160 JOURNEYS IN PEESIA LETTER xxiv Under the rule of the present Prince Governor com- plete religious toleration exists in Hamadan, and the missionaries have a fair field, though it must never be forgotten that a proselytising Christian, rendering honour to Christ as God, by his mere presence introduces a dis- turbing element into a Moslem population. In consequence of this tolerant official spirit there are a few Moslem girls among the sixty boarders here. In addition there are a large number of day pupils. The girls live in native fashion, and wear native dresses of red cotton printed with white patterns, white cli&dars, and such ornaments as they possess. They sit on the floor at their meals, at each of which one of the ladies is present. They have excellent food, meat once a day in summer and twice in winter, bread, tea, soup, curds, cheese, melons, cucumbers, pickles, and gourds. The winter supplies are now being laid in, and cara- vans of asses are arriving daily with firewood, cheeses, and melons. The elder girls cook, and all the washing, making, and mending are done at home, each elder girl in addition having a small family of young ones under her care. The only servant is the Iheestie or water-carrier. The dormitories, class-rooms, eating-room, and hammam are large and well ventilated, but very simple. A plain but thorough education of the "National School" type is given, in combination with an industrial training, fitted for girls whose early destiny is wifehood and maternity. Some of the teachers are men, but the religious instruction, on which great stress is laid, is given by the ladies themselves, and is made singularly interest- ing and attractive. Music and singing are regarded as among the recreations. The discipline is perfect, and the t dirtiest, roughest, lumpiest, and most refractory raw material is quickly transformed into cleanliness, bright- ness, and docility, partly by the tone of the school and