poles which hung from the stern, and Avas surmounted by a golden ball. Others with sails like balloons, and hulls so low in the water that they had the appearance of so many giant butterflies. Another day, and we had answered the inquiries of the officials of the Custom-house, and laid the ship alongside the wharf. Then how my hopes, anxieties, and fears increased ! Neither father nor mother were awaiting my arrival ; no person came on board making anxious inquiries. Thinking, dreaming, ex- pecting, I stood looking into the faces of the crowd which thronged the wharf till my eyes ached — nay, more, became damp with tears of bitterest disappoint- ment. There assembled, were people of all nations — Burmans, Peguers, Chinese, Armenians, Siamese, Por- tuguese, and Englishmen ; tradesmen, laborers, mis- sionaries, and merchants ; but among them all not one who cared one jot for me who had traveled so many thousands of miles to rejoin all I loved in the world, or valued me at the price of a bundle of the rattans on deck. I sat upon a coil of rope, w^ith my eyes fixed to the 30 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. shore, unheeding the bustle upon deck, as melancholy, as resignedly as if I had been the sole inhabitant of a drowning world. Suddenly my arm was clutched ; the words, "My poor boy!" fell on my ears. I started, tears of joy rolled down my face — I had not, then, been forgotten — my parent stood before me. Upon the instant I thought — I hoped so. One glance, however; and pushing him from me, I exclaimed — "You are not my father;" and the bitterness of my disappointment, the expression of my features, brought tears into the eyes of the stranger, who then kindly taking my hands between his own, said — " Be calm, listen ; I know your story, my poor boy." " My parents ! tell me of my parents. Why, oh, why are they not here ?" I said passionately. " Your parents are — " " What !" and I started with affright ; for a flash of light, a shock like that from a galvanic battery, shot through my mind. " They are in a better world — dead," he said mourn- fully. " Dead, dead !" I exclaimed, stupified, but — Can I paint my feelings at that moment ? No, it is impos- sible. I threw myself upon the deck and sobbed in impotent sorrow. The stranger si:)oke not a word for many minutes. God was good to me, for with a deep sensitiveness he had also implanted in my heart a feeling of resig- nation to his will. I recovered my presence of mind, and forming a resolution to quit that hateful country as soon as possible, in silent sorrow j^ermitted the MY FIRST REAL TROUBLE. 31 stranger to lead me from the sliip. "We passed through the suburbs to the inner town on foot to his house, wliere, as soon as the first outl)urstings of my grief had become softened, he told me that my j^arents had died but three months before my arrival — offerer, in A\a, at which capital they had been some time resident. " Oh, that I had been permitted but to arrive soon enough to soothe their last moments," said I. " It would indeed have been a consolation to them ; wdiile to you, my poor boy, it would have been for- tune." " What mean you, sir ?" I said, astonished at these words. " Had you been with them at the time of their death, you might have taken quick possession of your father's property." "My Other's property," I repeated, not under- standing why I could not take possession as it was. " It has been seized by the Myo-wun" (governor of the town). " Surely this cannot be possible ; for am I not my father's heir ?" " Unfortunately, my poor boy, any thing is possi- ble in this barbarous land that it may please the chiefa to do." " But there are laws even here." " True ; and one is, that the property of any for eigner who may die without heirs shall immediatel;? fall to the King of Burma." 32 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. " But my fiither did not die without an heir. Am I not living ?" " Your father was rich, my poor boy, and liis riches were chiefly accumuhited by the favor of his friend, the Prince of Prome ; therefore, no sooner did the king liear of his death than, assuming that you were not in existence, he ordered the Myo-wun to seize any property he might have possessed in this country." " But you say his majesty's brother, the Prince of Prome, was my poor fatlier's friend; if so, he will not permit his only son to be thus plundered." " It is a poor chance, yet your only one ; for death buries friendship, and the Prince of Prome loves gold ; still, I have communicated to his highness your exist- ence, and as a friend of your ftither's, j)i"ayed of him to restore to you the property." " His answer ?" I asked, impatiently. " May be many weeks before it arrives here," re- plied Mr. Johnson (for that was the name of my new friend) ; " adding " In the meantime, you must make jny house your own." Thus was I, who had gone out from England with a buoyant heart, great hopes, and a fair prospect, left suddenly alone in the world in a far-distant country, penniless, and dependent upon a stranger for my daily bread. But deeply as I felt Mr. John- son's kindness, and gratefidly as I accepted his oifer, I at the same time was of far too independent, and I trust honorable, a spirit, not to offer to make myself as useful to him as possible in his counting-house, a M"S FIRST REAL TROUBLE. 33 return Avhicli he gladly accepted ; and so I soon fo and myself deep in the mercantile mysteries of the natural products of the empire — such as teak timber, carda- moms, indigo^ elephants' teeth, salfron wood, and that petroleum or earth-oil by which my father had real- ized a fortune. Day by day I awaited to hear from the Prince of Prome. Messenger after messenger was sent to the capital city by Mr. Johnson, but without obtaining any thing more substantial than vague promises. Thus anxiously passed two years ; a period which 1 did not permit to escape without assiduously apply- ing myself to the study of the Burmese language. As, however, this town in which I passed those anxious twenty-four months, is, I believe, something totally different from any town you have either visit- ed or read about, I will endeaA'or to give you a sketch of its peculiarities. Rangoon, which signifies " peace effected," and was so named by its founder, the King Alompra, who built the city in memory of his conquest of Pegu, which till his time was an independent kingdom, con- sists of tAVO toAvns, one within the other, situated twenty miles from the sea, up the river Syriam, a branch of the great IrraAvaddi which traverses through the entire empire ; and, rising to a considerable height above water level, these towns are compara- tively free from the terrible inundations common to other Burman cities and villages during the rainy season. The inner town, or fort, in which the European 8 34 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. merchants and natives of importance had their resi' dences, was encompassed by a stockade; that is, a tall bamboo paling, eighteen feet high, which was again sm-rounded by a deep dirty ditch. Around the inner side of the stockade ran a platform for musketeers, upoii which were placed twelve miserable cannon. To give you a notion of the interioi", which was then populated by some 30,000 people, I must ask you to picture to yourself a vast city of human hutches, made of bamboos, and erected upon j^osts three feet from the ground, with pools of stagnant water beneath, but regularly arranged in nicely paved streets, intersected by gutters, aci'oss which were thrown planks for the convenience of pedestrians. A large herd of pigs, independent and ownerless, which, but that they acted as scavengers by devouring the refuse matter beneath the city, would have been as insufferable as the hundreds of ugly httle yelping, barking cur dogs which ever infest the streets of Ran- goon, to the annoyance of the merchant who may be pursuing his affairs, or getting between the legs, to the monstrous disturbance of the shaven-pated priests, who, wrapped around with an ample yellow sheet, with a fan of the palm leaf in one hand, and a large blue lacquered box in the other, perambulate the streets, with eyes turned neither to the right nor to the left, but fixed upon the ground, to gather from the venerating multitude the daily food for themselves and their bretlnen of the Kioums, or monasteries — food, by the way, which must be placed in the box ready cooked ; for the lives of these holy personages MY FIRST REAL TROUBLE. ^^ beincr ^iven up to abstract speculations upon the divine essence of their god Gaudama, it would be regarded as an impious waste of time for them to cook with their own hands. Then imaoine a woidd-be civihzed population, halt naked, the g'arments of the higher classes consistmg chiefly of a douT^le piece of cloth loosely wrapped about the body, a slight frock with sleeves and a handkerchief tied around the brow for a head-dress, with bodies tattooed or imprinted with hons, tigers, monkeys, hogs, crows, demons, or fabulous ammals- a style of bodily decoration which, although per- formed by the pamful operation of puncturing the skin with a needle dipped in paint, is, notwithstand- ino- so fashionable that many of the professionals m thit peculiar line of art obtain large sums of money for their services. Then, as for their teeth (" although the fashion of blackening them is not so common as in former ages), they are invariably of a sooty hue from their constant practice of chewmg the areca, or betel-nut. One custom, however, which struck me as bemg comical in a high degree, was that of boring m tlie lobe of the ear a large hole, in which (according to an individual's wealth or position), he or she stufls a gold, silver, paper gilt, or wooden ornament; and invariably, when the aperture is not otherwise oc- cupied, men, women, and boys, use it as a cigar- holder; that is, suppose they are interrupted in tlie enjovment of the cigar, they as instantly clap the un- burned portion within the ear as a butcher, wlien 36 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. making use of both his hands, places his knife in his mouth. Then, aUhough none wear shoes, boots, or stockings, and not always sandals, few are to be seen without the tee^ or xmibrella, the color and material of which (white being exclusively royal) marks the rank or office in every class of society. Such was the town and such the people among whom I impatiently and anxiously awaited two whole years. As I have said, my time was chiefly occupied in Mr. Johnson's business, or in studying the language. Moreover, at our house, which was near the Ex- change, where the Europeans assembled in the cool of the morning, and also to the Go-down, or Custom- house, we were seldom without society. Then, again, we mixed in the society of the higher class natives ; indeed, so popular at one time was Mr. Jolmson, that we had the entree to the family parties of the governor himself — that governor who, forgetful that we had " eaten his salt," afterward became our tyrant and persecutor. The first of those parties was to me so comical, and will, I believe, prove so interesting to you, that I will relate the events of the day. On the 1 2th of April, the last day of the Burman year, IMr. Johnson and myself were invited to bear a part in a S2)ort that is universally practiced throughout the Burman dominions on the concluding day of their annual cycle. To wash away the impurities of the past, and commence the new year free from stain, the women on tliis day are accustomed to throw water on every man they meet, and the men Xnwi jrv FIRST KEAL TliOUBLE. 37 the privileg-e of retorting — a licence Avliich, as you may inmgine, gives rise to a great deal of fun, par- ticularly amongst the young women, Avho, armed with long syringes and flagons, endeavor to throw water over any man who passes, and in return re- ceive the water with perfect good humor. But you must be told that dirty water must not be thrown, nor must a man or boy lay his hands upon a woman or girl ; moreover, if a Avoman declines to take part in the sport, she must not be molested, ibr it is taken for granted that she is ill. \Yell, on that 12th of April, about one hour before sun-down, we went to the house of the governor, and found his wife had provided to give us a damp reception, for in the hall there were roAvs of water- jars with bowls and ladles ready to hand. Upon entering the hall we were each presented with a bottle of rose-water, a little of which Ave poured into the hands of the governor, Avho sprinkled it OA^er his OAvn vest of fine floAvered muslin. The lady then made her appearance at the door, giving us to understand that she did not mean to join in the sport herself, but made her eldest daughter, a pretty child in the arms of a nurse, pour from a golden cup some rose-water, mixed with sandal wood, first over lier father and then over us. This Avas the signal for the commencement of the sport, for Avhich Ave Avere prepared by being dressed in Avhite vestments. About fifteen young AA'^omen then rushed into the hall from the inner apartments, and surrounding the governor, myself, and Mr. Johnson, deluged us Avith- 38 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. out mercy ; and of col^rse, laughing heartily if we ap- peared at all distressed by the water flung in our flxces. At length, all parties being tired, and com- pletely drenched, we went home to change our clothes; and in the way met many damsels, who would willingly have renewed the sport had they re- ceived encouragement from us ; but truly we had had sufficient for that day, especially as it came from antagonists whom politeness prevented our repaying in full. When Ave had changed our clothes, we re- turned to the governor's, and were entertained with a dance and a puppet show till the early hour of morning. BURMESE LAW. 39 CHAPTER in. 1 GET AN INSIGUT INTO BURMESE LAW, AND AM PUT IN THE STOCKS. During the two years, Mr. Johnson had left no means untried to procure the restoration of my pro- perty ; and at length my hopes revived, for in conse- quence of some important service rendered by my friend to the Prince of Prome, that lofty personage had sent to Rangoon a solemn promise to bestir him- self in the matter. Unfortunately, however, with the message came the news that a rupture had taken place between the Burmese and English governments, and that the former Avere preparing to invade Ben- gal ; the consequence of which was that the native authorities at Rangoon, prompted and goaded by the Mussulman, Armenian, and other traders who were jealous of the Europeans, began to subject the latter to every possible petty annoyance, and to such an extent that meetings of English and Americans were held at the Exchange to consider what measures were to be taken to protect themselves from insult, if not from injury. " These semi-savages will never rest till they find an excuse for murdering us," said Mr. Johnson, one morning, when we had returned from a meeting at the Exchange, and were awaiting a fish tiftiu, or lun- cheon, which my old nurse was preparing. 40 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. "Nay, sir, surely that is not possible; tliey must fear the English ^^ower too much," said I. " They fear nothing ; they are eaten up with arro- gance and pride ; and no wonder, for a nation who have ever been conquerors and never conquered, can't comprehend a power they have never felt. Even now it is said that a vast army is being prepared, not only for the conquest of Bengal, but, as they arrogantly believe, England itself." " Why, they haA^e no ships." "No, but they have hundreds of war-boats, which, in their ignorance of geography, and whether Eng- land is an island or even a distant portion of Asia, they stupidly believe to be all-sufficient." " Bah ! this is absolute nonsense," said I, laughing. " It is so, as far as even the conquest of the neigh- boring English territory in Bengal ; but at the same time enough to exhibit the feehng of the officials, and lead them to commit any outrage ujjon those of om* countrymen within their power." While we were conversing, our attention was drawn to a great noise in the street. It Avas the pub- lic disgrace and j^unishment of a priest who, with his face daubed Avith black paint, interspersed with white, and seated upon an ass, was being drummed out of the city amid the shoutings of a crowd so nu- merous, that it Avas Avith difficulty the criminal Avas saved from being crushed to death by the exertions of the attending constables, or Pa-IvAvets. These officials, Avho are to be found in every city in the empire, are chosen from the most atrocious THE FISH-THIEF. Page 40. BURMESE LAW. 41 criminals, who have been pardoned in consideration of their assuming for the rest of their lives the voca- tions of constables, gaolers, and executioners, with- out other pay or reward than what they may be enabled to extort from their miserable prisoners. Upon each cheek they have branded a ring, which implies they must have been guilty of some great crime, punishable by the laws with death. Further, tlieir naked breasts are tattooed with their especial offence, such as man-killer, or thief. So infamous are these pakwets held, that even in the fulfilment of their duties they are not permitted to enter within the walls of a house ; nor can their bodies be burned and have performed over them the usual funeral rites, but they are interred like lepers. Suddenly, however, while we were standing out- side the house watching these miserable men, a large cat, of the half-tailed Malay breed, darted past us, with a partly roasted fish in its mouth, followed by my nurse exclaiming, " The thief! The thief has stolen my fish." " There goes our tiffin, Harry," said Mr. Johnson, laughing; but, adding, as he pointed to one of the constables, " Look ! the eye of that rascally pa-kwet is upon her; he means mischief." Alarmed at the possibility of danger to my nurse, I ran after her ; and as puss had managed to effect her escape with the fish, found no small difficulty in persuading her to return to the house and serve up the tiffin as best she could without fish. The following three days after this adventure with i2 THE TMIITE ELEPHANT. the cat and the fish, (which, although at the time 1 thought so humorous, proved to be of serious conse- quence) were occupied by witnessing the singular ceremony of burning a deceased priest. Tlie holy man having died two years before, his body had, at the house in which he died, undergone the following process of embalming : — The intestines being removed, and replaced with various fragrant spices, and the opening sewn up, the body was covered first with a layer of wax, to jire- vent the admission of air ; then a layer of lac, mixed with other ingredients ; and lastly, a coating of leaf- gold. The body being thus prepared and gilded, was stretched at full length, with the arms over the breast, and then left in the ho use in which death had taken place, for twelve months. At the end of that period the body was removed to a house erected on purpose, in the shape of a kioum or monastery, about thirty feet high, and covered with leaf-gold, where it remained till the order was given for its being consumed, twelve months afterward. A month before the burning took place a stage was erected of bamboo, and by its side placed a coffin, decorated with gold and figures of many kinds, but all emblematic of death in its various forms. In the courtyard of the house were preparing two large four-wheeled carriages, one for the cofiin, the other for the stage, with its apparatus. The carriage in which the corpse was to be drawn had another stage erected upon it, similar to the one in the house, BURMESE LAW. 43 but of larger size, and fixed iipon an artificial kneeling elephant. When the time appointed for the ceremony grew near, the principal people in every street, were com- manded each to prepare the figure of a buffalo, bull, lion, bear, rhinoceros, elephant, or man ; as also a large rocket, which, at the proper time, was to be affixed to the figure. On the first day of the cere- mony these artificial animals, which were three times the size of life, were drawn around the town in procession, accompanied by the whole of the inhabi- tants, male and female, interspersed with flag-bearers, dancing boys and girls, and rows of young women, with an elder woman between each row to keep or- der. The next day came the most singular, and to a European ridiculous, portion of the ceremony. In an open space in the middle of a valley, the people were assembled. One of the carriages now held the stage upon which was placed the coffin containing the body ; a cable Avas fastened to each wheel of the carriage, when, at a given signal, the multitude divided into opposite parties, one half being at the front and the other at the back of the carriage. The four cables were seized simultaneously by as many as could get hold of them. Then the two parties com- menced to pull one against the other, as if struggling which was to get possessicm of the body, which was now dragged forward, now backward ; and in this struggle they continued the whole day without oitiier obtainins: the advantage. Near the idose of 4:4 thp: white elephant. evening, however, the ropes breaking upon one side, the opposite party claimed the victory. The next day the artificial animals were drawn forth upon Avheels, each with a rocket seven feet in length and four feet in circumference, made of timber secured by iron hoops, and rattan lashings affixed to it ; all of which, with a great quantity of fireworks, were discharged toward evening, causing the acci- dental death of several people. The following day was appointed for the burning. As, however, a quarrel arose between the two parties who had pulled the corpse, the unsuccessful insisting that the cables had been cut, instead of being fairly broken by the other, the viceroy granted another trial of pulling, but the same party came off as victorious as before. The next day the corpse was placed upon a stage in the middle of a temple erected for the purpose ; small rockets were fixed upon ropes with rings of rattan, so as to slide along them from the top of a hill, to which one end of the ropes was fastened to the cofiin. At a given signal the rockets were dis- charged, when, sliding along the ropes to the coflBn, which was purposely made of combustible materials, set it on fire, and thus consumed the body with as- tonishing rapidity. Having witnessed the conclusion of this strange ceremony, Mr. Johnson and myself walked leisurely back to the town, chatting together upon the advan- tages and disadvantages of the ancient custom of corpse-burning and urn burial, to which I was de- cidedly favorable, when, as we approached the bouse, BURMESE LAW. 45 imagine my surprise at seeing my nurse witli her arms bound, struggling in the hands of two slave constables. Indeed, to such an extent did it anger me, that I believe I should have felled them to the earth but for my friend, Avho said, " It is useless, Harry ; let us follow to the Rung-d- hau " (Court of Justice). " But what can have been the poor creature's crime ?" said I. " I know not, Masser Harry — I not know," ex- claimed my nurse. "The miserable woman will hear when she appears before the Praw " (Lord) " of Justice," said one of the constables. " Let us follow, Harry," said Mr. Johnson ; and we proceeded to the Court of Justice, where, sur- rounded by attendants and suitors, sat the judge, a fat, sinister-looking personage Avho, being disengaged, ordered the pa-kwet who had to make the charge against the prisoner to be sworn ; whereupon, while the Book of Imprecations was held over his head he repeated the following formidable judicial oath : — " I will speak the truth. If I sj^eak not the truth, may it be through the influence of the laws of de- merit — through passion, anger, folly, pride, and hard- heartedness — so that when I and my relations are on land, tigers, elephants, buffaloes, poisonous serpents, scorpions shall seize and crush, and bite us so that Ave shall certainly die ; let the calamities of fire, water, thieves, and enemies oppress and destroy us, till wo perish and come to utter destruction ; let us be sub- 4:6 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. ject to all the calamities that are Avithin the body, and all that are without the body ; may we be seized with madness, dumbness, blindness, deafness, leprosy, and hydrophobia ; may we be struck with thunder- bolts and lightning, and come to sudden death. In the midst of not speaking truth, may I be taken with vomiting clotted black blood, and suddenly die before the assembled people. When I am going by water, may the water sj)irits assault me, the boat be upset, and the property lost ; and may the alligators, porpoises, sharks, or other sea-monsters seize and crush me to death ; and when I change Avorlds, may I not arrive among men or spirits, but suifer unmixed punishment and regret, in the utmost wretchedness, among the four states of punishment. If I speak the truth, may I and my relations, through the influence of the ten laws of merit, and on account of the eflicacy of truth, be freed from all calamities within and without the body ; and may evils which have not yet come be warded for away. May the ten calamities and five enemies also be kept far away. May the thunder- bolts and lightning, the Nat of the waters, and all sea animals love me, that I may be safe from them. May my prosperity increase like the rising sim and the waxing moon ; and may the seven possessions, the seven laws, and the seven merits of the virtuous be ])rominent in my person ; and when I change worlds, may I not go to the four states of punishment, but attain happiness of men and Nats, and realize merit, reward, and perfect calm," I have given at full length this oath, that you may BURMESE LAW. 47 form some notion of my terror nt tlie fortlicoming cliarge against my poor nurse. What could it be ? Surely a crime of great magnitude ; nothing less, in- deed, than conspiring the death of the sovereign. " Now let the slave make his charge agaiast this miserable woman," said the judge. "Truly, O great praw " (lord), "the woman's crime is not small ; for, by permitting tlie escape of a thief she has defrauded the lords who administer justice of their just fees," said the pa-kwet, falling ujjon his hands and knees before the official, who then in a tstern voice said — " What says the miserable slave ?" " Truly, it is not possible for thy smallest slave to tell that of which she knows nothing. Surely this man is either a perjurer and deserving the punish- ments he hath invoked, or he hath mistaken thy slave for another, O mighty praw," replied the trem- bling woman. Then having looked at some notes written upon leaves of the palm-tree, the judge said — " Slave, didst thou not, on the day of the punish- ment of the priest, rush forth from the house of thy master crying that a thief had robbed thee of thy fish ?" This, then, was the charge; after so terrible an oath, it was too ridicidous, and I laughed aloud, to the disgust of the angry judge, who said — "Place the vile dog of a colar" (stranger) "in the stocks." "Pardon, O lord judge," I exclaimed, "but it is 48 TUE WHITE ELEPHANT. imijossible to help laughing ; for even if thou hadst the thief before thee, thou couldst get no fees." " Thou niiserable dog of a colar, the thief should be put in the stocks till he or his friends had paid the just dues," said the judge. But picturing to nay mind a cat in the stocks, I had greater difficulty than ever in restraining my laughter, as I replied, "Truly, O judge, it would be a difficult matter, for the thief was a cat." " The more reason, then, that this miserable woman should be confined till some friend pays the dues ; for, even if caught, the cat will not satisfy the claims of justice," said the sapient judge ; adding, " Let the woman be jjlaced in the stocks in the sun till twenty ticals have been paid by her friends," " Release the woman, O judge, and I will fetch the money," said Mr. Johnson. "Who will be surety that thou wilt return, O colar?" " That will thy servant, O judge," said I. " This is reasonable," said the official ; adding, however, " Let the youth remain in the stocks also, till the just dues are paid." Whereupon, the two pa-kwets instantly placed me in limbo ; and thus did I obtain my first real experi- ence of Burmese justice. Cruel, however, as was my case, it was mercy itself in comparison with an inci- dent that had occurred a lew days previously. A widow, miable by ordinary means to pay a cer- tain tax, was compelled to sell her only daughter. Receiving the purchase-money with a hea^■y heart, BDKilESE LAW. 49 she i)lacecl it in a box in order tliat slie might give vent to her grief during the night. Wlien, however, she aAvoke the following morning, she found the whole of the money had been stolen. Distracted she sat at her door giving vent to loud lamentations ; during which one of the imderlings of the court of justice passed. This man having heard the poor creature's story, repeated it to the judge, who, in fear for the loss of his fees, saj^ieutly comiuanded her to deliver up the thief. This, however, being impos- sible, he ordered the woman to be detained hi the stocks till some charitable person could be found not only to pay the tax, but also the fees he himself would have received, had the thief been taken. As, however, cases of even a worse nature than this happened during my residence in Rangoon, and they will serve not only to illustrate the laws of the people, but the value of the institutions under which we live in this country, where the judges, being highly educated, indepeiident of the government during good behavior, and moreover, well paid, have not the necessity, even if they were sufficiently dishon- est, to play such disgraceful pranks, I Avill relate one or two, first telling you that as the judges and other officers of Burma are paid by the contending suitors instead of tlie government, they encourage litigation, take bribes from both parties, and except in very palpable cases, give their decision in favor of him who gives the greatest sum of money. An aged Burmese woman in the service of a Eu- ropean merchant, being cited before the Judge for 4 50 THE WHITE ELEPHANT- not liavdng reported to the authorities a theft com mitted upon herself some three years previously, by "svhich the officials had been deprived of their fees, her master ajipeared to exonerate her, but was in- stantly seized by tAvo officers of the court, who told him that, as he had chosen to appear in the affiiir, he had rendered himself responsible, and could not be released unless some other individual was left in pledge for him. Accordingly he left his seiwant, a Burmese lad, who had accompanied him to the court. Shortly afterward, returning with the money to pay the fees, he found that the money-squeezing officials had placed the lad in the stocks and squeezed his ankles, until the poor boy gladly gave them a little money he had about his person, and a ncAV handker- chief. The old woman was also in the stocks, but was released without further inquiry as to the theft as soon as the fees had been paid. Another and more serious case was that of seven Burmans, who, having been condemned to death for sacrilege, were tied to the stake ready for execution. One was fired at several times without being hit. At every shot there was a loud peal of laughter from the bystanders. The criminal was taken down, declared to have a charmed life, and pardoned ; and, moreover, taken into the service of the judge — the real charm that saved this man's life, being, in fact, a large bribe ; the other six poor fellows, having no means ol' bri- bery, were executed. As for my own position, disa- greeable and painful as it was — for the smallness of the holes in the stocks so squeezed my ankles that BURMESE LAW. 51 the pain remained for days after — it was of slioit du- ration ; for no sooner did Mr. Johnson return with the ticals of flowered silver than I was released, when, having with the woman's accuser partaken of a dish of pickled tea — the customary form of con- cluding any trial — I returned home with my friend. 52 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. CHAPTER lY. OUR LIVES SAVED BY A CANIS'ON-BALL. As day by clay the rumors of the rupture between the English and the Burman governments increased, the position of the Europeans in Rangoon became intolerable; for as the natives arrogantly believed the power of their king to be sufficient not only to drive us from his dominions, but to conquer and plunder the Presidency of Bengal, we were soon subjected to innumerable petty annoyances ; but when the news arrived that their hitherto victorious gen- eral, Bandoola, was on Ms march to the capital of British India, with a vast army, the petty tyrants of Rangoon exerted their tyranny to the utmost, for- bidding us either to trade, leave the town, or even congregate together at the exchange. Now, as Mr. Johnson suspected that our position would speedily become altered for the worse, rather than better, he resolved to seize the first opportunity of leaving the city, and making his way to Ava, and so seek the protection of his friend, the Prince of Prome. So narrowly, however, were Ave watched, that the project seemed hopeless, until one day, while we were conversing upon our i)rospects, our Malay boy, with a grin upon his face, entered the room, say- ing, " A message-man from the Golden City ; 'sposc he bring good news for young sahib." 0T3R LIVES SAVED BY A CANNON-BALL. 58 This messenger, who followed at the boy s heels, w;is a man of middle size, and though his skin was not so dark, he was dressed in the fashion of tlie na- tive merchants ; that is, his head, Avhich was shaven all but a small tuft of haii*, was covered with a cotton handkerchief; and he wore the loose jacket, sandals, and the linen leg-coverings which pass for trousers. " Who are you, my friend ? surely not a Burman," said Mr. Johnson, when the man had performed the shiko, or Burman obeisance. " Naon Myat, the slave of the Prince of Prome," was the reply. " Then I half suspect that Naon Myat is a great rogue," said my friend. " Naon is not rogue, but good slave to great Prince of Prome, wlio has sent him with this letter," replied the man, holding a paper packet above his head. " Bravo! good news at last," said my friend, when he had perused the document. " May it indeed prove so," said I, although not by any means sanguine. " Good it is, though, my boy, for it is nothing less than a command from the Prince of Prome for you to accomj^any this messenger to Ava, Avhen his high- ness intends to restore your father's property." " Then the messenger should be rewarded," said I, joyfully. " Not a bad suggestion. lie shall, my boy," and the next minute my friend led Naon into our spacious cooking-room, where he left him in charge of the cook, making his choice from the best in our larder. 54 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. " I doubt this fellow's honesty," said Mr. Johnsoa on his return. " For what reason ?" " He is a half-caste : part Portuguese, part Bur- man ; and all half-castes are treacherous." " Pooh, pooh, this is ungenerous ; besides, the man is but a messenger; and therefore, if he has the incli- nation, he cannot have the power, to harm me." " You do not know these fellows, Harry ; — I do. My mind is made up ; I will accompany you." "Capital," said I; "but do you doubt the genuine- ness of that letter?" " No ; for it bears the royal seal, which will, by- the-bye, enable us to leave Rangoon ; for that even the Governor himself dares not dispute." "When shall we start?" said I, impatiently. "At sunrise to-morrow." " So be it ;" and I felt more joyful than since I had been in Rangoon. Thus man proposes. — Before, however, that sun arose we were awakened by the screaming of women, the angry shoutings of men, the tramp of native soldiers, the rolling of heavy ])ieces of artillery, the beating of tomtoms, the grunting of swine, and the howling and barking of dogs. Thug aroused, we jumped from our beds and ran down the ladder into the street, and then, far as the eye could reach we saw blaze after blaze of fire. " The fire beacons are lighted throughout the coun try ; an enemy must be near." "The English fleet," I exclaimed, joyfully. " The vile rogue confesses his guilt," said a voice ; OUR LIVES SATED BY A CANNOX-BALL. 65 and tlie next moment a lieavy blow upon the back of my head felled me to the ground. How long I remained senseless I know not, but my next sensation was that of a racking pain in my head, to relieve which I endeavored to raise my liand, but, to my horror, I found it bound to my side by a thick rope; then, looking around, my real situa- tion stood visibly before me ; there, in a long low room were about thirty Europeans lying or sitting upon the hard flooring, with their ankles fxstened between two poles of bamboo, which ran nearly the whole length of the room, and were held at least twelve inches from the ground by ropes suspended around pulleys near the ceiling, the ends of the ropes being conveniently at hand, so that the legs of the prisoners could be raised or lowered according to the pleasure of the attendant pa-k wets ; some half a dozen of whom stood gazing with maUgnant satisfaction at the miseries of their victims. As I have intimated, I at once comprehended that we were prisoners in the hands of the authorities, but why or wherefore was an enigma. Then I re- membered the alarm in the streets, and the ligliting of the beacons. Truly, I thought, the town has been treacherously taken by the old enemies of the Bur mans (the Siamese), and the Europeans are their prisoners ; but my head throbbed so violently, and my position — from my legs being lifted so tar from the ground, and my arms being bound so tightly — Avas so torturing that I can compare the sensation of that moment to nothinsr but a terrible ni.T. for any length of time against the Britisn, without reinforcements — had hastily organized household ser- vants, porters, pagoda slaves, priests, and hoatmeu into corps for fighting, while their families, old men, women and children, were driven like cattle in droves iiito the recesses of the neigliboing jungle, there to remain, not for their own safety, but as hostages who would have to answer Avith their lives for the good conduct of the newly levied soldiers. The scene was appalling ; with savage brutality the drovers, armed with bamboos, spears and hatch- ets, kicked with their feet or struck with their spears hobbling cripples or weak women, Avho screamed fearfully as the shot and shell fell within the stockade, arnid the yells of the defenders, the bellowing of cannon, the howling and barking of packs of dogs, and the grunting of the half-wild swine which were being driven with the crowd. Then the demon- iacal laugh of the pa-kwets, and the cry of agony of the wounded or dymg persons, as a shot now and then fell among us, killing some, wounding others, calls up to my memory even now a scene that freezes my blood. Among the wounded was Mr. Johnson, who, being unable to walk, was carried upon the shoulders of a pa-kwet. There was a supplement, however, to this terrible sight, which, belonging to ordinary civilized life, and not to the chances of war, filled me with greater horror than all I had witnessed. On our way to the great Dagon road we passed a bend of the Irrawad- dy ; the tide was rising rajjidly, to the intense terror A TERRIBLE SCKNE. ^O of seven naked men, ^vllo, having been secured by ropes to stakes, which were driven into the bed ot the river at low water, were then awaiting death by drownino-; and with strained eyeballs and demented countenances, calculating, perhaps, the length of their existence by the gradually rising waters. These men had received this sentence for sacrilege, or rob- bino- a monastery, and being too poor to bribe the jucfcre, it was being carried out with shockmg exact- ness'' Oh ! that I were free ; what would I nob risk to release those suffering creatures ! were the thoughts that passed through my mind; Thus, beneath a burning sun, which on our way struck several of my companions in misfortune sense- less, and upon a broad, well-paved road, whose sides were studded with pagodas and kioums, or monas- teries, and the heat of which was so intolerable that it scorched our feet, we were driven for a distance of three miles, till we arrived at a mound, some seventy feet in height, but so vast, that the area upon the top exceeds two acres, and from the centre of which, in the shape of an inverted speaking trumpet, arises in its golden glitter, to a height of three hun- dred and eighty feet, the Shoe-Dagon, or Golden Dacron Pagoda, which, being supposed to contain eicrht true hairs of Guadama-the god of the Bur- naans— is the chief shrine toward which pilgrims bend their course from all quarters of the empire. The Shoe-Dao-on, is also the sole place of worship of the people of Rangoon; for although there are numerous smaller pagodas, like those we passed upon the road, 5 66 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. they are the private properties of wealthy individuals, by whom alone they are made use of for the purpose of worshiping Guadama, whose golden image, en- shrined therein, is the object of their adoration ; and who, by the way, according to the Burman priests, was so wonderful a personage that I will give you a slight sketch of his origin and doings. Guadama was born 626 before our Saviour. Ho was the son of a king of Ma-ge-deh, in Hindoostan. When born, he was nursed by two deities, and his divine origin and perfections were made known by the bowing of the idol before which, according to custom, he was presented when born. Previous to his last birth he had lived in four hun- dred millions of worlds, and like any other inhabitant of the world, had gradually worked his way up through the state of beasts, and had been in every condition of life. Immediately upon his birth this astonishing baby exclaimed, " Now I am the noblest of men. This is the last time I shall ever be born." AVhenhe was ten years of age he was placed under the care of a wise man named Bahburemihbacshi, who instructed him in every kind of knowledge ; however, he soon outstripped in knowledge sufficiently to teach the wise man, his master, sixty languages. At twenty he married, but either from the shrewish- ness of his wife, or some other cause, he expressed a desire to turn anchorite, assumed the name of Gua- dama, and gave himself up to the contemjilation of the Deity. This, of course, is the tradition carried down by A rERRlBLE SCENE. 67 his disciples ; the truth, however, as near as we can ascertain, is worth our knowledge, for Guadania, although a pagan, was evidently a personage of mark in his own unenlightened age, and moreover a great reformer. And this truth has been attempted to be discovered by a learned writer, who says, — The truth concealed in this Indian fable seems to be simply this, that the son of the King of Ma-ge-deh, whose rank and austerities had secured the venera- tion of his countrymen, had sense enough to perceive the absurdity of the Brahmin's system, and ability enough to persuade his countrymen to adopt his own. The success of his new doctrine was such, that at one period it had nearly suppressed the ancient fliith of the Hindus ; but when events, which we cannot now trace, had re-established the authority of the Brahmins, they showed that they M'ere not behindhand in retalia- tion ; the followers of Budd'ha {i. e. Guadama) were persecuted without mercy ; and scarcely an individual of that faith can now be found in Hindoostan. Some of the fugitives appear to have taken refuge in Ceylon, while others fled into the mountains of Thibet. From Ceylon they conveyed their doctrine to the eastern peninsula of India. Fiom Thibet it traveled over Tartary to the north and west, into China in the east, and from thence into Cochin-China and the other regions in the south, where it is only divided by a lofty chain of mountains from its kindred faith, im- ported from the south and west into the kingdoms of Ava and Siam. Guadama, say the Burmans, obtained Nibbau G8 THE WHITE ELEPUAKT. (/. e., died) in tlie 5'ear before Christ 543, and at hia death advised that his relics and image shoidd be worshipped and liis h^w obeyed, until the appearance of the next Boodh ar Buddha, who would make his advent in five or six thousand years. But to continue my narrative : — This temple, then, transformed into a fortress, guarded by two large field-pieces, and which was to be our prison, was the most magnificent structure I had seen in Burma. It was encircled by two terraces within a balustrade, wliich represented a huge croco- dile, whose jaws Avere supported by two immense figures of a male and female Belhoo, or evil genius, who, with clubs in their hands, guard the entrance. Up a great flight of narrow steps we were driven to the upper terrace; from the centre of which arises the pagoda, or spiral i~)ortion of the structure, from an eight-sided golden base, surrounded by a vast number of smaller jjagodas ; grifliins, sphinxes, and images of the Burman deity shooting out as it were from this base. The domed form of the pagoda tapers upward to an immense height, the summit of which is surmounted by a tee, or umbrella of iron work, from which are suspended a number of small bells, wliich are set in motion by the slightest breeze, and })roduc^ a pleasant, if not musical sound. . Having reached the uj^per terrace, we were formally given into tlie custody of the commander of the pagoda garrison, a stout, gaudily-attired, consequen- tial-looking personage, who sat in a shabby chair of state, witli one leg thrown forward, and Ins toes bent A TERRIBLE SCENE. C9 miderwarcl, as if to grip the floor; his head and chest backward, that the inflation of his person might im- press us M'itli the dignity of tlie rank which the tslao, or cord of nobility, which he Avore, prochiinied him to liold in the army. Before this oflicer the slaves compelled us to bend our backs and knees, and so remain till his grandness had not only heard tlie crime with which we were charged, but until he had severely scrutinized us from head to feet; after which, he condescended to say — "The colars (foreigners) are rebels and traitors; they have betrayed the sacred land of the Golden Foot to their friends ; therefore, as it is good they should 1)6 treated like slaves and thieves, let them be put in the stocks in the great cell." When, fearing rather for my wounded friend than myself, for I had resigned all hope of rescue, I stepped forward and said boldly — " The chief is a brave man, and can put his prison- ers to the torture ; but even he dare not raise the anger of the mighty brother of the Golden Foot." "Does the dog of a rebel beard us?" he said, clutching the handle of his sword, as if to do instant execution on me. " If the chief is not afraid of an unarmed boy, let him order my arms to be imbound, and he shall see that the Prince of Prome is my friend," said I. To my surprise he ordered my arms to be set at liberty, and I gave him the prince's letter. When he had perused its contents, his lips quivei-ed, either with rage or fear — I think the latter — and he said — 70 IHE WHITE ELEPHANT. " The rebel dog dares me ; nay, more, lie tliinks ic langli at me, by making me believe in tbis writing," said, be angrily ; adding, however, ironically, "What would the dog ask — his liberty?" " To be placed in one cell alone with ray wounded friend till the chief can communicate with the great prince," said I. "The dog is presumptuous. He believes I fear these characters, therefore must his eyes be opened," he replied ; adding to the officer of the soldiers, " his prayer is granted ; see that the old a,nd the young rebel be chained together in one cell." After which, without another word, this subaltern despot arose, and having with some difficulty made his way through the slaves, who, as he arose, crouched at his feet, descended to the lower terrace. Well might these miserable beings crouch and crawl in the shadow of power, for the smallest and briefest authority in Burma carries with it the power of life and death over inferiors. Then, while our fellow j^risoners were driven to- gether in one large cell in the wall of the pagoda, Mr. Johnson and myself were conducted to a hole about eight feet square, where, having been first chained together arm in arm, we were left with our other limbs at liberty, and a small quantity of boiled rice, and a jar of water. "It is at least a comfort that the rogue has put us together," said my friend. " To me it is wonderful." A TERRIBLE SCENE. Tl "Not at all, Harry; he means to befriend us," eaid Mr. Johnson. " Then why chain us like tAvo thieves ?" said I. " In order to keep up his dignity before his slavea and soldiers, whom he would not wish to believe he is afraid of us." " Then the prince's letter frightened him, and he will release us." " Not me, for he dares not ; while after perusing the letter, he fears to keep, or at least to torture you. Thus, you will find that some time during the night he will come to this cell, and by way of favor, and for a sum of silver offer to release you." " If it be so, I shall refuse to quit this hole without you." "Nonsense, my boy, listen." Then in a whisper, Mr. Johnson said, " Accept the offer upon any terms, and you may release us all." "How?" And my heart leaped Avith delight at the notion. " Have you corn-age to make an attempt to reach the British fleet ?" " Do you doubt me ? But how is this thing to be accomplished ?" "Accept his offer, but insist that, as it Avill be dangerous for a European to make his appearance just now among the people, that he provide you with the native costume; then seek the nearest point of the Irrawaddy, and await some opportunity of seiz- ing a boat, when— but the rest I leave to your own prudence; then, when you reach the fleet, and have 72 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. marie it known where the Europeans are confined, i am strangely ignorant of our countrymen if we are not soon set at liberty," said my friend. " Glorious !" I cried. But then, as it occurred to me that he might be too sanguine, my ardor lessened, and I added, " Are you not too hopeful ? this petty tyrant may not be so easily bought over." " The princes, the king, the queen, all Burma may be bought at a price, but especially one, whose au- thority being temporary, is desirous of making his hay while the sun shines." " I trust it may be so." "Would that you could meet with that fellow, Naon Myat." "Ah! I fear that fellow is a rascal, and that he betrayed us to the soldiers. " A rogue he may be, most half-castes are ; he dare not, howcA'er, be otherwise than faithful to you," " Why not ?" " Because it is his interest to return to the Prince of Prome ; and if he does so without being accom- panied by 3'ou, his life will not be worth a day's pur- chase," " Capital !" I exclaimed. "What! that the poor fellow should be put to death?" " Xo, no, heaven forbid ; but that it should be liis interest to serve me, for withoxit his knowledge of the wild country, I know not how I should get to Ava." " lathe trainof the victorious British Army, I hope," A TERRIBLE SCENE. 73 "Well — yes; it is probable," I said. At that moment, however, the coinmanfler of the garrison made his appearance, as my friend had foie- seen. " The rebel colars have been treated leniently," said the magnate, bhuidly. " For Avhich they beg the generous praAV (lord) will deign to accept a present that he may build a pagoda," said Mr. Johnson. " The Sahib Johnson is good," replied the rogue. For my own part, my transactions with these people had been too few to have become hypocriti- cal, so I said — " The officer has read the Prince's commands, and therefore for his life dares not any longer obstruct my journey to Ava. Let him therefore generously, and like a warrior, at once release me and my friend, and he shall receive five hundred pieces of silver." "The young colar is brave and generous, and I wish him well. He shall therefore depart." "With my friend?" "The shadow of the Golden Foot, the mighty Prince of Prome, has not so commanded — the colai' Johnson is a prisoner. His countrymen are in rebel- lion at the gates of the city, therefore this cannot be; but as he is generous, and Avill make presents, he shall remain here unharmed until his friend the young colar may beg his release at the foot of the Golden Throne," was the stern reply. Knowing that it Avould be useless to msist upon the release of Mr. Johnson. I said — 74 THE WHITE ELEPHANT "Truly this is a great sorrow; but as it cannot be, I will accept my freedom ; and the sahib, my friend, will see that the present of silver is paid. Yet, the brave warrior has forgotten that it will be dangerous for a colar at the present time to pass among the Burman people." "The young colar's words are wise. He shall have a protection from the people under the seal of office," was the reply. " Still it wUl not be safe for a European to be seen in the public ways without the pus'ho and engi of the Burman." " The young colar's words are again good, and he shall be supplied with the dress." So saying, the chief left the cell 1 AM CHASED BY A SERlrENT. 75 CHAPTER VI. 1 AM CHASED BY A SERPENT, AND TAKEN BY THB ENEMY. Two hours after the chief had quitted the cell, a slave made his appearance with a bundle beneath his arm. It was the promised native dress, namely, the p^s'ho— a kind of trowsers, which, covering the loins, reach half way down the leg, and is made of a double piece of cloth so long, that it can be loosely wrapped about the body, and secured by having one portion tucked under another, one end being allowed to hang down loosely in front ; the engi, or sleeved frock of white cotton tied with strings in front, and descending below the knee ; a red Madras handkerchief, which being put on in the manner of a turban, but so as to leave the upper part of the head bare, formed the head-dress ; and a pair of thick sandals for the feet. When the man had assisted me, in completing my attire, and I had taken a hearty leave of my friend, he conducted me out of the cell. We had descended the steps of the pagoda, passed the outer sentries, and my heart felt lighter than it had for many a day. When, however, we turned an angle of the base of the building, what was my chagrin at seeing twc ponies, one of which was saddled, and provided with a basket of provisions slung across his nock, and hold 76 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. by a soldier in full uniform, i. e. with a red handker- chief around his head, a loose jacket of the same color, but naked legged, bare-footed, and tattooed. He was armed with a musket and a short sharj)- pointed spear ; and, I suppose, must have seen my vexation in my ftice, for he said — "The young colar goes to the golden city of the Lord of Thousands of Elephants. The great Praw Myark (my friend the commander of the garrison) too much honor sahib to let he walkee, four legs gc quicker than two, and slave see sahib no lost in jun- gle." To which jargon, without exciting suspicion as to my real intentions, of pourse I could make no reply ; so, making the best of a bad affair, I mounted the pony, which carried me at a gentle pace after my oily friend with the mahogany countenance and illus- trated legs ; but, as we went along, I racked my brains in endeavoring to account for this move of the commander of the pagoda garrison. Did he mean to betray me ? No, it could only be for his own safety that he had taken this means of preventing my going to Rangoon ; for should I happen to be retaken, he would have to pay for my escape from the pagoda with his own life. But when at least an hour had passed, and I began to fear for the safe execution of my schemes, I re- solved that my mahogany-colored fnend must be got rid of. Yes, but how ? and I smiled as I for the mo- ment determined, by a bold effort, to cut the reins of my pony, throw them across the fellow's arms, and I AM CUASED BY a SERPEN'i 77 thus secure liini to a tree. Very good, as far as ii "\ve7it ; but then we Avere crossing a great swamp through rice-fields, wherein no tree was to be found ; and so ended my scheme, till at length we entered the pestiferous jungle which skirted a large teak forest, where I resolved to make the attempt ; so, awaiting this opportunity, and calculating the chances of my success, unarmed as I Avas, OA'er a completely armed savage, I rode on in silence, and so long and so far through this dense jungle, that I began to fear that even, in the event of my getting rid of my keeper, I should never be able to find my way to the river. " Ah ! the Irrawaddy," I exclaimed, as, breaking through a mass of entangled underwood, I caught sight of water. " It is long — far from the Mother of Waters ; it is what sahib calls shoot out of," said the soldier. "A branch of the Irrawaddy," I replied, translating the man's meaning; and CA-en if it be, I thought, and leads to the great river itself, it is doubtlessly so coA'ered AAith war-boats carrying recruits to the be- sieged city, that it Avould be dangerous to folloAv its course; and so I rode on in sullen discontent till Ave reached the stream, Avhen seeing my guide intended in travel along the banks, and that, too, in an oppo- site direction to the IrraAvaddy, I said, " Let us ford this stream ; it will save time." " No ford this — it no can be, sahib ; no good SAvim when can walkee," replied the man, greatly to my surprise, for a Burman takes to Avater as naturally as a duck. 78 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. "Then we will eatee and drinkee," I replied, ill- naturedly mocking him, and resolved to come to a halt, and with the assistance of the pure water make my morning meal of cold boiled rice and fish ; when upon the instant my guide, Avho was probably as much in want of refreshment as myself, leaping from his horse, S2:)read out a cloth upon the grass near the edge of the river ; and while I made my meal, squatted down, holding his share in his hands and rolling his eyes by turns in every direction, as if upon the look-out for dangerous beasts or reptiles — a watchfulness that I soon found necessary, for jumping suddenly from his squatting position to his feet, and seizing me by the arm, he cried, " Let sahib take care — the snake ! the snake !" and there at a distance of a single spring lay a huge snake, with its great eyes glistening in our faces. "Fire, idiot!" I exclaimed, thinking he was too much terrified to use his musket. '*No, sahib, not fire; snake no take notice, if not fire ; if fire and not kill, snake follow every where till catchee and killee." Not, however, understanding the man's full moan- ing, vexed at being interrupted in my rough meal, and not by any means inclined to trust to the polit :■- ness, generosity, or self-denial of so formidable a creature, I snatched the gun from his hands, and dis- charged it at the reptile ; but a blow from the now really terrified Burman turned the weapon aside, so that the snake Avas but slightly wounded, it hissed, lifted up its great head, and preparing to make a I AM CHASED BY A SERFKNT. 79 Bpiing, would the next moment have had me in its fangs, but for my making a backward leap. The dis- tance gained, liowever, by this leap afforded but a temporary respite ; for with an agility that astounded me, the reptile followed at my heels, at which, being unarmed, I became so alarmed, that at the top of my speed I fled along the banks ; stopping, however, to take breath, I found the reptile still so near, that in another instant it would have overtaken me. There was but one chance of escape before me — the river ; I plunged into the stream, swam to the other side, scrambled upon the bank, and then rested to thank Heaven for my narrow escape ; but, to my horror, there, rising above the Avaters, was the head of the reptile, with its eyes dilated with rage, and its fangs protruding from its jaws. To my feet again, and off at full speed. In rising, my head-dress fell to the ground ; not stopping, however, to pick it up, I ran so fast that I believe the exhaustion of nature alone would have stopped me, had I not heard the voice of the Burman. This made me look back, and then, while panting for breath, guess my surprise at seeing the reptile — which, although intelligent enough to follow me for the insult I had put upon it — stupidly Avreaking its wrath upon my head-dress, and that, too, so determinedly, tliat it did not see the stealthy approach of the cat-like Burman, who, forgetting his reluctance to swimming, had crossed the stream, and, moreover, in a paroxysm of courage, put it to death with the butt-end of his musket. Need I tell you it was the first and last time I evei so THE >VniTE ELEPHANT. niadf an unprovoked attack upon a snake, at least of the family wi'h which my enemy was connected, and which, by the way, is somewhat celebrated for similai kind of feats. Those reptiles, called hamadryas, arc more com monly found in Tenasserim than in Pegu. They are between ten and. twelve feet in length, with a short head, a dilated neck, thick trunk, short tail, and nearly black in color. The hamadryas's bite is fital; and so fierce in its nature, that, althougii it may fre- quently not attack without provocation, when pro- voked, as I have shown you, it will not only savagely attack, but pursue its enemy until it has satisfied its vengeance. Perceiving thai even after we had recrossed the stream, and were preparing to remount our pouies, the Burman still trembled, I said, — " Why, thou coward, the enemy is dead, and can do thee no harm." " Me no fear for self, me fear for sahib ; had sahib been killed, his slave killed too for no taking care of sahib." As this Avay of proving that he did not care for liis own safety was rather illogical, I felt no Aery great compunction at carrying out my scheme for a sejiara- tion between us upon the first oppoitunity. That opportunity, I intended, should soon happen, for, as the adventure with the snake had once placed the nuisket in my hand, I managed by means of a trifling excuse, to again get it in my possession ; indeed, to my surprise, the Burman did not ofl:er the least objee- I AM CHASED BY A SEKPENT. 81 tion ; llie reason being, perhaps, that he tlionght it would be im])Ossible for me to find my way out of the dense forest into which we had now entered without his guidance. As we advanced into the forest I must admit that I was much puzzled to account for his change of man- ner, for from the wary guard, who had watched my almost every step, glance, and movement, he had be- come careless as to my movements, and as obedient as if he had been my slave. The enigma, however, received a more speedy and unpleasant solution than I anticipated ; for, as we were riding slowly toward a thicket of bamboos, there arose a loud yell, the meaning of which flashing across my mind instantaneously, I felled him to the ground with my musket, exclaiming — "Thou wretch, thou hast betrayed me;" but scarcely had the words left my lips when there was a rush from the thicket, a heavy weapon fell upon the back of my head, and I became senseless. I do not think I could have remained in a state of unconsciousness long ; for, when I recovered, I found my wrists bound tightly together, the sensation of blood trickling from my wound, and that I was being carried at a rapid pace through the wood. How fir or how long this journey lasted I know not, to me the distance appeared to be considerable ; but pain prolongs time, and I suffered great agony from my wound, so great indeed, that I must have again swooned, for without the least remembrance of a halt, I remember only finding myself lying among some 82 THE WniTE ELEPHANT. tall rniik grass, near the huge bole of one of the many teak trees which nearly encircled a glade. In my agony I suppose I must have groaned, for a man coming to my assistance, unbound my wrists, raised me in a sitting position against the tree, and having tied my legs together with a cord, the end of which was secured to the tree, put a jar of water and some cold boiled rice by my side, and without a word left me to myself The severity of pain becoming lessened, a numb- ness ensued which, however, became relieved by a copious draught of water. The refreshing liquid seemed also to give me new life, my sense of hearing became quicker, my eyes brighter, and alas! the sense of my miserable situation far greater. I could not doubt that I was in the poM^er of some savage tribe, on its way to or from the army, then being raised to oppose the British force. The number of ray captors amounted to fifty, for, whimsically enough at such a moment, I counted them as they squatted upon the ground in small par- ties, and ravenously partook of their fish, rice, and grapes, or pickled tea. A minute's observation showed me that they were not mere raw recruits, but soldiers who had pitched their bivouac for the night, which, by the way, as it Avas fast drawing upon us, proclaimed the length of time I must have re- mained senseless; observing that I was looking at them so intently, the officer of the party sent a soldier to stand over me as sentinel. Then the thought oc- curred to me that, if I pretended not to understand a I AM CHASED BY A SERPENT. 83 word of the Barman tongue, they would converse togetlier freely, and thus 1 might glean some informa- tion as to their intentions. Accordingly I addressed a few words in English to my guard ; and although he did not understand them, he made me comjire- hend their intentions toward me in the event of ray attempting to run away, by pointing in the distance Avith one hand, while with the other he drew a long knife across his throat. The pain in my head returning, I leaned backward against the tree ; when the soldier, perhaps beheving that I sought to sleep, and that a long rest might give me sufficient strength to relieve one of his com- rades from the trouble of carrying me on the next march, left me to rejoin his comjDanions. Then, for tlie first time, I bitterly regretted I had learned the Burmese language; for, from the earnest conversa- tion which took place, I found they intended to carry me the next day before the Maha Silwa, the most savage of the Burman commanders, a man whose hatred to Europeans was so intense that he had offered a large sum for every one taken alive, that he might have the savage satisfaction of witnessing their death by torture. Then, as if to add to my mental agony, my memory brought vividly before me the horrible cruelties the Burmese chiefs had been known to practice upon their unfortunate captives ; one in- stance, especially, that of a brave English colonel, who had been discovered by his brothers in arms, crucified, head downward, in one of their pagodas, 84 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. from wLich the General named by my captors bad been driven by assaidt. Terrible as was the prospect before me, I believe it sharpened my wits, for the shudder at the idea of death by slow torture becoming softened, I began to ponder what could be done — notliing, but place my trust in Providence and watch my opportunity. And here let me imjjress upon you that nothing but my great faith in the goodness of the Almighty could have kept me sane that night; that faith soothed my spirits, giving me a feeling of calm determination, a feeling I can compare to nothing but that which it certainly was not — apathy; for out of it arose the hope that saved me. If by my knowledge of their tongue I was punished as listeners are said to be pimished, namely by hear- ing no good of myself, I also heard news that made me joy for Englishmen. That day a battle had been fought with our troops, who had forced the Burmans far into the jungle, there to await the arrival of rein forcements. Then I smiled as I heard these rude men describe the English soldiers as a kind of devils, who could not be killed, and who no sooner lost an arm or leg than their doctors replaced them immediately. More- over, I learned they were exjiecting the arrival of some comrades, who were to bivouac with them. This arrival happened almost as they spoke, for sud- denly I heard a great yelling, which was vociferously answered by my captors, who in a few minutes were joined by a party heavily laden Avith hampers, bun I AM CHASED BY A SERPENT. 85 dies, baskets, and to my surprise, a couple of rifles. The satisfaction of both parties at meeting appeared mutual, although Avords cannot express the delight of my captors when they saw before them salted beef, i^ork, barrels of biscuit, bottled beer, wine, and several large kegs of spirits. To me, the sight of these things brought grief,for I knew that they must have formed part of the stores of some English regiment, and feared that my coun- tr}TTien had met with a defeat, which I afterward discovered was not the case, but that the party had been fortunate enough to surprise a badly-escorted wagon party. The new comers formed a portion of the most re- markable corps of the Burman army, an mstitution in itself. These " Invulnerables " — for such is the title they bear — are picked from the population, and distinguished from the other troops by their shorter hair, the more exquisite finish of the illustrations upon their legs, of elephants, tigers, and other animals, and the precious stones or pieces of gold beneath the skin of their arms, and Avhich are inserted during childhood. By their countrymen, and themselves, these poor creatures are believed to be invulnerable; a conceit which, although somewhat taken out of them by the British soldiers and sailors, they found it necessary to keep up during the war; indeed, it is recorded that throughout the whole contest the Invulnerables Avere found defending the stockades, their duty being to exhil)it the war-dance of defiance upon the part of the 86 THE YTHITE ELEPHANT works TQOSl exposed to the murderous fire from tlie English gi^'is, in order to infuse courage and enthu- siasm into the breasts of the Burmese troops ; and that, when at length their belief in their invulnerabil- ity became a little shaken by the English troops, the Barman commander endeavored to revive it by the free supply of opium. However, the arrival of these military mountebanks with their plunder of British stores, revived my hope of escape, for, from their surfeit, I thought I might obtain my liberty, although how, or by what means, I could not comprehend. Still, pretending to sleep,' I watched their movements narrowly. A fire being kindled around a few large stones, hampers were opened, and the viands placed in the flames ; and then, while so absorbingly engaged, some cooking, others standing by with their mouths water- ing at the prospective treat, I heard a groan, which sounded as if it came from one of the packages which the Invulnerables had thrown upon the ground a few yards from me. Keeping my eyes fixed upon this package, in a few minutes I saw it move. It was a human being, bound hand and feet, with his head and legs so bent together that he resembled a ball. The groan being heard by the officer of the Invul- nerables, he whispered to one of his men, who imme- diately ran to the poor captive, untied his arms, and brought him to a tree near to me, and there lefl him ; but so long had the poor fellow been tied in that un- natural jjosition, that it was some time before he could I FIND A FELLOW-PRISONER. Page 86. I AM CHASED BY A SERPENT. 87 even stretch ont his hand or leg. Like myself, fastened by the waist to the trunk of a tree, his legs were at liberty ; but as his back was turned tOAvard me, I could not discern his face. Then he called piteously for water ; the language Burman, and the voice was familiar to me. I watched anxiously to obtain a glance at his featm-es. When the water was brought, he turned his face toward me, and I at once recog- nized the features of an acquamtance. 88 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. CHAPTER YII. WHEREIN I AM NEARLY BITTEN TO DEATH, AND VmS NESS THE PUNISHMENT OF A SERPENT BY A MONKEY. " Naon My at !" I muttered, in surprise. " Lord of heaven ! who speaks ?" he ejaculated in broken English. "The young sahib Oliver," I replied; adding, "but speak low, and in English ;" for, although the soldiers were just squatting down to their feast, I feared to arouse their attention. "Heaven be praised, then, the sahib is alive." "Hush! they are looking this way," I said, and then in silence we gazed anxiously and earnestly upon a scene which, but that it led to our liberty, I would not now relate. While some placed huge pieces of meat upon the stones in the fire, awaiting only till it was half-warmed before they snatched it off and commenced eating ; others, the greater part, di\ided the food with their knives, and fell to eating like a herd of half-starved wolves. Indeed, the treat before them Avas such an one they had never before enjoyed. To their a])})e- tites, therefore, temperance was out of the question. Men with the voraciousness of wild beasts — it was fearful ; but still I prayed that their hunger might be followed by as deep a thirst. It was; kegs of L SERrENT AND A MONKEY. 89 rnm were broached, and tlicy drank till they reeled against each otlier. Then a man shouted with joy, for he had discovered a prize in the shape of a large case of French liqueurs, the property of some luxurious EngUsh officer. The savage sipped, the flavor Avas new, and he danced with insane and sensual delight. Then the whole party of already-intoxicated brutea followed his example, and, having once tasted, could not restrain themselves ; so, sipping, sipping, till they could sip no longer, they rolled one after the other in deep drunken sleep upon the ground. It was a disgusting, a fearful sight. The cold pale light of the brightly-shining moon, mixing Avith the lurid flames of the fire, shed a ghastly hue over the faces of the senseless brutes that makes me shudder now even, while I recal the scene to my memory. Still I felt my opportunity had arrived, and rejoiced ; but, alas ! I was tied to the tree ; fortunately, how- ever, the savage who had bound me had performed his task carelessly. A single jerk loosened the cord, so that I coidd crawl toward my fellow-captive, who, hopeless of escape, was gazing steadfastly at the re- volting scene, and who, when in a soft voice I pro- nounced his name, exclaimed with fear, " The Lord of heaven save me !" " Hush ! it is the sahib Oliver," I replied. "True! the Lord be thanked, it is the young sahib," said he. " There is hope, Naon.'"' " The Sahib is right. Yes, while there is life there is hope," he replied, despondingly. 90 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. " Let us escajje, then, Naon." " It is not imjiossible. Oh, saliib, I am tied to ihia tree." " True ; but your hands and feet are free, you can unfjisten the cord around my legs," said I, lying upon my back, and placing my feet upon his breast. A minute of pamful anxiety, lest one of the soldiers might awake, and my legs were at liberty. A glow — a vigor ran through my whole fi-ame ; in another minute I had performed a similar service for Naon, and we were both free, mutely, thanking that Provi- dence to which, and that vice drunkenness, which slays both mentally and physically more thousands than the sword, pestilence, or famine, we owed our liberty. Stealthily creeping by the stupified slaves of the bottle, I seized a rifle and a flask of the liqueur — the first for our protection, the latter as a medicine that might restore our exhausted strength. The thoughts of my fellow-captive were bent on revenge; for, snatching up a naked sword, the next instant he would have jjlunged it into the body of the sleeping chief, had I not caught his descending arm, whispering at the same time, "Idiot, you will arouse them — follow softly." Thus recalled to a sense of the folly he had been about to commit, he followed nie — where, I knew not, thought not ; but for some minutes we ran through tlie tall rank grass. We reached the thick wood again. I could go no further, I clung to a tree for eupi)ort ; Xaon fell prostrate. Pain and exhaustion A, SERPENT AND A MONKEY. 01 H*i^ oa; :i^asters; not even the horror of being re- taken, It we remained in that spot, could lend U3 strength tmfficient to advance further. Fortunately, I thought of the flask of licjuor. I broke the neck against a tree, drank, and was revived. I i)oured some of the liquid down my comiianion's throat ; it had the same etfect upon him. Thus, with renewed, if but borrowed, strength, we hastened through the forest, which for a mile or two was but scantily wooded ; and then, as we proceeded, dwindled in size, mitil brushwood seemed to have taken the place of trees. Still onward as fast as our weakness would permit. The ground became more moist. This, however, in our fear of being overtaken, we heeded not ; no, not even when the moistness had become a swamp. Suddenly Naon called out ; doubtlessly we were being pursued; death rather than be again in the hands of the savages, and like a startled hare I sprang forward, and found myself head foremost in a bog. 1 had yet strength to recover my feet, but my presence of mind forsook me when I felt that I was iu a quagmire, sinking inch by inch. I had sunk to my- waist, when N"aon, by an effort more of will than physique, succeeded in rescuing me from a death too terrible to think of eveti noA\ without a shudder ; and which would have been inevitable, had I f illen farther from the brink of the treacherous morass. " You have saved my life, Naon," I exclaimed. "It was the will of Heaven; but," he added, "we are safe— we are safe, sahib ; this morass is not far from the Cariauers' villao-e." 92 THE WHITE ELEPHANT. ' Far or near, I can go no further without rest," I exclaimed. " It is l)ut wisdom, saliib, for nature Avill hold out no longer," said Naon, philosopliically ; and there, ujion damj) grass, near the edge of the morass, tired, exhausted, we laid down — and, in spite of our dan- ger, slept. My sleep, however, became troubled, for I dreamed we had again fallen into the hands of the Burman soldiery, who were putting me to death by rolling me down a hill in a barrel lined with dagger points, the pricking of which awoke me, when the cause of my dream became more evident than agree- able. My arms and legs were spotted with the small, hungry, and loathsome leeches wliich infest the marshes of Pegu. "Naon, Naon! the beasts are sucking me to death," I exclaimed, endeavoring to tear one off my skin. " The sahib must not touch them, or they will bleed him to death," exclaimed Naon, looking aghast, and fearing to pull them oii"; knowing, as he did, that, if thus removed, dangerous ulcers would ensue. "But this is unbearable. What is to be done, Naon ?" I said, almost crying with pain. " Tombakoo — tombakoo," replied he, pointing to a field within a short distance. I comprehended his meaning. It was a tobacco- field, where, fortunately for me, the plant was not only plentiful, but blackening to ripeness. Gathering Bonie, and having well moistened it, Naon poured the juice u2)on the vampires, who, to my great delight — A 8KRPENT AND A MONKEY. 93 for the atta(,']imcnt was entirely on one side — dropped oli' one by one, leaving me, however, in a very unen- viable state, for the bleeding did not entirely cease for some hours afterward. The most curious, and to you, I have no doubt, in- teresting part of this adventure will be, to be told that these dangerous reptiles have little in conmion either with the horse-leeches or those used by medical men in this countiy. They are of a dark speckled color, and not larger than a blood- worm ; neither do they craM'l like the leeches I have named, but move foi ward by a series of jerkings, by first fixing their head on a spot, and bringing their tail up to it by a sudden jerk, while at the same time their head is thrown forward for another grip ; thus, their movements are so quick, that before they are perceived they contrive to get uj) one's clothes and fix upon the skin ; and that too, easily, through the light thin clothes worn in an Indian climate. Perhaps, however, the best notion I can give you of the danger pedesti'ians, and even equestrians, have to fear from these insects, will be in the words of a recent traveler through a neighboring country where they abound. He writes: "In marching through the narrow paths among the woods, we were terribly annoyed by these vermin ; for, Avhenever any of us eat down, or even halted for a moment, we were sure to be immediately attacked by multitudes of leeches ; and before we could get rid of them our gloves and boots were filled Avith blood. This was attended with no small danger ; for if a soldier were, fron? 94: THE WHITE ELEPHANT. drunkenness or fatigue, to fall asleep no the ground, he must have perished by bleeding to death. On rising in the morning I have often found my bed- clothes and skin covered with blood in an alarmingt manner." This was sufficiently annoying ; but the same trav- eler then adds : " The Dutch, in their marches into the interior, at different times lost several of their men; and on setting out, they told us we should hardly be able to make our way for them. But though we were terribly annoyed, we all escaj)ed without any serious accident. Other animals, as well as man, are subject to the attack of these leeches. Horses, from their excessive plunging and kicking to get rid of these creatures when they fasten upon them, render it very unsafe for any one to ride through the Avoods of the interior." For two reasons did I rejoice at the discovery of this tobacco-field. First, that it had in all probability saved my life ; and, secondly, because it was a sure sign of tlie proximity of some village where I might rest until sufficiently restored to strength to hasten on my mission for the relief of my friend Mr. Johnson and my fellow-countrymen. Thus, I said — " The village of Carians, of which you spoke, must be near ; shall we be safe in their hands, Xaon ?" " Let the sahib stretch his eyes across those rice swamps," said Naon. " I did, and in the distance saw enough to convince me that our hopes of resting within human habitation were futile, at least for the present, for there were A SERPENT AND A MONKEY. 95 but the traces of a villnge— the mere charred remains of huts, fi-om which a dark smoke ascended. . " The village has been destroyed— the Enghsh army must be at hand," I exclaimed. "It is not so, sahib; the village has been burned by a Burman general on his march to Rangoon, and the people with their cattle driven further into the Ulterior ; so that, should the British venture so for from the sea, they may find neither food nor shelter," said Naon. " Truly, then, all that we can do is, to reach the nearest point of the Irrawaddy as best we may," said I, resolved to make the attempt, notwithstanding that I could only walk by the aid of the rifle. " It would be wiser to jump into the mouth of the first tiger or crocodile we may find, sahib ; for, Irom Ava to Rangoon, the Irrawaddy is crowded with war-boats filled with troops on their way to join the army of the Maha Bandoola." "War-boats or no war-boats, I will endeavor Naon." to force my way to the English fleet or army, " It would be wiser to enter the lair of a she tiger; for since Rangoon w^as entered by the English, the whole surrounding country has been occupied by the sv)ldiers of the Bandoola." " Rangoon taken ? the English prisoners are then rescued," said I, at once thinking of my friend. " It is not so, sahib ; for, before the British could force the stockade Avhich surrounded the city, the native inhabitants were all driven into the jungle." ^6 THE WniTE ELEPHANT. "But the European prisoners, the sah b Johnson!" I exclaimed, in an agony of impatience. " Were heavily ironed, and sent in a war-boat to Ava." " But the saliib Johnson ; do you know aught ot him ? Surely they Avould not torture the friend of tlie Prince of Prome with irons." " Listen, sahib : thy servant is the slave of the king's brother, and so, although more Portuguese than Burman, and moreover a Christian, the governor released him from the stocks. Yet when he became so unwise as to attempt to aid the sahib Johnson to escape from the Shoe Dagon, and was discovered, the governor ordered him to be ironed and sent to Ava with the Europeans," said Naon. " Then how did you escape ?" said I. " By giving the chief of the boatmen, who were to take us to Ava, a piece of gold ; in return for which, during the night, he closed hi:? eyes and ears while I swam ashore ; reaching which, I at once re- solved to make my Avay through wood and jungle to tjie petroleum wells at Yenangyoung." " AVhat, on foot, without food, or a gun Avhere- with to procure it ? Truly it was a brave resolve," said I. " I trusted to the hospitality of the inhabitants of the first village of Carians at which I should arrive , but alas ! my path Avas crossed by the savages from whom the sahib last night rescued me." ''Ball! Xaon, do not mention that again, for the aid was mutual; but let us resolve what to do." A SERPENT Ji.ND A MOKKEY. ^7 ^' Let US proceed at once to Yenangyoiing," said he. " Imi)ossible, for we have neither food nor ammuni- tion, without Avhich it Avould be as dangerous to en- covniter the beasts of the forests as to attempt to reach Rangoon through the native army, whose war- boats now cover the river and separate us from that city," said I. " The sahib will have powder and bullets enough for the journey," said he, smiling, and pulling from his jacket a pouch of ball-cartridges which it appeared he had snatched from the ground where it had been thrown by the soldiers. " The possession of this alters the case ; so now lead on, Naon, and I will follow — that is, as far as my legs will carry me," I said ; and Naon led the way, once more, into the jungle; but in a different direc- tion from that in which we had escaped. "Stay, Xaon," I said, as the jungle, tall grass, and forest in the distance reminded me of tigers, snakes, and other any thing-but-hospitable inhabitants of those wild regions ; " let us load the rifle." " Hush ! not wise, sahib. To fire it in any ex- tremity now would be to bring upon us some strag- gling party, in whos