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CEYLON 



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THE CINGALESE. 



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It is a goodly sight to see 



What Heaven hath done for this delicious land ! 
What £raits of fragrance blosh on every tree ! 
What goodly prospects o'er the hills expand !" 

Btron. 



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CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE ; 

THEI& 

HISTORY, GOVERNMENT, AND RELIGION, 

THE :.-,--- --- : 

ANTIQUITIES, INSTITUTIONS, PEODtCE,' 

REVENUE, AND CAPABIL5ltf5S 
OF THE island; 

WITH 

ANECDOTES ILLUSTBATING 

THE 

ICAMEBS AND CUSTOMS 

OF THE 

PEOPLE. 
BY 

HENRY CHARLES SIRR, M.A., 

OF '< 

LINCOLN'S INN, B ABBISTEB-AT-L A W, 

AND 

LATE DEPUTY QUEEN'S ADVOCATE 

FOE THB 

SOUTHERN CIBCUIT IN THE ISLAND OF CEYLON, 

VOL. I. 

LONDON: 

WILLIAM SHOBERL, PUBLISHER, 

20, GREAT MARLBOROUGH STREET. 



1850. 
W.nUttti at ^tutioxwc^* Hall. 



V 



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• • • . » • " 



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* • 



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• 1. 



• c 



• •»>■•• a 



GARPENTIEK 

LONDON t 

PRINTED BY G. J. PALMBR, SAVOY 8TRSET, STitANO. 



ft 



TO 

THE MOST NOBLE AND RIGHT HONORABLE 
JAMES BROWNLOW WILLIAM GASCOIGNE CECIL, 
MARQUIS OF SALISBURY, K.G , D.C.L., 
LORD LIEUTENANT OF THE COUNTY OF MIDDLESEX, 

&>c. &c, &c. 

^ii fMatk iii, hp pttmiMaxif rtiptttfuUjn tstXiiaiittSy 

BY HIS LORDSHIP'S 

MOST OBEDIENT, 

HUMBLE SERVANT, 

THE AUTHOR. 



791079 



PREFACE. 



From the extxaordinaiy interest created by 
recent events in Ceylon, and the desire for infor- 
mation evinced by all classes upon the subject of 
the late Rebellion, we have been induced to prepare 
the following pages for the press, some portion of 
which appeared in a leading periodical shortly 
after our return from the Colony. 

Our object has been to unfold the capabilities 
of this beautiful island, and call attention to its 
undeveloped resources : amongst the former may 
be classed the proposed emigration to Newera- 
Ellja, and amongst the latter the long talked of, 
and essential undertaking — the restoration of the 
ancient tanks — the whole credit of which last- 
named proposition, a recent writer, who has never 
visited the Colony, has most unjustly claimed for 
himself, although the greater number of, if not ally 



TIU PREFACE. 

authors who have sojourned in the "Cinnamon 
Isle" have referred to the subject. 

In the performance of our task, we have endea- 
voured to notice, and believe that we have con- 
sidered, every topic of interest, described the 
general features of the country, its glorious an- 
tiquities and literature, and illustrated the cha- 
racter and habits of its mixed population. 

As a book of reference, we have essayed to 
render these pages useful, by the classification 
of chapters, each devoted to a particular subject. 

The ancient history of Lanka-diva has been 
glanced at, and its modem, or that portion thereof 
which is connected with European rule, has been 
fully entered into, and, being brought down to the 
present period, it includes a complete account 

OF THE late KaNDIAN REBELLION, ITS ORIGIN, 

AND CONSEQUENCES, together ivith an expose of 
the supposed grievances of our fellow-subjects^ 
and the critical position of the coloffial govern- 
ment. 

We have also ventured, from personal observa- 
tion and facts, to show the inefficiency of death, 
as a punishment, or example, amongst a popula- 
tion professing the tenets of Buddhism. 

April, I860. 
1, New Square, Lincoln* s Inn, 



IX 



CONTENTS 



OF THE FIRST TOLUME. 



CHAPTER I. 



Point de Galle — Beauty of the scenery and harbour — 
Canoes — Arrival of steamer — Scene on board — Native 
traders — Touters to the lodging-houses — Custom 
House — Grotesque appearance of Chitty Man — De- 
scription of the fort — Guard-house — Queen's house — 
Dwellings — Moormen — Pettah — ^Paying for your com- 
plexion. ..... Page i 



CHAPTER II. 

Going to call the coach, instead of the coach calling for 
you — Preparations for Departure — Description of the 
Royal Mails in Ceylon — ^The Colombo road — ^Wild Pea- 
cock — Guano— Monkeys — Toddy drawers — Bentotte — 
Restive horses — Anecdote — Caltura — Beauty of scenery 
— Cinnamon plantations — ^Pagoda tree — The fashionable 
quarter of Colombo— Colpetty — The Galle Face — Curious 
gazers at newcomers — Arrival of the Royal Mail, gives 



X CONTENTS. 

rise to ooigectures as to who the new-comers axe, and 
wherefore they have come to Ceylon. . .19 

CHAPTER III. 

Colombo — Harbour — Custom-house — Animated scene — 
Derivation of the name of the Port — ^Fortifications — ^Troops 
— Queen's House — ^Public offices in the Fort — ^Pettah — 
Native traders — Churches, chapels, religious and chari- 
table institutions — ^Public offices in the Pettah — ^Native 
police — Slave Island — Galle Face^Colonial manners — 
The effisct of climate upon the female character — The 
fashionable drive — Beauty of the spot — Sunset — Sea- 
breezes — Evening — Fire-flies — Cinnamon — ^Tribut^ de- 
manded by the Portuguese— Cultivation introduced by the 
Butch — ^Value of the monopoly to the Dutch and English 
governments — ^Description of the shrub — Uses of every 
portion of the cinnamon-laurel — ^Peeling knives— Nimi- 
ber of crops in the year — ^Preparing the spice — Challias- 
or cinnamon peelers — Punkahs — ^The result of an imex- 
pected downfall — Dessert — Crows, their boldness and 
audacity. . . . . . .39 

CHAPTER IV. 

Situation of Kandy — ^Route — Bridge of boats — Paddy ter- 
races — ^Aspect of the people — ^Ambepusse — Mountain 
zone — Kadaganawa pass — Mountain scenery — Talapat, 
or great fan palm — ^Animal life — ^Draught elephants — 
Peredenia — Bridge and Botanical gardens — Curious 
specimens of the vegetable kingdom — Travellers' friend 
— City of Kandy — ^Artificial lake — ^Bathing house of the 
Queen's — Palace — Native shops — Customs — Buildings — 
Artillery-barracks — Deficiency of water — The governor's 



CONTENTS. XI 

residence— Beauty of the architecture and site— Views of 
the valley of Doombera — Major Davie's tree — Grounds 
of the Pavilion — ^Lady Horton's road — Grandeur of sce- 
nery — Altitude of the mountains — Military station on 
One-tree hill — ^Legend — ^Kurunaigalla tunnel — Compul- 
sory labour — Animals, birds, and reptiles, in the sur- 
rounding country. . . . . .72 

CHAPTER V. 

Route to Trincomalee — Native suspension bridge — Caves 
of Dambool — ^Remains of tanks — DiflSculty of construct 
ing a portion of the road — ^Hot wells — ^Temperature of 
the waters — ^Beneficial applica^on in certain diseases — 
Legend attached to the waters — Coast and harbour of 
Trincomalee — situation, latitude, longitude— Size of har- 
bour — Fort of Trincomalee — Town — buildings — 
Troops — ^Insalubrity of the climate — ^Trincomalee named 
in ancient records— Colony of Malabars established there 
before 125 A.D. — Interesting religious ceremony on the 
promonotory in honour of Siva — Pillar to the memory of 
Francia van Rhode — Melancholy history — Fantastic 
appearance of the Quartz Rocks — ^Principal roads 99 

CHAPTER VI. 

Newera EUia — ^The sanatorium of the island — ^The road — 
Mountain conflagration — Convalescent station for the 
military, established 1829 — Cascades of Rambodde — 
Newera Ellia a royal residence in 1628 — Scenery — Eurc^ 
pean aspect of the dwellings— Vegetation — ^The town- 
Public buildings— Salubrity of the climate — ^Farming ex- 
periments — Great capabilities and fertile soil of Newera 
Ellia — Proposed plan of emigration — Price of stock and 



I 



XU CONTENTS. 

produce — Iron found on the plain — Carriage roads — Foot- 
path to the summit of Pedro-talla galla — Horton Plains, 
the highest table-land in Ceylon — Luxuriant specimens 
of the Nepenthes distillatoria, or pitcher plant — Nelu, or 
honey plant. . . . . .115 

» 

CHAPTER VII. 

Geological character of the island — Minerals — Salt lakes 
— Revenue arising from them — Tanks — ^Agriculture — ^Na- 
tive plough — Mystic rite when the paddy is trodden out 
— Cultivation — Lemon grass — ^Value and uses of cocoar 
nut trees — Cinnamon — Coffee — Sugar — Cotton — Tobacco 
— Areka nuts — ^Ambuprasudana, or water nut — Jack and 
bread-fruit trees — Indigo — Mulberry trees — ^Talapat palm 
— Mee tree — Ebony tree— Calamander tree — Red sandal 
and satin-wood trees — The Kabook tree — Variety of the 
vegetable world — The bo, or sacred tree — Capabilities of 
cultivation and extraordinary fertility "of the soil — Ex- 
pense of housekeeping — Prices of provisions at Galle and 
Colombo— Meat — Poultry — Fish and fisheries — ^Fruit — 
Vegetables — Servants* wages — House-rent — Same at 
Kandy and Newera Ellia. . . . .134 

CHAPTER VIII. 

Natural history— Elephants of Ceylon spoken of by Pliny 
and Dionysius — Sagacity — Trained to be executioners by 
the kings of Kandy — Ancient mode of valuing elephants 
— Anecdote — Catching elephants with the atmaddoo — 
Ornaments made from the coarse hairs of the tail — King 
of Kandy's personal inspection of captiu'ed elephants — 
Tyranny — Knox's account — Rogue-elephant — Elephant- 
shooting — Major Rogers — His miraculous escape — Sin- 



mmmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmi 



CONTENTS. Xlll 

gular death — Elephants ascend the mountains — ^Tusks 
found buried in the jungles — Elks — Deer — Walmeenya — 
Beauty and docility — Wild buffaloes — Bears —Cheetahs, 
or leopards —Kandian mode of snaring them — Distinctive 
peculiarity — ^WHd hogs — Animals found in jungle— Rats 
— Shrew — ^Anecdote of a musk-rat — Ornithological speci- 
mens — ^Land-leeches — Ticks — Snakes — Anaconda— Cobra 
capello, or the sacred naga of the Cingalese — ^Warning— 
Hair-breadth escape — ^Tic polonga — Legend — Ichneumon 
attacking a cobra — Crocodiles — Hunting — Crocodile- 
charmers — ^Native method of catching and destroying 
crocodiles — ^Fecundity — Number of eggs — Pugnacity of 
the young — Insect tribes — White ants — ^Destructive pro- 
pensities — Their nests. . . . .183 

CHAPTER IX. 

Geographical position of Ceylon — Size, fertility, and produce 
— Mentioned by classical writers of antiquity — Hindoo and 
Cingalese records— Date of the submersion of the island, 
nearly coincides with the Mosaic — ^Indian conqueror, 
Wijeya — Aborigines — Island visited by the Romans — 
Cingalese ambassadors visit Rome— Accotmt given in the 
sixth century by Cosmas Indicopleustes — Island first 
visited by the Portuguese in 1505 — ^Native account — 
Dutch in Ceylon — Wars between the Portuguese and 
Dutch — Affecting historical anecdote — Battles — The 
Portuguese possessions in Ceylon obtained by the Dutch 
in 1658 — List of the Portuguese Governors. . 218 

CHAPTER X. 
Historical accoimt continued from 1659 to 1795, when the 



XIY COIfTENTS. 

Dutch surrendered, by oapitulation, their possessions in 
Geylon to the British — ^list of Dutch Goyemors — Sum- 
mary of the effect of Portuguese and Dutch rule upon 
the Cingalese character — Philaiethe's account of the 
same. ...... 254 

CHAPTER XI. 

Kajidian character — Personal appearance-— Cingalese of the 
lowlands — Charact^ of the women — ^Native goyemment — 
King's officers — Customs — Mode of smelting iron — British 
rule from 1796 to 1806 — Governor North — ^First English 
goyemor — Supreme Court of Judicature established — 
Kandian war — ^Fearfiil massacre of British troops— 
Dastardly and disgraceful conduct of Major Davie— 
Extraordinary escape of two soldiers — Summary of poli- 
tical events — ^False policy of General Macdowall — ^Noble 
conduct of Captain Nouradeen — Bravery of Major John- 
son — Sir Thomas MaitJand succeeds the Honour- 
able Frederick North — The judicious rule of Governor 
North. . . . .277 

CHAPTER XII. 

From 1806 to 1844 — ^Sri Wikrama's tyranny — ^Frrst Adikar 
fieunily mxudered — ^Affeoting account of the execution — 
Heroic conduct of the wife and son — ^Babe taken from 
the mother's breast to be decapitated — ^Rebellion in 
Kandy — Martial law proclaimed — ^Tranquillity restored — 
Dalada relic— Dealii of the King of Xandy — Governor Sir 
CoUn Campbell — His policy — Bishopric of Colombo con- 
stituted — The first Bishop Dr. Chapman — His exertions 
and character — ^Rebellion in Xandy — ^The Priests' causes 
of dissatisfaction — ^New taxes and first disturbance — ^Pre* 



CONTENTS. XV 

tender proclaimed — His progress — Eebels enter and 
destroy the public buildings at Matel^ — Troops march 
from Kandy— Conflict with rebels — Martial lawproclaimed 
— Eeward offered for Pretender — ^Destruction of Kumegalle 
— Observer newspaper exciting discontent — ^Alarming 
meeting of natives near the seat of Government — ^Attack 
of the police— Mr. Elliot addresses the mob — ^Reinforce- 
ments sent to Kandy — ^The Commandant takes possession 
of the Dalada relic — ^Pretender's brother shot — Result of 
Courts Martial — ^Special sessions of Supreme Court — The 
Chief Justice's charge— His recommendation to mercy — 
Lord Torrington's reply. . . . .318 



ILLUSTRATIONS. 



VOLUME I. 



View of Colombo 

Map of the Island of Ceylon 

Chitty Man 

Cingalese Man 

Cingalese Woman 

Batramahatmeer 



Frantispieee 

Page I 

11 

. 279 

. 282 
. 284 



VOLUME II. 



The Lake of Eimdy . . . Frontispiece 

Kandian Woman • • ^ . .35 

Cingalese Pins, or Ornaments for the Hair . 36 
Bnddha and Priests • . . .116 

Profile of Cingalese Woman . . .174 



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CEYLON AND IHE CINGALESE. 



CHAPTER I. 

Point de Galle — ^Beauty of the scenery and harbour — 
Canoes— Arrival of steamer — Scene on board — ^Native 
traders — Touters to the lodging-houses — Custom 
House — Grotesque appearance of Chitty Man — De- 
scription of the fort — Guard-house — Queen's house — 
Dwellings — Moormen — Pettah — Paying for your com- 
plexion. 

Prosaic language is inadequate to convey a 
faithful portraiture of the exquisite scenery, truly 
oriental in its character, that abounds in the Cin- 
namon Isle, the poet's pliime, and painter's pencil, 
being alone calculated for the purpose. The 

VOL. I. B 



, • • • • • • . 

. * .• • • * • • . 



• • 






2 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

extreme fertility of the soil, and the magnificence 
of the vegetable kingdom, in no part of Ceylon 
are more perceptible than in the neighbourhood 
of Point de Galle, the traveller's eye dwelling 
with delight upon the varied, and verdant foliage 
which encircles the sea shore. The pellucid 
azure of the cloudless skies, the sun's glittering 
beams reflected in millions of sparkling rays on 
the bosom of the blue ocean, the waves rolling 
and dashing in volumes of snowy surf over the 
dark yellow rocks, present a picture of all that 
is sublime and lovely in Nature. 

The harbour of Point de Galle lies at the 
southern exti'emity of the Island of Ceylon, being 
an inland bay of a semicircular or horse-shoe 
form, constructed by the all^-bounteous hand of 
Nature, and is situate in lat. 6° O 59° north, and 
long. 80** 17' 2" lat. Skirting the harbour, are 
masses of rock, riven by the dashing of the 
surge, and worn by the hand of time into many 
fantastic and picturesque forms. In the back 
ground are cocoa-nut palms (Cocos nucifera) 
with their stately but slender trikiks o'er-topping 
all the other trees, and outvieing the rest of the 
vegetable world in majestic graceful loveliness. 
Nothing can be more elegant than the elongated 
green leaves, with their feathery fringe, which 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 3 

wave in a canopied form from the summit of the 
tree, droop around the slender stem, moving 
gently to and fro as the sea-breeze wantons 
among them. Clusters of nuts (or fruit) of an 
oval shape, measuring from seventeen to twenty 
inches in diameter, grow amongst the leaves close 
to the trunk of the tree ; and these being of a 
green less vivid than their brilliant colouring, 
contrast exquisitely with the subdued hue of the 
dark brown bark of the trunk. Mingled with 
these stately trees is the majestic bread-fruit tree 
(Artocarpus incisa) with its umbrageous foliage, 
and enormous emerald-green leaves; from the 
branches are suspended the large round fruit, 
covered with a rough rind, gladdening alike eye 
and heart, with the magnificent majestic beauty 
of luxuriant vegetation. Near to this tree will be 
seen the slender papaw tree, (Carica papaya,) the 
stem gradually tapering to the top, where the 
leaves spread forth in a parachute form, the 
fruit, bright yellow and melon shaped, hanging 
beneath them. 

Interspersed Amongst these monarchs of vege- 
tation are various other trees, clothed in rich 
foliage, but of smaller dimensions, contrasting 
well with those of larger growth. Imagine the 
waves foaming and frothing, dashing against and 

B 2 



4 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

over the yellow rocks, then a billow gracefully 
rolling appearing to gain increased strength as 
it reaches the shingly beach, on which it is pre- 
cipitately driven in a shower of white spray, the 
froth remaining for a few moments on the glis- 
tening strand, and even as you gaze, becoming 
absorbed. On the imdulating bosom of the 
swelling blue ocean sparkling with the bright 
rays of Sol, in all the varied prismatic tints, 
a few European vessels are riding at anchor, 
their furled sails hanging in graceful festoons 
from the yards. Intermingling with these craft 
are the canoes of the natives, nidely constructed 
barks hollowed out of the trunk of a tree, with 
some transverse sticks for benches ; to one side 
of the canoe is fastened an outrigger, formed of 
a slender spar nearly of equal length with the 
vessel to which it is attached by two curved arms ; 
this outrigger floating upon the water, prevents 
the possibility of the canoe being capsized. 

These primitive craft vary in length from twelve 
to twenty feet, and in width fi'om two to three, 
being propelled by paddles three feet and a half 
long, roughly wrought into a battledore shape, 
the three or more men using them being seated 
at either extremity, and in the centre of the 
canoe. These fragile barks are usually laden 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 5 

with luscious fruits, vegetables, fish, or other 
articles of an edible nature, for the use of our 
ships; and the native occupants of the canoes, 
are men and youths of bright bronze complexion, 
with well-formed features, and soft black almond- 
shaped eyes, the luxuriant long black hair of the 
former being twisted into a thick knot at the back 
of the head ; of the latter, allowed to flow " o'er 
their shoulders bare," a smaU handkerchief, 
scarf, or piece of cotton, tied aroimd their loins 
forming their sole clothing. Place all these in- 
animate and animated adjuncts under cloudless 
skies, and a tropical sun, with the thermometer 
standing at ninety-six, and a faint conception 
may be formed of the scenery around, and har- 
bour of Point de Galle. 

As soon as the steamer from England arrives, 
equal excitement prevails on board the vessel 
and on the shore, and as we wish to edify our 
indulgent readers "Delectando pariterque mo- 
mendo,'- we will imagine the vessel to have ar- 
rived during the night, and the captain as anxious 
to take in his supply of coal, and pursue his 
voyage, as the passengers are to touch terra 
firma again, after passing days or weeks without 
enjoying that luxury, although it may only be 
for a few hours. The day has dawned, the 



6 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

morning gun has boomed o^er the waters, waken- 
ing all slumberers, and those amongst the pas- 
sengers who are about to make Lankadivas^ 
verdant shores their home for a time, are soon 
busily en^loyed in packing up their trayeliing 
appiul^nances, anxious to avail themselves of the 
first boat that pushes ofi*, to take them to the 
shore. Many, buoyant with hope, and in the 
full strength and vigour of manhood, looking 
forward with eager anticipation to the comple- 
tion of schemes and projects, whereby they hope 
to make a fortune, resolving to devote the whole 
energy of their nature to ensure the accomplish- 
ment of their plans. Could some of the dreamers 
but raise the veil of futurity, numbers would 
shrink back appalled ; for, in lieu of wealth and 
renown, they would see the phantoms of disease 
aftd untimely death throwing around their gloomy 
shadows, an J hovering in their path. But, as 
the orient sun rises in unclouded splendour, 
casting the red blush of his morning beams 
around on land and sea, so man revels in bright 
visions of what is to be, until the dull realities 
of life, like clouds obscuring the brilliant beams 
of the planeti cast their shade over the rays of 
hope. 

* The ancient name used by the natives for Ceylon. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. - 7 

To retUTTli to our description of the harbour.- As 
soon a43 the sun has risen, the waters appeA^t to 
teem with canoes, hastening to the steamed, 
soime bringing provisions, otliers to land pai^^ 
sengers and their baggage, Whilst large boats 
heavily freighted with coal, force their way be- 
tween the lesser craft. The scene of confiki^ion 
on board the steam-vessel soon becomes inde- 
scribable. Passengers are seen tossing their various 
packages into the canoe that is to bear them 
to the shore, and hurriedly attempt to descend 
the ladder at the stdamer^s side, but in so doing, 
encounter coolees ascending, carrying baskets 
of coal, and each then jostles and hustles the 
other, in the attempt made by eithet party to 
pursue their respective routei^. Then arises ^nd 
resounds a conflision of tongues and languages, 
only to be equalled by that of Babel, exclama- 
tions in Englil^h, Cingaiese, French, Tamil, 
Portugese, Hindostanee, in short in every knoWn, 
and almost unknown, languagie in the world 
assail the ear, with comments neither polite, nor 
peculiarly complimentary upon the agility of the 
tawny sons of Adam. A native with a very 
minute portion of dirty rag, attached to his person 
through the medium of a piece of coir rope tied 
around his loins, will step upon the deck, with 



8 . CBTLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

some trifling article for sale, and possibly en- 
counter a blushing bride, or fair damsel fresh 
from Albion's shores. The fair lady retreats a pace 
or two, with a slight scream at sight of the un- 
clothed dusky figure, placing her hand before 
her eyes to exclude the disagreeable vision. 

Then will follow a Moorman with shaven head, 
a round embroidered cloth cap, thickly padded 
with cotton, placed on the top of his shoni 
cranium to protect it from the sun's powerful rays, 
with at least six yards of cotton, either white or 
coloured, tied round his loins with a showy silk 
handkerchief, forming a kind of petticoat reach- 
ing to his ankles, (called by the natives Comboy,) 
but leaving him in a complete state of nudity 
from the waist upwards. This demi-nude speci- 
men of humanity has in all probability brought 
some articles of vertu or curiosity to sell, at all 
events what he considers so, consisting of knife- 
handles, and snufT-boxes, cut out of the molar 
tooth of the elephant, some fine samples of va- 
rious coloured glass which he endeavours to palm 
off as precious stones and gems of the first water. 
These are accompanied or succeeded by divers 
other natives and inhabitants of the island, some 
of them offering tortoise-shell and silver bodkins 
for the hair, others calamander work-boxes inlaid 



J^ " *•■ — !<■ ■■■ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 9 

with ivory, carved ebony caskets, and baskets 
made from the porcupine's quills, for sale. 
Amongst the multitude who regard the steam^ 
boat gentlemen, travellers being thus designated 
by all the native denizens of Ceylon, as their 
lawful game, are the touters for the hottelsj for 
so lodging-houses are called by these copper- 
coloured gentry. The touter is invariably a 
half-caste, or burgher, who generally abounds in 
a very undue appreciation of his own dignity, 
and position, and this gentleman, in his own 
estimation, will place a card in the hands of a 
traveller and descant most fluently in broken 
English, upon the good cheer, moderate charges, 
and comforts that are to be found in the parti- 
cular hottel which he has the felicity to represent. 
So soon as the eloquence of the touter has in- 
duced a passenger, or passengers, to trust him- 
self or themselves to his guidance, he intimates 
to a coolee that it is his will and pleasure, that 
such and such baggage should be placed in a 
particular canoe, not condescending to lower his 
dignity by touching, lifting, or carrying port- 
manteau, carpet-bag, hat-box, or dressing-case. 
When these minor arrangements are completed, 
he precedes the traveller down the ladder, el- 
bowing his way, vociferating in an authoritative 

B 5 



10 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

manner, to clear a path as he rudely thrusts the 
coolees aside. Most ludicrous is the assumption 
of these half-castes, who are held in supreme 
contempt by the fiill-caste natives, their greatest 
term of reproach being — " he burgher man," (or 
half-caste,) and many a hearty gujfaw is in- 
dulged in at their expense by Europeans. 

The landing-place is a pier, extending some 
two hundred feet into the water, at the shore 
end of which is a rude building, bearing a strong 
resemblance to a dilapidated bam ; this is the 
Custom-house, and to it the baggage is taken, 
and the inquiry made if it consists solely of 
personal effects, or if there is any merchandize 
intermixed. If the reply is satisfactory, the 
packages are passed unopened, after the owner 
has signed a declaration that he has no article 
for sale or barter; for should there be any mar- 
ketable commodities, the packing-cases are de- 
tained to be examined, and duties levied. Never 
shall we forget our amazement at the grotesque 
costume and appearance of one of the subordi- 
nate Custom-house officers, who was a native of 
the Malabar coast, of the Chitty caste, or those 
professing belief in the doctrines of the Romish 
Church. The man carried on his head a black 
velvet cap about six inches in height, which 






■» - * 

• ^ ^ 






* .m •* J -> -> 



f , ,') 



l»' 



"f^-^^^^^f^ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 11 

projected forward in a hom-like manner, on either 
side of his head, the edges of the head-dress being 
trimmed with a thin gold cord. His long black 
hair, redolent of cocoa-nut oil, was combed back 
from the copper-coloured face, and twisted into a 
knot, close down to the nape of the neck, protrud- 
ing beneath the head gear. In each ear were three 
gold rings, studded with coloured stones, and 
these ear-rings being fully thirteen inches in 
diameter, rested upon the shoulders, a square 
piece having been cut out of the lobe of the ear, 
to allow the insertion of these ponderous and 
barbarous decorations. This mortal had on a 
white cotton jacket, open in front, thus exposing 
to view his hairy breast, although to one side of the 
vest were attached innumerable jewelled buttons ; 
round his loins were longitudinally rolled several 
yards of white calico, (forming the petticoat or 
oomboy,) the end of which being brought round 
his body, hung down the front of his person. 
The comboy was confined round his loins by a 
handkerchief folded crossways, the extremities of 
which being pendant at his back, formed a 
novel caudal termination, not hitherto mentioned 
by naturalists. The comboy reaching to his 
ankles, which were guiltless of covering, as well as 
his unshod splay feet, which appeared doubly 



12 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

brown from being contrasted with the white 
petticoat. This gentleman carried in his hand 
as a protection against the sun's rays, a Chinese 

^umbrella, made of black varnished paper, with 
a bamboo stick for the handle ; and we do not 
think that our visual organs ever beheld a more 
ludicrous spectacle than the tout ensemble of this 
being presented. 

We cannot dwell upon the impression pro- 
duced on the minds of those fresh from Europe, 
when they gaze for the Jirst time upon a crowd 
of half or rather unclothed Asiatics, who throng 
around them when they land, some being stimu- 
lated by the desire to induce the " steam-boiit 
gentlemen'' to purchase their goods, whilst others, 
from mere curiosity and indolence, will stand 
staring, open mouthed ; the boys with no other 

. covering save that which nature has bestowed on 
all, namely that of their long hair streaming down 
their backs, clamorously asking for pice^ or half- 
pence. 

The Fort of Galle, as the town is called, is 
approached by an ancient moss-grown archway, 
which, with the ramparts and town, were built 
by the Dutch after they had obtained possession 
of GaJle, A.D. 1640. Tradition affirms that Galle 
is indebted for its appellation and symbol — a 



^i^ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 13 

cock — ^to an error of the Portugese conquerors, 
who preceded the Dutch in Ceylon. The natives 
named this spot most appropriately, as it is sur- 
rounded by rocks, Galla, which is the Cingalese 
for rock : but the Portugese confounded this 
word with Gallus, or cock. Galle is generally 
garrisoned by a company of the " Ceylon Rifles," 
composed of Malays and Kaffres, and a detach- 
ment of whatever regiment of the line is on ser- 
vice in Ceylon. The uniform of the Ceylon 
Rifles is dark green, and the Malays make 
tolerably efficient soldiers, (being far more in- 
trepid and active than the Kaffres,) when com 
manded by judicious officers. Under the gate- 
way, a sentinel is stationed; and opposite to 
the archway, as you enter, is the guard-house, 
tenanted either by our own soldiers or by the 
Asiatics, as the duty alternates between the 
regiment of the line and the Ceylon Rifles. In 
the verandah of this building, the soldiers lounge 
when off* guard, and if our men are there, they 
may be frequently seen enjoying the luxury of a 
cheroot with extreme gusto ; but, if the Rifles are 
on duty, the Malays and Kaffres are invariably 
to be seen masticating a compound of the leaves 
and nuts of the areka palm and chunam, bespat- 
tering the whole verandah and ground with the 



14 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

disgusting red saliva, produced by chewing their 
favourite combination called betel. 

Situate upon an ascent, a short distance from 
the guard-house, is the Queen's house, a gover- 
nor's residence, when he visits Galle. This 
building was erected in 1687, and over the door- 
way the date is inscribed, above which appears 
the local symbol — the cock. A verandah ex- 
tends the whole length of this residence, which is 
shaded by some magnificent trees introduced 
from Java by one of the early Dutch governors, 
the botanical name of these splendid exotics is 
Mimusops Elengi. The ramparts extend about 
a mile and a quarter, enclosing the town, which 
consists of three principal streets, these being 
intersected by several minor ones. The houses 
built on either sides of the streets, are but one 
story in height — or to speak more correctly, con- 
sist merely of ground floors, and, to the best of 
our remembrance, there were but three residences 
at Galle that had an upper story — these were 
called an up-stairs. The roofs are tiled, project- 
ing beyond the outer walls, being supported by 
wooden pillars, thus forming a covered balcony, 
or verandah, in front of which are suspended 
tat^y to subdue the intense glare of the sun's 
beams, and exclude the gaze of the inquisitive 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 16 

passers by. These tats, or blinds, are composed 
of split reeds, held together by the interlacing of 
thin coir or string, and are attached to the roof 
of the verandah by rope. The roofs of all domi- 
ciles in Ceylon, whether tenanted by Europeans 
or Asiatics, slope outwards from the centre walls* 
which are considerably higher than the external 
ones ; the timbers resting upon the walls, leave 
a space between the wall-plate and the tiles, for 
the admission of air — ^thus allowing a thorough 
current to pass through the residence — and this 
arrangement of roof is met with in all tropica 
countries. The rooms are usually lofty and large 
and, instead of glazed windows, Venetian blinds 
are used, doors and windows being alike left 
wide open, a white screen being placed before 
the former, to prevent the persons and actions of 
the inmates being observed by all who choose to 
look, and a thin blind of open cane- work is occa- 
sionally affixed to the windows. In short, all 
privacy and retirement are sacrificed to that great 
desideratum in a hot climate — namely, obtaining 
and being in as much cool air as possible. 

One street in Galle is inhabited principally by 
Moormen, some of whom are extremely wealthy, 
although the external appearance of their dwell- 
ings frequently indicates abject poverty, com- 

7 



16 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

bined with uncleanliness. These men traffic in 
precious stones, rice, paddy, grain of all descrip- 
tions, cottons, prints, hardware, groceries, fruits,- 
salt, poultry, saltpetre ; in short, in every imagina- 
ble commodity whereby money is to be made. In 
fact, they even trade in that valuable article itself, 
as they lend cash where they believe repayment 
is certain, and where they can obtain exorbi- 
tant interest — for there are not more avaricious 
usurers in the world than the Moormen of 
Ceylon. 

The town of Galle, although a clean pictur- 
esque little spot, has one serious drawback, 
namely, the want of pure water; and neither 
Europeans nor natives will use the water that is 
procured in the fort for drinking or culinary pur- 
poses, as it is peculiarly unwholesome. The 
prejudice of the natives is carried to so great 
an extent, that very few, if any, will lave their 
persons with the water that is obtained from the 
wells in the fort, as they declare that a disease is 
produced by it resembling elephantiasis, which 
they call a Galla leg. Water of the best and 
purest description is procured in the vicinity of 
the fort, and the w^ater-carriers gain a good liveli- 
hood by furnishing the inhabitanl;^ of the town 
with this essential requisite to health and com- 
fort. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 17 

Within the fort is the Dutch church, which is 
used also for the service of the Established 
Church, and a Wesleyan chapel, the Catholic 
places of worship, and the Mahomedans being 
situated outside the fort. The pettah or bazaar 
— ^market in our phraseology — is well supplied 
with fish, fruits, and vegetables, which are alike 
plentiful and clieap, the prices of all edibles being 
naterially lower than at Colombo, or Kondy. 
rhe trade at Galle is confined principally to the 
exports — consisting of native produce, details of 
which will be given in a chapter devoted to the 
purpose. 

Having been informed it was necessary to 
secure places in the mail, if we intended proceed- 
ing to Colombo, we walked to the coach-office to 
take them, and our astonishment was extreme 
when we read the following announcement, which 
was printed in large type — ^^ Fares from Galle to 
Colombo, European gentlemen, £St 10^.; Mood- 
leors, native noblemen, and their descendants, 
£\ 10*.; proctors* and natives, ^1. Upon in- 
quiring, we were informed, there was no outside 
or inferior places in the coach, and that the same 

* Attorneys are called proctors in the island, and, during 
our residence in Ceylon, mostly all belonging to the frater- 
nity were burghers, or half castes. 



18 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

scale of charges was enforced to whatever part 
of die island the coach went. In vain we expos- 
tulated at this absurdity, trying to convince the 
good-humoured proprietor, that our rank cer- 
tainly taas lower than a nobleman, and our 
dimensions might be less than those of a proctor, 
or native, but, despite our rhetoric, we were 
obliged to pay the fare ; for said Mr. Christoffaletz 
smiling, and disclosing a set of well-shaped white 
teeth, which would be envied by many une belle 
dame, " You cannot say you are not a European 
gentleman, — can you ?" This argument was con- 
clusive, the money was forthwith placed in his 
hands. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 19 



CHAPTER II. 



Going to call the coach, instead of the coach calling for 
you — Preparations for Departure — ^Description of the 
Royal Mails in Ceylon — ^The Colomho road — Wild Pea- 
cock — Guano^Monkeys — Toddy drawers — B entotte— 
Restive horses — Anecdote — Oaltura — Beauty of scenery 
— Cinnamon plantations — ^Pagoda tree — The fashionahle 
quarter of Colombo— Colpetty — The Galle Face — Curious 
gazers at new-comers — ^Arrival of the Royal Mail, gives 
rise to conjectures as to who the new-comers are, and 
wherefore they have come to Ceylon. 

The journey from Galle to Colombo occupies 
eleten hours, or eleven hours and a half, the 
coa^ch usually, or rather nominally, starting at 
gun-fire, five o'clock in the morning. It not 
unfrequently happens, that the passengers have 
to go and call the coach, instead of the coach 
calliDg for them, and this has occurred to our>^ 



\ 



20 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

selves more than once whilst resident at Galle ; 
for the natives of Ceylon, like most Asiatics, 
place little value either on time or punctuality. 
The gun has fired, — we have walked about, 
working ourselves nearly into a state of fusion, 
and quite into a very ill-humour, by anathema- 
tizing the want of punctuality of the Cingalese, 
and at length resolve to sally forth, and ascertain 
why the coach has not come for us and our 
baggage. We reach the office, the door of which 
IS closed, the dim light of a cocoa-nut oil lamp is 
seen glimmering through the crevices of the portal. 
Not a sound is heard from within the dwell- 
ing ; all are, or appear to be, buried in sleep, and 
the coach also is in a state of tranquillity, snugly 
ensconced in ithe verandah, and under the vehicle 
are comfortably reposing two natives. These 
sacrifices to the drowsy god are regarded by us 
as personal insults, especially as we have abridged 
our matinal slumbers, for the sake of not keep- 
ing the coach waiting for us. Exasperated 
beyond endurance, we batter the house-door 
lustily for two or three minutes, which at last is 
opened by a yawning Cingalese, with hair stream- 
ing over his shoulders, who inquires in a sleepy 
tone, "what master want?" "Want, eh? that's 
tao good. Why is not the coach ready that was 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 21 

to have called for us at gun-fire ?" The coach 
master, being aroused by these noises, comes 
forth from his sleeping apartment, and with many 
apologies, orders the coach to be prepared forth- 
with, calling loudly for the horsekeepers. These 
gentlemen are still revelling in the arms of Mor- 
pheus under the coach, and, despite the reiterated 
shouts of their master, continue to dose. Finding 
words useless, and patience exhausted, physical 
force is restored to, and, by dint of simdry mani- 
pulations in the region of the ribs, the dormant 
faculties of the horsekeepers are aroused, and 
orders being given in some unintelligible jargon 
(to us), away they start in quest of the horses; 
the master assisting the remaining awakened do- 
mestics to pull the coach out of the verandah. 

So soon as the horses are harnessed to the vehi- 
cle, the baggage is attempted to be collected, and 
although the quantity is short that is allowed to 
be carried by each passenger, being but twenty 
pounds, the time is long before it can be either 
arranged, or placed upon the conveyance, as 
each coolee will maintain that he cannot lift a 
caipet-bag without assistance, and that a port- 
manteau requires the united strength of four of 
his brothers in colour and calling. This feat 
accomplished, then ensues the turmoil attendant 



22 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

upon placing the baggage, as the sole receptacle 
for it is a board about three and a^half feet long, 
and a moiety of the width, placed at the back of 
the mail coach. On this the luggage rests, one 
package being piled upon another, and attached 
"by pieces of coir passed over and under, crossed 
and re-crossed, until all is fairly secured. 

As we can well remember the astonishment 
with which we gazed upon the primitive machine, 
dignified by the name of the " Royal Mail," we 
will attempt a description of the same for the 
edification, and we trust amusement, of our peru- 
sers. The royal mails in Ceylon are placed upon 
four wheels, and look like — what ? — nothing to be 
seen in Europe now, but the vehicles have a 
slight affinity with, and bear a faint resemblance 
to, the lower half of an antiquated English stage 
coach, cutting ofi* the upper half, and detaching 
the doors. The seat for the driver is attached to 
the coach, so that his back, and those of the pas- 
sengers on the front seat, touch. The roof is 
made of leather, painted white and varnished, 
lined with cotton, and supported by four slender 
iron rods, which shake with every jolt of the 
coach. To this roof, leathern curtains are hung, 
which can be either drawn to protect the passen- 
gers from the sun or rain, or rolled up to admit a 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 23 

free passage to the air. The roof of this antedi- 
luvian production projects over the driving seat, 
thus covering seven persons, namely, the passen- 
gers in the body of the conveyance, the driver, 
and whoever may be seated at his side, and the 
horsekeeper, who indiscriminately perches him- 
self on the top of the luggage, stands on the 
fixed protruding iron step, or clings to any part 
of the vehicle most convenient to seize hold of. 
Picture this machine badly painted, lined with 
leather filthily dirty, and worn into holes, from 
which the stuffing, made from cocoa-nut fibre, 
starts forth. Put this on a carriage, with four 
wheels of various colours, with two horses badly 
fed, and worse groomed, caparisoned with worn 
harness, the buckles and straps of which are 
replaced with fragments of coir rope, and you vrill 
have some remote idea of the royal mails in the 
Island of Ceylon. 

Let us now suppose all minor obstacles sur- 
mounted, such as dilatory drivers, and refractory 
horses, and we fairly clear of Galle, en route for 
Colombo, the seat of government. The morning 
breeze is cool, the grey light soothing and pleasant, 
and our good-humour restored, we are prepared to 
gaze around, and note all worthy of observation. 

We were particularly struck in the tropics 



24 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

by the non-existence of twilight, for almost 
iramediatelj the sun sets it is dark, and in 
the absence of the moon continues so, until he 
re-appears. The coach proceeds leisurely on its 
way, and soon our eyes are gladdened by the 
glorious spectacle of the sun's rising — as gra- 
dually Phoebus appears above the bed of waters, 
on which he casts the effulgence of his beams. 
Now his rays are thrown upon a grove of waving 
palms, anon they rest upon the roof of a hut, 
like a coquettish beauty bestowing bright glances 
on all around. Soon we encounter a strange- 
looking vehicle, somewhat like a two- wheeled 
tilted cart, with a thatched semicircular hood, a 
white cloth being hung up at either end, to pre- 
vent inquisitive eyes from prying into the interior. 

This machine is drawn by one or two oxen, and 
in answer to our inquiries we learn that it is 
called a bullock-bandy, and contains Moorwomen, 
who have been, or are going to the bathing-place. 

The rumbling of the coach will occasionally 
rouse a family, (as many of the natives sleep in 
the verandah, instead of their dwellings, for the 
benefit of the cool air,) and, as they indolently 
lift their heads, will gaze upwards, and finding 
that day has positively set in, will slowly rise 
from the ground on which their sleeping mats 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 25 

have been spread. Along the coast, almost close 
to the sea, the screw-pine (Pandsenus) flourishes 
in extreme luxuriance ; and, as the whole shore is 
planted with cocoa-nut trees, which droop over 
the road, the lover of nature pursues his way with 
feelings of intense gratification, especially when 
he gazes upon the waving palms above his head, 
then upon the blue ocean, upon whose surface 
the sun's young beams are reflected. The 
prospect is so exquisitely lovely, that it appears 
more like enchantment, or a dream of fairy land, 
than sober reality. Upon reaching Gindura, the 
coach Is placed in a boat, and ferried across the 
river, and this spot is also a scene of surpassing 
beauty. On the bosom of the tranquil stream, 
floats the pink lotus, the tulip-shaped flower, being 
enshrined Amongst the broad green leaves ; Areca 
palms (Areca catechu) waving over, and drooping 
into the river, and here and there a flowering 
shrub of gorgeous hue, intermixed among the 
stately trees clothed in their vesture of brilliant 
green. 

Within a short distance of the opposite side of 
the ferry, the constantly-varying panorama of 
nature, becomes, if possible, still more enchant- 
ing : the boundless ocean, with its ever-changing 
hues Qn one side, its white spray dashing over 

VOL. I. C 



26 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

the rocks, with the dense groves of noble trees on 
the other, are alike sublimely beautifdl. Cocoa- 
nut trees planted on either side of the road, bend 
towards each other, forming a shady avenue 
through which the coach passes. 

Occasionally young plantations of pa^ms, the 
leaves spreading out thickly in an irregular fan-like 
form from the root, will greet the eye, contrasting 
finely with fhe older trees, whose slender naked 
tall trunks are surmounted by a crown-like diadem 
of leaves. 

Startled by the sound of the coach- wheels, a 
peacock, with a shrill scream, will take flight, his 
gorgeous plumage glittering in the sun, as he 
wings his flight upwards, or he may wend his 
way to a noble ebony tree, and alighting there, 
will proudly raise his crested head, the feathers 
of his drooping tail intermingling with the luxu- 
riant foliage of the splendid tree. Sometimes a 
guano (a species of lizard,) will cross the road in 
pursuit of his prey, whose short clumsy legs, and 
slothful ungainly movements, seem ill calculated 
to enable him to pursue, or entrap a more agile 
creature. But see — he has marked that beautiful 
little squirrel as his victim : how nimbly the reptile 
is ascending the tree after the poor little animal, 
his clumsy legs move quickly enough now — 
luckily the agile fellow has seen him, and with a 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 27 

bound to another tree, gets clear of his pursuer. 
These hideous reptiles are amphibious, and we 
have seen several that measured more than five 
feet from the snout to the tip of the tail, and it is 
affirmed they possess such strength in that part, 
that with one blow of their tail a man's leg will 
be broken. They are likewise omnivorous, for 
they will alike steal and devour your fowls and 
your fruit. 

Indulging in gambols on the boughs of the trees 
that skirt the road-side, are to be seen monkeys, 
of every size, and of numerous species, which in 
the very wantonness of sport, w^ill pluck a young 
cocoa-nut, and dash it on the earth; then run 
along the ropes that attach one tree to ther other, 
performing again the same mischievous antic, 
despite the threatening gestures of the toddy- 
drawers, who have, for their convenience, thus 
linked the trees together. It would be impossi- 
ble to travel seven miles in Ceylon, much less 
seventy, the distance from Galle to Colombo, 
without seeing toddy-drawers pursuing their 
calling, and the first time we saw the operation 
was during the journey now alluded to. The 
liquor is obtained from the flower of the cocoa- 
nut palm, (Cocos nucifera,) in its fresh state 
being called toddy, which is a sweet refreshing 

c 2 



28 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

beverage; when fermented, it becomes arrack, 
the intoxicating qualities of which are well 
known. The ascent of the tree is thus accom- 
plished : the toddy-drawer knots a piece of rope 
into a circle, passing his ankles through it, and 
the resistance offered by the ligature enables 
him to press the soles of his feet against the 
naked trunk of the tree, precluding the possibility 
of slipping down whilst in the act of climbing, 
the toddy-chatty, or jar, being slung at his back. 
When the summit of the tree is reached where 
the flower is, the man cuts off the end, suspend- 
ing the chatty to the orifice from whence the 
liquid flows, binding the blossom tightly above 
the incision. Some of the full-grown trees will 
yield from one to two hundred pints per diem ; 
but the trees that are tapped never bear fruit. 

To the tops of the toddy -trees, the drawers attach 
ropes, to enable them to move from one to the 
other, without the trouble of descending and 
ascending ; and, although it is most unpleasant to 
see these men clinging with hands and feet, 
whilst pursuing their aerial way, comparatively 
but few accidents occur. When one does hap- 
pen, it is usually fatal, as the height of the palms 
to which these ropes are attached, varies from 
sixty to one hundred feet. The appearance of a 

6 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 29 

fresh-drawn chatty of toddy is exceedingly 
agreeable, as the form of the red clay jar approaches 
the classical ; the foaming frothing liquid over- 
flowing the brim, and hanging in creamy drops 
around the vessel; moreover, the toddy-drawers 
twine scarves about their brows, to protect them 
from the sun's rays, carrying their burthen upon 
their turbaned heads, thus completing their re- 
semblance to the figures of antiquity. 

To speak technically, the coach breakfasts at 
Bentotte at ten o'clock ; but, as drivers and horses 
in Ceylon are equally erratic and self-willed in 
their movements, the hour varies according to 
their tempera and inclinations. All the inns, or 
rest-houses, as they are called in Ceylon, are Go- 
vernment property, and the men placed in them 
are only legally permitted to charge twenty-five 
per cent, above the market prices, for the provi- 
sions supplied by them, but we never found in 
our peregrinations, these gentry content with this 
ample per centage, but, like all other innkeepers, 
be they in Europe, Asia, or Africa, (for we 
cannot speak from personal knowledge of 
America) took every advantage, making tra- 
vellers pay as much as possible for the slightest 
refreshment, or smallest accommodation. Ben- 
totte is a lovely spot, and the rest-house for 



30 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Ceylon, is tolerably good, that is to say, the roof 
does not admit the pitiless storm, or the sun's rays ; 
neither are there holes in the doors to admit when 
closed, pariah dogs, reptiles and rats, and there 
are a table, a chair, and a bedstead, guiltless of 
Mosquito curtains, however, in one of the 
sleepkig-rooms. This we can vouch was the case 
when we left Ceylon, but deponent cannot adduce 
farther evidence as to the furniture in the other 
apartments of the building. Oysters are obtained 
here from the river, and, although their appear- 
ance, size, and colour, which is of a purplish tint, 
differ materially from our own, the flavour is 
good. It is rather remarkable that in no other 
part, through which this river flows, nor from 
whence it has its source, are oysters to be met 
with, Bentotte being the sole place. 

Again, the coach has to be placed in a boat 
to be ferried over the stream, and, upon reaching 
the shore, we were highly diverted at witnessing 
the attempts made by several horse-keepers, to 
harness two restive horses, and attach them to 
the Mail, the driver warning them, speaking or 
rather shouting at the highest pitch of his voice, 
to hold " Peter Layard's head and keep clear 
of Dr. Prin's heels," and requesting us to take 
our seats as quickly as possible. The scene that 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 31 

ensued is beyond our powers of description, con- 
sequently we think it better to narrate verbatim 
the adjurations the driver bestowed upon the 
horses, endeavouring, by defective spelling, to 
imitate the half-caste's broken English. 

" Now, genel-men, is you seated in the coch^ 
cos if you is, the osses shall be put to." An 
affirmative being returned, some orders being 
given by the driver in Cingalese to the horse- 
keepers, adding in English, " We shall be soon off 
now, as you is ready." But the horses were not 
as ready to go as we were, and after some diffi- 
culty one was harnessed to the coach, the other 
creature's head being held securely by two horse- 
keepers, whilst two others dragged, more than led, 
the animal towards the vehicle and attached the 
traces, the horse rearing and plunging, as much 
as it was possible, with two men holding his 
head. During the hazardous performance of 
putting the horses to the coach, the driver placed 
his feet firmly against the splash-board, grasping 
his whip, with a most determined expression of 
countenance, whilst we watched the whole pro- 
ceedings in a state of delightful expectation. 
At length the operation was achieved, and no 
sooner was the last trace buckled, than the horse- 
keepers let go the animal's head, rushing on 



32 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

either side of his path, with the celerity of an 
arrow sent from a well-strung bow. This horse 
plunged violently forwards, whilst tJie other 
planted his foiu: feet firmly in the loose ground, 
evincing a resolute determination not to move 
one inch either for entreaty or castigation. 

Now commenced a resolute battle for mastery 
between the horses and the driver, who thus alter- 
nately addressed each. " Peter Layard yer brute, 
kim up yer ill-tempered lazy thing — yer vont, 
vont yer ?" Thump, bump on the creature's back 
went the butt end of the whip, the driver stand- 
ing up to give greater force to the blows. " Dr. 
Prins, yer willin^ do yer vant to brek the coch to 
bits ? is eels vill be in my mout in minit.^'^ (They 
were battering away at the splash-board.) 
" Peter Layard, yer hugly beast, kim up, if yer 
doesnH — ^" Another heavy blow, which com- 
bined with the implied threat had the desired 
effect, for off started both horses at fiill gallop, 
rushing close to a hut, the wheels grazing the 
dwelling, and catching the screen made of 
platted cocoa-nut leaves, and dragging it away. 
" Now, genel-meny^ said the driver, " we shall go 
along ioo-tiful, its honly at fust starting that we 
ave a bit of bother, I dunt mind these osses 
when we hani got lady passengers, for they do 



7 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 33 

squeal so ; when Dr. Prins begins is tricks, that it's 
puts me houL You see ere we AaZ-vays call the 
osses hafter the genel-men we buys 'em on, for 
whoever as a bad oss he sells he to us ; we giv 
£15 for Dr. Prins, and d£l8 for Peter Layard^ 
but he is a good un to go though he is hugly, 
and fights shy of his work at/usi ; but as for Dr. 
Prins, he is not worth alf the money, for he is 
a arty feeder, werry lazy, werry wiciouSy and 
werry often kicks over the traces." Although we 
cannot vouch for the gastronomic capabilities of 

• 

the quadruped Dr. Prins, we can bear testimony 
to the driver's veracity, as regards the three latter 
propensities of the animal. 

The noble stream, the Kalloo Ganga, has yet 
to be crossed, and again the ferry boat is freight- 
ed with the Royal M^iil and its cargo. The 
river divides Caltura from Pantura, the former 
place being celebrated for its pure water, and 
salubrity, and, before the discovery of Newera 
£llia, was regarded as the Sanitorium of Ceylon, 
The scenery about Caltura is lovely in the ex- 
treme, (almost equalling that around Galle, 
though of a less bold and imposing character,) 
the banks of the river being wooded down to the 
water's edge with stately palms, noble bread- 
fruit, tamarind, and jack trees. Scattered be 

c 5 



34 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

tween these majestic specimens of vegetation, 
is the pomegranate-tree with its bright scarlet 
flowers, the cinamon-laurel with its delicate white 
blossom, and the tube-rose shrub, loading the atmo- 
sphere with the fragrant aroma of their flowers. 
On the pellucid rippling waters float luxuriant 
aquatic plants, the numerous white water-lilies, 
and pink lotuses being entwined with a small 
creeper, the elegant blossom of which resembles 
our own " forget-me-not " in size and colour. 

From Caltura to Colombo, the hand of nature 
and of art appear to combine to make the vista 
as glorious as it is possible to conceive ; the 
distant view of lofty mountains, and rich groves 
of trees, and palm-shaded bungalows, situate in 
the midst of cultivated gardens, radiant with the 
gorgeous hues of the tropical flowers. Combine 
this with the heaving ocean, on the bosom of 
which float numberless fishing canoes; the yel- 
low sandy beach, glittering with the bright scales 
of the newly-caught members of the finny tribe ; 
and all must admit the scene to be one of sur- 
passing sublimity and loveliness. For some 
miles, as you approach Colombo, the road runs 
between cinnamon-plantations, the dark shining 
leaves of the laurel contrasting exquisitely with 
the pearly hue of the blossom; but the shrub 






CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 35 

is clad in its greatest beauty when it first puts 
forth its pristine vesture, the young leaves then 
being of a pale delicate yellowish green, streaked 
with bright red. 

On the right-hand side of the road, (near to 
the tamarind-tree, where the ^lite of the colony 
go about six o^clock in the morning, to drink 
fresh toddy,) grows one of the most magnificent 
pagoda, or banian trees (Ficus indica) imagin- 
able.^ The foliage of this tree is splendid, 
and it bears a minute fig-shaped, scarlet-coloured 
fruit; nevertheless the principal beauty consists in 
the innumerable fibres sent forth by the branches, 
which enlarge as they reach the earth, and there 
take root, forming a complete grove, or series of 
trees ; these fibres in their turn producing shoots, 
which will again multiply and take root ; and it 
is asserted, that in the province of Guzerat, one 
of these trees measures more than two thousand 
feet in circumference, near the bottom of the 
stems, the branches of which naturally cover a 
much larger space. Although the tree we allude 

* This tree is considered sacred by all BrakminSt who 
aflfirm the God Vishnu was bom under it, and that the 
characteristics of the deity are mbUmized in the tree. The 
Bo-tree (Ficus religiose) is held sacred by all Buddhists, 
Buddhism being the national religion of Ceylon. 



36 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

to, on the Colombo Road, does not cover near 
the same extent of ground, we can speak as to 
its beauty, more especially after dusk, when its 
numberless dark leaves are illuminated by myri- 
ads of fire-flies, (Elater noctilicus,) whose quick 
flitting movements dazzle and delight the be- 
holder. 

In Colpetty, (the fashionable quarter of Co- 
lombo,) large bungalows, (dwellings on the 
groimd floor,) surrounded by highly-cultivated 
compounds or gardens, become more frequent, 
and occasionally a palanqueen carriage will be 
met, in which recline one or two European 
ladies, hastening to make some purchases in the 
fort before the shops close, which they invariably 
do by half-past five or six at the latest. Then 
the Galle Face, the Hyde Park of the colony, is 
attained ; the fresh sea-breeze, as it blows over the 
greensward, cooling the heated traveller's brow, 
vehicles of all descriptions are met, from the hac- 
cary of tlie native, drawn by a bullock, to the 
carriage of one of England's merchant-princes, 
to which a high-bred Arab horse itf attached, the 
inmates of all these conveyances alike bestow- 
ing inquisitive looks upon the passengers in the 
Royal Mail; and, when a strange face is dis- 
covered, every attitude and gesture of the starers 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 37 

eTince the utmost curiosity; for, believe us, no 
new arrival in a country village, or town in Eng- 
land, no presentation at a drawing-room, of beauty 
or bride, causes so great a sensation, as a new 
arrival in a colony. For in a colony everybody 
troubles his or her head with ever}'^ one else's 
business, most philanthropically at times neglect- 
ing his or her own affairs to attend to other people's. 
The Mail is now at the end of the Galle Face, 
now it rattles over the drawbridge of the fortifica- 
tions ; now it is under the archway ; now it 
has entered the Foit; and now it jingles and 
rattles down the principal street of the " Fort 
of Colombo," many of the inhabitants, of all 
shades of colour and denominations, being on 
the qui vive to see " who is in the Mail." 

So soon as the last passenger and his small quan- 
tum of luggage have been disposed of, the Royal 
Mail jolts and jumbles to its own halting-place, 
the driver retailing every look and observation 
of the passengers, with, at times, sundry addi- 
tions and embellishments, spreading the news 
also, that one or more ^'strange Engli£ genel- 
men " were come to the colony, and where they 
have been domiciled. Every eager listener then 
gives an opinion concerning the new-comer's 



38 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

profession, or aTOcation, surmising how much 
each individual may gain by, or be interfered 
with, in his peculiar calling by this, or those 
" strange English gentlemen." 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 39 



CHAPTER III. 



Colombo — Harbour — Custom-house — Animated scene — 
Derivation of the name of the Port — ^Fortifications — Troops 
-Queen's House — Public ofl&ces in the Fort — Pettah — 
Native traders — Churches, chapels, religious and chari 
table institutions — Public offices in the Pettah — ^Native 
police — Slave Island — Galle Face — Colonial manners — 
The efiect of climate upon the female character — The 
fashionable drive — Beauty of the spot — Simset — Sea- 
breezes — Evening — Fire-flies — Cinnamon — ^Tribute de- 
manded by the Portuguese— Cultivation introduced by the 
Dutch — Value of the monopoly to the Dutch and English 
governments — ^Description of the shrub— Uses of every 
portion of the cinnamon-laurel — Peeling knives— Num- 
ber of crops in the year — ^Preparing the spice — Challias, 
or cinnamon peelers — Pimkahs — The residt of an unex 
pected downfall— Dessert — Crows, their boldness and 
audacity. 

Colombo is alike the seat of the colonial go- 
vernment, and the capital of the maritime pro- 



y 



y 



40 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

vinces, being situate in lat. 6<^ 57" north, and long. 
79^ 50" east. The harbour is semicircular, but 
only boats and very small craft can find refuge 
within it, vessels of any size being compelled 
to anchor in the roads, from one to two miles 
distant from the shore. Extreme caution is re- 
quisite in piloting a ship into Colombo roads, as 
there are sunken rocks, sand banks, and a coral 
reef, and the waves break heavily on the bar 
during the prevalence of certain winds. 

The principal part of the export and import trade 
is carried on at this port, consequently, the scene 
at the Custom-house, during the hours of business, 
i*one of great activity and excitement. Coolees, 
carrying bags of coffee, bales of goods, casks of 
cocoa-nut oil, bundles of the fibre, baskets of the 
nuts, packages of cinnamon, and sacks of grain, — 
hustle each other, whilst the shrill cry of the 
bullock-driver, as he attempts to clear a passage 
for his heavily-laden waggon, or bandy, serves 
only to make " confusion more confounded." 

During the time this is being enacted at one 
part of the quay, boats loaded with various com- 
modities, either endeavouring to land the articles, 
or take them to the outward-bound ships, are 
trying to leave or approach the small landing- 
pier; and, as the tawny boatmen pursue their 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 41 

task, sing at the top of their voices a monotonous 
song. Occasionally a wave will break over the 
boat; then ensue shouts and exclamations not in- 
tended for ears polite, from the canicoplej or man 
in charge of the merchandize, as he urges the row- 
ers to perform their task with greater caution 
and celerity. 

Colombo is mentioned in Cingalese historical 
annals, about a.d. 496, where it is recorded that 
one of their kings, Moongaallonoo, there erected 
" warlike defences." Tradition declares that Ca- 
lamba derived its name from a grove of mangoe 
trees, called also Calamha in Cingalese; but, in one 
of the most ancient native works extant, we read 
that Calamha signifies a sea-port, and a fortified 
place. What the origin of the cognomen may 
have been, can be a matter of little import, but 
it is quite certain that the Portuguese conquerors 
corrupted or changed the name of the spot from 
Calamha to Colombo, in honour of iheir cele- 
brated navigator, Columbus. In 1505,*^ the Por- 
tuguese visited this port, and obtained permission 
to traffic with the natives ; disputes ensued, and 
we find that in 1518 the Portuguese had taken 
possession of Colombo, and commenced erecting 
the fortifications. The Fort is built on a small 
promontory, which is washed by the sea for more 



42 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. * 

than half its extent, and was completed by the 
Dutch after they had expelled the Portuguese, 
and could contain, on an emergency, nine or ten 
thousand souls. The extent of the fortifications 
exceeds one mile and a half, the ramparts being 
well constructed, having eight chief bastions and 
several minor ones, with banquets, parapets, &c., 
&c., communicating one with the other, mounting 
125 guns and six mortars. The Fort is garrisoned 
by European troops, the number of which vary, 
the Ceylon Rifles and gun-lascars being stationed 
outside the Fort, in a spot called Slave Island. 
When the governor is a military man, he has the 
command of the troops ; but, when his Excellency 
is a civilian, like the present Governor, Vis- 
count Torrington, the commander of the forces 
is usually a major-general. 

The principal street in the Fort is called 
Queen Street, and in this street, which is re- 
markably wide, and kept scrupulously clean, 
stands the Queen's or Government House, the gar- 
dens of which are laid out with great care ; for a 
specimen of almost every flowering shrub or plant 
indigenous to the island, is to be found in them. 
In the rear of Government House stands the 
Lighthouse, the height of which is ninety-six 
feet above the level of the ocean, and sailors 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 43 

affirm that in clear weather this bmlding can 
be discerned from an almost incredible distance 
at sea. Near to the Queen's House are situ- 
ated the various military and civil offices, one 
of the English churches, that of the Scotch 
Presbyterians, the Banks, General Post Office, 
Normal School, and the principal Library. From 
Queen Street, several side streets branch off, 
the minor ones crossing at right angles, and 
in these are situated the Military Hospital, 
the Medical Museum and Library, with ware- 
houses and shops. All the European com- 
mercial houses carry on their business within 
the Fort, be their trade wholesale or retail, but 
all the merchants and nearly every one of the 
shopkeepers reside elsewhere. 

Without the Fort, an extensive trade is carried 
on in every saleable article, both of native and 
foreign origin, by the Mooi*men, whose shops 
and stores are situated in the Pettah, the main 
street of which is one continuous line of shops 
and warehouses. Every imaginable commo- 
dity is here to be procured, from a lady's bon- 
net to a ship's anchor, from a paper of pins 
to a marlin-spike, from a bottle of pickles to a 
saddle, from a web of fine muslin to strong 
canvass for sails ; in short, it would be impos- 



44 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

sible to enumerate what these men have for 
sale, and equally impracticable to say what 
they have not. Moreover, we can positively 
a£firm, these traders vend their goods at one 
half the price, that is demanded at the principal 
European shop in the Fort. In the Pettah is 
situated the chief bazaar for edibles of every 
description ; and here also reside the greater 
number of the burghers, or half-castes ; in the 
streets that break off from the main street, and 
in the abodes of these people, is frequently to 
be seen some of the most exquisitely-carved 
ebony furniture conceivable, the designs, usually 
of fruit and flowers, being chiselled out with 
the utmost accuracy, depth, and sharpness. 

Adjoining the Pettah are places of worship for 
the English, Portuguese, and Dutch protestants, 
belonging to the established church, and in the 
church of the last are deposited the remains of 
all the Dutch governors who have died in the 
island. The Wesleyans, Baptists, and Roman 
Catholics, have also their chapels, the Mahome- 
dans their mosque, and the Brahmins their 
temple, the walls of which are decorated with 
carvings of elephants, lions, and tigers. In 
this district is situated the buildings that belong 
to the Society for thj Propagation of the Gospel, 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 45 

Promoting Christian Knowledge, Bible Associa- 
tion, Church Missionaries, Colombo Friend in 
Need, Government Schools, the Leper and 
Pauper Hospitals, the Dispensary, and other 
charitable institutions. The Supreme Court 
House, the District Court of Colombo, the Court 
of Requests, Police Oflfice, Cutcherry, and Fiscals' 
Office, are all outside the Fort. 

Public order is maintained (to a very limited 
extent, however,) by a body of native police, 
who are similarly organized to those of our 
Metropolitan force, and are under the superin- 
tendence — or were so when we left Colombo — of 
two most efficient superintendants. But zealous 
as Messrs. Thomson and Colpepper were in the 
discharge of their duties, they were not ubiqui- 
tous, and, as soon as they had left a street or 
district to visit another, the greater number of 
the policemen would sit down in some shady 
nook, commence chewing betel, and eventually 
indulge in a siesta, until roused by the visit of 
their superior officer, or relieved from their active 
occupation by a brother dozer. This efficient (?) 
force are clothed in the S0,me dress as the London 
police, with the exception of the hat, a peaked 
cap being substituted, and the effect produced by 
the latter is most ludicrous, as their long hair is 




46 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

twisted into a knot above the nape of the neck, 
and on this the cap rests. Their European attire 
also is ill calculated either for die climate or for 
their comfort, the stiff collar, tight coat and 
trousers, being most distasteful to those who have 
been habituated, from infancy, to the loose gar- 
ments of the Asiatics, and their clothing is as 
little conducive to their health as it is to their 
ease. 

The artificial lake of Colombo runs at the back 
of the Fort, and Sir Edward Barnes, during his 
Governorship, caused a lock to be constructed, 
whereby the inland navigation is carried to the 
sea. A small slip of land lies in the centre of 
the lake, named Slave Island, so called by the 
Portuguese and Dutch, who used here to lock up 
the government slaves after their day's laboiu:. 
A certain space was enclosed, around which huts 
were built, these dwellings being surrounded by 
a lofty wall, the gates of which were fastened at 
sunset, and unclosed at sunrise. Since the aboli- 
tion of slavery, all these buildings have been 
demolished, barracks for the Ceylon Rifles, and 
tasteful bungalows for Europeans, having been 
erected in their stead. 

One portion of Slave Island has the advantage 
of the sea-breezes, being only separated from the 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 47 

ocean by an isthmus, called the Galle Face, and 
this is the fashionable drive or resort in the 
evening, from the hours of five until seven. 
When we first arrived in Colombo, we felt much 
astonished at finding but few external marks of 
respect paid to the governor. For instance, his 
Excellency's carriage would drive round the 
Galle Face, and scarcely a hat would be raised 
as he passed, although some of the heads on 
which the hats rested belonged to civilians, some 
of them high in the government service ; or to 
merchants, who, from their birth, education, and 
position, as members of the legislative council, 
ought to have felt it their bounden duty to have 
rendered " honour to whom honour was due." 
Surely it cannot be derogatory to any man, how- 
ever high his station or birth, to evince, by a 
courteous demeanour, proper respect for the 
individual who is deemed a fit and proper person 
by his sovereign, to hold the reins of govern- 
ment. It has been previously remarked, by those 
who have resided in colonies, that generally the 
tone of conduct of most colonists is one of 
assumption ; and, as far as our own experience 
permits us to form an opinion, we coincide 
heartily in this observation, as too many endea- 
vour to assume a position that can only belong 
to the Governor, and act as if they believed that 



48 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

undue familiarity and disrespectful demeanour to 
superiors, would ensure the social position they 
were endeavouring to usurp. Although we thus 
contemn the manners of men, we regret to say 
that numbers of our fair countrywomen lose 
many attractive attributes from a residence in a 
colony, or presidency. We believe a lengthened 
sojourn in the East to be as prejudicial to the 
mental as it is to the physical powers of the 
female sex, the climate alike enervating body and 
mind, rendering the one incapable of taking su£B- 
cient exercise to preserve health, and the other of 
pursuing those studies that enlarge its own capa- 
bilities. Thus, after a comparatively short resi- 
dence in India, China, or Ceylon, a woman loses 
her vivacity, the principal part of her beauty, the 
whole of her energy, becoming equally disinclined 
to corporeal or mental exertion. The routine of 
ia. lady's existence has but little variety under a 
tropical sun ; the greater part of the morning is 
passed reclining on a couch, en dishabille, being 
fanned by an Ayah,* who tries to amuse her mis- 
tress by relating the occurrences that take place 
in the abodes of her acquaintance, this gossip 
being duly embellished with scandal. After tiflin,* 
the fair dame vrill either receive or pay morning 

* The mid-day meal, denominated luncheon in England, 
in the East is called tiffin. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 49 

visits, when more gossip and scandal are indulged 
in ; or she will read some silly tale of excitement 
to beguile the time, or soothe her to sleep. For 
seldom, we grieve to say, is any intellectual occupa- 
tion pursued that tends to strengthen the mind. 

About four o'clock the fair one retires to make 
an elaborate toilette for the evening drive, or to 
" don equestrian gear ;" in either case, the attire 
of every friend that she meets is severely criti- 
cised, and wonder expressed as to how their hus- 
bands can afford to supply them with this 
expensive finery, feeling quite sure they must be 
over head and ears in debt, strangely forgetting 
that, in all probability, she, the censiurer of ex- 
travagance, has assisted in^ if not insisted upon, 
incurring debts, which may preclude the pos- 
sibility of her own spouse returning to his 
native land for many long years. Add to this 
flirtation which, if practised in England, would 
not be tolerated, and a slight idea may be formed 
of female occupations in a presidency, or eastern 
colony. Let it, however, be distinctly understood 
that we do not thus condemn the conduct of all 
ladies who sojourn in presidencies, or colonies ; 
far be it from our intention so to do, for we have 
known women who were as good wives and 
mothers, and as valuable members of society in 

VOL. I. D 



50 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

every respect, bestowing attention alike on their 
domestic duties, and the cultiTation of their 
minds, with the same assiduity they did, or would 
have done in Europe. Nevertheless, truth com- 
pels us, although we feel a pang of regret whilst 
penning the line, to say, such estimable women 
as these cannot be regarded as specimens of the 
female character when removed from the whole- 
some restraints of English society, and enervated, 
if not demoralized, by the luxuries and customs 
of the East. 

About half-past five o'clock, the Galle Face, or 
Hyde Park of Colombo, begins to wear an ani- 
mated appearance, there being many vehicles 
and horses in motion, although the majority of 
the fair occupants of carriages and saddles, are 
alike listless in demeanour, and the eye of the 
stranger seeks, and seeks in vain, for the clear 
complexion, roseate hue of 'Cheek and 1^, viva- 
cious expressive countenance, and sparkling 
eyes, which are so pleasingly characteristic of 
Albion's daughters. Every description of con- 
veyance is to be seen driving round the Galle 
Face, from the Long Acre built carrip^ge of the 
governor, the dashing phaeton of t|^ Wealthy 
merchant, the unassuming gig, the country-built 
palanqueen^ and the humble bandy. The horses 

6 



CEYLON AKD tHE CINGALESE. 51 

that draw these vehicles are invariably attended 
by their keepers, (grooms being called horse- 
keepers in Ceylon,) who run by the side of the 
conveyance, when a gentleman, or coachman 
drives ; at other times, they lead the animal, ac- 
commodating their pace to that of the horse. 

These men wear a sort of liveiy, their turba^ 
and loose clothing being composed of bright 
tinted, or white calico, the colours varying ac- 
cording to the taste or fancy of theif employer, 
and many of their costumes are both pleasing 
and piot«Hresque, adding materially to the strange- 
ness of the scene. The view from, and of the 
Galle Face, is absolutely entrancing to the lover 
of nature, for casrt the eyes where you will, the 
gaze is involuntarily arrested by the extreme 
beauty of the surrounding scenery. There lies 
the boundless ocean, with a ship in full sail 
gliding over its undulating surface, the oatooes of 
the natives lightly floating on, and skimming 
over its waters, whilst the waves cmrvetting and 
rolling, dash in a shower of white foam on to the 
shdte. Bordering the beach is the carriage-drive, 
which encompasses greensward, whereon high- 
bred Arab horses are bounding and prancing, in 
the fidl enjoyment of exuberant health and ex- 
istence. On the opposite side is the race-course, 

D 2 



52 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

over whose variegated turf the steeds are caricol- 
ing in high glee, whilst die carriage-drive that 
divides the race-course from the greensward is 
thronged with carriages of every shape and de- 
scription, principaUy, if not entirely, occupied by 
Europeans, whilst the fantastically-clad Eastern 
attendants run at the horses' head, or at the side 
of the vehicle. 

At the back of the race-course flows the lake 
of Colombo, the banks being studded with 
drooping palms, j^hose branches overshadow 
the clear waters, on which float the pink lotus, 
and white lily — whilst a bungalow, the verandah 
of which is overgrown with graceful creepers, the 
grounds belonging to it being filled with gorgeous- 
coloured flowering shrubs, complete the vista of 
loveliness on that side. Looking from the bun- 
galow, with nought to impede the view, save the 
stand on the race-course, you can distinctly see 
the grey time-mossed ramparts of the Fort of 
Colombo. 

In due time, sunset arrives, — ^then how glo- 
riously the planet sinks into the bosom of the 
sea, in majestic tranquillity, as his parting beams 
illumine the green waters, on which they glitter 
in thousands of sparkling rays, whilst over the 
azure vault of heaven float violet, crimson, and 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 53 

golden-tinted clouds, which, as you gaze, fade 
away, in ever-varying tints. No language can 
describe the gorgeous, glorious, magnificent beauty 
of the sun's rising and setting in the tropics ; 
the constantly-changing and numberless hues 
which tinge the clouds in constant succession, 
are beyond the powers of language of the orator, 
the pen of the scribe, or the pencil of the painter, 
to delineate. See Sol is now dipping ; he almost 
appears to be toying with the waters, into whose 
bosom he is sinking, and on ^^which he throws his 
liuid beams. How gloriously refulgent is the 
sun's hue, how noble and clearly defined is the 
arch ! Gradually he sinks lower — ^lower — lower — 
and now he has gone to illumine another quarter 
of the globe, and cast around his life-imparting 
beams. 

After sunset, the sea breezes become most re- 
freshing, and, as they are wafted across the 
waters, their delicious coolness invigorates the 
wearied frame, exhausted by the depressing heat 
of the atmosphere during the day. The eques- 
trians now seem to be more at their ease, the 
gentlemen indulging in occasional vigorous 
gallops, the ladies putting their steeds into a 
gentle canter, the inmates of the carriages appear 
to be somewhat less listless, and will gaze 



54 CKYLON AND THE C1;N6ALES£. 

around, or enter into conyeraation with some 
degree of animation ; possibly a cavalier will 
arrest the horse's progress to salaam his fair 
owner, and retail, or inquire the last on^-dits, 
as he leans on the carriage-door. 

In the same ratio as Europeans enjoy the cool 
breezes, so do the Asiatics dislike them, and 
frequently the horse-keepers will cast sax implor* 
ing look into the vehicle, giving a slight shiver? 
their countenaxiices clearly implying ^^ this may be 
sport to you, but 'tis death to us." As the 
shades of evening advance, gradually the Galle 
Face becomes deserted, and, long before night- 
fall, the neighing of the horses and the rum- 
bling of wheels are no more heard, the only 
sounds greeting the ear being the soughing of 
the night-breeze and the breaking of the waves 
on the shingly beach. When night has thrown 
her sable' mantle o'er the earth, the aspect of the 
scene changes, for over the lake hover myriads 
of fire-flies, clouds of them flitting about in the 
air, then alighting on the waving leaves of the 
palms, causing the foliage to appear illuminated. 
Some few will settle on the floating leaves of 
the lotus, two or three will creep into the flower, 
sparkling like brilliants, then more of these lu- 
minous insects will alight on other aquatic plants, 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 55 

and the waters will glisten with a million minute 
specks of light. Then, innumerable numbers 
will wing their flight upwards until the air 
appears replete with a shower of the moon's 
beams. Many will then settle, possibly on a 
tall banana ; the outline of the gigantic graceful 
leaves being distinctly defined by the dazzling 
specks of fire upon them. Nought can be ima- 
gined more exquisitely lovely than this varied 
natural panorama ; and although in the moun- 
tainous parts of the island, the face of nature 
may assume a sublimer aspect, never does she 
wear a more pleasing, characteristic, and truly 
oriental one, than in the vicinity of the Galle 
Face of Colombo. 

The cinnamon-gardens in the neighbourhood 
of Colombo are the most extensive in the island ; 
and, although the beauty and fragrance of the 
shrub are much exaggerated, still the plantations 
present a most pleasing spectacle. It has been 
asserted by many, and still is by some, that the 
aroma of the spice is perceptible at sea, even 
when a vessel is some miles distant from the 
^^ Cinnamon isle :" this statement is as complete 
a delusion as can well be imagined, for, «/*the 
effluvia of cinnamon is apparent at sea^ it is when 
the captain or some one else on board the vessel 



. < 



56 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

has rubbed a portion of the flagrant oil upon the 
sails, to mystify travellers. We admit that an 
aromatic effluyia is diffused, whilst the operation 
of peeling is being carried on, but this odour is 
only apparent close to the spot where the cin- 
namon-peeler is perfonning his task ; and were 
every bush in the island to be barked simulta- 
neously, we are perfectly convinced the smell 
would not be felt a mile on land from where the 
work was being effected, and that it would be 
a perfect impossibility, for the scent of the shrub 
so to mingle with the atmosphere as to be per- 
ceived at sea. 

Cavilists have recently endeavoured to prove 
the Laurus cinnamomum not to be indigenous, 
but that it was introduced into Ceylon by some 
of ihe early traders, assigning as their most 
cogent reason, that the early Roman and Greek 
writers, when speaking of the products of Tra- 
pabane (Ceylon) do not enumerate cinnamon 
among them; strangely, in our opinion, over- 
looking, that although not mentioned indivi- 
dually, this spice may have been included among 
the numberless fragrant productions, for which 
this island was celebrated. To pursue this sub- 
ject farther, or to attempt to prove by quoting 
authorities, and using arguments that we are 



•-* 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 57 

home out in asserting the Lauiiis cinnamomum 
to be indigenous to Ceylon, would be alike un- 
interesting to the general reader, and unnecessary 
for our present prarpose ; as we treat principally of 
Ceylon, after it became known to the Portuguese. 
This shrub attracted the notice of D' Al- 
meida, who, with the shrewdness and observa- 
tion usually, if not invariably apparent in the 
mental organization of discoverers, instantly 
perceived the valuable article of commerce this 
spice would eventually become. In 1505, 
Ceylon was first discovered by D' Almeida, (then 
governor of Goa,) and permission was granted 
by the monarch of Colombo to the Portuguese to 
traffic with the natives; and, in the succeeding 
year, we find the crown of Portugal demanded 
for the protection promised to be afforded the 
Cingalese sovereign against his enemies, that a 
certain quantity of cinnamon should be annually 
given. This demand was complied with, and, 
although no care was bestowed upon the culti- 
vation of the shrub, either by the natives or Por- 
tuguese, the revenue derived by the sale of the 
spicy tribute proved a considerable and welcome 
addition to the finances of the king of Portugal. 
Although the Dutch gained a footing in Ceylon 
in 1640, we find no attempt was made by 

D 5 



r 



58 CBYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

them, to improve the staple oommodity of the island 
by cultiyatioii until 1765, and no strenuous exer- 
tions were made for the furtherance of the plan 
until 1770, and in this year the Governor Falck 
resolved to adopt energetic measures for the 
culture of the cinnamon-laurel. In this he was 
opposed by the native nobles and chiefs, who 
unanimously stated the quality of the spice would 
be deteriorated by cultivation. Despite these grar 
tuitous assurances, the governor caused several 
plantations to be formed, and tended with the 
greatest care. The young shrubs throve, and 
promised to repay, by a superabundant crop, the 
capital bestowed upon their cultivation^ when sud- 
denly every plant was found to be withered up. 

Falck instituted a rigid investigation into 
the cause of this phenomena, and discovered 
that the chiefs had employed men to pour 
boiling water over the roots of the laurels. Many 
of the offenders were severely punished, and 
no ulterior attempt at the destruction of the 
shrubs ensued. The reason why the culti- 
vation of cinnamon was discouraged by the 
chiefs, was, in the first place, that when it grew 
only in a wild state, they were paid a certain 
per centage for allowing their slaves to collect a 
stipulated quantity of the bark ; as no European 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 59 

could be found sufficiently courageous to risk 
his health, or life, in the forests and jungles of the 
Kandian provinces, where the best cinnamon 
was produced. In the second, it had become 
bruited that it was the intention of the Dutch 
government, if it should be found that cinnamon 
could be- improved by cultivation, to forbid any 
natives or Europeans trafficking in or having plan- 
tations of the laurel, save those appertaining to, 
and for the benefit of the executive powers. 
Dispassionately regarding this affair, we cannot 
feel surprised that the Cingalese should discour- 
age, and throw unlawful impediments ,in the path 
of the cultivation of a shrub from which they had 
hitherto derived emolument, and which was the 
spontaneous production of their native soil. 

So unjustly rigid was the monopoly of cinnamon 
maintained by the Dutch government, that nei- 
ther the European nor native proprietor of the 
land was allowed to destroy, cut a stick, touch 
the bark, or pluck the leaves of a shrub, (the 
seed of which might have been dropped by bii-ds) 
that grew on their property ; and they were also 
compelled to give notice to the superintendent 
of cinnamon-plantations when a cinnamon-laurel 
sprouted from the earth's bosom, or severe 
penalties were imposed. 



:» . "y 



60 CEVLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Every cinnamon-shrub was declared to be the 
sole property of the Dutch government, and the 
superintendent was authorized to send the peelers 
into a man's grounds to search for the shrubs, 
and, if any were found, they were immediately 
stripped of their bark, which was transported to 
the public warehouses, and the owner of the land 
either fined or imprisoned for having infringed 
the Dutch laws by not giving information that a 
cinnamon-plant grew on his land. 

The Portuguese were hard task-masters in 
Ceylon, but the yoke imposed by them, was not so 
oppressive as the iron fetters which shackled the 
Cingalese during the period that the Dutch had 
possession of the island. The spirit of avarice so 
completely reigned lord paramount in the breasts 
of the Dutch rulers, that history affirms, when the 
bushes yielded a superabundant crop, bales of 
cinnamon were burned, or otherwise destroyed, 
both in Ceylon and Holland, to keep up the 
exorbitant price then demanded and obtained 
for the spice. From old Dutch records we learn 
that for more than one hundred years, the revenue 
derived annually from the sale of cinnamon was 
seldom less than four hundred thousand pounds. 
When the island came into our possession, the 
cinnamon monopoly was granted to the East 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 61 

India Company for the yearly pajmaent of the 
sum of sixty-thousand pounds : this was ultimately 
increased to one hundred thousand, which sum was 
received by our government until 1823, when the 
right of cultivation and sale reverted to the 
Crown, and the amount realized by the sale of 
cinnamon varied to an almost incredible extent, 
the annual receipts fluctuating between fifty 
thousand, to one hundred and seventy thousand 
pounds. In 1832, a commission of inquiry into 
the effects of this monopoly was instituted, and 
in the following year, by the judicious policy of 
Lord Goderich this obnoxious measure was aban- 
doned, and the cultivation of the shrub has been 
thrown open since that period. Many improve- 
ments have been introduced by private indivi- 
duals. 

A cinnamon plantation somewhat resembles 
a luxuriant laurel copse, as the bushes are, by 
constant pruning, not allowed to exceed twelve 
or fifteen feet in height, except those that may 
be required for seed ; and these will occasionally 
attain the height of thirty or forty feet, the trunk 
of the shrub measuring from eighteen to twenty- 
three inches in circumference. The propagation 
of the Laurus cinnamomum is conducted with 
facility, seeds, plants, and roots, (if transplanted 



62 CEYLON AND THE CINOALESE. 

with caution^) alike thriving in an appropriate 
soil, that consists of a pure quartz sand, which 
to the depth of many inches is as fine as moist 
sugar, and perfectly white ; it then assumes a 
grey tint, and in some of the mountainous dis* 
tricts, layers of black moss are found immediately 
under this species of sterile sandy soil. It is re- 
markable that although white ants infest and 
abound in ail cinnamon plantations in the island, 
these destructive insects do not injure the bushes 
in the slightest degree. And it is a proverb with 
many of the Cingalese, that to have a thriving 
plantation of cinnamon bushes four plenties are 
requisite, namely — "plenty of sand, plenty of 
sun, plenty of white ants, and plenty of water.'' 

The foliage of the laurel is thick and of a dark 
shining green when arrived at maturity, but when 
young, the leaves are exquisitely beautiful, as 
their colour then is a pale yellowish green, striped 
with bright red : from the old leaves a fragrant 
oil is distilled, which the natives use for medi- 
cinal purposes, and which is applied by us to 
many uses. The cinnamon blossom is pure 
white, and scentless, the fruit or berry, acorn- 
shaped and small, the hue of which as it ripens 
gradually changing from green to purple, and 
from this is obtained, by boiling, a substance like 



C£YLON AND THE CINGALESE 63 

wax, which is frequently made into candles, 
and these emit an agreeable perfume whilst 
burning. Some enormously large tapers made 
from this wax were found by our troops in the 
king of Kandy's palace. The spice is the inner 
bark of the shrub, and, in order to ascertain if 
this is in a fit state, the peeler makes a diagonal 
incision in a shoot, and, should the inner bark 
readily separate, the shrub is in a fit state for 
peeling. The knives used by the cinnamon* 
peelers are of a peculiar form, being heavy, long, 
convex on one side, concave on the other, and 
the point of the instrument is remarkably fine. 

The bushes are generally peeled twice in the 
year, the first crop being the most abundant, and 
producing cinnamon of the finest quality. The 
first is obtained between the months of April and 
August, the second between November and 
January. The mode of obtaining the cinnamon 
is the following: the cinnamon-peeler cuts off 
the shoots of a year old, which are of the thick- 
ness of a man's finger, varying in length from one 
to four feet. The leaves are then carefully stripped 
off and placed in heaps, the peeler makes an 
incision with his knife the entire length of the 
shoot, separating the bark from the wood; he 
then carefully scrapes off the grey exterior skin. 



64 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

and the green inner epidermis, leaving the bark 
free from all fleshy substance, about the thickness 
of vellum, and of a greenish white colour. The 
man then places the small portions of the bark 
on the larger pieces, spreading the cinnamon 
out in a warm and shady spot, so as to enable 
the spice to dry gradually but thoroughly. The 
sun's rays and atmospheric influence cause the 
bark to assume a brown hue, and pipe-like form . 
and, when all moisture is evaporated, the cinna- 
mon is tied up into sheaves, or bundles, weighing 
from fifty to seventy pounds, and is sent to the 
market for sale. From the refuse of the bark, a 
golden-coloured fine-flavoured aqueous fluid is 
distilled ; from the root camphor is prociu*ed, and 
the peeled twigs are converted into walking canes ; 
in short, there is no ^art of the Laurus cinna- 
momum that cannot be applied to the use of 
man. 

The men who peel the cinnamon belong ex- 
clusively to a very low caste, called ChalliaSy or 
cinnamon-peelers ; and no native woman or man 
of a higher caste will associate with, or partake 
of food that has been prepared by these people — 
the poor Ghallia being despised in the maritime 
districts, as the unfortunate Bhodia is in the Kan- 
dian provinces. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 65 

The abodes of all Europeans in Ceylon bear a 
striking similitude to each other, the houses being 
constructed upon the same plan ; every door and 
window alike open, and the portals of distinct 
apartments having moveable blinds placed mid- 
way in the frame-work. The dining-room usu- 
ally extends the whole length of the dwelling, 
consequently the width of this apartment is gene- 
rally disproportionate to the length ; and in this 
hot climate, to enable the residents to partake of 
their meals in some degree of coolness ^ a punkah, 
nearly the length of the apartment, is suspended 
from the ceiling over the dining-table. 

As we have a vivid recollection of the astonish- 
ment with which we gazed, the first time we saw one 
of these singular machines, we will describe what a 
punkah is like, believing Hhere are many in this 
country who have not the most remote idea what 
this essential requisite to comfort, in an Eastern 
dwelling resembles. In the first place, a frame 
of wood, considerably longer than wide, is 
covered with white calico, to the bottom of which 
is attached a deep frill — flounce we believe to be 
the correct feminine term for this sort of garnish- 
ing. The frame-work is suspended from the 
ceiling by strong cords, while to the centre of the 
punkah is attached a very long rope, passing 



66 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

through a pulley ^rhich is pulled by a man 
stationed outside the dining-room, and by this 
means the machine is kept in oonstant motion. 
The use of the flounce is to catch the air as the 
punkah waves to and fro over your head, and 
very necessary and pleasant are the artificial 
breezes thus created by the waving of a certain 
quantum of wood-work and calico, where the 
thermometer ranges from eighty-six to ninety- 
eight. 

There is one slight drawback to the delight of 
owning a punkah, even in the tropics, for it is 
almost certain that your careless servants will never 
inspect the ropes by which the punkah is sus- 
pended, to see if they are worn by the friction, caused 
by the constant puUing of the punkah. It is very, 
veiy, very hot indeed, the mosquitoes are torment- 
ing you beyond endurance ; you slap your own face 
Ji/iy times, in the vain endeavour to annihilate 
one of these tormenting insects ; at last, in a fit of 
angry despair, you call out to the punkah-puller, 
" Can't you pull strong, you lazy mortal ?" —The 
biped, stimulated to exertion by your angry tone, 
gives an energetic pull — one in right good 
earnest, as much as to say^ ''Does that please 
you now, master ?" You hear a sort of rustling 
above your head, look up — crash — smash — down 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 67 

comes tbe punkah on the dinner^table, making a 
most awfiol uproar, shivering all the glass and 
crockery, and, worse than all, utterly destroying 
your meal. This disaster assuredly does not 
please you, although your orders were obeyed, 
" to puU strong," but even the downfall of a pun- 
kah, under different circumstances, excites dissi* 
milar passions in the human breast. 

If this contretemps happen in your own domicile, 
you rave at your appoo (or head servant) about his 
neglect of duty, carelessness, laziness, stupidity, 
&c., &c^ &c. ; vow that you will make him 
replace all that is broken, stamping, fuming, 
fretting, working yourself into both fever and 
fury. But let this disaster occur at a friend's 
house, you view it with the indifference of a stoic 
and the tranquillity of a philosopher, the equani- 
mity of your temper not being in the most remote 
degree affected, or ruffled : — quietly rising from 
the table, you employ your serviette in wiping 
from your waistcoat a portion of the contents of 
the curry-dish, which delicious combination of 
vegetables and fish, with some chicken cotelettes, 
and a claret jug, may have been deposited by the 
fall of the aforesaid punkah in your lap, not to 
the improvement of your white clothing. Your 
tone of voice is mild, your speech deliberate, 



68 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

your manner calm, as you beg your host to mo?le- 
rate his vexation, consoling him by remarking — 
" That it is a horrid bore, to have a dinner spoiled 
and the breakables demolished, but it is just like 
these fellows, so insufferably indolent in every 
way, neglecting their business to chew betel, and 
gossip about master's business." The host thanks 
you again and again for your consideration, 
becoming at last insanely profuse and prolix in 
his apologies for the mishap. You beg of him to 
say no more on the subject, but order his appoo 
to clear away the debris, and see if some edibles 
cannot be found either on the table or in the 
cook-house, that will serve as a substitute for the 
sumptuous and varied repast that was spread 
before you, in numberless dishes, but which the 
perverse punkah has converted into an unpalata- 
ble pot-pourri, or hodge-podge. 

It is the invariable custom to place dessert 
upon the table after dinner, and, although Ais 
consists of every variety of tropical fruit in 
season, none save recent arrivals^ ever venture to 
eat fresh fruit in the after part of the day : the 
older residents occasionally venture upon a little 
dried ginger, or try an English biscuit^ the crisp- 
ness and flavour of which have not been improved 
by its travels. We have noticed the flush of 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 69 

delightful anticipation pass over a new-comer's 
face,- as he gazed with evident satisfaction upon 
the cool-looking tempting firuits, garnished with 
gorgeous flowers, that were spread in trim array 
before him ; what delicious-looking pine-apples 
and mangoes, what magnificent bananas and 
custard-apples, what luscious pumbelows and 
guavas, what inviting water-melons and green- 
figs ! The custard-apples are near " the new man," 
he takes one on his plate, and carefully bisects 
the mellow, melting fruit, preparing to devour the 
same with great gusto. His neighbour, if cha- 
ritably disposed, and an old resident, in which 
case he is almost certain to possess a yellow skin 
and diseased liver, may whisper with an air of 
compassion for such ignorance, " I would advise 
you not to eat fr'uit after dinner, as it is very 
likely to produce cholera ;" (the plate is pushed 
away with extreme avidity ;) " eat as much as you 
like at breakfast, or tiffin, that Won't harm you in 
the least." The green thanks the yellow man, 
resolving to indulge his gourmandise and affection 
for fruit the following morning. 

We cannot dismiss Colombo without noticicg 
the immense flocks of carrion crows that infest 
Colpetty ; these birds abound in every port of 
Ceylon, but we think their number and audacity 



70 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

axe more macnifest in this part of the island than 
elsewhere. Tliese creatures are much larger than 
their European brethren, the plumage is thicker, 
and more glossy, and assuredly there is much spe- 
culation in their eyes ; in short, we think them very 
handsome-looking, intelligent birds. No sooner 
did the first glimmer of daybreak appear, than 
their loud and incessant guttural, kha — ^haa, kha«— 
haa, kha — ^haa, used to break our matinal slum- 
bers. The boldness, thieyish propensities, and per- 
severance of these creatures, are almost incredible. 
We have known a crow to fly into the break- 
fiELSt-room, hover over the toast-rack, seize a slice 
of bread, and fly ofi* with it, although there 
were people seated at table : we have witnessed 
other marauders hop on to the sill of the cook- 
house-window, and there remain watching, with 
the utmost inquisitiveness, the movements of the 
cook, and no sooner was the man^s back turned^ 
or a favourable opportunity occurred, than the 
bare-faced feathered thieves would pounce on 
some article of food, and make for the nearest 
tree, or roof of the building, there to devour it at 
their leisure. We have heard, but did not see 
the act perpetrated, that a crow appropriated a 
piece of cake, that a child of six years old was 
eating, despite the efibrts of the little unfeathered 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 71 

biped to drive the feathered one away ; but we 
can positively affirm that we have seen the crows 
flying off* with substances from our dwelling in 
Colpetty, that were nearly as heavy and bulky as 
their own bodies. There was one fellow whom 
we had christened the old soldier, (from his 
bravery, and because he had lost the lower half 
of one leg in the field of battle possibly, as a 
piece of red rag was tied around the stump ; for 
aught we know to the contrary, this might have 
been a novel order of the garter,) whose daring 
and audacity were beyond credence. This bird 
used absolutely to attempt to take food from a 
dog whilst eating, and very frequently succeeded ; 
the animal would naturally open its mouth, to 
snap or bark at the creature who was pecking or 
pulling at the food — the crow would then avail 
itself of this opportunity to fix the beak in the 
coveted morsel. Constantly we have seen these 
daring exploits rewarded with success, the bird 
flying off* in triumph with the spoil, and perch 
on the branch of a neighbouring tree, under 
which the dog would stand angrily barking, as he 
looked up at the robber leisurely eating the food 
in security, that had been purloined absolutely 
from between his teeth. 



72 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 



CHAPTER IV. 



Situation of Kandy — ^Route — Bridge of boats — Paddy ter- 
races — ^Aspect of the people — ^Ambepusse — Mountain 
zone — ^Kadaganawa pass — Mountain scenery — Talapat, 
or great fan palm — Animal life — ^Draught elephants — 
Peredenia — Bridge and Botanical gardens — Curious 
specimens of the vegetable kingdom — Travellers' friend 
— City of Kandy — ^Artificial lake — Bathing house of the 
Queen's — Palace — Native shops — Customs — Buildings — 
Artillery-barracks — Deficiency of water — The governor's 
residence — Beauty of the architecture and site — ^Views of 
the valley of Doombera — Major Davie's tree — Grounds 
of the Pavilion — Lady Horton's road — Grandeur of sce- 
nery — Altitude of the mountains — Mihtary station on 
One-tree hill — Legend — ^Kurunaigalla tunnel — Compul- 
sory labour — Animals, birds, and reptiles, in the sur- 
rounding coimtry. 

Kandy, the former capital of the interior, called 
by the liatives Maha-neura, or the great city, is 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 78 

situated in lat 7^—21' N. and in long., SO® 
48' E», at the sumznitof an extensive fertile valley, 
which lies more than 1500 feet ahove the level of 
the sea. The distance from Colombo to Kandy 
is seventy-two miles, the route crossing the 
bridge of boats, which was constructed during the 
government of Sir Edward Barnes, to obviate the 
imavoidable delay attendant upon the use of ferry- 
boats, to cross the Mutwal-Oya; which delay 
more than once led to serious results, when th^ 
assistance of our troops was required on the 
opposite side of the river. For the first eighteen 
miles of the road, the scenery is of the same 
character as that on the coast, with this exception, 
thiat rice is cultivated in a different manner to 
that adopted in the southern provinces. 

Instead of planting the grain on a level surface, 
in this district it is more general to sow it in 
terraces of irregular dimensions and construction, 
the usual mode being to make an elevation in the 
eentre of the paddy field, round which a terrace^ 
of less height extends, below which is a smaller 
cme, each one decreasing towards the bottom of 
the artificial mound. Every level space is kept 
well supplied with water, and is separated from 
the terrace underneath, by mud walls, in which 
are perforations, to allow it to descend fed irri- 

VOL. I. E 



74 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

gate the lower terraces. And although the Cin- 
galese agriculturist is far surpassed in the con- 
struction of the paddy terraces, by the ingenuity 
and regularity evinced in the formation of the 
same by the Chinese, still the beautiful appear- 
ance of the young rice is everywhere alike, and 
nothing can be imagined more pleasing than the 
exquisite brilliant tender green of the growing 
paddy. 

Soon the aspect of nature changes, the cocoa- 
nut palm plantations become less frequent, groves 
of areka and suriya trees, (Habiscus zeilanicus,) 
gradually taking their place ; the latter is a 
majestic tree, bearing a strong similitude to an 
elm, and, when it is covered with its yellow 
blossoms, the lovely appearance is indescriba- 
ble. 

The air of the people also varies considerably, 
as the maritime districts are left in the rear — ^the 
high comb and long comboy are no longer visible, 
a handkerchief taking the place of the first, and a 
very short cloth or petticoat being used as a sub- 
stitute for the last. The black paper umbrella 
is scarcely seen, a leaf of the talapat palm being 
used as a protection against the sun^s rays in its 
stead ; priests of Buddha, with shaven heads, and 
flowing yellow robes, wending their way to some 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 75 

temple, are much more numerous than in the 
southern province ; in short, all around tends to 
impress upon the traveller's mmd, that he is in a 
country and among a people totally dissimilar 
in all essential characteristics, to the lowland 
Cingalese. 

The road to Kandy is planned, and the skill 
of the engineer has been displayed in the most 
masterly manner; as the hilly and mountain- 
ous districts are ascended, the views become sub- 
lime in the extreme ; and the contrast presented 
by the huge masses of black gneiss rock, to the 
delicate and luxuriant flowering creepers that 
cling to some part of them, is alike wonderful and 
delightful. The prospect from the Rest-house at 
Ambepiisse, situated thirty-five miles from Co- 
lombo, is surpassingly fine. This building lies in 
a valley that is formed by a semicircle of hills, 
which are wooded from base to summit, the luxu- 
riance and gigantic character of the vegetation of 
Ceylon, in the mountainous districts, alone dis- 
tinguishing it from that of Switzerland, Scotland, 
and North Wales. Although the country around 
Ambepusse is beautiful, and its soil fertile, the 
district is exceedingly unhealthy, the resi- 
dents, both native and European, being liable 
to debilitating fever and ague. From Ambe- 

E 2 



76 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

pusse to Attoomakandy, the whole route, for 
eighteen miles, is enliyened hy the spectacle of 
land in the highest state of cultivation; coffee, 
sugar, and indigo crops alternately greeting the 
traveller's eye; and two miles from the latter 
place, the mountain-zone commences in all its 
sublimity and stem grandeur. At the first view 
of these stupendous and lofty mountains, which 
stretch in an enormous chain, (and which, during 
successive native dynasties, had formed the boun- 
daries of the Kandian monarchs* territories, and 
which also enabled them, for more than tihree 
centuries, to set at defiance all the arts of war 
practised by the Portuguese, Dutch, and English 
conquerors of the maritime districts,) all farther 
progress seems to be debarred. We believe the 
road that winds round Kadaganawa Pass can be 
compared to nothing of the same construction in 
modem times, save the Simplon ; and the officer 
who planned the first had innumerable difficulties 
to contend with, in the shape of inefficient as- 
sistants, unskilful and unwilling labourers, a 
tropical sun and unhealthy atmosphere, whilst 
those who executed the latter task, were aided by 
willing hands, ready hearts, and a genial atmo- 
sphere. We know that the sacrifice of human life, 
whilst clearing the dense jungle for the formation 



CEYLON AND THE CINQALEftE. 77 

of the road was immense, and we regret to say 
that numbers of our officers were claimed by 
death, whilst superintending the tardy labours of 
the natives, in the discharge of their duties. 

A series of views of the most magnificent and 
varied character open forth as the moimtain is as- 
cended ; on either side of which appear cultivated 
lands, bounded by dense forests, and rocks, whilst 
the clearness of the atmosphere enables the tra- 
veller to see the undulating lowlands stretching far 
into the distance. As the steep sides of the moun- 
tain are climbed, ravines and fissures are wound 
round, and oft;en a perpendicular mountain rears 
its lofty crest on one side, and descends in the 
same manner on the opposite. Sometimes a 
brawling waterfall appears over the traveller's 
head, as if threatening instant annihilation, by 
hurling him into the deep abyss below ; then the 
road will become so narrow that there appears to 
be scarcely room sufficient for the vehicle to 
stand on, and the strongest nerves may be 
shaken, as the eye glan'oes below at the steep 
precipice, down which some crumbling earth is 
rolling, loosened by the coach-wheels. To this 
circumscribed path, upon turning the next angle, 
succeeds a wide road and view of the surround- 
ing country-*-terminated by the Blue mountains 



78 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

in the distance, whose towering heads blend with 
the azure heavens, Adam's Peak rearing his lofty 
crest above his fellows. The combination of 
sublime and beautiful scenery, brought under 
notice during the ascent of the Kadaganawa 
Pass is nearly incredible ; roaring torrents dash- 
ing down frightful abysses, from whose sides 
spring enormous trees, and at whose base are lands 
teeming with grain. Terrific chasms, and over- 
hanging masses of rock, where bright coloured 
flowering shrubs have taken root, rapidly succeed 
each other ; and, when the summit of the moun- 
tain is attained, and the boundless extent and 
beauty of the prospect fiilly perceptible, many 
beholders of this magnificent scene cannot find 
utterance to express their sense of the might, 
majesty, and glory of the Almighty's works, and 
the humiliating feeling of their own littleness. 

The freshness of the atmosphere, and the 
splendour of the scenery, are admitted by all, 
and extolled by numberless Europeans who have 
ascended the Kadaganawa Pass; and amongst 
those who are keenly alive to the beauties of 
nature, and consequently possessing acute sensi- 
bilities, we never knew one, whose feelings were 
not alienated from home, or blunted by a pro- 
longed residence in the East, who did not de- 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 79 

clare they felt saddened, as the distant mountains 
and cooler air recalled scenes and persons in 
their native land, they might possibly never 
behold again, — while they compared the moun- 
tains they were then gazing upon to those in 
England, Ireland, Scotland, or Wales. A 
column of noble design and just proportions is 
placed on the summit of the mountain, erected in 
honour of him who planned the Kadaganawa 
Pass. 

The remaining portion of the route to Kandy is 
diversified by many beautiful specimens of die 
animal and vegetable kingdoms, as numbers of 
monkeys belonging to different species will sport 
among the branches, whilst flocks of parrots and 
birds with gaudy plumage will wing their way 
from, or settle upon, the boughs of the trees adja- 
cent to the road-side. Every tint of verdure is to 
be seen upon the trees, from the bright green of 
the young leaf, to the sombre tint of maturity, 
which will gradually subside into a rich brown, 
assuming a brilliant orange colour, before it drops 
from its paient stem ; and as the eye wanders 
farther into the jungle, the trees appear to form 
one vast natural bower. 

Attracted by the warmth, occasionally a 
speckled serpent may be seen gliding from his 



80 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

retreat in the underwood, to enjoy the full power 
of the sun's beams, or the reptile may entwine 
itself round the trunk of a tree in pursuit of some 
lovely bird, (not sufficiently strong on the wing 
to elude by flight thd creature^s deadly fangs,) or 
to rob the nests of the eggs, or unfledged young. 
It would be impossible to enumerate a tithe of 
the trees appertaining to difierent species that 
are to be met with in this vast garden ; but what 
principally attracts the stranger's attention, is the 
large talapat palm that grows a short distance 
from the right-hand side of the road, a few miles 
from Kandy . This magnificent tree towers above 
all the other gigantic monarchs of the vegetable 
world, and it is utterly impossible to find words 
adequate to describe its splendid beauty. The 
talapat, or great fan palm, is designated by most 
authors as Corypha umbraculifera, but some few 
call it Llcuala spinosa. Leaving those botanists to 
settle the disputed name that have a penchant 
for disputation, we will give a cursory descrip- 
tion of this celebrated palm — which varies in 
height from seventy to one htmdred feet. The 
leaves frequently measure, from the extremity of 
the stalk to the point, more than twenty-four feet, 
and the width varies from twelve to seventeen, 
and these are used by the natives for fans and 



■V. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 81 

« 

umbrellas. Under the natiye kings, none save 
these belonging to the highest caste were allowed 
to use these leaves, and the number was fixed 
that each chief, according to his rank, was to have 
borne before him. The flowers spring from the 
diadem of graceful verdure that crowns the palm, 
the blossoms being of a most exquisite pale 
yellow, and continuing in bloom for the space of 
three months, when they gradually disappear as 
the fruit forms.^ Near this gigantic tree, are to 
be seen the banian tree, tlie myrtle (Myrtus), the 
bay tree (Lauras,) and the tick seed simflower, 
which bears an immense number of golden- 
coloured blossoms, and is a species of Coreopsis ; 
whilst on the opposite side fragments of yellow 
rock are clothed with luxuriant balsams, (Impati- 
cus coccinea,) whose delicate white, and brilliant 
red blossoms, stand out in bold relief from the 
shining foliage. Ever and anon, some sportive 
green lizard will dart from out the long grass, 
and run across the road, or large carpenter bees, 
or beetles, whose wings pxe resplendant with the 
rainbow's hues, will in their airy flight poise on 
the wing, preparatory to settling upon some sweet- 
scented flower, thus ^ving the traveller an oppor- 

* For a detailed account of this palm, see a future 
chapter 

E 5 



8*2 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

tunity of noting their several characteristic beau- 
ties. Possibly the eye may rest upon a small 
lizard; whose delicate brown skin is spotted like 
the tiger's, or striped like the leopard's, or on a 
tree frog, whose peculiar formation and move- 
ments delight as well as astonish; the former 
may be resting tranquilly on the trunk of the 
tree, with extended tongue, to catch the mosqui- 
toes, or other small insects, and the latter may be 
creeping into the cup of the beautiful blossom, 
also in search of food. 

It not unfrequently happens, the next strange 
object that arrests the traveller's attention, maybe 
a tame elephant harnessed to a roughly-made 
cart, (as these creatures are used by the govern- 
ment in this district,) the driver walking quietly 
by the animal's side, unprovided with any means 
of enforcing his commands by severity, the pon- 
derous brute obeying his keeper's voice with the 
docility of a well-trained little child. In fact, 
earth and air in this fertile island teem with 
such infinite variety of natural productions, that 
the man devoted to scientific pursuits, and he 
whose sole aim is the acquirement of wealth, find 
alike a wide field for their respective occupa- 
tions. 

Three miles from the town of Kandy is Pera- 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 83 

denia, celebrated alike for its bridge and botani- 
cal, gardens; the bridge being built entirely of 
satin wood, one noble arch of two hundred fcid 
seven feet, spanning the swelling waters of the 
Mahavelle-ganga. The Botanical gardens, whilst 
under the superintendence of the celebrated 
oriental botanist, Dr. Gardner, were maintained 
in admirable condition, and every facility was 
afforded by that talented and courteous man, for 
the student or enquirer to obtain information. 

We believe these extensive gardens contained a 
specimen of every plant, shrub, or tree, indigenous 
to the island, (with the exception of the talapat 
tree,) as Dr. Gardner was indefatigable in the 
performance of his duty, and many rare speci- 
mens from the mountainous district, whose exist- 
ence was previously unknown, were obtained by 
the energetic. exertions of this gentleman. Among 
the curious foreign plants in these gardens, is a 
species of banana (Musa sapientum), native of 
Madagascar, called by many the " Traveller's 
friend," owing to the sweet aqueous fluid that 
flows from the sheath of the leaf when punctured. 
Every member of this tribe is exceedingly gi-ace- 
ful, but the beauty of the one now alluded to far 
outvies its compeers, as the leaves sprout with 
extreme regularity from either side of the stem, 



84 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

in regular gradadons, each leaf elegantly droop- 
ing over a lesser one, from the base to the summit 
of Ae stem. The trunk also is the same beautiful 
green as the leaves, and its formation is most 
peouliar, as it is flat; and has a platted appear- 
ance, looking exactly as if three stems had been 
regularly entwined. The height of this extraor- 
dinary specimen is nearly eighteen feet, and, 
although we have given an exact description of 
this beautiful tree, we feel that we have not been 
able to impart an adequate idea of its excessive 
loveliness and singularity. The lei-chee trees, 
natives of China* (Dimacarpus), usually attract 
much attention, but as we had seen them in 
this parent land growing to an enormous size, 
we did not feel the peculiar interest that we 
otherwise might have done. The fruit, the 
shape of which is oval, is considered extremely 
delicious, vaiying in size from a damson to a 
small plum ; the portion that is eaten, is a semi- 
transparent jelly-like substance, that is contained 
in a tough, thin, rough, red rind : when dried 
these fruits are very palatable, and can now be 
obtained in England, but in our estimation the 
lei-chee to be eaten in perfection, should be pre- 
served; the jelly prepared from them by the 
Chinese, is as delicious a compound as can well 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 8d 

be imagined. The trees belonging to this species 
in the botanic gardens have not attained their 
fiill growth, nevertheless they are universally 
acSinired ; the foliage resembles that of the laurel 
in size and colour, and the fruit grows in bunches 
suspended from stalks six or eight inches long ; 
the bark is a rich shade of bright brown, and in 
China, these trees, when arrived at maturity, are as 
large and lofiy as a full-grown oak ; those now al- 
luded to at Peradenia are only of a moderate size. 
Although not in these gardens, we cannot refrain 
from noticing one of the most noble specimens of 
vegetation in the world, that i» to be found in the 
Mahomedan burial-ground at Putlam, in this 
island. This is a tamarind tree, (Tamarindus 
indicus,) and called from its enormous size the 
giant's tree ; the height is ninety-eight feet, and 
seven feet from the root, the solid stem is thirty- 
nine feet in diameter : just above, the tree divides 
into two branches, one of which is twenty-one 
feet, and the other twenty-seven feet in circum- 
ference. The natives affirm that it increases in 
size annually, and that it is not more than a hun- 
dred-and-thirty years old. *At one time tamarind 
trees, but of a smaller size, used to aboimd in the 
jungles, but immense numbers have been de- 
stroyed in the formation of coffee estates, and 



86 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

many have been felled to obtain their exquisitely 
variegated timber, which is often manufactured 
into furniture. 

The position of the former capital of Lanka 
diva, is as beautiful and romantic as can be 
well depicted by the most vivid imagination; 
being situated in a valley, partially surrounded 
by lofty mountains, which are clothed in the 
perpetual verdure of trees, whose enormous 
girth betoken these were saplings in ages past. 
The mountains (varying from 300 to 2000 feet 
in height) are nearly in the form of an amphi- 
theatre, and, when their shadows are reflected 
in the lakers clear waters, the scene is more 
like enchantment than reality. This artificial 
lake was formed by the last tyrant monarch of 
Kandy, out of paddy-fields, which he forced 
the owners to yield up to him ; and many thou- 
sands of men were compelled to labour without 
the slightest compensation, at the embankments^ 
and numbers of wives were made widows, as 
score after score of the labourers fell victims 
to the unwholesome exhalations of the disturbed 
stagnant waters. Notwithstanding all the atro- 
cious associations connected with the construc- 
tion of this lake, it is a most refreshing sight, 
as the silver stream extends nearly a mile and 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 87 

three quarters in length, the breadth at the 
widest part exceeding five hundred and ten feet. 
A winding road encircles the lake, which being 
at the base of the surrounding hills, is sheltered 
in some measure by them from the scorching 
rays of the sun ; consequently, Europeans can 
indulge in pedestrian and equestrian exercise 
at a later hour in the morning, and an earlier 
one in the afternoon, than they can either at 
Galle, or Colombo. A small artificial island 
stands in the centre of the lake, on which is an 
octagonal building that was used by the Queens 
of Kandy as a bathing-house ; since we have 
had possession of the capital, it has been con- 
verted into a powder-magazine. Near the lake 
is the palace, and, although the building has 
suffered fearfully from the wanton destruction 
of our troops, still much remains to show what 
its magnificent decorations must have been in 
its hour of pride. The massive walls bear im- 
press of the sculptor's art, and they are equally 
remarkable for their solidity. From the palace to 
the side of the lake, runs a beautiful low trellised 
wall, in which are perforations of every shape and 
size, for the purpose of illumination upon oc- 
casions of public rejoicing and festivity; and 
nothing can be conceived more picturesque than 

8 






88 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

the view of this low wall from tlie opposite hill. 
Alas! we grieve to say, £his elegant structure 
was fast crumbling away, and, as it is not re- 
paired, in a comparatiyely short time not a. 
vestige of it will remain. The great objects 
of interest in Kandy are the temples and tombs 
of the kings, and as a full account of them will 
be given in a future chapter, we omit especial 
mention of them here. 

The town of Kandy is insalubrious, as it lies 
in a basin, open drains running at either side 
of the principal streets, and the effluvia from 
these receptacles of filth, especially after rain, 
is absolutely pestiferous. Improvements were 
commenced, by covered drains being constructed, 
and stagnant waters drained off, but as all la- 
bour proceeds in Ceylon in an inverse ratio to 
the grovirth of vegetation, it will be years before 
(if ever) these sanitary measures are effected. 
The present town consists of two main streets 
called Colombo and Trincomalee Streets, the 
former running east and west, the latter north and 
south; and the principal market for edibles is 
situated in the middle of the intersecting roads. 
On either side of the streets are small open 
shops, where the indolent owners sit chewing 
betel, being almost too lazy to serve a customer 






''« 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 89 

with their waxes, presenting a correct type of 
oriental customs and productions. Spread upon 
small wicker trays, are all sorts of spices, from 
the small round black peppercorn to the oval 
nutmeg and long pipe of brown cinnamon ; in- 
termixed with these, are heaps 'of brilliant red 
chillies, white rice, and golden turmerick, whilst 
from the roof are suspended bunches of the 
green and yellow plantains, and mat bags con- 
taining curry stuffs, coffee, and sugar. In one 
comer may be a pile of oranges and citrons, 
whilst the others are occupied with cocoa-nuts 
divested and undivested of their exterior green 
covering. Occasionally these articles axe so 
arranged, and the colours blend so harmoniously, 
that one is almost tempted to believe an artist's 
hand alone could thus have placed them. 

When a buyer approaches one of these recepta- 
cles, and the proprietor is suiSciently roused from 
his favourite employment of betel-chewing, to state 
the price of the required commodity, a wordy 
wax immediately ensues, for the native purveyor, 
let him traffick in the cheapest fruit, or the costli- 
est jewel, invariably asks double the value of the 
article he has for sale. The native buyer in all 
probability requires a fanam's-worth of curry 
stuff or spice, double the amount is asked, until 



90 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

fraction by fraction is abated, and the just price 
agreed to be taken ; each party chaffering with 
as much vehemence, energy, and gesticulation, 
as if three thousand rix-dollars were at stake, 
instead of three-halfpence. 

During the Kandian monarchy, the relatives 
and connexions of the royal family resided in 
a particular district, situated in a south-easterly 
direction from the principal temple and palace, 
and which is now called Malabar Street. The 
ruling despot invariably deeming it essential to 
be prepared for rebellion, naturally placed re- 
liance upon his relatives. 

The Kandian laws forbade all save the nobles 
and chiefs to construct their dwellings with 
bricks, or kabook, or to roof them with tiles, or 
to elevate them from the ground ; the domiciles 
of all of inferior rank being composed of a com- 
poimd of mud and sticks, called waretchie, and 
roofed with platted cocoa-nut leaves, or paddy 
straw. A Kandian chief informed us the following 
was the original plan of the city ; all the streets, 
including the principal, being five in number, 
ran in straight lines, inclining from west and 
east to the north, forming a triangle based by 
the artificial lakes. 

There are a few good shops where European 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 91 

articles can be obtained in Kandy, but on ac- 
count of the expense attendant upon inland 
transit, the prices are exorbitant. The religious 
edifices and public buildings are of the same de- 
scription as those at Colombo, but their number 
is materially less. A very handsome church was 
built by subscription, and consecrated by the 
pious prelate. Dr. Chapman, the present and 
first Bishop of Colombo. Previously to the erec- 
tion of this edifice, divine service was performed 
in the Hall of Audience, formerly used by the 
kings of Kandy for the reception of ambassadors, 
which was, and is, used also as the Court-house. 
The town is garrisoned by a detachment of our 
troops, and of the Ceylon Rifles, the barracks 
for both affording ample accommodation for a 
large number of soldiers. Near the tombs of 
the kings are the artillery barracks, situated in 
a most picturesque spot, the grounds of which 
are stocked with flowering shrubs, and many 
European vegetables, that are reared and tended 
by the soldiers with the greatest care ; the men 
taking pride in, and bestowing extreme attention 
upon, the well-kept garden. Scattered over the 
lower hills are some houses of a better descrip- 
tion, that have been erected within the last few 
years, find are inhabited by the government em- 



93 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

ploy^s and Europeans. Although these dwellings 
are commodiom, and bmlt in comparatiyely 
salubrious spots, they have one most essential 
drawback, namely, want of a plentiful supply of 
good water; for as gneiss fonns the bed of Kandy, 
water is difficult to obtain in certain situations, 
being particularly scarce on the hill sides. 

His Excellency's residence, called the Pavi- 
lion, is the only structure in Ceylon that is 
calculated for the abode of one who is en- 
trusted with the government of Asiatics, and, 
moreover, is the representative of the .Sovereign 
of Great Britain. It is a fax;t of which most 
are cognisant, that Eastern nations place ex- 
treme value upon all the appliances of state, 
although this is admitted theoretically, it is 
too frequently disregarded practically, and 
we have heard the remark made many times, 
both by highland and lowland nobles, that the 
Queen's House of Colombo "was plenty small 
for great man, all same Rajah." Surely it is 
unwise to practise niggardly parsimony in such 
matters, giving a people, (whom we have con- 
quered, and wish to impress with an idea of 
our notions of wealth and power,) the convic- 
tion that we either cannot, or will not provide 
suitable residences for the Governors who are 
sent to rule over them. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 93 

The Queen's House at Kandy was planned by 
Lieut.-Colonel Brown, RE., and built while Sir 
Edward Barnes was Governor. This building 
is composed of a centre and two wings, which 
form in the rear three sides of a square, is elegant 
and commodious, combining every requisite for 
a dwelling in a tropical^ climate, and beautiful 
architectural proportions. The house is sur- 
rounded by regular coUonades^ and, as the entire 
surface of this handsome edifice is encrusted 
with a preparation that bears a high polish, the 
whole of the building has the appearance of 
being constructed of white marble. The pavi- 
lion commands a >dew of the principal part of 
the town, as well as an extensive prospect of the 
adjacent country'; and it would have been im- 
possible to have selected a more advantageous 
site in every way. The house stands in the 
centre of a large lawn, about which are planted 
at regular intervals groups of magnolia and palm 
trees : the park-like gL'ounds coyer a large space, 
and are well stocked with flowering exotics, and 
kept in excellent order. The park extends to the 
sides of the hills, and beautiful views of the moim- 
tain landscape valley of Doombera, and the mean- 
dering river are obtained. But in the centre of this 
lovely valley stands a gentle elevation, on which 



94 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

is a large and solitary tree, that recalls mournful 
recollections, for it is called Davie's tree ; and 
it was in this vicinity in 1803 the fearful massacre 
of our poor soldiers took place, occasioned by 
the cowardice of the officer who commanded 
them. Major Davie ; a man who alike disgraced 
his country and humanity. 

The beautiful grounds were planned and laid 
6ut during the government of Sir Wilmot Horton, 
who succeeded Sir Edward Barnes, and the road 
that vnnds roimd the hills in the rear of the 
Pavilion is still called, and known only by the 
name of Lady Horton's road. The rapid suc- 
cession of magnificent views that meet the eye 
from this mountain path are most glorious, as the 
rapid waters of the Mahavelle ganga flow below, 
the forest-clothed mountains, and hills, on which 
every tint and variety of foliage are to be dis- 
cerned. From the main road, a minor path leads 
to the one that encircles the lake of Kandy, (whose 
level is sixteen hundred and fifty feet above the 
ocean,) the height of the mountain immediately 
over it, being three thousand feet. A mile beyond 
is the rocky ridge of Hantanna, which is four 
thousand three hundred feet high ; the Peak of 
Hoonasgiri again towers above this, and the 
summit of the Knuckles, then proudly rears its 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 95 

lofty crest towards the heavens above all, the 
height of this mountain exceeding six thousand 
one hundred feet. From other parts of Lady 
Horton's road, various mountains are perceptible, 
besides those already enumerated, whose altitude 
varies from three to five thousand feet ; but al- 
though we can give the heights of the eminences, 
we cannot impart an idea of the transcendant 
sublimity and grandeur of the scenery that sur- 
rounds Kandy. 

The Citadel, or stronghold of our troops at 
Kandy, is situated upon one-tree hill, conununi- 
cating by signals with Atgallee, which is distant 
seven and a half miles on the Trincomalee road, 
and is a military station of great importance, as 
it stands upon rising ground that commands a 
vast extent of country, and this part proved of 
the utmost service during the late rebellion. On 
every side Kandy is approached by mountain 
passes ; and through one of these ran the cele- 
brated Kurunaigalla tunnel, which was five hun- 
dred and thirty-seven feet in length. The road 
through the tunnel united at the base of the 
mountain, with the principal route to Colombo, 
thus enabling troops advancing on Kandy, to 
turn the heights near the Kadaganawa Pass. 
This tunnel was constructed by order of Sir 



96 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Edward Barnes, to consolidate, so to speak, the 
British power after Kandy came into our pos- 
session ; for a legend has been extant, from time 
immemorial, that no foseion power could re- 
tain the Kandian dominions, until a path was 

BORED THROUGH THE MOUNTAIN. And a chief 

told us, that when his countrymen beheld this 
task commenced, their hearts failed them, but, 
when they saw it completed, and men walking 
through the bowels of the earth, they then knew 
it was their destiny to be ruled by a nation who 
could pierce rocks, and undermine mountains. 

The tunnel was completed on the 8th of De- 
cember, 1823, but we regret to say this has now 
collapsed, and the road is impassable. This 
tunnel, the principal carriage roads, and bridges, 
never could have been constructed, had not the 
system of compulsory labour been adopted by 
our government, as it had been carried on under 
the native dynasty. By order of the King in 
Council, in 1832, all compulsory services, and 
forced labour of every description was declared 
illegal and abolished. Whilst making the exca- 
vations for the tunnel, some rare and valuable 
gems were discovered, and the only ruby we 
have ever seen without flaw or defect in colour, 
was found at that period. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 97 

Wild animals and game abound in the neigh- 
bourhood of Kandy, as the jungles and forests 
afford them safe retreat. For as the surrounding 
country consists alike of mountains and valleys, 
hills and dales, woods and plains, rivers and 
streamlets, every animal from the elephant to the 
cheetah, every bird from the peacock to the snipe, 
every reptile from the python to the centipede, 
or amphibious guano, can find secure shelter in 
one or other of their respective haunts. We 
have known discredit cast upon an officer's asser- 
tion, who stated that during Sir Edward Barnes' 
government, he had heard continually after night- 
fall, the shrill cry of the elephant, and bellowing 
of the elk, in the jungle behind, and close to the 
Governor's temporary residence. We feel certain 
that every syllable of this statement was strictly 
correct ; as we have heard Kandians affirm, that 
formerly beasts of prey would constantly come 
into the city during the night, when pressed by 
hunger, and that leopards have often been found 
drowned in the wells. Much of the dense jungle 
that surrounded the town is now cleared away, 
but we can positively declare that very recendy 
a cheetah was seen close to a dwelling-house, 
in the early part of the day, and, despite the 
shouts of the servants, pounced upon a large 

VOL. I. F 



98 tfETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

turkey, deliberately walking off with his prize, 
not bounding, into the neighbouring plantation. 
Neither can we forget that during our residence 
in Kandy, a cobra capello was seen within a 
hundred yards of our abode, nor that we killed 
a black scorpion, (the most venomous of this 
tribe,) fiilly nine inches in length, in the 
verandah, narrowly escaping treading upon the 
reptile, which we mistook for a piece of sticky 
nor that we were roused from our slumbers by 
the efforts of a favourite dog, who was endea- 
vouring to kill an enormous centipede, that was 
crawling up the bed-post under the mosquito 
curtains. 



CEYLON AND THB CINGALESE. 99 



CHAPTER V. 



Ronte to Trincomalee — ^Native suspension bridge— Cayes 
of Dambool — ^Bemains of tanks — ^Difficulty of construct- 
ing a portion of the road — Hot wells-^Temperature of 
the waters — Beneficial application in certain diseases — 
Legend attached to the waters — Coast and harbour of 
Trincomalee— Situation, latitude, longitude — Size of har- 
bour — Fort of Trincomalee — Town -^ Buildings — 
Troops— Insalubrity of the cUmate-^TrincomaJae named 
in ancient records — Colony of Malabors established there 
before 125 A.D. — ^Interesting religious ceremony on the 
promontoiy in honour of Siva — Pillar to the memory of 
Francina van Bhede — Melancholy history — Fantastic 
ctppeaxance of the Quartz Eocks — ^Principal roads. 

The route fromKandy toTrinoomalee.abounds 
in objects of novelty and interest ; the first one 
IS situated six miles from Kandy, and consists of 
a cane suspension bridge, dirown over the De- 

F 2 



100 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

deroo-oya. The construction of this fragile 
medium of communication to the opposite sides 
of a rapid stream, evinces alike the ingenuity 
and readiness of the natives to avail themselves 
of those means most easily obtained, and calcu- 
lated for their purpose. 

This structure is composed of cable-rattan, 
which frequently grows to the length of two 
hundred yards ; and varies but little in thickness 
from one end to the other, is extremely light, 
flexible, and tough. The bridge is commenced 
by entwining canes a few feet apart round the 
trunks of two large trees that grow on the oppo- 
site banks of the stream, and whose branches 
bend over the river ; when the required number 
of canes are securely fastened in this manner, 
portions of the same material are laid across to 
form the path, which is the same breadth as the 
circumference of the stems of the trees. Rattans 
are then placed at a sufficient height to form 
hand-rails, these being attached to the bridge 
by thin bamboos, or sticks, which alike support 
and retain the rails in their proper place. 

From the overhanging boughs are suspended 
cane or coir ropes, which are attached to the 
bridge, thus strengthening the structure, and 
lessening the vibration. The means of ascent 



s ^ m » 



•J ^ ^ ^ <• 



«l A 



* -.! ! 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. .101 

are by a ladder composed of the same materials, 
which rests against the trunks of the opposite 
trees ; and it is perfectly astonishing to see the 
fearlessness with which women, children, or 
men carrying heavy burthens, will cross one of 
these aerial structures. 

Thirty-five miles from Kandy is Dambool, 
near which place are the celebrated Buddhist 
rock cave temples, which may almost be classed 
among the wonders of the world, as they are 
complete specimens of man's skill, perseverance, 
and ingenuity. * The remains of tanks, that 
once fertilized by their waters whole districts, 
now suffered to fall into decay, becoming choked 
up with dense underwood and rank vegetation 
are continually passed; causing sensations of 
surprise and pain, that our government should 
suffer such sources of wealth to become the 
focus of disease, instead of having them repaired, 
and applying them to the pui-pose for which they 
were constructed. 

The last thirty miles of the road are peculiarly 
interesting to the antiquarian, as they lie through 
a forest, in which are scattered remains of 
temples, tanks, and villages. The officer who 

* For the detailed account of these extraordinary exca- 
vations, see the chapter devoted to the antiquities. 



■ • 






102 CEYLON AND THE CIN(^AL£8E. 

traced this portion of the road, had to oTereome 
innumerable difficulties, and endure both toil 
and privation in the peiformance of his task, as 
nearly the whole of this portion of the road 
was traced from the summit of the trees, and 
great difficulty was experienced in obtaining 
sufficient water for the large number of men 
necessarily employed. Captain Atchison was 
indefatigable in his exertions, and the road was 
completed in an incredibly short time ; and we 
cannot do better than quote his own words, show- 
ing the obstacles he had to surmount, and the 
remains of ciyilization that were brought to 
Ught 

**The ruins of Wihares (temples), remains of 
deserted villages, tanks, and other remnants of 
antiquity, prove that the vast wilderness of beau- 
tiful and valuable forest-trees through which the 
new line of road passes, heretofore supposed a 
trackless desert^ obnoxious to the existence of 
man, and destitute of water and inhabitants, 
once contained a considerable population, by 
whose labours an extensive ti*act of irrigated 
lands was regularly cultivated." 

Seven miles from Trincomalee, near a ridge 
of wooded hills, are the hot springs of Kanya : 
there are seven wells of various sizes, containing 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 103 

pure water,, the temperature of which, is unequal, 
the thermometer raiiging in different weUs from 
100^ to 112^. The enclosure in. which the springs 
are, is about forty feet long, and eighteen wide, 
being surrounded by a wall of kabook, each 
well likewise having a low embankment. The 
taste of the waters is not unpleasant, although 
they are not drank, the natives believing only in 
their restorative qualities, when applied exter- 
nally. 

These waters are oonsid^ed efficacious in 
cutaneous ai^d rheumatic diseases, and some of 
our medical men recommend their application. 
The mode of using these waters is by afiusion, 
the invalid standing upon a square stone tablet, 
whilst chatties of water are poured over his 
person. The springs are deemed sacred by the 
natives^ and under the especial protection of 
Ganeesa, (the Hindoo god of wisdom,) to whom 
tliere is erected a temple near the spot, and in 
which is a stone statue of the god; and the fol- 
lowing legend is extant among the natives re- 
garding the origin of the springs, which they 
view with awe and reverence. 

The god, Vishnu, being resolved to prevent the 
h^ro King, Bawana, going to war, with one of his 
devotees, assumed the form of a venerable man, 



104 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

and appeared before the monarch, just as he 
was settmg forth to battle, and with loud lamen- 
tations informed him that his mother, Kanya, was 
dead. The king^, deeply afflicted, immediately 
ordered his soldiers to their homes, stating that 
he could not go forth to war until the solemnities 
and ablutions were gone through that were en- 
joined to be performed for deceased relatives. 
Vishnu disappeared, but, fearing his favourite 
might be accidentally encountered by the 
monarch, if he went to the bath, caused the hot 
springs to burst forth on the spot, and as the 
king laved his person, the waters miraculously 
appeased his wrath, and from that time have 
never ceased to flow ; being called Kanya, after 
the mother of the monarch. 

The beauty of the coast and harbour of Trin- 
Gomalee has been expatiated upon by many, and 
the eulogies bestowed upon the immense tracts 
of inland forests, groves of palmyra palms, ad- 
jacent country, and bold shores, are fully merited. 
Trincomalee is the capital of the eastern pro- 
vince, and is situated in lat. 8^ 33' 5"^ north, and 
in long. 81^ 13' 2^ east, possessing a harbour 
which is invaluable for its safety, position, and 
size ; naval men have declared in our presence, 
the greater portion of our men-of-war could find 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 105 

room, and ride in it with the utmost security. 
The inner harbour or bay is land-locked, and 
being nearly unfathomable, vessels of every class 
can there find shelter from, and in the most vio- 
lent storms. 

The entrance to the harbour is nearly five miles 
wide, and lies between Foul Point on the south- 
east, and Fort Frederick on the north-west, the 
width gradually decreasing to three miles between 
Norway Point to the south-west, and Chapel 
Island on the north-west, when it expands sud- 
denly, and forms Great Bay to the southward, 
and Trincomalee harbour to the northward. 
During war, this is the principal depot for the 
Indian navy, as there is an excellent dockyard 
and arsenal, capable of holding and refitting the 
largest man-of-war. 

The fort of Trincomalee extends over a space 
exceeding three and a half miles, and commands 
the entrance to the inner bay ; within the walls 
are buildings, erected for the defence of the lovv 
ground by the landing-place. Three miles west 
of Trincomalee is a cliflT which projects into the 
sea, and on this is the citadel called Fort Osna- 
burgh, which is built exclusively for the defence 
of the harbour, and which cannot be taken, until 
the lower fort has been captured. 

F 5 



106 CETLOH ANP THE ClKOALBftE« 

The town of Trincomalee extends in a north-- 
easterly direction, along the outer bay, being 
situated in a well- wooded, hilly country, and is 
separated £roni the fort by a wide esplanade. 
Although the population is extremely limited 
when compared with that of Colombo, the houses 
are scattered oyer a much greater extent than 
they are at the seat of government, but few 
Eiuropeans have settled at Trincomalee, conse- 
quently the society is restricted to the families of 
the military and civil officers who are stationed 
there. 

The native population is composed chiefly of 
Malabars and Moors, who pay comparatively 
little attention to ag^cultural pursuits, conse- 
quently large tracts of valuable land remain un- 
cultivated. The government offices are compa- 
ratively few ; the religious edifices are calculated 
for the accommodation of much larger congrega- 
tions than are likely ever to fiU their walls, as, 
from the . insalubrity of the climate, few Euro- 
peans would reside at Trincomalee unless neces- 
sity compels them to do so. The Wesleyans 
and Roman Catholics have each appropriate 
places of worship, and the natives likewise have 
their temples and mosques. 

The fort is garrisoned by a detachment of our 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 107 

soldiers, and the Oeylon Rifles, and our troops 
evince great dislike to being sent to this station, 
as the enervating natinre and excessive heat of 
the climate, the thermometer ranging from 74^, 
to 91^ throughout the year, almost incapacitate 
Europeans from escorting themselves, especially 
when encumbered with a soldier's uniform and 
accoutrements. Occasionally spasmodic cholera 
will break out suddenly in a most virulent form, 
attacking and destroying alike in a few hours 
the European and the native, Ac drunken and 
the sober, the brave man and the coward, the 
happy and the wretched, and after committing 
fearful ravages will as suddenly cease. Never*- 
theless, cholera is always more prevalent in 
Trincomalee and Jaflhapatam, than in other parts 
of Ceylon. 

If we are to credit traditions, Trincomalee 
appears to have been weU known in the earliest 
ages, as it is stated there was a temple erected 
on diis spot, that was celebrated all over the 
continent of India. Brahminical records declare 
that in the earliest wars of the gods, three of die 
peaks of the Maha-meru, or abode of celestial 
beings, were thrown down, and driven into 
various parts of the earth, and that one of these 



108 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

is Trincomalee, and that it immediately became 
the abode of Siva^ or Eiswara. 

The heir apparent of Manoo Salen, sovereign 
of the Coromandel coast, hearing of the sanctity 
of Trincomalee, left his father's dominions, 
erected a temple to the god, on the summit of 
the rock, built a town, constituted a Malabar 
chief the governor of the city and adjacent 
country, inviting his father's subjects and other 
emigrants to settle there. This is stated to have 
occurred 1589 B.C., and, although this early date 
cannot be authenticated by the testimony of con- 
temporary writers, the Malabars possess several 
works in the Tamil tongue that profess to de- 
scribe the beauty of this temple and other sacred 
buildings. 

Cingalese historical records to some extent 
corroborate the Tamil, as they say their King, 
Gaja Bahoo, who reigned between 113 A.D., 
and 125, gave rice-fields and lands as endow- 
ments to the temple for entertaining the inten- 
tion of destroying the fane of Siva, and building 
a new one to Buddha in its place. The Cingalese 
account also states that Graja Bahoo took the 
natives of the Coromandel coast prisoners, and 
sent them to Trincomalee ; whilst the Taiuil 



-^^^ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 109 

writers declare that at a much earlier period, 
their forefathers had voluntarilj emigrated to 
this spot. 

Without attempting to reconcile these con- 
flicting statements, it is an indisputable fact, that 
in the second century of our era, and during the 
reign of the Cingalese monarch, Gaja Bahoo, 
a colony was established at Trincomalee, and it 
is rather remarkable that many of the Malabars 
at Trincomalee can distinctly trace back their 
pedigree to the period above named. 

The promontory on which the fort is built is 
dedicated to Siva, and this rock is regarded with 
peculiar veneration by the god's worshippers, as 
they believe that on this spot the first temple 
dedicated to his service, by the Prince Kala- 
kootu (the king's son before alluded to) was 
erected. Some oriental scholars maintain that 
Siva means destroyer, whilst Wilson, who is no 
mean authority, states in his Sanscrit dictionary, 
that Eiswara, the ancient designation for Siva, is 
" an universal spirit." 

Although every vestige of the temple has long 
since been obliterated, at stated periods oblations 
are offered to the god on the presumed site of 
his original temple. Shortly before sunset, the 
Brahmin priest ascends the rock, wearing a 



110 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

peculiar costume for the occasion, which consists 
of a yellow doth twisted round his loins, and a 
chaplet of large and many-coloured beads bound 
around his brow. The officiating priest climbs 
to a lofty part of the rock that overhangs the 
sea ; the subordinate priests standing upon the 
adjacent crags, some of the worshippers ranging 
themselves by their side, whilst others stand or 
kneel in more secure situations. 

The priest first performs various ablutions, 
then makes several low salaams towards a deep 
chasm in the rock, (in which the deluded beings 
suppose the god they worship dwells,) casting 
rice and betel leaves into th^ fathomless ocean 
that rolls below ; then again bows lowly to the 
chasm, and stands in a devotional attitude gazing 
upon the sun. So soon as the sun touches the 
waters, a subordinate priest hands a species of 
censer ^tp his superior, who holds the vessel 
above^is head with one hand, waving it to and 
fro in the air ; he then ignites the incense, which 
being composed of inflammable and fragrant pre- 
paration, bursts instantaneously into lurid flames, 
diflusing a powerful perftime around. When the 
^ame has subsided, the priest casts two young 
cocoa-nuts into the ocean, and receives the 
oblations and oflerings of the congregation> for 



T^^ 



C£YLON AKD TH£ CtMOALBSE. Ill 

the god. When these have been coUected, both 
priests and people make low reverences, in the 
direction of the chasm, and the service concludes 
with a few muttered words from the officiating 
Brahmin. 

The offerings made by the devotees are of 
little value, as they consist of small quantities of 
rice, betel leaves, flowers, and cocoa-nuts, and, 
when money is presented, the coins are generally 
copper. This ceremony is remarkably interesting, 
as it undoubtedly is one of great antiquity ; and, 
from being performed upon a lofky precipice, 
whose steep sides beetle o'er the deep, and at 
the hour of sunset, has a character of mystery 
and wildness about it, that bears a stronger affi* 
ni^ to romance, than to the realities of life. 

As recently as 1622, an extensive range of 
temples dedicated to Siva, were levelled by 
the Portuguese, when Trincomalee wai| in their 
possession, and they applied the nraterials, 
to the construction of a portion of the fortifi- 
cations. 

Above the part of the promontory where the 
officiating priest worships the god, is a monu- 
mental pillar, erected to the memory of Francina 
van Rhode, who in 1687 committed suicide by 
leaping from a projecting crag. A lengthy in- 






112 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

scription was originally carved upon the pillar^ 
but time and exposure to the elements have 
nearly obliterated the whole, leaving merely the 
name, date, and a few words visible. Tradition 
has handed down the cause of the sinful act, and 
some descendants of the lady's family are still 
in Ceylon. 

Francina van Rhede was the daughter of a 
Dutch gentleman in the government service ; and 
had formed an attachment to an officer in the 
army, which was sanctioned by her father, and 
the day was fixed for the celebration of the nup- 
tials. Misunderstandings arose as to the amount 
of the bride's dowry, and other matters being 
disputed, the intended bridegroom broke off the 
match, and shortly after obtained leave to return 
to Europe. The unfortunate and misguided 
girl, rendered desperate by the desertion of her 
lover, resolved that he should not leave the 
island during her lifetime ; and, having obtained 
information as to the time of the ship's sailing, 
watched from her chamber-window the isails 
spread that were to waft him from the cinnamon 
isle. 

Before clearing the coast, the vessel was com- 
pelled to tack, and pass close to the precipices 
that bound the southern part of the Fort. For 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 113 

this moment she had watched; she rushed from 
her dwelling, darted along the edge of the clifTs, 
under which the swift vessel was gliding, for an 
instant balanced on an overhanging crag, then, 
with a wild exclamation of revengeful despair, 
leaped from the giddy height^ and was dashed 
against the rocks below. With some difficulty, 
her mangled remains were collected, by the order 
of her heart-broken father, to receive christian 
burial ; and, although we can only hope the act 
of self-murder was perpetrated during temporary 
insanity, as that alone can extenuate the com- 
mission of so fearful a crime, we have often felt 
surprise that the family should have commemo- 
rated so awfiil an occurrence by the erection of 
a pillar in this conspicuous situation. 

Some of the quartz rocks at Trincomalee have 
a most picturesque appearance from the sea, and 
a low hill, (that extends a distance of nearly two 
miles,) from Chapel Point to the opposite one of 
Fort Ostenburgh, has a fantastic and singular 
aspect. The sides of the rock are precipitous, 
being perfectly bare, standing out like denuded 
veins, exhibiting a strong similitude to the ruins 
and columns of ancient monastic edifices. The 
principal route through the island ends at Trin> 



114 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

comalee ; for though roads diverge at Taxious 
points both at Galle, Colombo, and Kandy, the 
main road commences at the former town and 
terminates at the latter. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESB* 115 



CHAPTER VI. 



Newera Ellia — ^The santtUHEnnn of the island — ^The rood — 
Mountain conflagration — Convalescent station for the 
military, established 1829 — Cascades of Eambodde — 
Newera Ellia a royal residence in 1628 — Scenery — Euro- 
pean aspect of the dwellings— Vegetation — ^The town — 
Public buildiDgs — Salubrity of the climate — ^Farming ex- 
periments — Great capabilities and fertile soil of Newera 
Ellia — ^Proposed plan of emigration — ^Price of stock and 
produce — ^Iron found on the plain — Carriage roads — Foot- 
path to the summit of Pedro-talla galla — Horton Plains, 
the highest table-land in Ceylon — Luxuriant specimens 
of the Nepenthes distiQatoria, or pitcher plant — ^Nelu, or 
honey plant. 

The road to Newaxa Ellia, the sanitorium and 
convalescent military ^station of Ceylon, (called 
by the natives the City of the Plain,) commences 
at the Peredenia bridge, three miles from Kandy, 



116 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

whence it runs through the mountainous parts of 
the island, which are celebrated in Cingalese 
records from being connected with the names of 
the heroes, Rama, Rawana, and the lovely Seeta. 
The route winds round precipitous slopes, the 
recesses of which, from their peculiar formation, 
are called the Devil's Punchbowls, and, during 
the whole of the journey, wide-spread valleys, 
gently undulating ground, flowing rivers, towering 
mountains, gushing cascades, and a well-wooded 
country, are passed in quick succession by the 
delighted traveller. Moreover, the invigorating 
coolness of the atmosphere, as the higher ground 
is reached, enables an European to enjoy 
the exquisite scenery in comfort. Some will 
commence the journey in the after part of the 
day, remaining at Gampola, twelve miles from 
Kandy, (where there is the best Rest-house 
in the island,) for the express purpose of witness- 
ing the sublime spectacle of a mountain confla- 
gration, which frequently occurs during the hot 
and dry season. 

The mountain of Ambulawe overhangs Gam- 
pala, and the coarse vegetation which clothes it 
frequently ignites spontaneously : much of the 
grass grows to a height of seven or eight feet, 
being distributed over the hill in patches ; this 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 117 

peculiar herbage being one of the characteristic 
productions of Ceylon, called lemon-grass, or 
Andrapogon Schaenanthus, and in this part of the 
island generally covers the hills that are not over- 
grown with underwood and jungle. 

The appearance of this burning grass is most 
magnificent : a lurid flame suddenly bursts forth 
in distinct spots over the mountain, and the con- 
flagration goes on rapidly against the wind, the 
breeze causing the long grass to bend towards 
the flames, which drying it instantaneously, im- 
mediately ignites, casting around a lurid light. 
When the blaze has subsided, myriads of sparks, 
borne aloft with the volume of dense smoke, 
illumine the atmosphere ; or, falling upon other 
tufts of grass, set fire to them also. By these 
means the conflagration extends, a loud crackling 
sound being perceptible in the immediate neigh- 
bourhood, and in the distance a roaring hollow 
sound. Until the advancing flames are arrested by 
the dense woods that clothe each ravine. What 
appears extraordinaiy is, that the roots of the 
Andrapogon Schsenanthus are neither injured 
nor destroyed by the conflagration, for, after a 
two-days' rain, from the midst of the calcined and 
blackened masses the young shoots will burst 
forth ; and in a we^ the whole moimtain will be 



118 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

again dotted over with patches of waving grass of 
the most brilliant green. 

Newera Ellia was first visited by Dr. Davy in 
1819, and, although he at once saw and stated the 
immense advantages to be derived from its salu- 
brious and temperate atmosphere, it was not until 
ten years had elapsed that a m^itary convalescent 
station was established on this spot, and this 
desirable measure was adopted in 1829 Ji>y Sir 
Edward Barnes. Many serious difficulties had 
to be contended with in the formation of the 
latter part of the road, as from Bambodde to the 
plains £he route through the pass is on an in- 
clined plane, which ascends one foot in every 
fourteen. Even now much difficulty is experi- 
enced in keeping the road in repair, for continu- 
ally masses of soil and stones roll from the 
mountain's sides and block up the path. It is 
rather singular that it should have been during 
the government of Sir Edward Barnes that nearly 
every important road in Ceylon wajs either com- 
menced pr completed, and these vast undertake 
ings were carried into execution before the aboli- 
tion of compulsory labour. 

The cascades of Hambodde are superb, and 
durihg the rainy season the vast volume of the 
torrents that dash down is incredible, the noise 

6 



\ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 119 

of the waterfalls being heard distinctly at a 
considerable distance. Near Bambodde is the 
lovely valley of Kotmaale, through which mean- 
ders a flowing stream, whose waters possess 
peculiar efficacy, according to the superstitious 
belief of the natives ; as they assert that whatever 
woman bathes in the liver within three months 
after she becomes a wife, will be blessed with a 
beautiful, numerous, and fortunate family. 

Prom the summit of Bambodde Pass the first 
clear view of Newera EUia is obtained, which 
lies about six thousand three hundred feet above 
the sea ; and, although it is called a plain, it is 
not such in reality, as a chain of hills, running 
from south-west to north-east, divide it unequally. 
When we took possession of this place, in 1829, 
the only vestiges found of former occupants were 
the remains of a temple, and one or two build, 
ings, although it is an historical fact, that the 
Queen of Kandy, in 1628, here took up a tempo- 
rary abode after her second marriage, when she 
was compelled to leav^ the ca>pital by the Portu^s 
guese. 

Game abounds in this district, and it was in 
the pursuit of elk that a party of our officers dis» 
covered the plains, some natives having volun- 
teered to conduct them to a spot where the 



120 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

animals abounded. The boldness of the scenery 
around Newera Ellia can only be equalled by 
that of Snowdon, as it is encircled on e^ery side 
by craggy mountains, amongst which is the 
loftiest mountain in Ceylon, Pedro-talla-galla, 
whose towering peak rises eight thousand three 
hundred feet above the ocean's level. 

The plain is dotted over with white-washed 
residences, recalling many home recollections, 
for on the roof of every dwelling are to be seen 
chimneys ; the cool and bracing atmosphere not 
only rendering fires pleasant morning and even- 
ing, but causing them to be absolutely neces- 
sary. To those who have not visited the 
tropics this remark may appear puerile, but 
will be fully appreciated by those who have 
sojourned in the east, for none can tell, save the 
latter, the feeling of strangeness that pervades 
the mind when the beholder first looks upon 
dwellings unmarked by this sign of the household 
hearth. 

Nothing about Newera Ellia Plain tells of the 
tropics, the bracing air enabling Europeans to 
walk out at any hour of the day, the mental and 
bodily faculties soon regain their lost vigour, the 
frame is invigorated, the palled appetite recovers 
its tone, and speedily the hollow sallow cheek 



I 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 121 

becomes roupded, and assumes health's roseate 
hue ; many a desponding invalid, whose large 
family and slender means forbade return to his 
native land, has reason to bless the day the 
^anitorium of Lanka-diva was discovered. 

The beauties of vegetation also wear a fami- 
liar aspect as the eye is gladdened with floral 
gifbs that appertain especially to the temperate 
zone, such as rhododendrons, the white guelder, 
damask, and pink rose-trees, violets, sweet-peas, 
acacia, peach, apple and pear-trees, with nearly 
every fruit and vegetable that are produced or 
consumed by us, can be met with in the imme- 
diate neighbourhood. And all this is found 
upon the summit of a mountain seven degrees 
from the equator, where occasionally the ther- 
mometer has fallen below 28% and where ice 
half an inch in thickness is sometimes found 
in the morning. 

The town of Newera EUia stands upon a plain, 
6,300 feet above the level of the sea, and from this 
table-land mountains rise in various directions, 
diversified with gentle slopes and undulations, 
over which are scattered various residences. 
Perpetual cascades burst from the sides gf the 
neighbouring mountains, and pure rapid streams 
of wholesome water wind through the valleys, 

VOL. I. G 



122 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

whilst much valuable timber clothes the hills; 
and for an extent of several miles well watered, 
and alternate plains, hills and dales, give the 
surrounding scenery the appearance of a natural 
park. A church has been built near the Go- 
vernor's house, and there are also residences 
belonging to the Bishop, Commander, Colonial 
Secretary, and other government servants. 

A' detachment of our troops is always at 
Newera EUia, and their barracks, hospital, &c., 
are excellent. Throughout the district, from 
November to the end of April, the thermometer 
seldom rises above 65^ Fahr., and, although frosts 
are not unfrequent during the night, snow is 
unheard of : the temperature of the winter 
months resembles the bracing atmosphere of 
a fine October in England, and the summer 
months combine the genial warmth of August 
with the beneficial showers of April; in short, 
the oppressive atmosphere of the tropics is 
unknown at Newera Ellia. 

The soil varies as in Great Britain from the 
rich brown to the black loam, and all English 
produce succeeds in a most luxuriant manner, 
although hitherto the farming has been almost 
entirely in the hands of the natives, who, not- 
withstanding their ignorance of the subject. 



1 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 123 

have amassed large sums from the cultiva- 
tion of potatoes, carrots, turnips, and other 
vegetables ; their farming experiments not ex- 
tending beyond these simple endeavours. Many 
gentlemen for their amusement have planted Eng- 
lish grass, clover, wheat, oats, barley, beans, peas, 
and have found green crops of every description 
thrive and yield in the most extraordinary man- 
ner. 

It has afforded us great pleasure to peruse the 
circular of Mr. Baker, an energetic and enter- 
prising gentleman, v^ho has located himself at 
Newera Ellia, wherein he sets forth in most 
glowing language, the agricultural advantages 
which this district possesses, and where an ar- 
rangement has lately been made for opening a 
new field for agricultural enterprise ; suggesting 
also a system of emigration, which offers both 
peculiar advantages to the colonist, and ensures 
him, on his arrival in Ceylon, a comfortable farm 
with a dwelling-house and requisite buildings, 
ready for his immediate occupation. This fore- 
thought for the emigrant's comfort, the writer 
very justly remarks, obviates his exposure to the 
usual hardships experienced by those, who under 
ordinary circumstances seek to improve their fast- 
decaying prospects in their fatherland, by migiat- 

G 2 



124 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

ing to unknown shores ; and the fact undeniably 
bespeaks a most favourable impression for the 
honesty, integrity, and sincerity of the promoter 
of the scheme. Mr. Baker is said to have en- 
gaged the services of seventeen English farm- 
servants of both sexes, who, with a large supply 
of farming implements, have ere this, in all pro- 
bability, reached their destination, where that 
gentleman is stationed exerting himself in the 
development of his laudable plan, which, if suc- 
cessful, must be alike beneficial to the colony, 
and the new settlers. 

Although we are not prepared to agree with 
Mr. Baker in all his sanguine expectations of the 
results likely to accrue from Newera EUian emi- 
gration, still, making due allowances, we think his 
plan is most deserving of the serious considera- 
tion of those amongst our own Irish farmers, who 
contemplate a change, and we wish him, and 
those British subjects who may follow him, the 
success which his energy, honesty, and fore- 
thought so eminently deserve. The circular 
before us draws most forcibly the contrast be- 
tween the settler proceeding to Australia, or Ame- 
rica, and the emigrant to Ceylon, the former 
landing in a wild and baiTen country, houseless 
and friendless^ with nothing but the certainty of 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 125 

the greatest privations before him ; while the latter 
is landed free of expense in Ceylon, and without 
delay takes possession of his farm, and, settled in 
his house, is ready to commence his operations 
immediately. 

We can bear witness to the advantages offered 
in this mountain district for a European settle- 
ment, and the only matter of astonishment is, 
that so many years of Biitish rule should have 
elapsed before the attempt was made. Newera 
Ellia is a district blessed with a peculiarly salu- 
brious climate, and in every way adapted for the 
production of those necessaries of life, which at 
this moment are imported into the colony at an 
enormous expense, and capable of raising sup- 
plies considerably beyond the wants of the in- 
habitants, for which ready markets may be ob- 
tained. The natives, says Mr. Baker, now 
produce five successive crops of potatoes from 
the same land: thus, even from their ignorant 
farming, they adduce a proof of the peculiar 
quality of the soil. 

Stock of all kinds is remarkably cheap, and 
the draught buffalo is an animal which entirely 
supersedes the horse for all hea\y work, not only 
on account of his great strength, but from the 
fact of his requiring no other food than pasture. 



126 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Cows and buffaloes may be purchased from 25^. to 
40s, per head ; sheep, from Ss. to 7s. ; pigs from Ss. 
to 7*. ; fowls, from 7s. per dozen ; ducks, from I2s. 
ditto. Mr. Baker proceeds to show that, notwith- 
standing the very low price of stock, fine meat is 
unknown in Ceylon, the beasts being unfattened, 
and slaughtered without discretion. Although in 
many parts of the island the calf is permitted to take 
the whole supply from the mother, yet not a cheese 
h^fi ever been manufactured in Ceylon, and but- 
ter sells for 2*. 6d. per pound. Notwithstanding 
the abundance and cheapness of pigs, hams and 
bacon have never been cured ; and yet all these 
articles are consumed in large quantities, and 
imported from England at an enormous price, 
cheese, hams, and bacon being generally sold at 
2^. per pound. 

All these articles may be prepared at Newera 
Ellia, with the same facility, and at one-fourth of 
the cost, of those produced in England, and 
would therefore sell at a large profit both for 
home consumption and for exportation. The 
island is chiefly supplied by Bombay with pota- 
toes, but those of a superior quality now pro- 
duced at Newera Ellia sell at 28^. per cwt. In 
three months fr*om the planting of the sets, they 
are fit to dig, and one set has frequently been 



v 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 127 

known to yield fifty potatoes. Wheat has been 
experimented upon, and the quality produced 
proved infinitely superior to the seed imported, 
and yet Ceylon is entirely dependant upon Ame- 
rica for the supply of flour. Oats and beans 
thrive well, but have been neglected, conse- 
quently the horses in the island are fed expen- 
sively upon paddy and gram, the principal 
portion of which is imported from India : thus 
a most extensive market is open to supply the 
home market, as well as that of the Mauritius. 

Mr. Baker oflFers to the enterprising farmer of 
small capital, a comfortable and most profitable 
farm, free from those heavy taxes which burthen 
his industry at home, where he may not only 
amass a considerable fortune, but may live a 
happy, luxurious life, with the advantages of 
residing in a comparatively civilized society, with 
a school for the education of his children, and 
the house of God within his reach. 

We feel bound to correct an error of Mr. 
Baker's, who states that cheese and hams were 
never produced in Ceylon, as the former have 
been made, and we believe are still, at the island 
of Delft, near Jafiha, and also at Manear ; the 
latter have been cured at Newera EUia by British 
soldiers — however this has nothing to do with the 



1-28 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

fact, which must be apparent to the meanest ca- 
pacity, that were those articles produced at New- 
era Ellia equal to the English, they would bring 
remunerative prices to the farmer. We should 
also observe another mistake, namely, that the 
Colony is not entirely dependant upon America for 
flour, large quantities being annually imported 
from the- Bombay Presidency. In respect also 
to the successive crops of potatoes, we fear the 
promoter has overlooked the necessity of manure, 
an4 his circular makes no mention of whence he 
proposes to derive his supply, as well as the fact, 
that in all probability the market would be limited 
to the European population of the island. We 
have been informed that recently potatoes grown 
at Newera Ellia were offered in the Colombo 
market at 24«. per cwt. being four shillings less 
than stated by Mr. Baker. 

We repeat that the scheme of Mr. Baker is 
highly deserving of consideration ; what he states 
of the climate, circumstances, and position of the 
settlement is perfectly correct, and there can be 
little doubt that the fattening and improving of 
the breeds, both of cattle and poultry, would be 
remunerative, as well as the growing of seed and 
green crops — luxuries and enormous fortunes are 
out of the question — some comfort and an honest 



I 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 129 

livelihood are to be found ; and we should think 
that there is a good opening for some able-bodied 
industrious Irish labourers, and their wives and 
families, who are more inured to hardships than 
their English neighbours ; the men could be con- 
stantly employed in this delightful climate in the 
cultivation of the soil, while their women might 
find profitable employment in dairies and poultry- 
yards. 

The difficulties are great which encompass the 
agriculturist in Ceylon, for want of a sure supply 
of labourers. The local press is full of constant 
complaints and communications on the subject 
such as these, — " Some estates are hard up for 
coolees, and very few are appearing from the 
coast. Indeed if it be true, 8is it is said, that in 
their own country fine rains have fallen after long 
drought, filling their tanks and fertilizing their 
lands, we cannot expect men, for it is only in 
their exigency, having no work in their own 
country, that the Malabars come here.^' 

" Accounts of the most deplorable nature con- 
tinue to reach us on the difficulty of obtaining 
coolees. There is every reason to apprehend 
that a laige portion of the crops will be lost for 
want of hands." " A fiiend has just been here on 
his way to the Four Korles in search of coolees. 

G 5 



130 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

He gives a most melancholy account of the 
scarcity of labour which prevails everywhere. 
Nearly all his coolees have bolted, and there is 
litde hope of being able to replace them. Happy 
is the man who can muster thirty coolees on an 
estate of three hundred acres in bearing. Nearly 
all the superintendents have gone to look for 
coolees, with but faint hopes of success, and the 
comfortable conviction, that if they do not suc- 
ceed, the crop must be entirely lost. On some 
large estates the coolees have fled to a man.'' 

By the foregoing, our readers will perceive that 
the agriculturist in Ceylon is entirely dependant 
for labour upon the periodical visits of the coolees 
from the Malabar coast, who require but little for 
their support, which consists for the most part of 
ricCj and when they have acquired a small sum 
in wages, immediately return to their families, re- 
gardless of acquiring more money, and leaving 
their employers without notice, or redress. 

Taking this fact, therefore, into consideration, 
as well as the utter hopelessness of being able to 
induce the Cingalese to work, if they have suffi- 
cient food to eat, and which ihey can procure 
with very slight exertion, it would appear to us 
to be indispensably requisite, as an element of 
success in Mr. Baker's undertaking, to secure the 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 131 

assistance of a sufficient number of Irish, English, 
or Scotch labourers, who, being accompanied bj 
their families, would not have the same induce* 
ment to make a speedy retreat afier the Malabar 
fashion. The Irish, we know from experience, 
have many good qualities, and that of attaching 
themselves to those who give them food and rai- 
ment, and treat them with consideration, is not 
the least; and Paddy is a right good fellow at 
heart, when beyond the reach of political agita- 
tion. For all further particulars on the subject of 
the settlement at Newera EUia, we refer our reader 
to the promoter, S. W. Baker, Esq., whose circu- 
lar is dated from No. 4, Wolseley Terrace, Chel- 
tenham. 

Iron of good quality is found on the plain, and 
the natives say that formerly precious stones were 
also occasionally met with in the swamps about 
Newera Ellia. This statement is disbelieved by 
many, although excavations are still to be seen 
that were made by the gem-seekers ; and we, who 
know the inert disposition of the Asiatics, can 
hardly imagine they would have exerted them- 
selves, had they not anticipated and found profit 
arise from their toil. Dr. Davy alludes to these 
jewel-hunters, for he writes, in 1819, "There is 
good reason to believe that the individuals epr 



132 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

gaged in this pursuit, who are not very numerous, 
and chiefly Moormen, would be better employed 
in cultivating the ground that they ransack.'' 
Carriage -roads and paths have been constructed 
around and through the plain, which branch ofl' 
into the surrounding valleys and wind round the 
mountain's base ; and a foot-way has been con- 
structed that leads to the cloud-capped crest of 
Pedro- talla-Galla. 

The ascent of the mountain is remarkably steep 
and fatiguing; nevertheless, we have known ladies 
attempt and accomplish this hazardous journey, 
and have been well rewarded for their exertion 
by the sublime scenery that surrounds " Mat 
wove rock," the altitude of which, as we have 
previously remarked, is eight thousand three hun- 
dred feet above the sea. The richest and most 
luxuriant parts of Ceylon, namely. Upper and 
Lower Ouva, are seen in the distance, and in the 
background towers Samenella, or Adam's Peak, 
clothed in perpetual verdure ; whilst the projecting 
mass of the nearer momitains are distinctly visible, 
whose bold sides are clad with impervious forest 
and dense underwood. 

The highest table-land in the island is situated 
some few miles from Newera EUia, and is called 
the Horton Plains, as it was discovered during the 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 133 

time Sir Wilmofe-Horton governed Ceylon. This 
district is celebrated foi the rich botanical speci- 
mens that it affords, the most curious of which is 
the pitcher plant, (Nepenthes distillatoria,) that 
thrives and grows in great luxuriance, as the 
extraordinary blosspm, or vessel from which the 
plant derives its name, is frequently ten or eleven 
inches long, and the graceful effect of these beau- 
tiful productions, as the breeze plays among them, 
is indescribable. 

In this neighbourhood a plant flourishes that 
is called by the natives nelu, or honey-plant, as 
the flowers emit a powerful effluvia resembling 
new honey. This is a jointed plant that flowers 
but once in eight years, and, as the blossoms 
decay, large numbers of bees appear to be at- 
tracted by the peculiar effluvia ; and so delighted 
are the insects, that clusters of them will hang 
suspended from the branches for hours. Around 
the nelu-plant a leafless parasite often entwines, 
whose beautiful blossoms are bell-shaped, having 
amber hearts and scarlet edges; and as these 
appear to be united with the nelu at the root, the 
natives declare that this plant bears two kinds of 
flowers, which are totally distinct in form and 
colour. 



134 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 



CHAPTER VII. 



Geological character of the island — Minerals — Salt lakes 
— Revenue arising from them — ^Tanks — ^Agriculture— Na- 
tive plough — Mystic rite when the paddy is trodden out 
— Cultivation — Lemon grass — ^Value and uses of cocoa- 
nut trees — Cinnamon — Coffee — Sugar — Cotton — Tobacco 
— Areka nuts — ^Ambuprasudana, or water nut — Jack and 
bread-fruit trees — ^Indigo — Mulberry trees — ^Talapat palm 
— Mee tree— Ebony tree — Calamander tree — ^Red sandal 
and satin-wood trees — ^The kabook tree — ^Variety of the 
vegetable world — The bo, or sacred tree — Capabilities of 
cultivation and extraordinary fertility of the soil — ^Ex- 
pense of housekeeping — Prices of provisions at Galle and 
Colombo — Meat — Poultry — Fish and fisheries — Fruit — 
Vegetables — Servants* wages — House-rent — Same at 
Kandy and Newera Ellia. 

The simile of a pearl, to whicli Lanka is 
likened, is most peculiarly appropriate, not onlj 
in reference to the form of the island, but from 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 135 

the natural beauty of its scenery, the productive- 
ness of its soil, and the richness of its mineral 
kingdom. We have previously referred to the 
beauty of die scenery, which we have witnessed 
with such deepfelt gratification^ and we purpose 
devoting this chapter to the mmeral construction, 
produce, revenue, and capabilities of €eylon. 

The geological character of the country is dis- 
tinguishable for uniformity ; primitive rock, with 
little exception, constituting the whole island. 
The exceptions consist of recent formations, and 
are only to be found- in the neighbourhood of 
Ja^fhapatam, and at a few places along the shore. 
The varieties of primitive rock are innumerable, 
but the species are ill defined and few. Granite 
is the most dominant species, whilst domolite, 
quartz, and homblend, are less frequently to be 
met with. Gneiss and granite exist in countless 
varieties, and offer considerable difficulty to the 
mineralogist, who attempts to name them. Fine- 
grained grey coloured granite is occasionally to 
be met with, and the best we have seen was at 
Point de Galle, but graphic granite is still less 
common. We have seen, however, very beautiful 
specimens from the sea shore in the vicinity of 
Trincomalee, in which the quartz is of a grey or 



13(> CEYLON AND TH£ CINGALESE. 

blackish-coloured rock crystal, and the felspar of 
a vivid fleshy hue. 

Gneiss and sienite are found in the Kandian 
provinces ; the former is very abundant and beau- 
Ll, and is composed of qwtz a^d white felspar, 
with black mica and innumerable garnets of a 
pale colour. Homblend, dolomite, and quartz 
are rarely to be seen in massive forms. Horn- 
blend and greenstone are plentiful, forming por- 
tions of hills in the Kandian provinces, but it is 
not believed that they constitute the whole forma- 
tion of any hill, or mountain. Dolomite is found 
in as large varieties as granite, generally crysta- 
line and of a pure white coloiur, and very fre- 
quently it is formed of rhombs, which a blow of a 
hammer separates with facility. It is met with 
imbedded, and in veins, and in this form it 
abounds in Kandy ; while small hills are com- 
posed of it in other parts of the island. In 
ancient days, dolomite was exclusively appropri- 
ated for the use of the king. Quartz is very 
abundant, and a very remarkable hiU is com- 
pletely formed of this rock in the neighbourhood 
of Trincomalee ; on the side towards the sea the 
hill is laid bare, and presents to the spectator the 
appearance of a mass of ruinous buildings, and 



GEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 137 

possibly owing to this, the name of Chapel Point 
was given to one end of this hill. 

In the north of the island, at Jafihapatam, which 
is at once the most populous and productive por- 
tion of Ceylon, we find two instances of recent 
formation, namely sandstone and limestone. 
Sandstone however cannot be said to be confined 
to this district, as it is found in a variety of 
places, extending round the coast, in general be- 
tween high and low water-mark, where it is seen 
in horizontal stratified beds. In some instances, 
the sandstone is very dark coloured, approaching 
to black, and in others it is of a greyish yellow 
colour. 

Limestone however has been considered, and is 
believed, to be confined to the north ; it is very 
compact, of a fine grain, containing innumerable 
shells, of a pale brown or grey colour, and its 
fracture is conchoidal. 

Iron and manganese are the only metallic ores 
of any consequence which have been discovered 
in Ceylon : the former is plentiful, and may be 
found all over the island, either as magnetic iron, 
bog iron, red hematite, iron pyrites, specular iron, 
or blue phosphate of iron. But we do not know 
of any vein, or large bed, of iron ore having as 
yet been discovered in Ceylon. Black oxide of 



138 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

maDganese occurs scattered and imbedded in 
gigantic rocks in small quantities^ but at so great a 
distance inland, that the carriage would be too 
expensive to admit of a profitable export trade. 
It is very remarkable, that no other metals have 
as yet been discovered, in a country, where the 
nature of the rock would indicate their existence. 
However, although some authors have asserted, 
that gold and mercury are found native in Ceylon, 
such we believe to be most incorrect, and we 
have never heard, that either lead, copper, or tin, 
has as yet been discovered. 

Lanka-diva abounds in every variety of the 
quartz family ; hyalite, chalcedony, iron flint, and 
rock-crystal, which latter is found crystallized and 
msLSsive, in great quantities, and of a variety of 
colours. This is made use of by the Cingalese, 
who form lenses for spectacles from it, and 
employ it for statuary and ornamental purposes. 
Rose quartz, phrase, amethyst, and caf s eye, are 
also abundant. The Ceylon cat's eye is the most 
valuable in existence, and is much more prized 
there, than in Europe. 

Topaz and schorl are also found in Ceylon ; the 
former is commonly of a yellowish, or bluish-white 
colour, but perfect crystals of it are very rarely to 
be met with. Common schorl occurs very plenti- 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 139 

fully in granitic rocks, and in some places, it is 
mixed with felspar and quartz ; tourmalin is oc- 
casionally to be met with, but of a very inferior 
description, and these are either of red, green, or 
honey colour. 

In the granitic rock, garnet, cinnamon-stone 
and pyrope abound, and the common garnet is 
found diffused in gneiss through the whole island, 
the crystals however are diminutive and ill- 
defined. The precious garnet occurs in horn- 
blend rock in the neighbourhood of Trincomalee, 
but of an inferior description* Cinnamon-stone 
has heretofore been exclusively found in Ceylon, 
where it is very abundant, although confined to 
particular districts, and is principally met with in 
Matura. It is found in very large masses of 
many pounds in weight, and small pieces of irre- 
gular form in the granitic alluvial; The zircon, 
called by the Cingalese "Matura diamond," 
which is foimd in the island, is considered to be 
the best in the world; besides zircon and hya- 
cinth, there is another species in Ceylon, which is 
opaque, un crystallized, and masdve. Zircon is 
found both of yellow, green, red, and light grey 
colours, which the native merchants dispose of 
respectively for topaz, tourmalin, rubies, and 
diamonds. 



140 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Ceylon has for a considerable period been 
renowned for its rubies, of which there are four 
species, namely sapphire, spinell, chrysoberyl, 
and corundum, which are found in granitic rock. 
The principal varieties of sapphire, such as red, 
purple, yellow, blue, white, and star stone, are 
met with, sometimes of large size, and in perfec- 
tion at Matura, Saffragam, and other places. The 
purple, or oriental amethyst, is rare, and the green 
still more so. Spinell is very rare, and is occa- 
sionally met with in the clay-iron ore in the 
Kandian provinces, where gneiss is abundant. 
Chrysoberyl is peculiarly rare, and is said gene- 
rally to come from Saffragam. Corundum is very 
plentiful at a place called Battagammana, where 
it is found on the banks of a small river, called 
Agiri Kandura ; it is of a brownish colour, and is 
in the form of large six-sided prisms. 

In the family of felspar, Ceylon produces 
tablespar, Labrador stone, adularia, glassy felspar, 
compact felspar, and common felspar. The La- 
brador stone is found at Trincomalee, and adula- 
ria is plentiful in Kandy, Common homblend is 
abundant, and glassy tremolite and pitch-stone 
occur in the neighbourhood of Trincomalee. 

Mica, forming a component part of granite and 
gneiss, is very plentiful, and frequently is found 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. ]41 

encloSfed in these rocks, where it occurs in very 
extensive flakes, which the Cingalese employ for 
ornamental purposes. Green earth is rather un- 
common ; but is found in Lower Ouva of a green 
and pea-green colour. At Galle and Trincomalee 
common chlorite is found scattered through 
quartz. Talc, dolomite, carbonate of magnesia, 
and native carbonate of magnesia, are occasion- 
ally discovered. Sulphur and graphite also occur, 
the former rarely, but the latter is abundant in 
Saflragam. 

Nitrate of lime and nitre are very common, and 
the nitre caves appear to be formed of carbonate 
of lime and felspar. 

Salt lakes exist to a large extent in the district 
called Megam-pattoo, on the sea shore, and which 
in all probability are supplied from the sea, as 
the saline contents of both prove to be of a simi- 
lar nature. The salt monopoly produces the 
government a yearly revenue of iJ42,000, and, 
were this portion of government property super- 
intended and conducted upon scientific princi- 
ples, there can be little doubt that the revenue 
would be twice, if not three times the amount. 
It appears to us rather extraordinary, that the 
attention of the home and colonial government 
has not been directed to such a legitimate source 



142 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

of revenue, in preference to the tax upon dogs, 
and such like, which has created so much discon- 
tent amongst the followers of Buddha. 

All the soils of the island appear to have origi- 
nated from decomposed granite rock, gneiss, or 
clay-iron stone, and in the majority of cases 
quartz is the largest, and frequently nearly the 
sole ingredient. It is very remarkable that the 
natural soils of Lanka-diva do not contain more 
than between one and three per cent, of vegetable 
substance, which may be attributed to the rapid 
decomposition, occasioned by a high degree of 
temperature, and heavy falls of rain, 

The most abundant crops are produced in the 
dark brown loam, which is formed from decom- 
posed granite and gneiss, or in reddish loam, 
which is formed from Kabook stone, or clay-iron 
stone. The soils, which have been found to pro- 
duce inferior crops, are those in which a large 
proportion of quartz is contained. The soil de- 
rived from clay-iron stone is of a reddish brown 
colour, and has the property of retaining water for 
a veiy long time, to which may be attributed its 
productive quality. To the practical and scien- 
tific agriculturists, Lanka-diva affords abundant op- 
portunity for experiment and investigation, where 
the soil is in a state of nature, and unimproved 
by the admixture of any description of manure. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 145 

Ceylon possesses one great advantage over 
many other countries, namely, a very abundant 
supply both of spring and river water, which, in 
most instances, is of a pure description. The 
ancient inhabitants of the island seem to have 
been fully cognisant of the advantages of irriga- 
tion, and they availed themselves of the best 
means to secure a constant supply of water for 
the purpose. Tanks and lakes were constructed 
by them, which irrigated the whole island, " and 
were hardly surpassed by the kindred wonders of 
Egypt," and the ruins of these stupendous works 
indicate a degree of prosperity, civilization, and 
population, which can scarcely be credited by 
those who visit the country at the present day. 

It is much to be regretted that a British Colo- 
nial Government, which has now been established 
for upwards of half a century in Ceylon, should 
not have learned a lesson firom these gigantic 
remains, and restored them to the useful purposes 
for which they had originally been constructed. 
Had such a course been adopted, capital and 
labour would have been expended to some pur- 
pose, occupation and employment would have 
been given to a population, who are natiurally in- 
dolent, the country would have produced more 
abundant crops, and the land would have been 
rendered doubly valuable. 



144 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

This important question has been under the 
consideration of various colonial governments, 
commencing with Sir Thomas Maitland^ in the 
year 1806, who proposed the restoration of the 
tanks, and the Colonial Engineer of that period, 
Captain Schneider, made his report upon the 
subject, wherein he estimated the expense of 
restoring the Giant's Tank, Cattoekare, at twenty- 
five thousand pounds, and considered that it 
would occupy three years. Tradition attributes 
the construction of this national work to the 
giants, which is by no means unreasonable, a^ 
the people in those days must have been giants 
at all events in energy, when compared with the 
present race. 

The tank is situated in a large tract of low 
land near Mantotte in the northern province, and 
covers a space of twenty thousand parrahs of 
sowing land, a parrah being equal to about an 
English bushel and a third ; it is bounded from 
north-west to south by an earthen dyke, to con- 
fine the water in the rainy season ; and, when 
necessary, to irrigate the paddy-fields, which are 
now brokeji, and in several places scarcely trace- 
able. 

On the south side, the river, during heavy 
rains, carries the water from the high lands 

8 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 145 

to the sea, and at some seasons rises nine feet 
above its banks, notwithstanding the bed of the 
river is twelve feet in depth ; about nine miles 
from the south end of th« dam of Cattockare, 
there is another, six hundred feet long, from forty 
to sixty broad, and from eight to twelve in height, 
built of large hewn stones, some measuring seven 
and eight feet in length, from three to four in 
breadth, and from two and a half to three in 
thickness, firmly cemented together, which must 
have been constructed at enormous labour. Near 
to this dam there is a canal to lead the river- 
water to the tank, but it has now the appearance 
of not having been completed, and is broken at 
several places. The height of the dam above the 
level of the sea varies considerably, at some 
places it is thirty-six feet, while at others it is 
sixty-seven. 

The natives consider that the water of the rivu- 
lets running into Cattockare, independently of the 
river, would be sufficient to supply the tank; if 
this be the case it would cost a much smaller sum 
than Captain Schneider's estimate, and would 
consequently take a much shorter time to accom- 
plish. Villages have been foimed toithin the 
tank, whose inhabitants have constmcted smaller 
tanks for the irrigation of paddy-fields, which are 

VOL. I. H 



146 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

also cultivated within the same limits. A large 
tract of country in the vicinity of the Giant's 
Tank, is now unproductive, which might be con- 
verted into paddy-fields if the people had the 
means of artificial irrigation ; and it has been 
calculated that if the tank were repaired, it would 
be sufficient to irrigate land, capable of produc- 
ing annually one hundred and fifty thousand bags 
of rice. This one instance, therefore, we consider 
sufiicient for our purpose, without reference to the 
other tanks and lakes of Ceylon, as ex uno disces 
omnia. 

After Sir Thomas Maitland, Sir Robert Brown- 
rigg supported this measure, who was followed in 
the same views by Sir Robert Horton, and Mr. 
Stewart M'Kenzie, all of whom concurred in the 
opinion that the undertaking should be made a 
government one; still no scheme was arranged, 
the tanks continue unrepaired, and the whole 
question lay dormant until Sir Emerson Tennent, 
the present Colonial Secretary resuscitated it 
from the colonial archives, and it is to be hoped 
that the same energy which has restored it to 
light, will ere long devise a scheme whereby the 
tanks and lakes may be gradually restored to their 
original purposes of irrigation, an undertaking 
which according to the report of the Committee of 

6 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 347 

Finance and Commerce " is so certain to repay 
the revenue the whole, and more than the whole 
of the expenditure incurred." 

As the inhabitants are now compelled, either 
to contribute labour or money towards the con- 
struction or repairing of roads, this labour, or 
subsidy, may be very fairly employed in the 
equally, if not more beneficial work of repairing 
these ancient fountains of wealth, whereby the 
colony would become not only self-supporting, 
but would export rice equal in amount to the 
quantity for which she now exports specie. 

Agriculture has been conducted in Ceylon by 
the natives on the simplest principles, the culti- 
vation pursued by them being of two descrip- 
tions, namely, the dry, and wet. The chenas, or 
grounds which are overgrown with underwood, 
are cultivated in the dry manner, which is com- 
menced by cutting down the jungle, by fencing 
in that portion which is intended for cultivation, 
and by consuming the timber which has not been 
employed for the latter purpose ; the ground is 
immediately after turned up and sown. Great 
care is subsequently required to protect the crops 
from the wild animals which abound in Ceylon, 
an^ accordingly the natives are obliged to keep 
strict watch during the night 

H 2 



148 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Those crops which are chiefly grown in dry- 
ground consist of a species of rice, called corri- 
can, and Indian com; these are occasionally 
weeded, and no further trouble is taken by the 
agriculturist until the time of harvest, when the 
crop is either reaped, or the heads of the com 
are cut off, in case the straw is not preserved. 
The chenas do not grow crops the second year, 
first owing to the underwood, which soon springs 
up into a plentiful crop, never having been pro- 
perly extirpated, and secondly, owing to the want 
of manure, which is never employed. This dry 
cultivation, however, is only adopted by the 
poorest classes, and is very inconsiderable in 
comparison with the wet, which is entirely used 
for the growth of paddy. This last description 
of cultivation requires an abundant supply of 
water, and is followed by the natives in every part 
of the island and in every locality, where sufficient 
water can be commanded for the successive stages 
of the paddy. 

The fields devoted to the cultivation of paddy 
are surrounded by embankments ; each field is 
flooded with water between two and three inches 
in depth, and, when sufficiently saturated, is 
ploughed while under water ; this process is again 
repeated, or the ground is trodden by buffaloes 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 149 

until the whole is worked into mud. The mud 
thus formed is made perfectly level, the water 
drawn off, and the paddy-seed, which has already 
germinated, owing to its having been steeped in 
water, is thrown over the muddy surface. Imme- 
diately after the seed has struck root, the aper- 
tures in the embankments, by means of which the 
water was drawn off, are closed up and the field 
is re-flooded. 

The weeds are careftdly eradicated from the 
paddy when it has attained about three inches in 
height, and those parts of the field which appear 
too tliin, are supplied firom others where the paddy 
has sprung up too thickly. The field is kept 
under water until the paddy is nearly ripe, when 
it is again drained, and when ripe is reaped, and 
immediately trodden upon the threshing-floor by 
buffaloes. During the whole period from sowing 
time until harvest, the farmer is obliged con- 
tinually to watch the corn-field, day and night, to 
prevent the destruction of his crop by wild ani- 
mals. Where a sufficient supply of water can be 
had, two and three crops are annually grown in 
the same field, but where the farmer can only get 
a supply in the rainy season he can only grow 
one crop. This circumstance alone is sufficient 
to prove the great advantages which would accrue 



150 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

to the colony, from the repairing of the ancient 
tanks and lakes. 

From the want of water in the lowland districts, 
as we have said, only one crop can be grown, and 
the fields are generally of a large size ; but, in the 
mountainous and higher districts, irrigation is 
more conveniently managed, there being a more 
abundant and easy supply of water ; and here^ as 
in China, cultivation is carried up the sides of 
hills in the form of terraces, and the paddy may 
often be seen in its various stages, in adjoining 
fields, from the newly sown to that which is being 
reaped, and trodden out by buffaloes, or oxen. 

The plough which is used in Ceylon is of a 
most simple nature, the shear and single upright 
handle being made out of a curved piece of 
timber ; the single handle is surmounted with a 
cross-tree, a pole is fastened into a mortice with a 
wedge, at the curve between the handle and shear, 
while a yoke is attached by coir ropes to the 
pole, which is fastened by coir cords to a pair of 
buffaloes or oxen y one man in general holds the 
plough, and guides the buffaloes, or oxen, with a 
goad, occasionally urging them with his voice. 

On every occasion where the plough is not, or 
cannot be used, the mehmotte, or large hoe, of an 
unwieldy nature, is employed, which in their 



\ 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 151 

hands is made a most useful implement. Instead 
of a harrow after ploughing the ground, they em- 
ploy an Implement which they call anadatpoorooa, 
which is a board with a pole, to which oxen or 
buffaloes are yoked, and upon which the driver 
sits. A lighter implement is used with the hand, 
like a rake without teeth, for the purpose of pre*- 
paring the mud for paddy seed. The jungle-hook, 
axe, and reaping hook, are all too similar to our 
own implements to need description. 

The treading out of the paddy is performed 
upon a hard floor, prepared for the purpose by 
beating the clay ; before the natives begin the 
work, however, a mystic rite and incantation are 
observed by the owner of the paddy, in the ex- 
pectation of preserving the produce from the evil 
spirits. The ceremony is performed by describ- 
ing three circles, one within the other, on the 
centre of the floor, with the ashes of wood, which 
the owner scatters from a large leaf; the circles 
are equally quartered by a cross, the four points 
of which are terminated by a character resembling 
a written letter M ; within the inner circle, the 
owner lays some paddy straw, upon which he 
places a few pieces of quartz and a small piece 
of the kohomba tree, the whole of which he 
covers over with paddy-straw; he then walks 



152 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

round the cabalistic figure three times, and stops 
at one of the ends, salaams three times with up- 
raised hands, and finally prostrates himself upon 
the earth, all the time repeating incantations. 
When this ceremony has been completed, the 
paddy is pUed upon the concentric circles, and 
the buffaloes are immediately after urged to the 
task of treading the com. 

In the vegetable kingdom, sweet potatoes, yams, 
occus, brinjals, and other Eastern vegetables are 
cultivated, but the natives do not construct regu- 
lar gardens for the piu^ose. In Newera EUia 
English potatoes, cabbage, peas, and other Eu- 
ropean vegetables have been introduced, and 
they are grown there with great success, which 
the climate will not admit of in other parts of the 
island. 

We must here introduce the most characteristic 
production of Lanka-diva, the Andropogon schoe- 
nanthus, or lemon-grass, which is a hard grass, 
growing from two to eight feet in height, emitting 
when crushed a powerful smell of lemon; very 
agreeable in the first instance, but after a time 
the effluvium is most oppressive and sickening; 
in taste it is an acid of a very refreshing charac- 
ter ; this grass is the usual clothing of the Kan- 
dian hills, and when young is considered choice 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 158 

pasture for buffaloes. We have seen a very fine 
essential oil extracted from this grass, which 
would no doubt be most valuable to perfumers. 

The cocoa-nut (Cocos nucifera) is very exten- 
sively cultivated in Ceylon; indeed nearly the 
whole island is encircled with this useful and 
productive tree, which may be justly designated 
the summum bonum of the native population. 
The cultivation of it is rapidly increasing, for 
it is found to be a most valuable and safe invest- 
ment of property, as it requires a trivial outlay, 
and little fiirther care than the planting, except 
protection from cattle during the first two years ; 
thriving as it does most luxuriantly in sandy soil, 
and bearing fruit in the fifth year. The estimated 
value of the produce of a single tree is a rix dollar 
per annum. This tree frequently exceeds one 
hundred feet in height, and there is no part of it 
which is unproductive to the owner; from the 
flower he obtains toddy, from which the finest 
arrack in the world is distilled, and from which 
is also prepared a coarse-grained brown sugar, 
called by the natives jaggery, and an excellent 
description of vinegar. 

The green fruit yields a delicious cooling bever- 
age to the weary traveller, and a vegetable pulp, 
highly esteemed by the natives ; the ripened fruit 

H 5 



164 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

is also used as food, or oil is extracted from it, 
which is now manufactured into candles and 
soap, and the refuse, or oil cake, is used for 
feeding cattle; while the external husks, after 
long soaking, are beaten into coir, which is now 
well known in England, and is used for stuffing 
mattresses, &c., and from which cordage and 
matting are manufactured. The leaves, when 
interwoven, are called cajan, and make excellent 
thatch, and afford protection from the sun's rays, or, 
when burned, are converted into an alkali. The 
young leaves are used by the natives for a variety 
of useful and ornamental purposes, particularly 
the latter on joyous and festive occasions, when 
bamboo arches are decorated with them, and 
brooms and mats are made from the young pine. 
A medicinal oil is extracted from the bark, 
which the native practitioners use as an effica- 
cious remedy in cutaneous diseases ; the root is 
also used for medicinal purposes, and its elastic 
fibres are woven into strainers for liquids, while 
the timber may be used in building, or converted 
into beautiful articles of furniture. But it would 
be endless to describe the various additional uses 
to which every portion of liiis valuable tree is 
convertible, which are said to be upwards of one 
hundred, and have formed the theme of many 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 155 

native poets. There are annually exported from 
the colony about eight thousand pounds' worth 
of cocoa-nuts, thirty thousand pounds' worth of 
cocoa-nut oil, seven thousand pounds' worth of 
arrack, and ten thousand pounds' worth of coir. 

Cinnamon (Laurus cinnamonum) is a staple 
article of produce in Ceylon, but it is not neces- 
sary for us here to enter upon the appearance of 
the gardens, in which it is cultivated, or the mode 
of barking the twigs, as we have described both 
in a former chapter. A very accurate account i& 
given of the shrub by Nicolo De Conte, not only 
of its appearance, but also of the manner in which 
the bark was prepared in his day. During the 
sway of native rulers, as well as that of the Dutch 
and Portuguese, cinnamon was a government mo- 
nopoly, and was so continued after the establish- 
ment of British authority in the island, until the 
year 18^3, when it was abolished, and many large 
cinnamon gardens, which had been previously 
cultivated by government, were disposed of to 
private individuals, and those that remained in 
the hands of the crown were farmed to the 
highest bidder. 

The enormous sum of two shillings per pound 
was levied upon all exported cinnamon until the 
year 1842, when it was reduced one half. Still it 



156 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

was found incompatible with the existence of the 
export trade in this article to continue this re- 
duced duty ; as from careful investigation it was 
proved that cinnamon could not be cultivated, 
prepared for market, and delivered in London, 
paying a shilling per pound export duty, under 
two shillings and fourpence per pound ; which 
was of course without allowing profit upon out- 
lay, or interest of any description. Accordingly, 
in 1848, the whole tariff was considerably altered, 
the export duty upon cinnamon was again re- 
duced to fourpence per pound, with a duty of 
threepence per pound on importation into the 
parent country ; and the government confidently 
expect the trade in this spice, which has fallen 
off more than one half, will be revived. 

But this hope seems to us to be fallacious, 
and we fear that this tardy legislation will not 
enable Ceylon to compete with the East India 
Company's possession on the coast of Malabar, 
or with the Dutch settlement in Java, where the 
shrub has rapidly increased in cultivation, since 
the prohibitive export duty of two shillings was 
imposed by Ceylon legislation on its own pro- 
duce. We say this advisedly, particularly with 
regard to Java, as the cost of the grower there 
has been calculated at a considerably smaller 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 157 

sum than that of his competitor in Ceylon, and 
the former can import his cinnamon into this 
country paying sixpence duty, which gives him 
in duty alone, the advantage of one penny under 
the latter, therefore something more remains to 
be done by our legislators for the cinnamon pro- 
prietors of Ceylon. The amount of export duty 
received upon this article in 1844, was fifty three 
thousand one hundred and ninety-seven pounds ; 
while, in 1846, it amounted to only twenty thou- 
sand and eighty-two pounds. 

Coffee (Coffea arabica) we believe to be in- 
digenous to the i8land, as we have questioned 
an erudite priest and noble upon the subject, and 
they both agreed in stating that a decoction from 
the berry had been used by the natives from time 
immemorial. ^ Some authors state that coffee was 
introduced into Ceylon, from Java, by the Dutch, 
who procured seedlings from Mocha, in 1723, 
and that under the auspices of the Governor- 
General of Batavia, Zwaardenkroom, the first 
plantations were formed in Java. 

When and wherefore coffee was introduced 
and cultivated in other settlements, it is not our 
pmpose to investigate, as we treat solely of 
Ceylon and its productions ; but we feel convinced 
the coffee shrub has been known in the island in 



I 



158 C£irLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

a wild state for ages past. Coffee was first cul- 
tivated in 1820, and has become an object of 
great speculation amongst British residents, who 
have expended large sums of money in clearing, 
planting, and cultivating estates. Many indivi- 
duals have been ruined by coffee plantations, 
some few have succeeded in improving their 
financial r^ourpes, who were sufficiently prudent 
or fortunate to purchase land at a fair valuation, 
and either had experience to guide them in the 
personal superintendence of their properties, or 
entrusted the management to those who were 
worthy of iheir confidence. The quality of the 
berry is considerably improved by cultivation ; 
many like Ceylon coffee : for our own part, we 
candidly confess we prefer Mocha, and we have 
very rarely tasted coffee in Ceylon, which could 
bear comparison with it. 

The expense of clearing jungle, and forming 
it into a coffee estate, have been calculated at 
eight pounds per acre. The first step in this 
clearance is both curious and imposing to wit- 
ness ; the plantations being formed on the moun- 
tain sides, the coolees are set to work on the 
forest trees at the base of the hill, whose trunks 
they notch half way through, thus labouring on 
their way up to the mountain's summit, upon 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 159 

attaining which the uppermost trees are com- 
pletely felled, and these simultaneously falling 
on those beneath, carry them, with a terrific crash 
in their downward course. The falling mass, 
like the avalanche, increasing at each step in 
bulk and weight, acquires fresh impetus in its 
progress, overpowering all obstacles, and thus 
with the roar of thunder, thousands of noble forest 
trees are laid low in a few seconds. The pros- 
trated timber is usually fired and reduced to 
ashes. The seedlings are generally planted out 
in the rainy season, and require constant care 
and attention to prevent them from being over- 
grown with weeds, and jungle grass. 

The appearance of a coffee estate in fiower is 
truly beautiful, the bushes being completely 
covered with a mass of silvery white blossoms, 
which are throvni out in strong and bold relief 
by the glossy, deep-green coloured leaves. Then 
in the advanced stage, when these blossoms are 
changed into ripened berries of a deep red colour, 
under whose weight the branches yield, the spec- 
tacle is extremely pleasing, and must be wit- 
nessed to be appreciated ; the reader must take 
our word for it, that at these periods the sight is 
one of immense beauty, while the general appear- 
ance of the coffee estate is somewhat like an 



160 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

extensive plantation of evergreens, dotted here 
and there, with enormous forest trees, purposely 
left in clearing the jungle, for the proteotion of 
the young plantation. 

The coffee expoited in 1846 amounted to one 
hundred and seventy-three thousand eight hun- 
dred and ninety-two cwt., which was increased in 
1847 to two hundred and forty-five thousand cwt. ; 
and, during the year 1849, forty millions of 
pounds have passed over the roads to the coast. 

We will not go through the mechanical prepa- 
ration of the berry for the market, but glance at 
the difficulties that to a greater or lesser extent 
every planter must have to contend with. In the 
first place, it is impossible to ascertain from the 
&oil if a plantation is certain to succeed or not, 
as we have known contiguous coffee estates, 
although the same attention has been bestowed 
and plan pursued upon both, produce totally dif- 
ferent crops, the one having thriven, the bushes 
yielding an abundant harvest, whilst the other 
has been a total failure, from the rats having 
gnawed the roots of the plants, or the. attacks of 
insects having entirely ruined the young shoots, 
or from some inexplicable cause. The coffee- 
plant also speedily exhausts the productive qua- 
lity of the soil, and, unless manured, the earth 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 161 

loses the elements of fertility, finally becoming 
incapably of producing even a scanty crop. 

Labour likewise is extremely difficult to be pro- 
cured at times, as the planter depends in a great 
measure upon the labourers who arrive from the 
coast, and possibly they may have amassed a suf- 
ficient sum, and choose to return home either 
when the crop is ready for gathering, or when the 
berry is fit for peeling. Thus large quantities of 
coffee are annually spoiled. Many capitalists 
have suffered severely from this cause, and those 
especially whose superintendents maltreat the 
coolees, either by beating them, or by mulcting 
them of their scanty and hardly-earned wages. 
We feel convinced that a more certain supply of 
labour might be depended upon, were the unfor- 
tunate coolees treated with the consideration due 
to human beings — which we regret to say they 
too frequently are not. 

It is many years since the cultivation of the 
sugar-cane was first commenced, but the planta- 
tion at Caltura failed, owing principally to want 
of experience on the part of the cultivator, in the 
selection of a congenial soil. The estate of Mr. 
Hudson, at Peradenia, however, having been more 
judiciously formed, led to a successful result, and 
was the cause of many planters following the in- 



162 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

defatigable proprietor's spirited example. Several 
sugar plantations are now actively and success- 
fully managed, producing an article inferior to 
none grown in the East, either in appearance or 
for use, and at no distant period, we may fairly 
conclude, that the sugar of Ceylon will be a most 
important article in her export trade. 

Cotton-cultivation is very much neglected in 
the island, although there is every just ground to 
believe, that it is capable of producing as fine a 
quality as any which has ever been grown ; in- 
deed the importance of this branch of produce 
has not, as yet, arrested either the attention of the 
local authorities, or of the agriculturist. In this 
opinion we are fortified by an American planter 
in the East India Company's service, who thus 
reports, " I am of opinion, from what I saw of the 
climate, temperature, and soil, that Ceylon will 
produce cotton equal in quality^ and when the 
comparatively small amount of capital required 
is considered, T doubt not it may even produce 
the article cheaper than we can in America^ 
where a large sum must be laid out for labour 
and where the expense of food and clothing is 
much greater than the cost of importing labour 
into Ceylon, independently of the risk of a morta- 
lity among the labourers after they had been pur- 
chased." 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 163 

The advocates of slave emancipation should be 
amongst the first to encourage the growth of 
cotton in Ceylon, and produce an article v^hich 
c$in fairly compete with the slave-grown cotton of 
America. A commencement has been made in 
the neighbourhood of Batticaloa, where American 
seed has been sown, and country cotton is grown 
by some in conjunction with maize, or Indian 
com. The quantity of cotton however which has 
heretofore been grown is insufficient for the con- 
sumption of the island. 

The tobacco-plant has been for a considerable 
period grown, and very extensively cultivated at 
Jaffna, and its quality is held in high estimation 
amongst the Malabars and Malays, so much so, 
that some years ago the Bajah of Travancore 
contracted for an annual supply of it. The 
quantity of tobacco now exported from the island 
amounts in value to some thirteen thousand pounds 
per annum. 

The Areka, or Betel-nut tree (Areka-catechu) 
flomishes in great abundance through the island. 
It is a slight tall palm, with much smaller leaves 
than those of the cocoa-nut, and more feathered 
in their appearance : these are attached to the 
tree by a tough impervious skin, which is 
used by the natives to carry their provisions in. 



164 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

The nuts hang in luxuriant branches, one ti*ee 
producing several hundreds, which are used by 
Easterns with chunam, for the filthy purpose of 
chewing. A large export trade is annually car-, 
ried on in this article, amounting to about the 
value of thirty thousand pounds, which is likely 
to be increased, since a dentifrice has lately 
become much esteemed in this country, which is 
prepared from the nut. 

The ambuprasudana, or water-nut, is a most 
valuable provision of nature, for purifying muddy 
and unwholesome water ; the natives use it for 
this purpose by rubbing it over the internal sur- 
face of their water chatties, which has the pro- 
perty of precipitating all impure and earthly par- 
ticles, thus rendering the water pure and drink- 
able. 

The jack-tree (Aitocarpus integrifalia) grows to 
an enormous size, is a most beautiful object in 
nature, affords most agreeable shade, and pro- 
duces an immense quantity of fruit both from its 
branches and trunk. The fruit are of a some- 
what oval form, in size varying fr*om half a foot to 
five or six in circumference ; their external cover- 
ing is rough and of a greenish hue, and their sec- 
tion of a whitish colour, containing a number of 
kernels, enveloped in a yellowish coating, which 



f- 



L 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 165 

is of a most luscious flavour, but peculiarly dis- 
agreeable to the olfactory nerves. The kernels 
are the size of a pigeon's egg, and when cooked 
make good food, and excellent curry. The 
timber is of a yellow colour, but when polished 
with bees-wax it approaches to a light-coloured 
mahogany, and all ordinary furniture is manufac- 
tured of it. 

The bread-fruit-tree ( Artrocarpus incisa) is also 
one of large size, and abundantly productive. Of 
this, there are two descriptions, the one bearing 
fruit with seed and which is much larger than the 
other, which has no seed. The greater and 
lesser sort are both used in culinary preparations, 
as well in the green, as in the matured state, the 
natives making a curry of one, whilst Europeans 
eat the fruit as a vegetable either boiled or fried. 
The native who has a bread-tree, cocoa-nut-tree, 
and jack-tree, has nearly all his wants provided 
for, and it is to this bountiful provision of nature, 
we may attribute the inactive disposition of the 
people. 

Indigo was formerly exported from Ceylon, 
during Dutch rule; notwithstanding, however, 
that the plant is indigenous to the soil, which 
with the climate offers every inducement for its 
cultivation, and that the greatest facilities for 



166 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

manufacture are at hand, still do step has yet 
been taken since Great Britain has had the 
island, to unfold this source of wealth. A proposi- 
tion, we believe, was made to government in the 
year 1817 to embark capital in this cultivation, 
upon condition that the speculators should be 
assisted with a grant of land, which, in the event 
of the abandonment of the design, should revert 
to government. This does not appear to have 
been entertained, and it remains for some other 
enterprising individual to set the example in 
indigo, as Mr. Hudson did in the culture of the 
sugar- cane. 

The mulberry tree flourishes in the island, and 
might easily be propagated, for the nourishment 
of the silk- worm ; had the natives a moiety of the 
industry and perseverance of the Chinese, we see 
no reason why silk of as fine a quality as any ex- 
ported from the Celestial Empire, should not be 
produced in Lanka-diva. 

The most glorious vegetable production of the 
island is the Tala, or Talapat palm, (Carypha 
umbraculifera,) which varies in height from seventy 
to one hundred feet. The circumference of the 
trunk near the ground is about nine feet, and 
gradually tapers to the summit, where the gigan- 
tic leaves droop and spread out in a parachute 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 167 

form ; it is a singular fact, that wherever a leaf 
has sprung from the trunk of the tree, an in- 
delible mark is left after the leaf has fallen. The 
natives affirm, that the tree never lives more than 
one hundred years, and that it commences to 
decay as soon as the blossom has arrived at per- 
fection. The flower ii^large and of a most exqui- 
site yellow; whilst in blossom this is enclosed in 
a sheath, which bursts with a loud explosion as 
soon as the flower has arrived at maturity. The 
flowers remain in full bloom for nearly three 
months, when they gradually disappear, and the 
fruit, which is about the size of a plum, ripens. 

The leaves of this magnificent tree frequently 
measure, from the extremity of the stalk to the 
tip of the leaf, twenty-five feet, and the width 
varies from twelve to seventeen feet — these im- 
perishable leaves, when dried, are applied by the 
natives to various purposes ; from the form of the 
leaf without prepai*ation, it can be folded like a 
fjEui, and this is borne before the chiefs and nobles 
by their retainers. The leaves are also cut into 
strips and used for olas and books, a thatch is 
also made from them, which serves as a roofing 
to dwellings. In the trunk is found a species of 
pith, which when dried yields a fine meal ; the 



l68 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Datives make this into cakes, and the flour is 
most delicate and delicious. 

We regret that we are unable to give the reader 
the name of a tree which grows in Ceylon, whose 
leaves, owing to their roughness, are constantly 
used by native carpenters instead of sand-paper ; 
they have also the property of extracting stains 
from furniture, and are known by the name of 
" carpenter's leaves." 

The mee-tree grows to an enormous size, and 
the branches afibrd a welcome shelter to the 
weary traveller from the noonday sun ; neverthe- 
less, the effluvia of its blossom, which is a minute 
white flower, is most unpleasant, and some affirm 
especially unwholesome. So luxuriant are these 
buds, that when they fall to the ground the earth 
appears to be covered with snow for some dis- 
tance around the parent tree, and the natives say, 
that when the periodical heavy rains wash down 
an accumulation of these pestiferous blossoms 
into the tanks, and they are allowed to remain 
floating on the waters, the exhalation invariably 
produces disease. Notwithstanding this convic- 
tion, nothing will induce them to fell a mee-tree, 
because the fruit produces pungent oil, which 
they apply to many purposes. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 169 

The magnificent ebony-ti'ee (Dyospiras ebo- 
num) is most peculiar in its aspect, as the foliage 
is almost black, the bark of the trunk nearly 
white, and the branches sprout forth about thirty 
feet from the root, giving the tree a mournfully 
grand appearance. The wood is usually jet 
black, invariably extremely hard and weighty, 
and is much sought after both by Europeans and 
the wealthy natives, for articles of decorative fur- 
niture, and high prices are readily obtained for 
fine specimens, that are elaborately carved. The 
oldest and best trees, are generally found in the 
forests of. the eastern province. The Calamander 
tree, (Dyospyrus hirsuta,) or variegated ebony, is 
most majestic, and is also much prized. At one 
time, this tree was exceedingly common in the 
forests; but has become scarce, as it is more 
esteemed for articles of furniture than ebony, from 
the beauty of the WQod, which is striped or 
mottled with black and shades of brown, is close 
grained, will bear a high polish, and is worth a 
large sum. The red sandal and satinwood trees 
are natives of Ceylon, but these are now as rarely 
met with as the Calamander tree, and for the same 
reason. 

The Kabook tree, a species of terminalia, attains 
a large size, the timber being exceedingly dura-* 

VOL. I. I 



170 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

ble, and of a brick-dust colour ; the»peculiarity of 
this tree consists in its flourishing, alike on the 
banks of streams, in level districts, and also at 
an elevation of two thousand three hundred feet, 
and what is more remarkable still is, that the 
natives believe, (and with apparent justice,) that 
wherever this tree is found, water will be met 
with near its lowermost roots, and those who 
have caused the experiment to be made, invari- 
ably declare that by digging close to the tree 
water has been always discovered. 

Were we to notice a tithe of the trees aiid 
vegetable productions worthy of remark, that are 
met with in this fertile spot, volumes would not 
suffice ; therefore we shall but give a description 
of one more, and that is the tree sacred to 
Buddha, the bo-tree, or Ficus religiosa. Under 
this magnificent tree, Buddhists believe the god 
to have slumbered, when he became the incarna- 
tion of wisdom. The foliage is peculiarly luxuri- 
ant and beautiful, the broad leaves being heart- 
shaped; and so sacred were these considered, that 
their semblance was only permitted to be carvt$d 
or painted upon the palace, or articles of furni- 
ture intended for the sole use of the reigning 
monarch. The blossoms are most lovely and 
fragrant, being bell-shaped, the colour a milk- 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 171 

white, save in the centre of the flower, which is 
delicately tinged with gold. These trees are 
carefully guarded from injury, by terraces of earth 
and stone, and some from their huge cavernous 
trunks appear to have braved the sun^s beams, 
and the lightning's flashes for centuries. 

Tn the early morning, the perfume of the orange, 
citron, wild jessamine, and other flowering 
shrubs, is delicious beyond conception, and ex- 
quisite as these floral beauties are at all times, 
they are rendered still more so by the fragile 
parasites, and pepper vines, that entwine aro^d 
their trunks when met with in a wild state. It 
is impossible to enumerate the luscious fruits of 
the island, as every one, save the mangostein, 
that grows in the torrid zone, is produced by the 
prolific soil of Lanka-diva ; from the stately tama- 
rind, Shaddock papaw mangol, and banana trees 
down to the small delicate chillie, all alike spring 
spontaneously from the teeming earth. 

What especially demands the attention of the 
European agriculturist is, that in the various 
parts of the island, the peculiar productions of 
Europe and Asia will alike thrive, if care is 
bestowed upon the cultivation of the former ; so 
that while the fragrant nutmeg and clove-tree, 
with all tropical productions, attain the utmost 

I 2 



172 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

luxuriance on one portion of the soil ; wheat, 
barley, potatoes, turnips, and other European 
vegetables, will yield remunerative crops, and 
flourish upon another. And we believe that no 
portion of the globe possesses the same capabili- 
ties for cultivation as are to be found on this 
island, whose internal resources are comparatively 
undeveloped ; thus ofiering a fair opening for the 
enterprising capitalist and industrious emigrant. 

The expense of housekeeping in Ceylon is con- 
siderable ; for, although the prices of provisions 
are generally moderate, the multiplicity of arti- 
cles required, and used, by the servants, com- 
bined with the style of living, render the domestic 
expenditure, frequently, very great. Moreover, it is 
impossible to keep such a check as to avoid 
peculation, as the appoo, or head-servant, invari- 
ably goes to the bazaar to purchase all articles of 
daily consumption ; thus it is absolutely impracti- 
cable for the head of the household to ascertain 
the correct price of food, as it not only depends 
upon the supply and demand, but upon the honesty 
or cupidity of the appoo. 

This only applies to native produce, as all 
European productions, comestibles, and every 
other import are paid for monthly — and we can 
conscientiously aver that either the importers. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 173 

exporters, or consignees, ought to make rapid 
and immense fortunes, as the price demanded is 
often trebled, and frequently quadrupled, when 
there is a scarcity. Thus, good butter will fre- 
quently fetch two shillings and half-a-crown the 
pound, cheese the same, ham, bacon, dried and 
pickled tongues, preserves and pickles, being 
sold in the same ratio. 

The prices of all viands are now nearly the 
same at Galle and Colombo, although before the 
steamers touched at the former place, we have 
been infoime4 that edibles were materially 
cheaper at the former place. Mutton, when it 
can be piu'chased in the market, which is but 
seldom, fetches an enormous price, being sold at 
the rate of a rupee or two shillings per pound,* 
but a good succulent haunch or joint of mutton 
cannot be procured in the bazaar at any price. 
Kids are sold, and used as a substitute for sheep, 
and, when the creatures are young, and have been 
well fed, a quarter of one roasted is not a despi- 
cable dish ; the price per pound varies from six- 
pence to sevenpence hal^enny. 

* From this arises Mutton Clubs, a certain number of gen- 
tlemen, generally four, forming the club, purchase sheep, 
feed them, and divide the expense amongst them. But even 
then the price is enormous. 



174 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Beef is invariably lougb, and lean, the best 
parts being sold at sixpence per pound : pork is 
the best animal food that can be procured in 
Ceylon, and the value of good meat is the same 
as beef. Poultry is plentiful and moderate in 
price, tiurkeys and geese selling from four- 
shillings and sixpence to seven shillings and 
sixpence each ; ducks from three to four shillings 
and sixpence the couple ; fowls from ninepence 
to one shilling and sixpence each ; but we must 
observe that although the price is low, the birds 
are never fatted, and are generally sold before 
they are full grown, therefore the expense of feed- 
ing them materially adds to their original cost* 

The fishes of Ceylon are numerous, and many 
of their varieties are unsurpassed, if not unequalled 
in delicacy of flavoui; and lusciousness, and the 
prices of the best descriptions are tolerably rea- 
sonable. The fish, par excellence^ of the island is 
the seir-fish, which is a species of scomber, 
having much of the appearance and flavour of the 
finest salmon, which however it infinitely excels ; 
the flesh is of a delicate pink, but becomes colour- 
less when subjected to any culinary process. 
This delicious fish is caught with hook and line, 
is solely found in salt water, and we have seen 
some whose weight exceeded twenty pounds. 



CEYtON AND THB CINGALESE. 175 

The bull's-eye pomfret is likewise much esteemed, 
and the beauty of this fish is indescribable, as 
the head, body, and fins are of a brilliant red, the 
scales being tinged with gold. Soles, whiting, 
mackarel, and mullet are also plentiful, attain a 
large size, are cheap and good, and the method 
adopted by the natives to catch the last men- 
tioned fish is somewhat singular. 

The fishermen push off in their canoes after 
sunset ; and, when they have reached a favourable 
spot, one man waves a torch over the water, and 
the fish apparently fascinated, speedily rise to the 
surface^ and remain floating near the torch ; 
another man immediately darts a pronged iron 
instrument, (not unlike a large horse^^comb,) at- 
tached to a wooden handle, into the creature's 
back, and hauls it into the canoe. 

It would be impossible to enumerate the mem- 
bers of the piscatory tribe that supply the table of 
Europeans, or the means adopted by the natives 
to ensnare them. Suffice it to say that for salt- 
water fish, the hook, pronged instrument, and 
nets are used, whilst for a particular firesh-water 
fish, kraals are constructed of so intricate a 
nature, that it is impossible for the fish to escape ; 
in some places, conical baskets made from thin 
slips of bamboo in which an aperture is left for 



176 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

the hand are used : this machine is cautiously 
lowered over the fish, and the prize is seized hold 
of by the fisherman. 

So primitive are some of the means employed 
to catch the smaller fry, by and for the poor, that 
we have seen the men attach a grain of boiled 
rice to a piece of cocoa-nut fibre, hang it over the 
side of their canoe, and patiently catch, and de- 
tach fish after fish, for hours ; the market value of 
which would not exceed three farthings. Crabs, 
craw-fish, and prawns, are to be procured along 
the entire coast, but oysters fit for food are only 
to be met with in the river that flows through 
Bentotte, and these the divers detach from the 
rocks witli mallets. The most remarkable cir- 
cumstance connected with the latter edibles is, 
that although the stream flows for a considerable 
distance beyond, and has not its source at Ben- 
totte, it is only at that place the oysters are found^ 

We cannot avoid expressing our conviction, 
that the importance of the fisheries in Ceylon, 
both in reference to the consumption of the island 
and as a great source of export trade, has not 
attracted the attention it deserves. There is a 
considerable demand for salt fish in the interior, 
and the Roman Catholic population alone amounts 
to nearly two hundred thousand, who generally 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 177 

observe most strictly the fasts of the church. To 
meet this demand^ there is an import trade of salt 
or preserved fish, amounting annually to the value 
of some iGl5,000. The waters which wash the 
coast on every side swarm with the finest fish of 
every description, and a number of boats are em- 
ployed in fishing, particularly in the vicinity of 
Colombo, during the prevalence of the south-west 
monsoon. 

A very small quantity of fish, however, is pre- 
served, and the mode of salting adopted by the 
Cingalese is peculiarly defective. In a tropical 
climate decomposition commences rapidly after 
death ; it is obvious, therefore, that a fish should 
b^ salted immediately it is caught, whereas the 
natives rarely salt any except that portion which 
they have not been fortunate enough to dispose 
of, and the curing never takes place until after 
exposure to the powerful rays of the sun on a 
sandy beach. Sand and salt are thus mixed to- 
gether, and the result can easily be imagined; 
namely, that such fish cannot be eaten by Euro- 
peans, who, if they could succeed in eradicating 
the sand, cannot cure the incipient putridity. 

The most judicious method for salting that we 
have heard of is that which has been suggested 
by Mr. Bennett, namely, to adopt the practice 

I 5 



178 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

observed by the nutmeg-curers ; and construct, 
beneath a thatched roof, tiers of open platforms, 
composed of split bamboo, at distances and of 
dimensions to correspond with the size of the 
fish. Thus, any quantity might be cured by smoke, 
proceeding from the ignition of damped paddy- 
straw, placed beneath the lowest tier, which 
would thus, ascend to the roof, passing through 
each tier in its progress. It has also been sug- 
gested that, as the boats employed in fishing 
have little room enough to carry their cargo, a 
dhoney * should accompany a certain number of 
them laden with salt, whose crew could be occu* 
pied in salting the fish, as rapidly as possible 
after it had been caught. It must be observed 
that the extravagant price of salt has acted most 
prejudicially upon the improvement of the fisheries. 
The attention of the government appears to have 
been directed to the importance of this branch of 
industry during the Government of Sir Edward 
Barnes, when an ordinance was passed imposing 
a duty of fifteen per cent upon the prime cost 
of all salt fish imported into the island, and per- 
mitting (he exportation, free of duty, of all fish 
cured in the colony. 

The vegetable productions indigenous to the 
* Or native sailing-vessel. 

8 



GEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 179 

tropics are both abundant and cheap ; and, although 
the mangols do not equal those of Bengal, nor the 
pine-apples those of Singapore, nevertheless the 
delicious fruits of Ceylon are, as a body, unrivalled 
for their exquisite flavour and variety. Potatoes 
are at times exceedingly scarce, and dear, and we 
have occasionally paid at Galle -sevenpence half- 
penny pet pound for them, and never less at 
Colombo than threepence. Some years ago, the 
island was dependant upon Madras and Bombay 
for the supply of these vegetables, but in 1823 
the first potatoes were planted in Kandy, and 
good crops are now annually procured, but still 
this article of food remains dear and comparatively 
scarce, as there has arisen a greater demand from 
the influx of Europeans. 

Servants wages are not high, but the sum paid 
monthly in most establishments is large in pro- 
portion to the income ; as the number of domes- 
tics, although not to equal the retinue kept up in 
India, far exceeds a moderate household in 
Europe. The appoo, or head servant, receives 
from fifteen to twenty-five rix dollars* per 
month, a good cook the same, the table-servant 
from ten to twelve, the horsekeepers, and there is 
one to each horse, receive the like sum, the coolee, 
It A rix doUar is one shilling and sixpence. 



180 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

or servant that -sweeps the rooms, and performs 
menial offices, six or seven, the cook's boy five, 
the grass-cutter for each horse three rix dollars, 
and the ayah, or native female attendant where * 
there is a lady or children, is remunerated accord- 
ing to her knowledge of needlework, bat never 
receives less than the table-servant ; and, if she 
understands her business thoroughly as ladies'- 
maid, or nurse, frequently as much as the appoo. 

To these must be added the water-carrier, who 
is paid according to the number of baths and 
quantity of water required daily. It is not the 
custom to provide the domestics with food; never- 
theless few edibles ever make their appearance 
a second time upon the table ; for, according to 
your domestics' account, the rats, dogs, or heat, 
purloin and spoil everything that disappears. 
Unmarried men, if economically disposed, (but 
few are in the East,) can make two or three ser- 
vants suffice; but, although we have known many 
families have a larger number of domestics than 
we have enumerated, we cannot recall to our recol- 
lection any that had a smaller establishment ; and 
the whole household of men will not perform their 
duties as efficiently as two women servants would 
in England. 

House-hire is comparatively low, as there are no 



/ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 181 

taxes, but in particularly healthy or fashionable 
quarters, the rent demanded for a good dwelling, 
will be found little lower than that which is paid 
in England, and in some instances much higher. 

The price of provisions at Kandy is one- third 
more than at Galle, or Colombo, and at times 
edibles of every description are exceedingly scarce, 
and difficult to be procured upon any terms. 
Servants^ wages and house-rent are also exceed- 
ingly high. Those who reside or sojourn at 
Newera EUia, are compelled to pay exorbitantly 
for every article of food, and at times a residence, 
or lodging, is not to be procured for money ; andy 
when the whole or portion of a domicile is to be 
obtained, the sum paid for temporary accommo- 
dation, equals if not exceeds, the rent extorted by 
the lodging-house keepers of a fashionable water- 
ing place during the height of the season. 

We have been informed by the descendants of 
the Dutch and Portuguese that wages, house-rent, 
the price of provisions and furniture, in every 
part of the island, have become more than trebled 
since the English obtained possession of Ceylon ; 
and they have pathetically bemoaned to us that 
each year the value of everything increased : 
strangely forgetting that, although individuals 
might have to pay a higher sum than they for- 



I I 



192 GSTLON AND TH£ CINOALB8E. 

merly did, the diffusion of specie must benefit the 
majority of the inhabitants, as lands become culti- 
vated, and the market-price of. the produce mate- 
rially enhanced by augmented consumption. 



C£YLON AND THE CINGALESE. 183 



CHAPTER VIII. 



Natural history— Elephants of Ceylon spoken of by Pliny 
and Dionysins— Sagacity — Trained to be executioners by 
the kings of Kandy — ^Ancient mode of valuing elephants 
— ^Anecdote — Catching elephants with the atmaddoo — 
Ornaments made from the coarse hairs of the taU^-Eing 
of Kandy's personal inspection of captured elephants— 
Tyranny — ^Bjiox*s account — Rogue-elephant — ^Elephant* 
shooting — ^Major Rogers — His miraculous escape — Sin- 
gular death — Elephants ascend the moimtains — ^Tusks 
found buried in the jungles — Elks — Deer — ^Walmeenya — 
Beauty and docility — Wild buffaloes — ^Bears— Cheetahs, 
or leopards — Eandian mode of snaring them — ^Distinctive 
peculiarity — ^Wild hogs— Animals found in jimgle^-Bats 
—Shrew — ^Anecdote of a musk-rat— Ornithological speci- 
mens— Land-leeches — ^Ticks — ^Snakes — ^Anaconda— Cobra 
capello, or the sacred naga of the Cingalese— Warning— 
Hair-breadth escape— Tic polonga — Legend— Ichneumon 
attacking a cobra — Crocodiles — Hunting — Crocodile 
charmers-^Native method of catching and destroying 
crocodiles— Fecimdity-^Number of eggs^Fugnacity of 



184 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

the young — ^Insect tribes — White ants — Destructive pro* 
pensities — Their nests. 

In this chapter we do not pretend to classify 
scientifically the mammalia, or ophidia, of Ceylon ; 
we merely give sketches that we think interesting and 
amusing to those who desire general information. 

From historical records we find that Lanka-diva 
has been celebrated for the tusks of its elephants 
from a remote period; and both Pliny audDiony- 
sius dilate largely upon the superior quality of 
the ivory, which they represent as being whiter, 
and of a less porous nature, than the tusks of 
other animals of the same species. 

In ancient times also, the monarchs of the pe- 
ninsula eagerly sought for the Ceylon elephants, 
on account of their superior docility and courage ; 
and it is believed that the greater number of ele- 
phants that were used in battle by Pyrrhus, as 
well as during the whole of the Punic wars, were 
obtained from Ceylon, by the Phoenicians, who 
shipped them to the Persian Gulf, or the ports of 
the Red Sea. Cingalese annals state, that in the 
palmy days of their island, the traffic in elephants 
and spices, formed their principal exports, as all 
the Eastern potentates, either when at war with 
their neighbours or for purposes of stately show, 
eagerly sought, and gave large sums for these 
ponderous but sagacious creatures. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 185 

Some authors have attempted to cast discredit 
upon the natural intelligence of the elephant, but 
from our personal observation we can conscien- 
tiously say, that we believe them to be the most 
sagacious of all quadrupeds, and most capable of 
receiving man^s instruction. Although we make 
this statement, we do not mean to affirm that all 
elephants exhibit extreme intelligence ; neither 
do all men, nevertheless few would be sufficiently 
fool-hardy enough to declare, that the characteristic 
quality of manhood was stupidity, because some 
few are especially obtuse. That elephants possess 
the faculty of memory to an extraordinary extent, 
has been evinced in numberless instances, and 
that they also understand the meaning of lan- 
guage has been distinctly proved, and we will 
adduce the following in corroboration of our 
assertion. 

During the native dynasty it was the practice 
to train elephants to put criminals to death by 
trampling upon them, the creatures being taught 
to prolong the agony of the wretched sufferers by 
crushing the limbs, avoiding the vital parts. With 
the last tyrant-king of Kandy this was a favourite 
mode of execution, and as one of the elephant- 
executioners was at the former capital, during our 
sojourn there, we were particularly anxious to test 



186 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

the creature's sagacity and memory. The animal 
was mottled, and of enormous size, and was 
quietly standing, with his keeper seated upon his 
neck ; the noble who accompanied us desired the 
man to dismount, and stand on one side. 

The chief then gave the word of command, 
ordering the creature to " slay the wretch !** The 
elephant raised his trunk, and twined it, as if 
around a human being, the creature then made 
motions as if he were depositing the man on the 
earth before him, then slowly raised his fore-foot, 
placing it alternately upon the spots where the 
limbs of the sufferer would have been. This he 
continued to do for some minutes, then, as if satis- 
fied the bones must be crushed, the elephant raised 
his trunk high above his head and stood motion- 
less; the chief then ordered him ^^ to complete his 
work,*' and the creature immediately placed one 
foot, as if upon the man's abdomen, and the other 
upon his head, apparently using his entire strength 
to crush, and terminate the wretch's misery. 

When we bear in mind the monarch was de- 
throned in 1815, and the animal had never since 
that period been called upon to perform the bar- 
barous task to which he had been trained, few we 
believe will be disposed to cavil, concerning the 
extraordinary intelligence and memory evinced by 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 187 

the creature. Space will not permit us to bring 
forward other instances, to demonstrate our asser^ 
tion, but volumes might be written in proof of the 
elephant's sagacity and memory, being second 
only to those of man. 

Cuvier, no mean authority, states that a marked 
difference is manifest in the formation of the Afri- 
can and Asiatic elephant, and writes, ^^ Elephas 
capensis, fronte convex^, lamellis malarium rhom- 
boidalibus. Elephas ludicus, fronte plano-con- 
cavi, lamellis malarium arcuatis undatis.** 

The height of a full-grown Ceylon elephant 
varies from eight and a half to ten feet, and their 
colour is also diversified, as some of the tuskers 
have a portion of their head and ears of a speckled 
flesh colour, others are mottled all over their 
bodies, whilst many are of the usual elephantine 
hue. White elephants have been occasionally 
but rarely found in the island, and the natives 
affirm this breed is not indigenous, but was intro* 
duced from Siam. 

Although all tusk-elephants are males, not more 
than three or four in a hundred have these valu* 
able protuberances ; the remainder being provided 
with short tusks like the females, which project 
eight or ten inches beyond the mouth, and in- 
variably incline downwards. The tusks vary in 



188 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

« 

length from three to seven feet, and their weight 
ranges between thirty to one hundred and twenty 
pounds, but sixty-five or seventy are the average 
weight of those appertaining to a full-grown 
animal. 

Formerly the traffic in elephants was princi- 
pally carried on by the Moormen, and, as their 
mode of valuing the creature was singular, we 
subjoin a statement. They measured from the 
extremity of the fore-foot to the top of the shoul- 
der, and for every cubit they demanded one thou*- 
sand rupees, and readily obtained that sum for 
the Ceylon elephants. Numberless extraordinary 
anecdotes are extant connected with the acknow- 
ledged superiority of the island elephants, even 
by those of their own species ; and, although we 
will not vouch for the accuracy of the statement, 
as we have never seen an African and Ceylon 
elephant in jnxta-position, we give the following 
anecdote from Tavemier, who writes, " One I will 
tell you hardly to be believed, which is, that when 
an}' other king or rajah has one of these elephants 
of Ceylon, if they bring any other breed before 
them, in any other place whatever, so soon as the 
other elephants behold the Ceylon elephants, by 
an instinct of nature, they do them reverence, by 
laying their trunks upon the ground, and raising 
them up again." 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 189 

Id their Dative juDgle, the elephaDt is tormeDted 
by a large species of mosquito, or fly, aod aD io- 
sect called the tick, which pierces the hide, causiDg 
excessive paio ; aod, to baffle these tiDy but io- 
exorable eDemies, the huge creature rolls itself od 
the earth, aud, wheo a wild elephant emerges from 
the jungle^ the skin is of a dingy brick-dust colour, 
from the sand and particles of red earth that cover 
the hide. 

The elephaDts are oow ODly found iu the thickly- 
wooded forests of the iDterior, although under the 
Dutch, and during the rule of the first English 
governor, the Honourable Frederick North (since 
Lord Guildford), the great elephant-hunts used to 
take place Id the maritime province, aud at times 
one or two thousand men would be employed for 
many weeks in snaring elephants, or driving them 
into kraals. 

As the mode of snaring and hunting elephants 
is geuerally the same and has been often described, 
we will ODly allude to oue of the former, that we 
believe to be peculiar to the islaud, aud which is 
called ATMADDOO, or hand-snaring. The ropes 
are made either from buffaloes' or bullocks' hide, 
aud have a running noose at one end ; the hunters 
lie iu wait in a jungle where they find recent 
tracks of the elephants ; concealed in the trees, 



190 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

they readily perceive the approach of the animal, 
and allowing it to pass their ambush, stealthily 
creep in the rear, getting close to the creature, 
and awaiting the favourable moment slip the 
noose under a hind-foot, another hunter twining 
the opposite end of the rope around the trunk of 
a tree. The elephant in attempting to pursue the 
route is checked and tripped up, finally stumbling ; 
the other hunters immediately rush forward with 
additional ropes, and secure the legs by twisting 
cords from one to the other in a figure of eight ; 
the elephant is then securely fastened to the 
neighbouring trees, and a shed erected to protect 
the animal until sufficiently tamed to be removed 
with safety. 

Under the native dynasty, the successful ele- 
phant-hunters were highly rewarded by the mo- 
narch, and were allowed to pluck out the long 
coarse hairs that are occasionally found at the 
extremity of the tail. These are highly valued 
by the Kandian women, who weave them into 
bangles and anklets. The Kandian kings only 
retained the tuskers and speckled elephants, the 
others being set at liberty. Sometimes, to please 
the potentate, the herd would be driven into the 
city and captured in his presence, and Knox, who 
was a prisoner in Kandy for twenty-one years. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 191 

says, " If the elephants caught did not please the 
king he ordered their liberation, but if they did, 
he selected some spot near the city, and there 
they were kept until he ordered them to be se- 
cured. This might not take place for two or 
three years, during which interval headsmen and 
watchers were set over them, and if the beasts did 
chance to stray beyond the royal bounds, the 
headsmen summoned their followers to bring them 
back again immediately, for, were one only lost, 
they were apprehensive of the king s displeasure, 
which was little short of death.*' 

It is well known these animals are usually 
found in herds, and when a solitary elephant is 
seen, the Cingalese say that it is a rogue-elephant, 
" hora alia^'' who has been expelled for nefarious 
and turbulent conduct by the other members of 
the herd. It is strange, that whenever a solitary 
elephant is found or heard of, the creature is in- 
variably viciously mischievous, destroying crops, 
and taking human life, apparently in wantonness 
and without provocation, and a rogue»elephant 
in former days used frequently to lie in wait near 
a road, rush upon the unwary travellers, trample 
them to death, then quietly return to the jungle. 
Such an occuiTence took place a comparatively 
short time ago. 



192 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

In certain parts of the interior, the natives 
suffer materially at times from the destructive 
depredations of herds of elephants; and occa- 
sionally, paddy-fields, and topes of cocoa-nut 
trees, will be completely devastated in the course 
of the night. Elephants have a strong partiality 
for the leaves of the cocoa-nut ; and, when they 
cannot reach them with their trunks, they throw 
their whole weight against the tree, and, by con- 
tinued pressure, succeed in laying low the stately 
palm. . 

The sense of smell and hearing, in these ani- 
mals is extremely acute^ but a strong light, or the 
vivid glare of the sun, is evidently obnoxious to 
their eyes ; and, for this reason, an experienced 
elephant-shooter will invariably endeavour to 
place himself in such a position as to allow, if 
possible, the beams to fall upon the elephant^s 
forehead, as it is near the eyes, at the top of the 
skull, the vulnerable spot is to be found. Balls 
will inflict no serious injury, unless the brain 
of the animal is perforated ; when this is the case, 
in the time of a passing thought, the ponderous 
creature lies prostrate and motionless at the feet 
of the comparative, pigmy destroyer. 

As elephant-hunters cannot conveniently bag 
their game, it is customary to cut off their tail. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 193 

and bear it away as a trophy, and some amusing 
anecdotes are current in Ceylon connected with 
new arrivals and young sportsmen, who have 
commenced docking a live, instead of a dead 
elephant, the creature having been merely stunned 
by the shot; and the pain of the incision acting 
as a counter-irritant, causing the animal to regain 
its scattered senses and feet, the animal shuffling 
off in one direction, and the inexperienced hunter 
running swiftly in the opposite, bawling loudly 
for assistance. 

The most celebrated elephant-hunter in Ceylon 
was Major Rogers, and it has been stated to us 
by those who knew this adventurous man well, 
that he had slain more than fourteen hundred 
elephants. His hair-breadth escapes were mira- 
culous, and among the many we will cite but one, 
which, although it savours of the wonderful, is 
strictly correct. 

The Major had shot at an elephant, but the 
ball glanced off, merely inflicting a flesh-'wound ; 
the creature, infuriated with pain, raised its trunk, 
uttering the terrific trumpet-like squeal, which 
they always make preparatory to a charge. The 
elephant seized Rogers with the proboscis, and 
carried him a short distance, then dashed him on 
the ground, into a deep hole, and trampled upon 

VOL. I. K 



194 CKYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

him, breaking his right arm intove " places, and 
several of his ribs; and it was only the small size 
of the hole into which he had been thrown that 
saved his life, as the elephant had not sufficient 
room to use his full strength. When his brother 
sportsmen came up to the Major, they found him 
lying senseless, and, so soon as he recovered his 
speech he stated, that he was perfectly conscious 
when the elephant both seized and trampled upon 
him, but that he knew attempting to escape, or 
struggling was worse than futile, and that he 
was entirely passive upon principle, as he had 
often reflected upon such an event occurring, and 
had resolved to remain perfectly motionless. We 
believe no greater mastery of mind over matter, or 
resolution, was ever recorded than this. 

The death of this courageous man was as 
melancholy as extraordinary: he was travelling 
in the interior with a gentleman and his wife, on 
the 7th of June 1846, and the party were taking 
refreshment at a Rest-house, preparatory to pur- 
suing their journey. A violent thunder-storm 
came on which detained the travellers for some 
time ; it had abated, the sun was again shining 
and preparations were making to resume their 
tour, when the Major stepped into the verandah, 
saying that he thought the rain had entirely sub* 
sided, and it was time to set out. 



CBYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 195 

t 

Suddenly, a viyid flash of lightning was seen, 
a loud crash of thunder heard ; his companions 
called to him, saying they had better wait awhile 
longer ; not receiving a reply, the gentleman went 
out, and there lay poor Rogers a lifeless corpse, 
who but a few moments previously, was full of 
life and merriment. Thus died one whilst under 
shelter and apparently out of danger, who had 
often braved the heat of the battle, the fury of 
the elephant, and who had never shrunk from a 
hazardous undertaking. 

We cannot conclude our observations upon ele- 
phants, without remarking upon their capability 
of enduring extreme atmospheric changes, for, in 
Ceylon, the tracks of these animals are found 
alike in the valleys of the interior, and on the 
elevated thickly-wooded mountains, and many of 
these elevations exceed six thousand feet, above 
th6 ocean's level, the thermometer varying in the 
valleys, and on the mountains forty-five degrees. 
These clumsy animals appear also to delight in 
climbing steep hills, and slippery rocks, and oft- 
times their mutilated bodies axe found in preci- 
pices and abysses below. 

Frequently tusks of a large size are discovered 
in the jungles, but whether they have been buried 
by the natives, and forgotten, or have been forced 

k2 



196 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

into the earth by the animals, none can tell; 
though it is asserted that elephants in flight will 
fall upon their tusks, their own impetus and 
weight snapping them off close to the sockets. 
But, even presuming the latter statement to be 
correct, it is a problem to us how the tusks can 
be found beyond their own depth, unless in the 
course of time the soil has accumulated over 
them. 

In the central province elks abound and afford 
good sport; these animals approximate closely to 
the red deer of Scotland, and at a distance might 
readily be mistaken for them. When they are 
full-grown their height varies from four to five 
feet and a half, their colour a dark reddish brown, 
which gradually shades into black upon the neck 
and hinder part. There are several species of 
deer indigenous to the island, that are remarkable 
for their elegant forms and beautiful coats, abd 
among them Albinoes are occasionally seen, with 
the red eyes peculiar to the colour, and these 
animals are highly prized by the Kandians. 

We shall only describe the smallest of the deer 
tribe called by some naturalists the musk-deer, 
the Linnsean name of which is Moschus meminna, 
the Cingalese Walmeenya. These diminutive 
creatures, perfect in^ their proportions, are the 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 197 

tuost exquisitely lovely of all quadrupeds; the 
beauty of their delicate limbs, lustrous eyes, 
spotted skins, and graceful forms baffling all de- 
scription. We had a full-grown male, whose 
height did not exceed ten inches, and length 
fourteen ; the throat, neck, and stomach, were milk 
white ; the remainder of the body was grey, regu- 
larly striped with black, over which were equi-dis- 
tant yellow spots. The head gradually tapered to 
the snout, whilst from either side of the mouth 
protruded a small but perfectly-shaped tusk; the 
eyes and ears large and open, the tail short, and 
the weight of the Lilliputian was under five 
pounds. 

It was curious to observe how kindness con- 
quered the animaVs natural timidity; when we 
first had him, if an attempt was made to handle 
or lift him, he immediately snorted and resisted, 
kicking violently, and small as he was, he could 
inflict strong kicks with his slender pointed hind- 
hoofs. Gradually fear subsided, and, as he be- 
came domesticated, he was placed upon the table 
after dinner, and allowed to nibble first one fruit 
and then another from the dishes; at last, he 
would boldly walk about, and, when called by 
name, would fearlessly approach and take food 
from the hand, allowing caresses to be bestowed 



198 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

upon bim. His terror of the dogs also diminished 
by degrees ; at firs^ when they barked he would 
Giouch dowti instantaneously^ (As this species do 
in a wild state, among the grass for concealment, 
as soon as they hear a noise,) and remain motion- 
less, panting with alarm, exhibiting other syfflp«» 
toms of fear, with dilated eyes^ At length, he 
would become calm, finding no injury inflict^dy 
and before we left the island would allow a small 
terrier to stand close to, and sniff his coat^ and, 
if the larger dogs barked when he was out of his 
cage, would gaze inquiringly toxtards the spot 
wfa^re the noise proceeded from, without exhi- 
biting the slightest uneasiness. 

With some difficulty, we obtained a female of 
the same breed, as these animals are rarely tak#n 
alive, and succeeded in bringing both to England, 
but unfortunately our changeable climate did not 
agree with them, and first out tame petted faroutite 
and then the female sickened, and eventually each 
died of inflammation of the lungs. 

The wild buffalo of Ceylon is a variety of the 
Malabar, but much larger and fiercer, and abounds 
in many of the thinly inhabited districts. Hunt-" 
ing these animals is considered perilous, (although 
adventurous spirits pursue the pastime) for, should 
the ball not take effect near the shoulder, the 



■''''■^^^^^^^^^^^^"■■■■^■■■■■^■■iiBBa 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 199 

brute invariably charges, in a curved lijie, in- 
clining sideways, and presenting one horn with 
unerring accuracy, which too frequently enters 
the body of the sportsman. Their indomitably^ 
courage and tenacity of life, are only equalled by 
the spirit of reveuge evinced when they are at- 
tacked- This animal is called gaura by ; the 
natives, and formerly this breed overran many 
localities, that still bear the creature's name* 

The bears of the island, though small/, are re- 
markably fierce, and will attack man even when 
unmolested. These animals are much dreaded by 
the natives as their powerful fore-legs, sharp 
claws, aiid fangs, usually inflict mortal injuries, 
or so disfigure the person as to leave few pleasing 
marks of humanity. 

The leopard, or cheetah, haa a most beautiful 
coat, and occasionally attains the length of seven 
and a half feet, and, although extremely destructive 
to cattle, dogs, and all domesticated creatures, 
never attacks human beings, unless in self-defence. 
The Ceylon leopard has distinctive peculiarities, 
the principal one being, its incapacity to draw 
back the claws within the sheath. 

Cheetahs abound in the Kandian districts, and 
the natives wage a perpetual war of destruction 
against them, on account of their partiality for 



V 



200 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

their cattle and poultry. They shoot them, with 
cross bows, furnished with large bladed arrows, 
and spring guns ; they dig pitfalls over which is 
suspended a newly-killed animal, and make en- 
closures, with a dropping gate, under which is 
laid some tempting morsel ; in short, no scheme 
of extermination is left untried, and our only 
astonishment is, that the whole race has not been 
extirpated centuries ago. 

The wild hog is found in most of the wooded 
districts, is both ferocious and powerful, and will 
readily turn to attack man, or beast. The full- 
grown males are larger than the Westphalia boar, 
the colour of their hides being a dark brown or 
black, which shades into grey on the shoulders 
and throat. Hunting these creatures is a favourite 
sport, and the flesh of a young hog is well-fla- 
voured and succulent, resembling newly-killed 
venison. 

In the jungles are also to be found jackalls, 
hares, the ichneumon or mongoose, a peculiar 
species of w^eazel, many descriptions of monkeys, 
some of them rare and curious ; sloths, squirrels of 
every variety, and the hideous creature called the 
flying-fox, porcupines, (which seriously damage 
plantations of cocoa-nut trees, as their favourite 
food is the centre of the root,) and other animals 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 201 

that onr prescribed limits preclude noticing. But 
in no part of Ceylon are lions, tigers, or wolves, 
to be seen. 

Amongst the greatest domestic pests in Ceylon, 
are the innumerable legions of rats that abound in 
every part of the island and infest every dwelling, 
and the audacious boldness of these destructive 
vermin will hardly be credited. We have fre- 
quently seen the creatures perched upon the back 
of a chair, or top of a screen, and not offer to move 
until something was thrown at them ; and we w411 
give an account of a rat's presence of mind, that 
will equal that exhibited by Rogers when he was 
seized by the elephant. 

Hearing a great commotion and barking among 
our dogs, we went into the verandah to ascertain 
the cause, and found they were disputing about 
the possession of a recently-caught animal, which 
our nostrils soon informed us was a shrew, or 
musk-rat; we made the dogs relinquish their 
prize, pro tem;, as we were desirous to examine 
the vermin, promising them that as soon as our 
survey was completed, the rat should be returned. 
We took up the creature by the tail, (the dogs 
leaping and barking around us,) carried it into the 
dining-room, and held it close to the lamp, to 
observe its ^distinctive peculiarities. 

>^ K 5 






V 
t 



•V 



203 CEYLON AND THE OiNGALtSE. 

The creature was without motion ; not a musele 
moved, and the limbs hung loose as if life had 
totally quitted the carcase. This examination 
lasted iiillj five minutes, and, when our curiosity 
was satisfied, we threw the rat to the dogs, (which 
closely surrounded our legs and the table, yelping 
with the excitement of expectation,) expecting to 
see it torn to pieces, when to our amazement the 
brute not only took to its legs with all imaginable 
celerity, and ran off, but got clear away, baffling 
every effort of the dogs to retake it Assuredly, 
all must admit that the rat not only ^' stole away/* 
but also stole a cunning march upon us. 

The musk-rat will occasionally measure twelve 
inches from the snout to the tail ; the head is 
slender, the upper jaw projecting considerably be- 
yond the lower, the whiskers bushy, long and 
white, the colour of the coat grey, but the feet are 
totally devoid of hair, and the tail is thick at the 
root. The effluvia of this creature is most power- 
ful ; and, if it runs over any edible, the article 
becomes so impregnated with tbe^ peculiar smell 
as to be totally unfit for use. 

The ornithological specimens of Ceylon are as 
numerous as beautiful, and no study can be con- 
ceived that offers a wider field for investigation. 
From the gorgeous feathers of the wild peacock 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 208 

to the diyersified plumage of the Cingalese star- 
ling, from the rhinoceros bird to the jungle-crow 
and blue rock-pigeon, all being met with on the 
island, and all furnishing alike subjects of profit- 
able thought and observation ; we believe Ceylon 
to be only second to Australia for the number 
and beauty of, indigenous birds. 

In some parts of the island red-legged partridges, 
quails, and snipes abound, but the sportsman has 
to contend with two serious drawbacks, let the 
game he seeks be an elephant, or buffalo, a par- 
tridge, or snipC) as every jungle and morass 
abounds with land-leeches, and an exceedingly 
disgusting insect called the tick. The land-leech 
is found wherever there is long grass, and its 
slender form when ungorged not being thicker 
then a very fine needle, enables it to penetrate 
through the clothing. Some sportsmen wear 
what are called leech-gaiters, others boots, but we 
never yet knew, or heard of any one, being able 
to exclude these blood-thirsty creatures. 

The dimensions of the land-leech are about an 
inch in length, and one-tenth in diameter, their 
colour a dark green approaching to black ; but 
when gorged they are quite two inches long, and 
three quarters of an inch in circumference. They 
draw a considerable quantity of blood, their bites 

7 



204 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

causing great irritation ; and, if the places are 
scratched, eventually inflammation. As their mo- 
tions are peculiarly agile, they are most difficult to 
kill, or to remove ; for, when you have succeeded 
in taking them off your legs, they almost instanta- 
neously fasten upon your hands, before you have 
time to destroy them. It is dangerous to pluck 
them off quickly, as that increases the irritation of 
the wound, but, if they are touched with brandy, 
they immediately drop off. 

Lime-juice, and other acid applications, will 
alleviate the itching and staunch the bleeding, and 
those who are of good habit of body and abstemi- 
ous, only suffer temporary inconvenience from 
their bites, whilst others who live freely, and 
whose constitutions are debilitated, often find the 
wounds fester, and ultimately ulcerate. Many 
animals suffer severely from the land-leech, and 
sheep will not thrive upon any pasture where they 
are to be found. During the dry season, these 
noxious creatures multiply to an almost incredible 
extent, and especially abound upon all wooded 
hills. 

As leeches abound in the grass, so do the ticks 
upon the trees, where they lie upon the leaves in 
myriads, and, if the branch is shaken by the wind 
or touched by the sportsman, they fall upon his 



C£YLON AND THE CINGALESE. 205 

person and drive him nearly insane ; as their sling 
resembles the prick of a red-hot needle, and the 
skin is no sooner punctured than intolerable itch- 
ing supervenes. These filthy insects are about 
the size of a very large pin's head, of an oblong 
form, and flat, and of a mulberry colour ; but, when 
they are distended with their sanguinary meal, we 
can positively declare that we have seen many 
that were quite a quarter of an inch wide. 

The legs of ticks seem to be provided with 
small hooks, as they cling to the skin with most 
obnoxious tenacity, defying every effort to remove 
them, without pulling the body from the limbs ; 
these insects are as troublesome to animals as they 
are to man, and without extreme caution will 
cluster round the fleshy part of a dog's foot and 
between the toes, eating into the flesh, inflicting 
agonizing torture upon the poor brute which, mad- 
dened by the pain, vainly essays to pull them out 
with the teeth. We found that ticks would more 
readily fasten upon an European than upon the 
country-bom dog, and we shall not readily forget 
the manner in which our terriers used to be bitten 
by them, despite the daily ablutions and care 
taken to free the dogs from these ruthless tor- 
mentors. 

Snakes, venomous reptiles, and insects, abound 



206 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

in Ceylon, and it is surprising that so few deaths 
occur annually from their bites. We shall neither 
attempt to enumerate, nor classify the Ophidia, 
merely mentioning what we think most likely to 
interest the general reader. 

The largest of the serpent tribe in Ceylon is the 
anaconda, (belonging to the genus Python,) and 
is far from being uncommon in the island ; a full- 
grown snake will measure from seventeen to 
twenty feet, and we have heard it asserted that 
one twenty-five feet long, and whose body was two 
and a half in circumference, was killed by our 
informant. This reptile is handsomely marked 
in regular patches of a dark rich brown and yellow ; 
the teeth are large and sharp, and the muscular 
power of the jaws is very great. The creature 
has two homy excrescences, or spurs, near the tail, 
and these enable the reptile to cling with greater 
security to the branches of the trees, from which 
it will swing, ready to seize upon and entwine 
around any animal that may come within its reach. 
They encircle their victims in the same manner as 
the boa-constrictor, crushing every bone, and 
lubricating the carcase with saliva before swallow- 
ing it ; and, although they have been known to 
seize upon a deer, or young bufialo, their usual 
prey is believed to be jackalls. The Cingalese do 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 207 

not particularly dread this snake, as it rarely 
Attacks man. 

The cobra-capello, or hooded snake, is called 
naga by the natives, and is considered sacred, 
as on the western coast before the arrival of 
Goutama Buddha, it is believed the people wor- 
shipped this snake. The reverence with which 
this reptile is regarded, although its venomous 
nature is well known, prevents many of the na- 
tives destroying it; and the most ingenious 
reasons are assigned by them to Europeans, to ex- 
tenuate or account for the deadly bite too often 
inflicted by the cobra, or naga. 

In Kandy, when a cobra is caught, instead of 
slaying the noxious vermin, and thus preventing 
farther mischief accruing, the people wishing to 
be rid of it, will secure it, and convey it during 
the night to some distant village, or jungle. 
Those who fear and desire the destruction of 
the naga, but whose superstition causes them 
to hesitate before they take life, make a com* 
promise with their conscience, by enclosing the 
snake in a mat-bag, with some boiled rice for 
food, and place the receptacle, inmate, and 
food in a flowing stream, where the snake is 
certain to meet death either by drowning, or 
from the hands of some less scrupulous devotee. 



208 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Therefore, we warn our readers, if, in the course of 
their peregrinations, they should wander through 
the Cinnamon Isle, and see floating upon a river's 
sparkling surface a mat-bag, the mouth of which 
is tied with especial care, not to open the same 
without due caution, or they may be greeted with 
a loud hiss, and be severely punished for indulg- 
ing in the %0'C2S[gA feminine propensity of curi- 
osity. 

This reptile, when full grown, is often found 
from six to seven feet in length, and varies in 
colour, those of a light hue being called by the 
natives, high-caste, and those of a dark, low-caste 
snakes. The bite of this reptile is poisonous and 
generally deadly, but if seen by a human being 
there is time to flee from the impending danger ; 
as the creature is compelled to twine the lower 
extremity, and erect itself upon the coil, before it 
can dart. The aspect of this creature with its 
inflated head, just before it makes its unerring 
deadly spring, is said to be most terrific ; and the 
following occurrence is indelibly imprinted upon 
our memory. 

A legal friend was going on circuit to Jaffna, 
and to relieve the tedium of the journey had 
quitted his palan queen and taken his. gun, re- 
solving to walk in the shade, looking for game. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 209 

and soon bemoaned his fate at not meeting with 
sport. He observed for some distance the tracks 
and foolmarks of elephants, but neither bird nor 
beast presented itself; the footfalls became deeper, 
thicker, and fresher as he penetrated farther into 
the jungle, bearing evidence that a numerous herd 
had but recently passed through. 

Our fliend picked his way carefully between 
these tracks, and, as he stepped over a very deep 
hole, he thought he saw a dark glistening sub- 
stance filling it up: he proceeded a few yards, 
then turned round intending to retrace his steps 
and satisfy himself what the shining object was, 
when, to his dismay, he saw a cobra with inflated 
head, rising from the hole over which he had just 
before stepped ; he instantly levelled his gun and 
shot the venomous brute before it had time to coil 
and erect itself. 

The tic-polonga, although somewhat smaller, is 
more to be dreaded than the cobra, as the bite is 
almost instantaneously fatal, and the terrible rep- 
tile darts forward without the slightest warning, 
or giving the victim a moment's notice, — in short, 
it is the most dangerous and vicious snake in the 
island, despite the assertion of a recent author to 
the contrary, who has never been in Ceylon. 
This snake is peculiarly active and spiteful. 



$10 CETLON AMD THE CINGALESE. 

attacking alike bipeds and quadrupeds, and tbe 
effects of its venomous fangs are the same upon 
all, the muscular powers becoming paralyzed, dnd 
the sanguineous fluid speedily coagulating ; and 
we never heard but of two men who recovered 
after being stung. 

The tic-polonga is frequently three or four feet 
long, and the body is thick in proportion to the 
length ; the head is triangular^ and the colour a 
dark grey, almost approaching to lead. The Cin- 
galese abhor this snake as much as they venerate 
the cobra-capello, and the following legend con- 
nected with these two reptiles illustrates the dif- 
ferent sentiments entertained by them.— 

^^In the isle of Serendib there is a happy 
valley, that men call the vale of Kotmal^. It 
is watered by numerous streams, and its fields 
produce rice in abundance; but at one season 
great drought prevails, and the mountain tcnrents 
then cease their constant roar, and subside into 
rivulets, or altogether disappear. At this period 
when the rays of the noontide sun beat fiercely 
and hotly on the parched earth, a tic-polonga 
encountered a cobra-capello. The polonga had 
in vain sought to quench his burning thirst, and 
gazed with envy on the cobra, who had been 
more successful in his search for the pure beve-. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. ^11 

rage. ^ Oh ! puissant cobra, I perish with thirst ; 
tell me where I may find the stream wherein thon 
hast revelled.' * Accursed polonga/ replied the 
cobra, Hhou cumberest the earth, wherefore 
should I add to the span of thy vile existence. 
Lo, near to this flows a mountain-rill, but an 
only child is disporting herself therein, while 
her mother watches the offspring of her heart. 
Wilt thou then swear not to injure the infant, 
if I impart to thee where thou mayest cool thy 
parched tongue.'. *I swear by all the gods of 
Serendib,' rejoined the polonga, * that I will not 
harm the infant' ^ Thou seest yonder hamlet ; 
in front of it gushes forth a spring of water, 
that abates not during the intensity of the summer- 
heat' The polonga wended his way to th« 
spot, and there beheld a dark-eyed girl bathing 
in the rushing waters. Having quaffed the 
delicious liquid, he repented him of his oath 
touching the infant His evil soul prompted 
him to kill her, and, as she lay beneath the 
shade of a leafy tamarind-tree, he approached 
and inflicted a mortal wound. As he retired 
from his dying victim, he again met the cobra, 
who seeing blood on his fangs, and perceiving 
the cause, thus addressed him. ^ Hast thou 
forgotten the sacred oath thou swearest unto 



212 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

me ? The blood of thy victim cries for ven- 
geance. Thou shalt surely die.' And, darting 
his fangs into the body of the polonga, he slew 
him instantly." 

There are many other venomous snakes, rep- 
tiles, and insects indigenous to the island, which 
we cannot notice ; and, when the Kandians catch 
and kill any of these, they invariably suspend 
their lifeless bodies to the trees, we presume as 
a warning to their fellows. The only exception 
to this rule being the sacred naga, who, even 
if exterminated, is never subjected to so great 
an indignity. 

The beautiful little creature, the ichneumon, 
is the declared foe to this snake, and is invariably 
the assailant : the animal springs upon the back 
of the snake and seizes the nape of the neck, and 
never uncloses its teeth until the snake is life- 
less. 

Those who have witnessed the battle say that 
the cobra always tries to escape, and that before 
commencing the fjght the ichneumon runs to a 
particular plant and eats a portion, and this serves 
as an antidote to the reptile's poison. We are 
rather incredulous upon this latter point, but are 
quite certain that the ichneumon will assail the 
snake in the open air, and as scrupulously avoid 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 213 

doiDg SO if in ao enclosed space. We cannot 
say either if the antipathy of the ichneumon 
extends to other serpents, as all the encounters 
we have heard of took place with the cobra-ca- 
pello. 

The crocodiles of Ceylon grow to a great size, 
some of the full-grown males measuring twenty 
feet; but their average length is fifteen. The 
species found in the island differ materially in the 
formation of the head from the crocodiles of the 
Ganges, but they are equally ferocious, never 
leaving go of their prey, seizing alike men and 
animals ; and a native told us he knew a man who 
was dragged out of his canoe and devoured by 
one of these monsters. In the tanks and streams 
of Putlam these reptiles swarm, being also found 
in small sheets of water that are met with in the 
flat and scantily-populated districts, and occa- 
sionally in a season of long-continued drought, 
crocodiles will be seen in the jungles, making 
their way from the dried-up tanks to the rivers. 
Europeans hunt these creatures, and consider it 
good sport, and the lives of many valuable dogs 
have often been sacrificed, as the crocodiles fre- 
quently seize the animals and drag them under 
the water. The only way to avoid this disaster is 
to ride close to the dogs, and fire as they approach 
the water. 



214 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Another method of destroying the crocodiles is 
the following, which^ although efficacious, savours 
too much of slaughter in our estimation to be 
called sporting. Hooks, baited with flesh, are 
attached to about twenty thin, but strong strings, 
a piece of wood being fastened to the opposite 
ei^tremitj of the lines, to which a strong cord is 
attached. This apparatus is cast into the water 
by attendants, the float indicating when the bait 
has been seized ; the men then pull the cord, and 
the numerous strings having become entangled in 
the wide-set teeth of the crocodile, the head is 
soon drawu above the water, and the sportsman 
aims a shot between the head and neck to break 
the spine ; the creature is then hauled on shore 
and despatched with spears, or guns. We have 
heard of some men killing in this manner many 
dozens in the course of the year, but we again 
repeat, it is too like butchery to suit our taste. 

In the districts infested with crocodiles, men 
calling themselves crocodile-charmers abound, 
and, as these cunning fellows know the habits and 
haunts of the reptiles, they generally succeed in 
conveying a party safely through, or across a 
stream. Crocodiles, although ferocious, are slug* 
gish and cowardly if attacked, and the natives of 
Putlam will go in a large body into the water. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 215 

and drag them on shore with strong nets. Those 
who drag the net keep their legs in constant mo- 
tion, whilst others shout and strike upon the 
water with long poles ; this disturbance appears 
to terrify and confound the crocodiles, who com- 
paratively straggle but little when entangled in 
the net. 

Men, armed with spears and fire-arms, remain 
on the banks of the tank, or stream, and so soon 
as the reptiles are drawn into shallow water they 
are speedily despatched. The natives in using 
the spear try to wound the reptile under the fore 
leg, as that is the most vulnerable part of the 
creature. And they prefer this mode to wasting 
powder and ball, as from the hard and irregular 
surface of the crocodile's skin, it is difiBcult for 
any, save a good marksman, to mortally wound 
the reptile. 

The fecundity of the crocodile is proverbial, as 
the female lays from seventy to eighty eggs, which 
are larger than a goose's ; these are deposited in 
the sand, being hatched by the heat of the sun, 
and numbers of the eggs fortunately never arrive 
at maturity. Those who have broken the mature 
eggSf And liberated the young crocodiles, state 
that they utter a sharp bark immediately on 
leaving the shell, and will snap and bite a stick, 
or any other weapon held near them. 



216 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

It is impracticable to particularize many of the 
insect tribe, although Ceylon is as rich in these 
as she is in her ornithological and vegetable king- 
dom, and the brilliance and beauty of the fire-flies 
and beetles are proverbial, whilst the white ants 
are equally celebrated for their destructive pro- 
pensities. 

This small insect is dreaded both by Europeans 
and natives, as it will undermine houses, destroy 
furniture, devour clothing, and render provisions 
useless. And what is most extraordinary is, that 
the insect will eat away the interior of a beam, or 
leg of a piece of furniture, leaving the exterior 
apparently sound, and the first intimation you 
have of the work of destruction being commenced, 
is the beam falling down in particles of dust ; or 
the table, bedstead, or chair giving way. At cer- 
tain seasons they acquire wings, and possibly, to 
the dismay of the inhabitants, in a few minutes 
every article in the room will be covered with 
white ants, and the only way to entice them out 
of the dwelling is to have a fire kindled in the 
compound, as a brilliant light invariably attracts 
these insects. 

The Cingalese call their nests " heaps of old 
boiled rice," and they are composed of various 
substances, so amalgamated as to bear a strong 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 217 

resemblance to a fine white honeycomb and 
grains of rice. We have heard of those who have 
broken ofT pieces of these abodes to examine them, 
and who have as a reward for their laudable spirit 
of investigation, we presume, been most severely 
bitten or stung by the inmates. A difference of 
opinion exists, as to whether white ants sting, or 
bite ; we know not what means they employ, but 
we do know they can draw blood in one instant, 
and cause extreme pain when inflicting the wound. 



VOL. I. 



r 



218 GETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 



CHAPTER IX. 



Geographical position of Ceylon — Size, fertility, and produce 
—Mentioned by classical writers of antiquity — ^Hindoo and 
Cingalese records — Date of the submersion of the island, 
nearly coincides with the Mosaic— Indian conqueror, 
Wijeya — Aborigines — Island yisited by the Roman&— 
Cingalese ambassadors yisit Rome— Account given in the 
sixth century by Comas Indicopleustes — Island first 
visited by the Portuguese in 1505— Native accoimt— 
Dutch in Ceylon — Wars between the Portuguese and 
Dutch — Affecting historical anecdote — Battles — The 
Portuguese possessions in Ceylon obtained by the Dutch 
in 1658 — List of the Portuguese Governors. 

Ceylon is situate between 5® 66', and 9^ 50' 
north latitude, and between 80° and 82^ east lon- 
gitude ; and, from the shape and position of the 
island, it has, with no less beauty than truth, 
been compared to a pearl-drop on the brow of 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 219 

the Indian continent. Its length is about 276 
miles, its breadth about 108, and its circumference 
is about 900. The superficial area is nearly 
24,000 square miles, and the population is esti- 
mated (since the last census) under a million and 
a-half. The island is bounded on the north-east 
by the Gulf of Mannar, by which it is separated 
from the main land, and the Indian Ocean bounds 
its other shores. 

The sea-sihore presents great diversity of 
scenery ; in some places studded with barren 
rocks, in others wooded to the water's edgB with 
cocoa-nut trees, which skirt the island, presenting 
a scene of truly oriental beauty. 

In the interior are mountains from 6,000 to 
8,000 feet in elevation, which form a species of 
natural circular fortification, protecting the inte- 
rior, by means of which the natives were enabled 
to defy European modes of warfare for more than 
three centuries. Many x>f these mountains are 
clothed from base to summit with primeval forests, 
and among the trees may be seen the cinnamon- 
laurel, butj when this shrub attains the dimensions 
of a moderate sized tree, it is useless for commer- 
cial purposes. It is on the slopes of these moun- 
tains that the soil best adapted for the cultivation 
of coffee is situated, and since 1835 the culture of 

L 2 



220 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

this shrub has so increased, that the produce of 
Ceylon alone, is nearly sufficient to furnish the 
supplies requisite for the consumption of Great 
Britain. 

Although the breezes passing over the ocean 
and these lofty mountains are at times refreshing, 
the oppression produced by the heated atmo- 
sphere is frequently extreme ; but the suffocating 
simooms experienced on the continent of India 
are here entirely unknown. 

The Wellanee, the Mahawelliganga, the Gui* 
dora, and the Ealluganga, are the principal rivers ; 
and the sources of these, together with those of 
some smaller and tributary ones, originate in the 
lofty mountains; and the fertility of this verdant 
isle may be attributed to the plentiful supply of 
good water. 

The temperature of the island varies consider 
ably, as in the mountains, and at Newera Ellia, 
the thermometer will fall below freezing-point,* 
whilst on the coast it will range from eighty-six 
to ninety-six of Fahrenheit. 

From the earliest ages Lanka-Diva, or Ceylon, 
has been renowned for the wealth of its marine, 
vegetable, and mineral productions : the sea yield- 
ing costly pearls, and a plentiful supply of various 
and delicious fish, fit for the sustenance of man. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 221 

The vegetable kingdom teems with riches of 
another nature, equally valuable— the coffee-bush, 
from the berry of which the fragrant decoction is 
made; the cinnamon-laurel, the bark of which 
furnishes delicious spice, and from whose leaves a 
pure oil is obtained; the nutmeg-tree, with its 
aromatic spice ; the clove-tree, with its fragrant 
blossoms; the sugar-cane, with its juicy pulp and 
spiral slender leaves ; and the tobacco-plant. 

The gi'aceful cocoa-nut tree, which will spring 
into existence where there is scarcely soil suffi- 
cient to cover the root ; the green fruit furnishing 
a cooling and delicious beverage, the ripened nut 
food, the shell fuel, the fibres are woven into coir, 
or rope, and from the old nut a pure oil is ex- 
tracted ; the leaves, when plaited, form a shelter 
from the elements ; the trunk yields a juice from 
which, when fermented, a spirit is distilled, or 
sugar extracted > and the tree, when past bearing 
fruit, is cut down, and the beautifully-variegated 
timber is made into articles of furniture. 

The Jack-tree, with its enormous fruit of an 
oval shape, measuring more than eighteen inches 
in diameter, affording nourishment; while its 
yellow trunk, when hewn, is made into articles 
for domestic use. The magnificent bread-fruit- 



222 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE 

tree, with its splendid foliage and fruit; the 
orange, pomegranate, lime, shaddock, and tama^ 
rind, with their luxuriant yerdure, flowers, and 
delicious fruit ; added to these, we find the Malay 
apple, cashew-nut, fig, papaw, jambo, almond, 
guava, custard-apple, rambatam, and mangoe 
trees, and nearly every other tropical fruit, all 
being distinguished for their size and umbrageous 
foliage. 

Amongst the denizens of vegetation, we find 
the elegant banana, or plantain-tree, with its broad, 
young leaves, folded tmmpetwise one within the 
other; the superb amethyst, bell-shaped flower, 
with yellow petals, and the pendant clusters of 
yellow, ripened, luscious fruit : the amber ananas, 
or pineapple, with its green crest, and the grena- 
dilla melon with its mottled rind. Whilst amongst 
culinary vegetables are brinjal, yams, sweet pota- 
toes, oceus, a species of cucumber, pumpkins, and 
rice ; whilst European vegetables and fruit, such 
as strawberries, peas, beans, potatoes, and cab- 
bages, have been introduced into Kandy and 
Newera-EUia since 1B23. 

In the forests are found, the noble talipat, 
ebony, calamander, banyan, areka-nut, suriya and 
many other trees, whose names are totally un- 



r 



CEYLON AND T&E CINOALfiSB. 22S 

known to Europeaiis ; but, were we to attempt to 
give an account of all the riches of the botanical 
produce of Ceylon, it would occupy volumes. 

The fruitfulness of the earth's womb is here 
developed in the production of the ruby, emerald, 
sapphire, onyx, amethyst, opal, moon-stone, cat's- 
eye, jacynth, and topaz. The precious gems here 
enumerated are found at the present day ; and we 
have been informed by a Kandian noble of high 
rank, that gold was formerly found on the island. 

From the foregoing facts, it is appaarent 

" What Heaven has done for this delicious land ;" 

and, by judicious and energetic government and 
management, the prolific and fertile isle might 
soon be rendered the most productive of our colo- 
nies, and the brightest colonial gem in the British 
diadem. 

The Cingalese are extremely proud of the cele- 
brity and antiquity of their isle ; and the native 
historians assert, that thousands of years before 
the bifth of our Saviour, the island was peopled 
by a race whose mental powers were highly culti- 
vated, and of whom they are the descendants. 
Certain it is, that the Cingalese, for centuries past, 
have been retrogading in the arts and sciences ; 
as the antiquarian remains of public buildings, 



224 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

tanks, and temples of vast magnitude, found in 
the interior of the island, indicate the existence of 
a nation, which had nurtured and brought to per- 
fection the nobler arts. 

These extraordinary remains will be noticed 
more particularly in a future paper devoted to the 
antiquities of Lanka-diva ; but to proceed regu- 
larly, we must now glance at the early history of 
Ceylon, although the greater portion of it is in- 
volved in obscurity. Cingalese historians affirm 
that here was situated the garden of Eden ; from 
the top of the highest mountain in the island, 
called Adam's Peak, they say that the progenitor 
of all mankind was expelled, and that from this 
mountain's top the trace of his footstep is to be 
seen. 

We gather from Herodotus that the earlier 
Greeks had a knowledge of the countries and 
islands east of the Indus, but the first circumstan- 
tial account that we have of Taprabane, or Ceylon, 
is given by Onesiculus, the Macedonian admiral, 
who lived b. c. 329 or 30. Diodorus Siculus 
B. c. 44, gives a correct account of the size and 
situation of the island and describes the natives, 
customs and productions, with extreme fidelity, 
although a love for the marvellous is occasionally 
indulged in. Strabo states that Taprabane 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 2-25 

abounded in elephants, and that the contiguous 
waters teemed with amphibious creatures of an 
immense size. Dionysius, who flourished a.d. 36, 
confirms former accounts, saying, " And from 
thence the vessePs course being turned to the 
west, immediately in front of the promontory of 
Koolis, you will come to a large island, Taprabane, 
mother of Asia born elephants, and other strange 
animals.^' This celebrated geographer treats of 
the size and value of the elephants and their 
tusks, the gems and fragrant spices. Notwith- 
standing numerous other proofs have been ad- 
duced to prove that Ceylon is synonymous with the 
Taprabane of the ancient classical historians, a diver- 
sity of opinion has arisen among writers, as to the 
identity of the island; but, as it would be unprofit- 
able to follow ancient or modern authors through 
their various disquisitions on this subject, we 
shall proceed to give an account of the presumed 
origin of the Cingalese. Ribeiro writes, in his 
" Historia de Ilgha de Zeilau :— 

'* The Chinese, from a remote period, were the 
masters of Oriental commerce ; and some of their 
vessels were driven upon the coast of Ceylon, 
near the district which they subsequently termed 
Chilau. The mariners and passengers saved 
themselves upon the rocks ; and, finding the island 

L 5 



226 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

fertile^ soon established themselves upon it. 
Shortly afterwards, the Malabars, having disco- 
vered it, sent hither their exiles, whom they deno- 
minated Galas. The exiles were not long in 
mixing with the Chinese; and from the two 
names was formed Chingalees, and afterwards 
Chingalais.*' 

The other statement is, that the son of an Indian 
king, Wijeya Singha, of renoyrned warlike propen- 
sities^ who, the native authors assert, conquered 
the island, and bestowed upon them his name of 
Sinffka. Why or wherefore the island is called 
Ceylon, and the people Cingalese, can matter 
little ; but to us it appears evident, that the Chi- 
nese were neither wholly nor in part the abori- 
gines of Ceylon, as those who are acquainted with 1 
the yellow skins, small elliptic eyes, broad faces, 
and flat features of that nation, will readily admit 
that the Cingalese differ from them completely, 
both in complexion and features. But there is 
great similitude in every way, between the person 
and complexion, of the Cingalese and Indian. 

To us it seems that the only hypothesis to be 
drawn from the above is, that the Indian king, 
Singha, did conquer the island of Ceylon, at an 
early date, and that his followers mixed with the 
aborigines, and from them the present race is de- 



GEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 227 

scended. Whether any of the aborigines, how- 
ever, are now to be found in the island, whose 
blood is unmixed with Indian, it is difficult to 
prove, or whether the Veddahs, or wild men, of 
the present day, are descendants of the original 
inhabitants of Ceylon ; but at this time they are a 
distinct race, and are only to be found in the in- 
terior, living in the jungle, in caves, or in rude 
huts builtof the branches of trees, wandering from 
jungle to jungle in search of game, quitting each 
successively as food beoomes scarce, and shooting 
their prey with rude bows and arrows ; and these 
Veddahs will not hold intercourse, live in a town, 
or intermarry with the inhabitants. We have 
been informed that the language they speak is un- 
intelligible to most other natives of the island. 
All these facts, therefore, strengthen our pre- 
viously-stated supposition, that the Veddahs, are 
the aborigines of the island ; and that the other 
inhabitants are the issue of the aborigines and the 
Indians. 

[t is distinctly proved by historical records that 
the island was conquered by Wijeya, B.C. 543, 
and Ceylon was then called, as it now is by 
Hindoos, Lanka-diva. It may not be irrelevant 
to remark, that both Hindoo and Cingalese chro- 
nicles agree in stating, that about 23S7 B.C., the 



228 CETLON AND THS CINGALESE. 

island was overwhelmed by the sea, and in this 
date there are but forty years difference be- 
tween it, and the time assigned to the deluge by 
Usher, in his erudite chronology. The native 
writers state that this calamity was brought about 
by the wickedness of their monarch, Rawana, who 
then ruled the island, and the obdurate sinfulness 
of the inhabitants ; and this also, is a remarkable 
similarity between the Mosaic and heathen rea- 
sons assigned for the flood. 

Cingalese records state, '^ The foaming waves 
of the ocean overwhelmed the most fertile and 
extensive provinces, as well as the lovely capital 
of our pearl-like island, Sri-Lanka-poora, and 
since then the resplendent palaces, stately towers, 
seven concentric walls, and battlements of shining 
brass, are known only to the gods of the sea." 
Rawana was the sovereign of Southern India and 
Ceylon, and carred off the lovely wife of Rama, the 
king of Oude, into his '^ pearl-island kingdom,'' and 
bloody wars ensued which nearly depopulated the 
island. And the whole history is set forth in the 
Raraa-yama, the oldest epic poem extant Having 
thus glanced incidentally at the history of Ceylon 
before the flood, and the birth of our blessed Lord, 
we will proceed to the first century of our era. 

Pliny afiirms, that during the reign of the Em- 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 229 

peror Claudius, a Roman vessel from the coast of 
Arabia, was driven upon that of Taprabane, or 
Ceylon ; that the king of the country treated the 
Komans with hospitality and kindness during 
their sojourn of six months ; and upon their de- 
parture they were accompanied by four ambassa- 
dors from the Eastern to the Roman monarch. 
Many modern writers treat this account as fabu- 
lous ; but, in our opinion, Pliny is borne out in 
his statement by the fact, that Roman medals of 
ancient date were found, in the year 1574, at 
Mantotte, in Ceylon. We learn also, from Pliny, 
that a fleet, consisting of more than one hundred 
sail, went each vear from the Red Sea to the 
coasts of Malabar and Ceylon, for the purposes of 
trade. Doubt has been thrown on this assertion, 
as writers state that it would have been imprabti- 
cable for the ill- constructed vessels of that period, 
and with imperfect knowledge of navigation, for 
the Romans to have traversed the Indian Ocean ; 
and although it must be allowed that such a 
voyage must necessarily have been a perilous one, 
still it was perfectly practicable to have sailed 
with one monsoon, and to have returned by the 
opposite, as is the custom, in the present day, 
with the unwieldy junks of Siam. 

All writers agree that in the first century after 



230 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

ihe Christian era, regular commercial intercourse 
was established between the inhabitants of 
Southern Europe and those of India and Ceylon. 
Gibbon, in his '' Decline and FaU of the Roman 
Empire," writes : — ^' The objects of Oriental traffic 
were splendid and trifling ; silk, a pound of which 
was esteemed not inferior in value to a pound of 
gold; pre<^ous stones, amongst which the pearl 
claimed the first rank after the diamond ; and a 
Tariety of aromatics that were consumed in rdi- 
gious worship and the pomp of funerals." The 
articles here enumerated appear to have been the 
principal exports required by the wealthy and 
luxurious Romans; with the exception of the 
el^hant's tusks, from which they manufactured 
articles of furniture, drinking-vessels, and personal 
ornaments, and this coyeted-materisd Ceylon could 
supply most abundantly ; therefore we may fairly 
conclude that the trade of Ceylon with Rome was 
considerable. About this time the Chinese began 
to trade with the Cingalese ; and we find com- 
merce gradually extending until the sixth century, 
when Ceylon was visited by Cosmas, who was 
surnamed Indicopleustes, during the reign of the 
Emperor Justinian ; and he particularly treats of 
the precious gems and spices, which were con-^ 
veyed to all parts of India, Persia, and the Arabian 
Gulph, from Ceylon. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 231 

We cannot trace^ century by century, the course 
of the history or commerce of Ceylon, but will 
quote the words of Marco Polo, who visited the 
island, a.d. 1244. After describing its position 
and size, he writes : — 

'^ Both men and women go nearly in a state of 
nudity, only wrapping a cloth round their loins. 
They have no grain besides rice and sesame, of 
which latter they make oil. Their food is milk) 
rice, and flesh, and they drink wine drawn from 
trees. The island produces more valuable and 
beautiflil rubies than those found in any other 
part of the world ; and likewise sapphires, topazes, 
amethysts, garnets, and many other precious and 
costly stones. * In this island there is a very 
high mountain, so rocky and precipitous, that the 
ascent to the top is impracticable, as it is said, 
excepting by the assistance of iron chains em- 
ployed for that purpose ; by means of these some 
persons attain the summit, where the tomb of 
Adam, our first parent, is Reported to be found.** 

And yet this circumstantial account, with its 
veracity of detail, was stamped as fable, both by 
the contemporaneous writers, and those who 
followed, for a lengthened period, after the decease 
of the learned and truthful author. 

* Samanella, or Adam's Peak 



232 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

In the year of oorLord, 1444, Nicola de Conte, 
a Venetian, gives a particular account of the tali- 
pot-tree, its leaves, size, &c., and describes the 
mode of preparing cinnamon, and the precious 
gems and pearls that were found in Ceylon. From 
the fourteenth to the sixteenth century, * we have 
much valuable information given us by various 
authors, concerning the trade of the island ; but 
as our principal business is connected with it after 
it came into the possession of Europeans, we will 
at once state, that, in 1505, the Portuguese, under 
Don Lorenzo de Almeida, visited the island, and 
were permitted to trade. 

Previously to proceeding with the history of the 
country from the sixteenth century, we must take 
a retrospective glance at the ancient historical ac-* 
count of the government of Ceylon under its native 
rulers, or kings. From these accounts, it appears 
that the island was frequently in a state of war- 
fare, either with the Malabars, or Moormen of the 
adjacent continent; that, with the fortunes of war, 
each would conquer alternately, and in turn be 
subdued, when ratifications of peace would ensue 
to be again broken, which, necessarily, produced 
fresh hostilities; and it is apparent that Kandy 
and the adjacent country became subjugated 
eventually by the Malabars, who placed a prince 



•I 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 233 

of their own nation on the throne, and maintained 
their position against the native kings of the south, 
the Portuguese and Dutch rulers, until dethroned 
by the force of British arms and valour in 1815. 
The islanjd was divided into various principalities, 
each ruled by its own king, who would continu- 
ally make incursions into the domains of a brother 
monarch, when war would result; the weaker 
party would become captive, and his kingdom 
would merge into that of the conqueror. 

Notwithstanding these continued internal com- 
motions, the wealth of the people appears to have 
been great ; and arts and sciences were cultivated 
to an extent which would seem incredible, were 
(he statement not borne out by historical and 
native writings of that period, and supported by 
the remains of ancient grandeur, which are dis* 
persed throughout the island. 

We shall now leave the ancient historical retro- 
spect of Ceylon, and return to a.d. 1505, when the 
Portuguese obtained permission from the emperor 
of Ceylon to trade with his subjects, bartering the 
produce of Europe for the ivory, gems, and spices 
of their island. History asserts that it was 
chance, or rather adverse winds, which drove the 
Portuguese vessels on the shores of Ceylon, whilst 
in pursuit of some Moorish pirates whom they 



234 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

had seen sailing in the direction of the Maldives, 
and the winds proving adverse, they sought reftige 
in the Bay of Colombo. The Portuguese at that 
period were endeavouring to extend their trade, 
and obtain possessions in the east — Goa, on the 
Malabar coast, being their principal settlement, 
and the contiguity of Goa to Ceylon offered pecu* 
liar facility for bringing their policy into action. 
Francisco de Almeida, the governor of Goa, was 
a shrewd, crafty, wily politician, and one well 
calculated to carry his sovereign's schemes for the 
extension of his dominions into effect. Accord- 
ingly, we find that the vessels were scarcely an- 
chored off Colombo, before he made overtures to 
the emperor to trade with the natives. From a 
curious antiquarian work in Cingalese, the follow- 
ing description of the Portuguese, their diet, and 
guns, is extracted : — 

''And now it occurred, in the Christian year 
1505, that a ship from Portugal arrived and an- 
chored in Colombo. The race of men are exceed- 
ingly white and beautiful ; they wear a covering 
to the feet and head made of iron, and they are 
always in motion. Their drink is the colour of 
blood, and they eat what looks like a white stone. 
They have weapons of warfare which make a 
noise like thunder when it breaks upon Jugan- 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 236 

der« Pariyata, and a ball of iron shot from one of 
them, after flying some leagues, will break a castle 
of stone.'* 

According to the Portuguese historian, Ribeiro, 
a treaty was made between the Portuguese and 
Cingalese monarchs, and it was stipulated that 
the emperor, Prackrama^ should pay a tribute 
annually, to consist of two hundred and fifty 
thousand pounds of cinnamon, to the king of Por- 
tugal, on condition that the latter should assist in 
defending Ceylon from her enemies and invaders. 

Although the trade of the island had been de- 
creasing for centuries, still, in 1518, it must have 
been considerable ; for, when the Portuguese mo- 
narch sent a fleet of nineteen sail to enforce the 
payment of the tribute, the commander of this 
expedition, Alvarengo, writes (according to Ri- 
beiro) : — ** In the batboUr of Colombo we found 
many ships from Bengal, Persia, the Red Sea, and 
other places, waiting for their freights of elephants' 
tusks and spices " Prackrama refused to pay the 
tribute, and hostilities were commenced by Alva- 
rengo, who took possession of Colombo, and 
forced the Cingalese monarch to acknowledge 
himself tributary to the crown of Portugal. On 
the death of Prackrama, in 1527, the island was 
torn by civil war, which was carried on with more 



236 CEYLON AND THB CINGALESE. 

or less vigour until the year 1586 (during the 
whole of this period skirmishes continually took 
place between the Portuguese and natives, which 
invariably concluded by the success of the former), 
when the reigning monarch placed his grandson, 
and successor to his throne, under the protection 
of the crown of Portugal, sending an embassy to 
that court with the image of the young prince, and 
a crown of pure virgin gold. 

Between the years 1518 and 1536, the Portu- 
guese had introduced the form of Roman Catholic 
worship into Ceylon, and had endowed a monas- 
tery in Colombo, and Juan Monteira, the first 
Romish bishop of Ceylon, died at Colombo in the 
latter year. 

In 1541, the effigy of the young prince, Dhar- 
maa Paala, which had been sent to the court of 
Portugal, was crowned by John III., in the great 
hall of his palace at Lisbon, with extreme cere- 
mony and rejoicings, the ambassadors from the 
Cingalese monarch, with a numerous retinue, 
being present on the occasion — the king of Por- 
tugal, by this public act, acknowledging that he 
had accepted the protection of the young prince, 
and that he undertook the charge confided to him 
by the grandfather of Bharmaa Paala, the then 
reigning monarch of Ceylon, who having been 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 287 

accidentally shot by a Portuguese gentleman in 
the succeeding year, the Portuguese raised Dhar- 
maa Paala to the throne, thereby exciting consi- 
derable commotions amongst the natives, as the 
uncle of Dharmaa Paala laid claim to the crown, 
and was supported by numerous followers; and, in 
consequence, much bloodshed ensued. 

Eventually the arms of Portugal were victori- 
ous, and Dharmaa Paala retained possession of the 
throne until he bequeathed the whole island, in 
1580, to the crown of Portugal. It is about this 
time that a native historian writes : — " From this 
period forward, the women of the principal people, 
and also the women of the low castes, such as 
humowas and challias,y(>r tJie sake of Portuguese 
goldy began to turn Christians, and to live with 
the Portuguese ;*' and it is from this intercourse 
of the Cingalese women with the Portuguese, and 
subsequently with the Dutch, that the burghers, 
or half-castes, have principally sprung. These 
Ceylonese, as they call themselves, in contradis- 
tinction to the Cingalese, possess all the vices of 
the natives, without the redeeming or ennobling 
qualities of either their European or Asiatic pro- 
genitors. 

The Portuguese were not allowed to retain 
peaceable possession of the island, asBajab Singha 



238 . GETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

proclaimed himself king of Ceylon, and a long 
and bloody war ensued, which ended in the defeat 
and death of Rajah Singha^ at the advanced age 
of one hundred and twenty years, which event oc- 
curred in the year 1592. 

The Portuguese -now resolved upon subjugating 
Kandy, which had remained to this period an in- 
dependent state, and sent a large force thither for 
that purpose, which was defeated, suffering great 
loss. 

It was in the year 1602, that the Dutch first 
turned their attention towards Ceylon ; their pos- 
sessions in the East Indies were vast and lucra- 
tive, and this island would open a new gate to 
gain, could they obtain a footing ; consequently, 
in furtherance of their design. Admiral Spillbergen 
was despatched by the Prince of Orange and 
States General of Holland, with three men-of- 
war, fully armed and equipped, to open commu- 
nication with the natives. 

The fleet anchored south of Batticalloa on the 
29th of March in that year, and the admiral im- 
mediately commenced a correspondence with the 
governor of Batticalloa, and finally despatched a 
messenger to the king of Kandy, Wimala Dhar- 
maa, who received him with cordiality, and sent a 
letter to the admiral, written by himself, inviting 



CEYLON AND THK CINGALESE. 289 

■ 

the admiral to hU kingdom. Accordingly^ on the 
6th of July following, Admiral Spillbergen, with 
his suite, set out for Kandy, and they were treated 
by the king with great attention and hospitality ; 
every opportunity was afforded them to acquire 
information, and every public building opened to 
their inspection. The king appeared desirous to 
have the Dutch for allies, and offered every faci- 
lity for carrying on trade between the two nations ; 
endeavouring at the same time, with eager curi- 
osily, to obtain insight into the laws, customs, and 
religion of Europe. 

The admiral's mission proved a most successful 
one, as he obtained permission to build a fort on 
the sea-shore, and to carry on a free trade in cin- 
namon and pepper. Spillbergen sailed from Bat- 
ticalloa on the 2nd of September, and, espying 
three Portuguese sail off the coast of Ceylon, he 
made for, engaged with, and finally captured 
these vessels, and sent them as presents to the 
king of Kandy. 

In the following year, Schalt De Weerd was 

sent by the Dutch to Ceylon, and was received by 

their new ally, Wimala Dharmaa, in the most 

amicable manner^ and an ambassador from the 

king of Kandy accompanied De Weerd when he 

sailed for Achen. De Weerd, however, subse- 

8 



1 



240 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

qaentl J exasperated the king of Kand j by break- 
ing the treaty of alliance, and releasing four Por- 
tuguese vessels which had been recently captured 
by him. Wimala Dhannaa, upon the return of the 
Dutch squadron to the coast of Ceylon, remon- 
strated with the admiral upon this violation of the 
treaty and breach of faith ; and the ambassador 
excited Wimala Dharmaa's suspicion, cautioning 
him against the treachery of his new allies. ^ 

Shortly afterwards, the admiral requested the 
king to visit him on board his ship ; but this the 
monarch positively refused to do, fbaring that he 
might be made prisoner, alleging, as his reason, 
that the queen was alone at Kandy, and that he 
must return to her. De Weerd continued to press 
his request with impertinent importunity, and con- 
cluded by saying, that the king need be in no 
hurry to return to the lascivious queen, as doubt- 
less she had found some one to supply the king's 
place before this time : adding, that if his request 
was not complied with, he would not attack Galle, 
according to the articles of the treaty. Wimala 
Dharmaa immediately ordered his attendants to 
seize De Weerd, saying, '^ Seize that foul-mouthed 
pig !'' A skirmish then ensued between the Elan- 
dians and the Dutch, as the former essayed to 
carry their monarch's orders into effect, and 



\ 
\ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 241 

De Weerd and many of his attendants were 
killed. 

It is impossible to read of the conduct of Schalt 
De Weerd without loathing the character of the 
despicable, treacherous, coarse, Dutchman, who 
met the fate his insolence drew on his head ; and, 
although historians endeavour to palliate his con- 
duct, by saying that he was heated with wine ; in 
the estimation of all right-minded men this 
excuse, if a correct one, only heightens the folly of 
the Dutch, in sending an admiral, addicted to 
drunkenness, to negotiate and carry out a treaty 
with an ally. 

The following epigrammatic and terse note was 
sent by the king of Kandy to the second officer in 
command of the squadron : — 

"He who drinks wine is worse than a sow. 
Buddha has executed justice. If you want peace, 
let there be peace — If war, then war." 

It appears from history, that the Dutch allowed 
the death of De Weerd to pass unnoticed, as they 
did not declare war against Wimala Dharmaa, 
who died in 1604, and was succeeded by his bro- 
ther, Senerat, who married the widowed queen of 
Kandy. 

We find no further mention of the Dutch until 
the year 1612, when Marcellus De Boschouder 

VOL. I. M 



fi42 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

arrived at Kandy, and entered into a new treaty 
with the Kandian sovereign, offensive and defen- 
sive ; they were then granted the exclusive right 
of trading in Ceylon, and were allowed to com- 
mence building a fort at Cottiar. The Portu- 
guesO) already in possession of the island, viewed 
with jealous hostility the privileges granted to the 
Dutch ; and immediately on the fort of Cottiar 
being commenced, despatched an army, consisting 
of more than 4,000 soldiers, composed of Portu- 
guese, Cingalese, and Moormen, to attack the 
fort, which they took after a desperate resist- 
ance made by the Dutch^ and butchered in the 
most barbarous manner the whole of the occu- 
pants, including women and children. 

This massacre of his new allies, by the Portu- 
guese, so exasperated Senerat, that he sent an 
army of 5,000 men in pursuit, who fell in with 
the invaders before they reached their own terri- 
tories, and vanquished them, making many pri- 
soners, from whom they demanded heavy ran- 
soms. The king of Kandy now resolved upon ex- 
pelling the Portuguese from Ceylon, and com- 
menced war in a vigorous style against them, suc- 
cessfully; and, in 1614, we learn that an envoy 
from the viceroy of Goa proceeded to Kandy, and 
proposed a treaty of peace, which Senerat refused 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 248 

to accede to. From this date until 1635, we find 
the Kandians, assisted by the Dutch, at con- 
tinued war with the Portuguese ; the latter erect- 
ing forts at Trincomalee and Batticalloa, for the 
protection of the coast, but suffering constant and 
severe defeats ; the Kandian army advancing as far 
as Colombo, in their attempts to expel the Portu- 
guese from Ceylon : and it was only after a pro- 
tracted and desperate struggle that the Portuguese 
succeeded in retaining possession of the fort of 
Colombo. 

In the year 1635, Senerat died, after a brilliant 
reign of thirty years, and was succeeded by his 
eldest son, Raja Singha II. 

Wijaya Paalaa, the king's brother, claimed as 
his right, that Matel6 and the adjacent provinces 
should be formed into a separate kingdom, and 
he proclaimed their monarch; and endeavoured 
to enforce his demand by flying to arms, and 
calling in the aid of the Portuguese, who readily 
acceded to this request in the expectation that 
the commotion produced by civil war would aid 
their own designs. 

Historians differ materially as to the number 
of the invading army — Ribeiro and Botelho stating 
that it was composed of seven hundred Euro- 
peans, and twenty-eight thousand Indians ; while 

M 2 



244 CE7L0N AND THE CINGALESE. 

Valentyn affirms that it consisted of two thousand 
three hundred Europeans and half-castes, with 
six thousand Caffires. But be the number what 
it might, it is certain that a large army, com- 
manded by Don Diego de Melho, did penetrate 
into the interior, and, after ransacking Kandy, 
retired to Gannaruwa. Here Rajah Singha, the 
king of Kandy, surrounded them with his forces, 
putting all to death, either by the sword or bar- 
barous modes of torture, and subsequently cut off 
their heads and piled them up in a pyramidical 
form, as a warning to all aggressors ; and history 
asserts that only eight-and- thirty Europeans es- 
caped this frightful slaughter. 

In the year 1637, the Kandian monarch re- 
solved upon calling in the aid of his Dutch allies 
to assist him in vanquishing the Portuguese, and 
driving them from Ceylon, and sent ambassadors 
to Batavia for that purpose, who were received 
with every mark of respect ; and envoys from the 
Dutch were immediately despatched to Kandy. 
A treaty was entered into, whereby the Dutch 
agreed to furnish troops to the Kandian monarch 
upon the stipulation that the whole expenses of 
the war, on land and at sea, were to be defrayed 
by Rajah Singha. This the king consented to 
readily, but insisted that all the forts built by the 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 245 

Portuguese, as they were taken, should be placed 
in his hands. AH being now satisfactorily ar- 
ranged, the envoys returned, and Admiral Wes- 
terwold was sent in command of a force of six 
hundred men and several pieces of cannon, who 
immediately attacked Batticalloa, wresting it 
from the Portuguese; and the king of Kandy, as 
a token of gratitude, sent two ambassadors to 
Batavia with presents to the General and Council 
of the Indies. 

Trincomalee was taken from the Portuguese in 
1639, and by the orders of Rajah Singha the fort 
was razed to the ground, and not one stone left 
standing on the other. The fort at Batticalloa 
had previously shared the same fate, so that the 
whole of the fortifications belonging to the Por- 
tuguese, on the eastern coast, were now de- 
stroyed. 

In the year 1640, the war continued to rage 
with 'renewed vigour, success following the Kan- 
dian and Dutch troops. Negombo, a fortified 
town about eight leagues and a-half to the north, 
was taken by the Dutch after a faint resistance 
made by the Portuguese, as the spirits of the men 
were sinking under the continued prosperity that 
followed the Dutch arms. Immediately after 
taking Negombo, the Dutch marched to Point 



246 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

de Gralle, and stormed the place, which was 
taken after a Tigoroas resistance had heen made 
by the goremor, Ferreiro de Breito, who foaght 
bj the side of his men the whole uight of the 
assault, and fell covered with wounds, and his 
life was only spared at the entreaty of his noble 
and heroic wife. 

This affords us an opportunity of relating an 
instance of the devotion and courage of woman, 
where her affections are called forth, and which 
is recorded by Ribeiro, who states, thd governor 
of Point de GaUe, Ferreiro de Bretto, was mar- 
ried to a woman who was passionately attached 
to him, and that on the night of the assault she 
remained at his side on the batteries, animating 
and cheering him by her presence and courage. 
At length, after receiving five wounds, a blow 
with a musket levelled him, and the soldier was 
about to dispatch him wheu his wife threw herself 
between them, calling upon him as a man* and 
a Christian to spare her husband's life. Finding 
the soldier hesitate, she implored him to take her 
life first, and thus save her the anguish of seeing 
her beloved husband butchered before her eyes, 
and threw herself on her knees, clinging to her 
prostrate husband. A Dutch officer, who was 
near, hastened to the group, desired the soldier 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE, 247 

to desist; raised the weeping lady, and had the 
gallant goyernor tended until his wounds were 
healed. 

Admiral Koster, under whose command Galle 
had been taken, was now made governor of the 
place, and he immediately commenced building 
and repairing the fortifications ; but finding the 
Portuguese were making preparations to. reta^ 
Point de Galle, he deemed it necessary to call 
in the aid of the Eandian king, and proceeded 
to Kandy for that purpose. Rajah Singha re* 
ceived him with cold civility, and, although he 
promised to assist the Dutch admiral against the 
Portuguese, refi'ained irom keeping his word, as 
he considered that were the Dutch to become 
masters of the south of the island he would only 
be exchanging his enemies. 

The king now appeared to have awakened to 
the line of policy which had induced the Dutch 
to give him the aid of their troops to expel the 
Portuguese from Kandy, which was, that they 
might eventually become the masters of the whole 
island, as every place which had been taken by 
the Dutch had a large garrison left there to guard 
and protect it from the natives as much as from 
the Portuguese. Admiral Koster vehemently 
pressed the king for his aid, which was at last 



248 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

peremptorily refused. The admiral then accused 
the king's ministers of interfering to prevent 
S/ajah Singha keeping his treaty with the Dutch. 
High words ensued, and the admiral quitted 
the king's presence in great wrath, setting out 
immediately for Galle, which he was never 
destined to reach, as he was murdered on the 
road between Kandy and Batticalloa, it is said 
by the king's orders. 

The Portuguese appear to have been imbued 
with their former valour, as they retook Negombo, 
and there were constant skirmishes all over the 
island between them and the Dutch. In the year 
1644, the fortune of war again placed Negombo 
in the hands of the Dutch, and they forthwith 
fortified the town, throwing up earthen bastions 
at every corner of the fort, and on these were 
mounted several pieces of cannon. 

In 1646, a temporary pacification was entered 
into between the Dutch and Portuguese, which 
continued until 1654, and, during the intervening 
period a species of desultory war was carried on 
by Rajah Singha against the Dutch and Portu- 
guese. 

The Dutch authorities at Negombo, in 1646, 
carried off some of the king of Kandy's tame ele- 
phants, and slew them for the sake of their tusks 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 249 

and molar teeth. This act of wanton aggression 
naturally excited the anger and aroused the ven- 
geance of Rajah Singha, who without loss of tiipe 
surrounded the Dutch troops, took their com- 
mander, Adrian van der Stell, prisoner, caused 
him to be strangled, then cut off his bead, and 
sent it enclosed in a silken wrapper to bis coun- 
trymen who were stationed on the sea coast, with 
a message to the effect that thus he punished 
murderers and robbers. 

In the year 1655, hostilities again recom- 
menced between the Dutch and Portuguese, and 
Caltura was taken by the former in the October 
of that year. During the month of December 
following, the Dutch took prisoner the Portu- 
guese governor of Jaffhapatam, as he was on his 
road from Manaar to Colombo, then the stronghold 
of the Portuguese. The Dutch now prosecuted 
the war against the Portuguese with renewed 
energy ; and, marching up to Colombo, laid siege 
to that city, blockading it both by sea and land ; 
and, after severe loss on both sides, and an obsti- 
nate resistance on the part of the Portuguese for 
seven months, it was surrendered by capitulation, 
the Portuguese stipulating that they should be 
allowed to retire unimpeded to Jaffnapatam. 

The accounts given by Ribeiro of the sufferings 

M 5 



250 CEYLON AND THE CINOALESE. 

of the Portuguese during this siege are frightful. 
Reduced to starvation, they swallowed the most 
loathsome matter, resorting to the most revolting 
expedients to sustain life — maternal love being 
engulphed in the pangs of hunger, and mothers 
cutting the throats of infants at their breast, de- 
voured their offspring to sustain life. These ac- 
counts are too horrible to dwell upon, and we 
willingly let a veil fall over them. 

Not contented with the victory they had al- 
ready obtained, the Dutch pursued the Portu- 
guese to Jaffnapatam, thereby violating the arti- 
cles of the capitulation ; and, after a siege of four 
months, it was surrendered, and the inhabitants 
made prisoners of war. The Portuguese historian 
vituperates most bitterly the indignities offered 
to his nation by the Dutch — houses pillaged, 
plantations destroyed, wives dishonoured, and 
daughters ravished, are amongst the crimes that 
he attributes to the Dutch conquerors. 

It is at all times fearful to contemplate the 
horrors of war, and its attendant misery to indi- 
viduals, even of the victorious nation, but how 
much greater to meditate on the sufferings of 
those attached to the conquered country ? But 
in no history do we find greater atrocities recorded 
than those laid to the charge of the Dutch after 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 251 

the surrender of Jaffnapatam, in 1668, and which 
terminated Portugaese dominion in Ceylon ; but 
our own sentiments cannot better be expressed 
than in Fox's favourite maxim, ^^ Iniquissimam 
pacem justissimo bello antefero.'' 

We conclude the account of the Portuguese 
rule in the island, by quoting the following from 
PercivaPs " Ceylon :" — 

*^ The improvements made in the cultivation of 
Ceylon by the Portuguese were by no means con- 
siderable — that people, when they first took pos- 
session of it, were rather warriors than merchants. 
Their continual wars with the natives contributed 
to keep up the same spirit ; and their principal 
attention seems to have been directed to the forti^ 
fication of a few stations on the coast, and the 
erection of some military posts to awe the natives. 
But the Portuguese appear never to have properly 
discovered the advantages to be derived from this 
island, either in a commercial or military point of 
view. Their dominion extended all around it, 
and no station could be pointed out more commo- 
dious for a depot, either of merchandize or mili- 
tary stores. These advantages were overlooked 
by the court of Lisbon ; and those individuals 
who were sent to the command at Ceylon, were 
more anxious to gratify their pride by conquest. 



252 CEYLON AND THB CINGALESE. 

and their avarice by extortion, than to pursue a 
plan of permanent advantage either to the mother 
country, or to the colony. The Portuguese, there- 
fore, by their own misconduct, were deprived of 
this vahiable island before they were aware of the 
benefits to be derived from it." 

Although we do not coincide completely with 
the view taken by this excellent writer, still it is 
self-evident that the Portuguese paid but little 
attention to the cultivation of this prolific spot of 
earth, and we do not find amongst Portuguese 
records any statement of the proceeds of any 
pearl-fishery ; so that we may conclude that 
comparatively little attention was paid to the 
commercial or agricultural capabilities of Ceylon. 
However, it must be borne in mind that the Por- 
tuguese had to contend against innumerable difii- 
culties, being not only at war with the natives, 
whom they never entirely conquered, but continu- 
ally harassed by skirmishes and war with their 
European enemies, the Dutch. 

The following is a list of Portuguese governors 
and commanders in Ceylon, as given by Ribeiro: — 
Pedro Lopez de Souza, Jerome de Azevado, Fran- 
cois de Menezes, Manuel Mascarenhas, Homen, 
Nunho, Alvares Perreira, Constandin de Sal y 
Noronha, G. d'Albuquerque, D. George d'Al- 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 253 

meida, Diego de Mello, Antoine Mascarenhas, 
Philippe Mascarenhas, Francois de Mello de 
Castro, Antoine de Souza, Continho, under whom 
Colombo was lost. At Jaflnapatam and Manaar 
there were also Antoine d'Amarel j Menezes, the 
last of their captain- generals. 



254 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 



CHAPTER X. 



Historical account continued from 1659 to 1795, when the 
Dutch surrendered, by capitulation, their possessions in 
Ceylon to the British — ^List of Dutch Governors — Sum- 
mary of the effect of Portuguese and Dutch rule upon the 
Cingalese character — Philalethe's account of the same. 

The year succeeding the subjugation of the 
Portuguese by the Dutch in Ceylon, namely, in 
1659, Captain Robert Knox, the first author who 
wrote an account of the islands, was taken pri- 
soner at Batticalloa, the frigate Ann, which he 
commanded, having been wrecked off that coast, 
when the natives made him and several of his 
crew prisoners, who, by the orders of Rajah 
Singha II., were sent up to Eandy, and there 
held in captivity until 1679, when an escape was 
effected. 

From " Knox's Historical Revelation," we learn 



1 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 255 

that the Dutch experienced great difficulty in re- 
taining the possessions which they had wrested 
from the Portuguese, as Rajah Singha, the king 
of Kandy, was constantly at war with them, en- 
deavouring to retake the various fortified places 
and strongholds occupied by the Dutch. Notwith- 
standing these continual skirmishes, the Dutch, 
wishing to retain a footing in the island, in fur- 
therance of their commercial .and political views, 
endeavoured to preserve an amicable course with 
the natives, and sent frequent embassies to the 
Kandian court, to assure the monarch of their 
anxiety and desire to be at peace with him. 
Rajah Singha was not to be appeased by assur- 
ances, or professions ; occasionally, he would re- 
ceive the embassies with toleration, while at other 
times he would detain their envoys, without assign- 
ing any reason for so doing. 

In the year 1670, we find Rajah Singha detained 
an envoy, who was resolved to leave Kandy, or 
sacrifice his life in the attempt. This noble- 
spirited man, whose name we do not find re- 
corded, but which ought to have been handed 
down to posterity as an example of dauntless 
bravery, presented himself before the king, as he 
sat on his throne giving audience to his court, 
fully armed and equipped for a journey, his per- 



256 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

sonal attendaDts remaining outside the palace 
gates, saying that he had come to take leave of 
his Majesty, as he was about setting out imme- 
diately for Colombo. He bowed respectfully to 
the walls, in accordance with the etiquette ob- 
served at the Kandian court on taking leave, and 
quitted the palace without any attempt being 
made by the king to arrest his progress. On the 
contrary. Rajah Singha gave orders that he was 
to proceed on his journey unmolested, and to re- 
ceive what aid he might require in so doing. We 
can fully appreciate the Kandian monarch's con- 
duct — ^himself a noble brave character, he could 
well estimate the dauntless daring and courage, 
that would prompt such a course of action. And 
had the Duch invariably pursued an open, honour- 
able course with Rajah Singha, they would not 
have met with the constant annoyance which they 
experienced from the king of Kandy, 

No language of ours can so well explain the 
erroneous plan they pursued as that of Knox 
himself, at that time a prisoner at the Kandian 
court : — 

** The Dutch, knowing his proud spirit, make 
their advantage of it by flattering him with their 
ambassadors, telling him that they are his Ma- 
jesty^s humble subjects and servants, and that it is 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 257 

out of loyalty to him that they build forts, and 
keep watches round about his country, to prevent 
foreign nations and enemies from coming ; and 
that as they are thus employed in his Majesty's 
service! so it is for sustenance, which they want, 
that occasioned their coming up into his Majesty's 
country. And thus, by flattering him, and ascrib- 
ing to him high and honourable titles, which are 
things he greatly delights in, sometimes they pre- 
vail to have the country they have invaded, and 
he to have the honour ; yet at other times, and 
upon better consideration, he will not be flattered, 
but falls upon them at unawares, and does them 
great damage." 

Events pursued the same monotonous routine, 
between the Kandian and Dutch, until 1672, when 
France directed her attention to Lanka-diva^ and 
despatched a squadron, commanded by Monsieur 
de la Haye, which anchored ofi^ Cottiar, and im- 
mediately sent envoys to the Kandian king. Rajah 
Singha received them most amicably, and granted 
them permission to build a fort near the Bay of 
Trincomalee. Monsieur de la Haye shortly after- 
wards sailed for the Coromandel coast, sending in 
his stead Monsieur de LaneroUe, accompanied by 
a suite, to the Kandian court. Most unfortunately 
for the French nation, Monsieur de Lanerolle was 



258 CKYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

ill calculated for a political mission — hot-headed 
and impetuous, absurdly vain of the power, gran- 
deur, and customs of his own nation, he refused 
observance to the code of etiquette adopted at 
Rajah Singha's court, and treated the monarch 
with undue familiarity and insolence. This ex- 
asperated Rajah Singha, and, upon the return of 
Monsieur de la Haye, he found De Lanerolle a 
prisoner. 

The Dutch, taking advantage of this position of 
affairs, gave chase to the French squadron, taking 
some of their vessels, and the fort near Trinco- 
malee which they had built. So terminated the 
only well-arranged scheme concocted by the 
French to obtain a settlement or possessions in 
the island of Ceylon ; and which, in all proba- 
bility, would have been successful, had it not 
been for the insane, overweening vanity of De 
Lanerolle, which was as strongly characteristic of 
the French nation in the seventeenth, as it is in 
the nineteenth century — it being a national fail- 
ing, and not an individnars foible. For vanity, 
and nought but self-sufficient vanity, caused the 
disastrous events, precursors of the downiall of 
the French empire, which occurred during 1848 ; 
and the effect has been the convulsion of Europe, 
shaking it to its very centre. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 259 

There is a paucity of interesting matter con- 
nected with the history of Ceylon, until the year 
1679, when the Dutch governor of Colombo, Van 
Goen, sent an embassy to Kandy, requiring the 
king to abide by the articles of the treaty made 
between the two powers. To this the king pro* 
mised adherence, his warlike propensities and 
energy having become subdued by age and infir- 
mity, for at this time he was between seventy and 
eighty. In the month of October, in the same 
year, Knox eiSected his escape, after having been 
detained a prisoner at the Kandian court for twenty 
years. 

Again, there seems to have been a cessation of 
historical events worthy of record, until the year 
1685, when Rajah Singha 11. died, after a pro- 
tracted reign of fifty-one years, and was succeeded 
by his son, Wimala Dharma Suriya. Knox de- 
scribes Rajah Singha, with whom he frequently 
conversed during his captivity, to have been a 
well-formed, portly, athletically-built man, of a 
darker hue than most of his countrymen, with 
keen shrewd eyes ^' that were always in motion, 
who bears his years well, being between seventy 
and eighty years of age, and though an old man, 
yet appears not to be like one, neither' in counte- 
nance nor manners.'* He was abstemious in his 



260 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

diet, and chaste in morals, and punished severely 
any dereliction from morality that he discovered 
among his coart. Knox writes — 

'^ Many times when he hears of the misde- 
meanours of some of his nobles, he not only 
executes them, but severely punisheth the women, 
and he hath so many spies, that there is but little 
done which he knows not of; and often he gives 
command to expel all the women out of the city, 
not one to remain; but, by little and little, when 
they think his wrath is appeased, they do creep in 
again.'' 

Bajah Singh a possessed, in common with most 
satraps of the East, an inordinate fondness for 
dress and jewels, delighting to adorn his person 
with gaudy-coloured raiment, and ornaments stud- 
ded with jewels. History affirms that Rajah 
Singha exhorted his son and successor, Wimala 
Dharma Suriya the Second, on his death-bed, to 
remain at peace with the Dutch, and allow them 
to retain possession of their territories ; and, being 
of a tranquil temperament, he followed his father's 
counsel ; consequently, during his reign, there are 
no accounts of a peculiarly interesting character. 

In 1707, Wimala Dharma Suriya died, and was 
succeeded by his son, Narendra Singha. The 
following year the Dutch obtained possession of 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 261 

the island of Java, and, at the commencement of 
1709, they banished the ex-king of Java, Susasan 
Mang Burat Mas, with his family and attendants, 
to Ceylon. There were many followers of this 
king who shared his exile, and thus it was that 
the Malays became residents in the island, where, 
as a natural result, they multiplied considerably. 

In 1721, the queen of Kandy died, and the 
Dutch sent an embassy to Kandy to condole with 
the king, Narendra Singha, upon that event — the 
Dutch, preserving all external tokens of respect 
for the king of Kandy, who allowed them to re- 
main in peaceable possession of their dominions 
in Ceylon. The letter of condolence sent by go- 
vernor Rumph was to this effect — " To implore 
the Almighty to comfort his Majesty on the trying 
occasion of the demise of the high-born, excellent, 
and all-accomplished queen." 

In 1723, some Javanese princes and chiefs, 
forty-four in number, that had revolted against 
the Dutch at Bate via, were banished to Ceylon, 
and thus more Malays were introduced into the 
island bv the Dutch. 

In 1729, Governor Vuyst (governor of Colombo) 
made an attempt to render himself an independent 
sovereign, and in the prosecution of that scheme 
had recourse to the most atrocious cruelties, and 



262 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

perpetrated crimes of the blackest dye. He was 
at last taken prisoner by his countrymen and sent 
to Bataria, tried, and convicted of high treason to 
his country, and was sentenced to be broken alive 
upon the wheel, his body to be quartered, and 
then to be burned to ashes, and those ashes to be 
collected and cast into the sea. It is revolting to 
humanity to read these loathsome details, savour- 
ing of the ages of barbarism, and, though Vuyst 
met a merited reward for his crimes, in having 
had sentence of death executed on his person — 
still breaking alive on the wheel, quartering the 
body, throwing the ashes into the sea, refusing 
them Christian burial, is almost past credence, as 
having occurred in the eighteenth century, and 
casts a stigma of disgrace upon the nation that 
would sanction torturing the living body, or wreak* 
ing vengeance on senseless remains. 

In 1739, Narendra Singha died without issue, 
and was succeeded by his brother-in-law, Sreewi- 
jaya Rajah Singha. Histoiy says that the cha- 
racter of Narendra Singha was vile : he was most 
licentious, indulging his passions without restraint; 
prone to anger, he insulted his nobles, and was on 
the brink of losing his crown, through a rebellion 
which these injured nobles headed. Notwith- 
standing all this, he reigned two-and-thirty years, 

6 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 263 

and during this period his Dutch allies retained 
peaceable possession, and employed the advan* 
tage offered to increase their maritime dominions. 

During the reigns of the last two Kandian 
kings, the ordinances of the Buddhist religion 
had been considerably neglected, the priests 
having become lax and careless in the adminis- 
tration of the various rites thereof; and, in 1745, 
Sreewijaya Rajah Singha sent a deputation of 
his chiefs to Siam, to request that priests might 
be allowed to come to Kandy, to restore the 
neglected ordinances of- Buddha. In compliance 
with this request, several upasampadaj or high 
priests, returned with the chiefs, who set to work 
vigorously, immediately on their arrival, to fulfil 
the mission which had brought them from Siam. 
It appears that Sreewijaya Rajah Singha devoted 
the principal portion of his time to purify and 
restore the religion of the state, and Buddhism 
under this monarch was restored to all its former 
grandeur. 

During this reign, hostilities were renewed 
between the Dutch and Kandians ; and, although 
some of the maritime provinces were taken by 
the latter, they were eventually retaken by the 
Dutch; and, in 1747, Sreewijaya Rajah Singha 
died, and was succeeded by his brother-in-law. 



264 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Kirtisree Rajah Siogha^ who, in 1750, sent 
another deputation of chiefs to Siam, to pro- 
cure priests of Buddha ; and, in 1753, these 
chiefs returned to Cejlon, accompanied by some 
Siamese priests of the highest rank, and Welle- 
wike, the chief priest, was placed at the head 
of the Buddhist establishment in the island, 
under the title of Sanga Rajah. 

In the year 1761, the violent measures adopted 
against the natives by governor Screuder, occa- 
sioned an insurrection on the western coast; the 
Kandians aided the insurgents against the Dutch, 
and thereby involved themselves in fresh hostili- 
ties, (for there had been for a short period a cessa- 
tion,) and skirmishes were constantly carried on 
until the following year, when the Dutch made 
themselves masters of Kandy, Matel6, Doom- 
bera, and Wallapana; but Kirtisree Rajah Singha 
retook this portion of the kingdom, after the 
Dutch had held possession for nine months, and 
the slaughter that ensued is hideous to read of. 

From this period, desultory warfare was carried 
on between the contending parties, until the 
Dutch appear to have obtained the advantage ; 
as, in 1766, a new treaty was entered into between 
the Kandian monarch and the Dutch, which en- 
sured to the latter the unmolested possession of 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 265 

all the places on the sea coast ; and the 
Dutch now might look upon themselves as con- 
querors, having brought the eastern potentate 
under subjection, as by this treaty they dictated 
the articles which were agreed to by Kirtisree 
Rajah Singha, and one of these was, that the 
various humiliating ceremonies which were ex- 
acted by the king, when an envoy from the 
Dutch went to his court, were to be for the future 
entirely dispensed with, and totally abolished. 

We must now take a retrospective view of 
events, and return to the year 1763, when Mr. 
Pybus was sent by the Madras government as 
ambassador to the king of Kandy, to assure the 
monarch of the friendly feelings of the English 
towards him, and the anxiety of the government 
to furnish him with the means of carrying on the 
war against the Dutch, and offered to enter into 
a treaty. National events of importance, and 
the stirring incidents of the American war, called 
for all the attention and money that our govern- 
ment had to bestow, and to this only can be 
attributed the non-fulfilment of the treaty entered 
into with Kirtisree Rajah Singha; but the im- 
pression produced by this breach of faith, on 
the minds of the king and royal family, was 

VOL. I. N 



266 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

most prgudicial to the honour and probity of 
England. 

In 1781, Eirtisree Rajah Singha died, and 
was succeeded by his brother Rajadhi Rajah 
Singha; and la the following year a fleet, com- 
manded by Admiral Sir Edward Hughes, and a 
body of troops, headed by Sir Hector Munro, 
were dispatched by Lord Macartney, then Go- 
vernor of Madras, to Ceylon, to take from the 
Dutch their territories in that island; and our 
troops took possession of Trincomalee, which 
the French re-took for the Dutch in the August 
of the same year, during the absence of Admiral 
Sir Edward Hughes, who had sailed for Madras 
to have some necessary repairs performed to his 
ships. Mr. Hugh Boyd had been sent with 
the expedition as ambassador to the king of 
Kandy, and left Trincomalee in February, but 
did not reach Kandy until the beginning of 
March, owing to the badness of the roads ; for, 
although IVincomalee is less than 180 miles 
from Kandy, the route was a most tedious and 
perplexing one, Mr. Boyd and his companions 
having at times to force their way through a 
dense forest, or jungle. Previously to quitting 
Trincomalee, the following letter was despatched 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 267 

by Mr. Hugh Boyd to Rajadhi Rajah Sin- 
gha:*— 

" To the king of Kandy, &c. 

" I have the honour of acquainting your high- 
ness, that I am appointed ambassador to your 
Highness, Durbar, by His Excellency the'Right 
Hon. Lord Macartney, the Governor, and the 
President of Madras; and that I am charged with 
a letter to your highness, from the governor, in 
order to explain to you their favourable sentiments, 
and assure you of their friendship. I suppose your 
highness has already heard of the great successes 
of the English against their enemies, particularly 
the Dutch, whom they have now driven entirely 
from the coast of Coromandel, having taten from 
them their last settlement, Negapatam. 

"To carry on the victories of the English 
against the Dutch, Vice-admiral Sir Edward 
Hughes, commander in-chief of the king of Eng- 
land's ship and marine forces in India, is now 
arrived with the fleet and force under his command 
at Trincomalee, in conjunction with the troops of 
the English East India Company. He has already 
taken one of their forts from the Dutch, called 
Trincomalee Fort, with many prisoners, and with- 

* This letter will be foimd in the " Miscellaneous Works 
of Hugh Boyd," vol. II. 

N 2 



268 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

oQt opposition; and he is proceeding with vigour, 
and with certainty of equal success against their 
only other fort, called Ostendburgh, which must 
also yield to the great superiority of the British 
arms. 

^* This will certainly have been effected long 
before your highness can have received this let* 
ter. But in the character with which I have the 
honour of being invested, as ambassador to your 
highness, I am desirous to take the earliest op- 
portunity in transmitting to you these happy 
particulars, to assure you that it is only against 
their enemies, the Dutch, that the arms of the 
English are directed, and that the highest respect 
and attention will be shown your highnesses rights 
and dignity, and that your subjects will be treated 
with the utmost kindness and friendship, accord- 
ing to a declaration which his excellency. Sir 
Edward Hughes, admiral and commander-in- 
chief, has already published. I am happy in 
communicating these matters to your highness, 
not doubting that it will give you pleasure to 
hear of the success and power of your friends. 

'^ As many more English ships and troops are 
expected soon to be here, and, as some great 
further operations will probably be soon carried 
on by them for the destruction of their enemies. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 269 

and the advantage of their friends, I am> ordered 
by his excellency, the Governor of Madras, to 
communicate to your highness, as soon as pos* 
sible, the letter from him, which I have the 
honour of being charged with, 

** I shall be happy, therefore, to deliver it to 
your highness in person, with every explanation 
and friendly assurance which you can desire^ as 
soon as I shall know, in reply to this, that you 
have sent proper persons to conduct me thither ; 
and this I hope your highness will be pleased to 
do immediately, as there ought to be no delay in 
transactions of so much importance. 

^' I am also charged with a letter to your high- 
ness, from his Highness Walah Jah, Nabob of 
the Carnatic, which I shall be happy to deliver 
to you. I only wait to have the honour of 
hearing from your highness, as I have desired; 
I shall then immediately proceed to enter on all 
these important matters, on the most friendly and 
satisfactory ground to your highness. 

(Signed) 

" Hugh Boyd." 

Upon the arrival of our ambassador at Kandy, 
he met with innumerable delays, and was received 
with distrust and suspicion by the Kandian court ; 
the natural result of our former breach of faith, 



270 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

and which but ill-accorded with the British 
character for probity* ** It is now twenty years 
since your ambassador arrived here, while we 
waged war with our Dutch enemies : we replied 
frankly, and accepted cheerfully your offered and 
promised aid ; but since your envoy left, not a 
breath have we heard of your offered aid, nor 
promised assistance. As you are now at war, in 
your turn, with the Dutch nation, and are desirous 
to injure them, and obtain their possessions, you 
come to us, professing that it is only for our benefit 
that you desire to force them to quit our kingdom. 
We doubt the sincerity of your nation, as we have 
ever met with treachery from Europeans." 

Our ambassador made excuses for the non- 
fulfilment of the former treaty, and referred to the 
high character borne by England for probity and 
truth ; but all his efforts proved abortive, and he 
quitted Kandy the latter end of March, without 
having accomplished either of the objects of his 
mission — namely, to make a treaty, and form an 
alliance with the king of Kandy — and for some 
years we left the Kandians and Dutch in undis- 
turbed possession of Ceylon. 

In the year 1785, Governor Vander Graaff first 
introduced paper currency into Ceylon ; and, in 
1789, the same governor caused a census to be 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 271 

taken of all the inhabitants of the maritime dis- 
tricts, subject to the Dutch East India Company ; 
and the statistical returns gave eight hundred and 
seventeen thousand inhabitants, of both sexes, 
and of all ages. 

In the year 1795, the union of Holland with 
France took place, and war was declared by us ; 
and Colonel, afterwards General Stewart, was sent 
by the Governor of Madras, with a large force, to 
reduce Trincomalee, to which he laid siege, and^ 
after the lapse of little more than three weeks, the 
fort was surrendered by the Dutch commander, as 
our troops were preparing to storm it. In the 
September following of that year, Jaffna was taken 
by the same general ; Colpentyn was surrendered 
to the British forces, under the command of 
Colonel Bowser, on the 5th of November; and 
General Stewart shorly afterwards took Negombo. 
Success now followed the British arms in Ceylon, 
and General Stewart resolved upon attacking 
Colombo, the seat of government then as well as 
now, and marched for that place with his 
Majesty's 52nd, 73rd, and 77th regiments, ac- 
companied by three battalions of Native Infantry, 
and some Bengal Artillery. 

The route to Colombo lay through dense jungle, 
and over rivers swollen by the late rains ; but no 



272 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

ambush was laid by the Dutch to obstruct the 
progress of our troops, and they reached the river 
Kelany (about four miles from the Fort of Co- 
lombo), which was defended by a strong fort, and 
there halted to await the expected coming of the 
Dutch troops. At the conclusion of the second 
day, intelligence reached them that the guns were 
dismantled and spiked, and that the troops had 
abandoned the fort, and retreated to Colombo. 
Our men crossed the river with great caution, fear- 
ing surprise, but no ambuscade had been laid* 
Our encampment was then formed, the siege of 
Colombo planned, and our soldiers immediately 
afterwards marched for the fort, expecting a strong 
resistance to be made by the Dutch ; but to the 
astonishment both of General Stewart and the 
troops which he commanded, the only attempt 
to defend Colombo was made by a body of Malays, 
headed by a French officer, who were sent to meet 
them, but quickly retreated, and very shortly after 
Colombo surrendered, by capitulation, to the 
British forces, who were commanded by General 
Stewart and Captain Gardiner, R. N. Within a 
short period, the whole of the forts and posses- 
sions in the island belonging to the Dutch were 
delivered up to our troops. 
We should not have fouud Ceylon so facile a 



m^nm 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 



273 



conquest, had it not been for the want of disci- 
pline and subordination found amongst the Dutch 
troops — ^the men refusing to obey their officers' 
orders, and the officers almost deroid of bravery or 
energy to defend their country's rigbU. According 
to «* Percival's Ceylon," p. 92—" The Dutch force 
consisted of two battalions of Hollanders, the 
French Regiment of Wirtemberg, with some 
native troops, forming in all a force equal to that 
of the invaders." 

In taking leave of the Dutch as rulers in Ceylon, 
we give the names of those who were sent there as 
governors. I'ho first, in 1640, was W. J. Koster, 
who took Galle ; J. Thysz, J. Matsuyher, J. Van 
Kiltenstein, A. Vander Meyden, R. Van Goens, J. 
Hustaur, L. Van Peil, T. Van Rhee, P. De Rhoo, 
G. De Heer, C. J. Simonsy^ N. Becher, T. A. 
Rumph, A. Moll, J. Hertenberg, J. P. Schagen, 
P. Vuyst, S. Versluzs, G. Wontersz, J. C. Pielaat* 
D. V. Domburg, J. Maccara, Baron Von Imhofi*, 
W. M. Bruininch, D. Overpeck, W. M. Bruin- 
inch, D. Overpeck, J. V. S. Von Galnesse* G. Van 
Vreeland, J. De Joug, J. G. Saton, J. Schrender, 
Baron Van Eck, A. Mooyart, J. W. Faick, W. J. 
Van der Graaff, J. G. Van Angelbeech, under 
whom Colombo and the entire possessions of the 
Dutch were delivered over to the British. 

N 5 



274 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Under the Dutch, their own mode of worship 
was introduced into Ceylon, and there were many 
professed converts among the Cingalese. This 
arose from a regulation of the Dutch, which pro- 
hibited any native from holding an office, however 
humble, under their government, unless he pro- 
fessed to belong to their church. The Dutch en- 
couraged agriculture to a great extent, and intro- 
duced the cultivation of coffee, pepper, cardamons, 
and cinnamon. It was under Governor Falck that 
the latter shrub was Jirsi cultivated. The pearl- 
fisheries were also lucrative and productive, under 
their management; consequently, it must have 
been a national loss of no trivial nature, when so 
profitable and promising a settlement was wrested 
from them by the British. 

We shall wind up our summary by glancing at 
the effect produced upon the native character by 
the line of conduct pursued by the Dutch, who 
acted as if they believed that their responsibility 
as Christians and enlightened men^ commenced 
and terminated by forcing nominal religion upon 
the natives — ^by making an external avowal of 
Christianity the only stepping-stone to patronage, 
or employment under government; and they 
neglected no opportunity or means whereby wealth 
could be amassed. Their public policy and private 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 275 

enterprise began and ended with the same goal in 
view — namely, the acquirement of riches. Thus 
the English commenced their rule in Ceylon, 
having the impressions to eradicate which had 
been produced upon the minds of the Cingalese, 
through the sufferings they had experienced under 
the military and religious oppression of the Por- 
tuguese, and no less oppressive grasping and reli- 
gious despotism of their Dutch successors. 

These fearful examples, set by professing 
Christians, have been too forcibly stamped upon 
the feeble and flexible characters of the natives ; 
and European vices have thus become engrafted 
upon the effeminate, pusillanimous dispositions of 
the Cingalese who inhabit the lowland and mari- 
time districts, thus forming a character of the 
most despicable description. 

We subjoin the following extract from " Phila- 
lethe's History of Ceylon," in support of our 
previously-expressed views and sentiments : — 

*' The Portuguese were under the influence of a 
sentiment of bigotry, which, when it becomes a 
predominant feeling in the human heart, equally 
disregards the suggestions of caution, admonitions 
of prudence, and the higher considerations of 
humanity. It is a blind impulse, and it has all 
the effect of blindness, both visual and mental ; 



276 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

in the strange deviations which it causes from the 
straight path of virtue and truth, and consequently 
of the best policy, and most stable interest. The 
Dutch did not bend before the grim Moloch of 
religious bigotry; but cent, per cent was their 
faithf gold was their object^ and Mammon was 
their god. But the idol of the Dutch is as un- 
favourable to the growth of the loftier virtues, and 
to all that tends to humanize the exercise of power, 
as that of the Portuguese. Avarice is a cold, cal- 
culating feeling, and where it totally pervades the 
bosom, absorbing the affections, and concentrating 
the desires in a single object, it renders the heart 
as impenetrable as a stone to those moral con- 
siderations which are more particularly associated 
with a benevolent regard for the happiness of 
those who are placed in subjection to our will, or 
within the sphere of our influence. The insensate 
avarice of the Dutch proved as unfavourable to 
the happiness of the people of Ceylon, as the 
enthusiastic bigotry of the Portuguese." 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 277 



CHAPTER XI. 



Kaadian ohoracter — Personal appearance — ^Cingalese of the 
lowlands — Character of the women — ^Native government- 
King's officers — Customs — Mode of smelting iron— British 
rule from 1796 to 1806 — Governor North — ^First English 
governor — Supreme Court of Judicature established-- 
Kandian war — ^Fearful massacre of British troops- 
Dastardly and disgraceful conduct of Major Davie— 
Extraordinary escape of two soldiers — Summary of poli- 
tical events — ^False policy of General Macdowall — ^Noble 
conduct of Captam Nouradeen — Bravery of Mcyor John- 
son — Sir Thomas Maidand succeeds the Honourable 
Frederick North — The judicious rule of Governor North. 

Before we enter upon the history of Ceylon 
under the British, as the subjugation of Kandy 
forms a prominent feature of our rule, we will give 
a sketch of the character of the people, and the 
government of that nation under the dominion of 



I 1 



278 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

their o«m sovereigns and rulers. All those 
authors who have written upon Ceylon remark, 
with great justice, the difference of character that 
is observable between the inhabitants of the moun- 
tainous and those of the lowlands and maritime 
districts. It is an insult to a Kandian to call him 
a Cingalese, as the Kandians hold the latter in 
contempt The Kandians term only the inhabit- 
ants of the lowlands, Cingalese ; and the natives 
of the latter, when speaking of the former, in- 
variably make the same distinction — calling them 
Kandians, and not Cingalese. 

The Kandians are a purer race, possessing much 
nobility of character — are daring, courageous, and 
generous; whilst the Cingalese are cowardly, ser- 
vile, and mean : and the nobles of Kandy assert 
(and it was stated to us by a Kandian chief of 
high rank, and the highest caste) that the vices of 
lying and thieving, now so fearfully prevalent in 
Ceylon, were introduced iuto the Kandian pro- 
vinces by the Cingalese, who had acquired these 
intolerably despicable vices from intercourse with 
the Portuguese and Dutch. Robert Knox, who 
passed twenty years in captivity at Kandy, thus 
writes of them, in the seventeenth century : — 

** Of all the vices, they are least addicted to 
stealing, the which they do exceedingly hate and 



I 



CINGALXBE MAN. 



■•laillW ■ wm MIkM 



. t 



" ' !«! 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 279 

abhor ; so that there are but few robberies com- 
mitted amongst them. Thej do much extol and 
commend chastity, temperance, truth in words 
and actions ; and confess that it is out of weak- 
ness and infirmity that they cannot practise the 
same, acknowledging that the contrary vices are 
to be abhorred." 

After making this statement, he gives the fol- 
lowing one, which is somewhat contradictory) as 
regards their propensity to lying. But great al- 
lowance must be made for the position in which 
Knox was placed ; as his protracted captivity for 
so long a period (during which time he had re- 
ceived many promises relative to his release) 
would not predispose him to place much reliance 
on their veracity, or enable him to give an unpre- 
judiced opinion as to the natioual character. Not- 
withstanding, there is much truth to be found in 
the succeeding quotation, . which gives, on the 
whole, a fair estimate of the Kandian character: — 

^' In understanding, quick and apprehensive ; 
in design, subtle and crafty; in discourse, cour- 
teous, but full of flatteries ; naturally inclined to 
temperance, both in meat and drink, but not 
chastity ; near and provident in their families — 
commending good husbandly ; in their disposi- 
tions, not passionate — neither hard to be recon- 

8 



280 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

ciled when angry ; in their promises very un- 
faithful — approving lying in themselves, but dis- 
liking it in others ; delighting in sloth*- deferring 
labour till urgent necessity compel them; neat 
in apparel; nice in eating, and not much given to 
sleep." 

For the bravery, which we deem inherent in the 
Kandians, and their love of country, no better proof 
can be offered than the determined, vigorous, and 
protracted resistance opposed to the attempted 
subjugation of their country by the Portuguese, 
Dutch, and British. And this dislike to the im- 
posed yoke of a foreign power exists to no small 
extent at this moment, as the recent insurrection 
proved; whilst the Cingalese have tamely sub- 
mitted to foreign rule for more than a century and 
a half. The difference of person apparent in the 
Kandians and Cingalese^ is as marked as their 
mental dissimilitude. The bearing of the Kan* 
dian is haughty and erect ; the complexion, bright 
bronze, or brown; the eye large — meeting the 
observer s fixedly and undauntedly ; the brow 
higb-Dose, weU formed and prominent; and the 
expression of the face intelligent While, on the 
contrary, the deportment of the Cingalese is ser- 
vile and crouching; their complexion of a yellower 
brown ; the eye, although of good size, seldom fully 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 281 

opens, and endeavours to avoid looking fixedly on 
the observer ; the brow low ^ the nose less promi- 
nent, and not so well formed, as that of the Kan- 
dian ; and the expression of the countenance has 
a character of servile, low cunning. 

Although it is affirmed by writers that the Kan- 
dians and Cingalese are both descended from the 
same parent stock, we disagree with them mate- 
rially, as the Kandians have all the distinctive 
marks of a nobler race, and purer blood— being, 
in our opinion, the offspring of Malabars, who 
had intermarried with the Yeddahs, or aborigines 
of Ceylon, whose blood has remained pure, owing 
to non-admixture with foreign conquerors ; as 
Kandy remained a free^ warlike, and independent 
state long after the lowlands had experienced the 
yoke of numerous conquerors, of various nations: 
whilst the Cingalese are the descendants of the 
followers of the Indian King, Wijeya, who con- 
quered Ceylon long anterior to the Christian era. 
But the latter race has deteriorated, both physi- 
cally and mentally, by constant admixture with 
the various tribes and nations who have con- 
quered, colonized, or visited the lowlands and 
maritime districts. 

Although Buddhism inculcates the practice of 
chastity and continence more than any other 



282 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

heathen religion, yet in no part of Asia is the 
observance of these vittnes less practised than by 
the followers of Buddha, and more especially in 
Ceylon, where the want of chastity in woman, 
which pervades all classes, beginning with the 
highest and descending to the lowest caste, is 
lamentable in the extreme. This appears to have 
been a national failing, from the earliest records 
of the island ; but in a work intended for general 
perusal it would be unadvisable to quote verbatim 
et seriatim from Knox on this topic, who expa- 
tiates iiilly and strongly on the total disregard 
evinced by the women for chastity. We shall, 
therefore, confine ourselves to the following ex- 
tract fi-ora that author : — 

" Whilst a woman would flee from the contact 
of a man of a lower caste than herself, so would 
she desire and seek it most anxiously with one of 
her own caste, or of a higher one." 

At this time it is the crying sin of the natives, 
even among women professing Christianity ; and 
many murders arise from the excited jealousy of 
husbands and lovers, whp come unexpectedly, 
and find a paramour with the women ; when the 
ever-ready knife, or any other weapon that is near, 
is seized hold of, and bloodshed ensues. 

The government of Kandy was an absolute and 



i t' 



1 • ■' . 



' • » 



\'.\ 



. • » I . t H • • . . 



;» 



* ^» 



A 



T* ..'•'< 



CINGALBBE WOMAN. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 283 

despolic one, the king having unlimited power 
over the lives and property of his subjects: in 
fact, the Kandian nation being the slaves of the 
monarch — slavery was permitted, and practised 
to a gieat extent throughout the kingdom. But 
the king was not only lord paramount of the soil, 
the whole produce of which he could claim, if it 
pleased him so to do ; but he claimed and en- 
forced equal ownership over the persons of the 
cultivators. 

The men of the next rank to the monarch were 
the two adikars, or prime ministers ; and these 
adikars also acted as judges, and to them an ap- 
peal could be made, should a suitor feel dissa- 
tisfied with the decision of the governor of his 
province — and from the adikar a final appeal lay 
to the king in person ; but the king reserved to 
himself the power of inflicting capital punishment, 
and human life was constantly sacrificed in the 
most wanton manner, and on the most puerile 
occasions. These adikars were appointed by, 
and held office during the king^s pleasure. After 
the adikars came the dissaaves, or governors of 
provinces. A certain number of this body were 
appointed to the command of the king's troops ; 
and these held a superior rank to their fellows, 
whose business it was to receive and pay into the 



284 CEYLON AND THR CINGALESE. 

royal treasury the tribute to the king, and main- 
tain peace and order in their provinces. The dis- 
saaves, like the adikars, received their appointment 
from the king, who would disgrace them, depriv- | 

ing them of their offices, and putting them to 
death, or torturing them, as caprice dictated. 

The next in rank and power were the ratrama* 
hatmeers, who acted as deputies to those dissaaves, 
who commanded the king's guards, or troops, by 
preserving proper order in their provinces during 
the disaaves' necessary absence from their dis- 
tricts, whilst on duty at court. Under these ra- I 
tramahatmeers were many inferior officers, who 
obtained their posts either by bribery or from the 
patronage bestowed by their superior. When the 
dissaave, or ratramahatmeer, travelled through his i 
province, to administer justice, he was attended 
by the whole of his inferior officers. Before the 
dissaave, or ratramahatmeer, was borne a long 
whip made from the fibres of the talipot palm, 
which was the emblem of their official rank, and 
also used by them as an implement of punish- 
ment. This whip was constantly kept in motion 
when borne before these officials ; and the sound 
produced served to warn all travellers or passers-by 
to clear the road, and leave a free passage, and also 
to apprize those who had complaints or charges to 



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CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 285 

prefer, that the dissaave, or ratramahatmeer, was 
at hand. 

When a complaint had been substantiated, 
which, in the estimation of the official, called for 
corporal punishment, the criminal was straight- 
way stripped, tied to the first tree, and flogged 
with the whip which a short time previously had 
given notice of the judge's approach. This busi- 
ness concluded, the dissaave would resume his 
way, to enact the same scene elsewhere. Fines, 
imprisonment, and torture were the other punish- 
ments inflicted by the dissaaves and ratramahat- 
meers, in the course of these periodical visita- 
tions, which were conducted with great state, 
ceremony, and parade ; and were also very lucra- 
tive, as the dissaaves and ratramahatmeers were 
bribed to decide in the briber s favour, and con- 
sequently whoever could or would administer the 
largest bribe almost invariably gained his suit. 
But on the reverse of this pleasant picture stood 
a despotic monarch, who, fi'om the merest whim, 
would take from them their rank and wealth. 
Knox, after referring to the above facts, writes :— 

^^ But there is something came after, that makes 
all the honour and wealth of these great courtiers 
not at all desirable — and that is, that they are 
so obnoxious to the king's displeasure, which is 



286 CETLON AND THE CIKOALESE. 

80 customary, that it is no disgrace for a noble- 
man to have been in chains — nay, and in the 
common gaol, too ; and the great men, too, are 
so ready, when the king commands, to lay hold 
on one another, as he to command them, and 
glad to have the honour to be the king's execu- 
tioners, hoping to have the place of the exe- 
cuted." 

In the foregoing quotation is found a summary 
of the uncertain tenure of place and pow^r, when 
held from or under a despotic monarch, who even 
dictated what description of dwelling his subjects 
were to build or inhabit It may appear almost 
paradoxical that a nation should have suffered 
one man to tyrannize over their persons, actions, 
and properties, to the extent which the Kandians 
permitted under their own kings, and should yet 
rebel against the mild rule of the British govern- 
ment. But such is the anomaly presented by 
human nature, that we will cheerfully and wil- 
lingly endure what we voluntarily submit to, or 
our forefathers have borne before us, however 
intolerable it may appear to others; whilst the 
supposition or knowledge that we are to be forced 
into a particular line of action, dictated by a 
novel or foreign power, who rules with its own 
laws, although the administration of those laws 



•vf^mim^mmf^t^fnmaf 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 287 

may be equitable, and for our benefit, produces 
a feeling which causes us to consider ourselves 
aggrieved ; and we rebel against the foreign yoke 
This is not only a national feeling predominant 
amongst the Kaudians, but will be found in every 
quarter of the globe, and is applicable to the in- 
habitants of every country. 

Knox, after describing the various modes 
adopted for building their dwellings, says :— 

" For they are not permitted to build their 
houses above one story high ; neither may they 
cover them with tiles, nor whiten their walls with 
lime ; but there is a clay which is as white, and 
that they use sometimes. The poorest sort have 
not above one room in their houses — few above 
two, unless they be great men ; neither doth the 
king allow them to build better. The great 
people have handsome and commodious houses. 
They have commonly two buildings — one oppo- 
site the other, joined together on each side with 
a wall, which makes a square court-yard in the 
middle. Round about against the walls of their 
house, are banks of clay to sit upon. Their 
slaves and servants dwell round about without, 
in other houses, with their wives and children.'* 

This author speaks of the ancient remains of 
grandeur which were found in Kandy, and these 



288 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

will be noticed in a chapter devoted to the anti- 
quities of Ceylon. In writing of their cultivation 
of rice, the staple commodity of food for the 
nation, he tells us that their ploughs consisted of 
^^ a piece of wood, shod with iron [these primitive 
ploughs are used in the interior at the present 
day, and to them are yoked buffaloes, or bullocks] 
proper for the country.'* He describes minutely 
the Oriental custom of treading out the grain from 
the husk, ^^ and this is a far quicker and easier 
way than threshing; at reaping also they are 
excellent good, just after the English manner." 
He also states, '^ their rents were brought to the 
king thrice in each year, and were generally paid 
in the produce of the soil, and not in money." 
Besides these, however, whatsoever is wanted in 
*' the king's house, and they have it, they must, 
upon the king's order, bring it " 

Knox describes the state of learning in the 
Kandian dominions, to have been in a fearful 
state of degradation, to what it had been in 
former times ; and it is certain that for centuries, 
the inhabitants of Ceylon had been retrograding 
in learning, arts, and sciences, more particularly 
since the Portuguese and Dutch had obtained a 
footing in the island, ^* Their learning," says 
Enos, '^ is but small; all they ordinarily learn is. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 289 



* 



to read and write, but it is no shame to a man 
if he can do neither — nor have they any schools 
wherein they might be instructed in these or any 
other arts.'* The Kandians polished the precious 
stones found in their dominions by a species of 
grinding- stone, still in use among them, and 
which is very similar to an European one. They 
smelted the gold found in their rivers, in furnaces, 
formed of a species of white clay, found inland, 
and they fashioned the precious metal into orna- 
ments for the head, nose, ankles, fingers, and 
toes ; and in the gold were frequently set precious 
stones and gems. We subtract the succeeding 
lines from Knox, as giving a most accurate and 
interesting account of the mode adopted by the 
Kandians to obtain iron from the ore. He com- 
mences by saying, that the ore was found 
throughout the country, and that it generally lay 
about five or six feet below the surface of the 
earth : — 

" First they take these stones and lay them in 
a heap, and bum them with wood, which makes 
them softer and fitter for the furnace. When 
they have so done, they have a kind of furnace, 
made with a white sort of clay, wherein they put 
a quantity of charcoal; there is a back to the 
furnace, behind which the man stands that blows. 

VOL. I. o 



290 CETLON AND THE CUIGALESE. 

Behind the funiace thej have two logs of wood 
placed fa&t io the ground, hoUow at the top like 
two pots ; upon the mouihs of these two pieces 
of hollow wood they tie a piece of deer's skin, on 
each part a piece, with a small hole, as big as a 
man's finger, in each skin. In the middle of each 
skin, a little beside the holes, are two strings, 
tied fast to as many sticks stuck in the ground, 
like a spring, bending like a bow — this pulls the 
skin upwards.^ 

He then describes minutely the process of 
blowing, and continues : — 

^' As the stones are thus burning, the dross that 
is in them melts, and runs out at the bottom, 
where there is a slanting hole made for the pur- 
pose. Out of this hole runs the dross-like streams 
of fire, and the iron remains behind, which, when 
it is purified as they think enough, they drive 
through the same slanting hole ; then they give 
it a chop half way through, and so fling it into 
the water : they so chop it that it may be seen 
that it is good iron, for the satisfaction of those 
who are minded to buy/' 

The state of religion observable among the 
Kandians, anterior to, at the period of, and sub- 
sequent to Knox's captivity, will be noticed here- 
after ; and we will fur the present bid adieu to 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 291 

the ancient Kandians^ and resume our history 
subsecutively, from taking possession of the 
Dutch settlements in Ceylon by the British, in 
1796. 

Mr. Andrews was sent as ambassador to the 
Kandian court, by the Madras government, to 
obtain Rajah Singha^s ratification to the preli- 
minary treaty, and to negotiate a definitive one 
on more enlarged principles, by which the Kan- 
dian nation was to have enjoyed privileges and 
advantages which they had not possessed in tran- 
quillity for more than two centuries. Ten armed 
vessels were to have been placed at the king's 
service, entirely free from our superintendence, 
to carry on foreign and home trade; and the 
seways^ or salt-marshes at Putlam, then most 
profitable, and which had been in the possession 
of the Dutch, from whom they had passed into 
our hands, were to have been given up to Rajadhi 
Rajah Singha. Our ambassador could not suc- 
ceed in bringing matters to a termination, as the 
king of Kandy required various alterations to be 
made in the proposed treaty, to which Mr. 
Andrews was not authorized to accede. 

The first pearl-fishery, under our government^ 
took place during this year, and yielded upwards 
of sixty thousand pounds. The proceeds of the 

o 2 



292 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE* 

several fisheries ander the Dutch and English 
will be given in a portion of this work devoted to 
the produce of Ceylon. 

In the year 1797, an insurrection was caused 
by the employment of Malabar Duboshes, or col- 
lectors of the revenue and other duties; these 
offices had been formerly filled by the Cingalese 
aratchys, or headmen, but the Madras government 
had displaced them, substituting natives of the 
Malabar coast in their stead. These trivial dis- 
turbances were speedily quelled, and entirely sub- 
sided, when the Cingalese were reinstated in their 
official appointments. 

The king of Kandy, during this year, made 
overtures to us for a renewal of the negociation, 
and conclusion of the treaty ; but, before a defini* 
tive arrangement was entered into, Rajadhi Rajah 
Singlia died, after a tolerably tranquil reign ol' 
seventeen years. Although he had five legitimate 
wives or queens, as well as concubines, he did 
not leave any male issue ; and he bore the cha- 
racter of an indolent, voluptuous man, '^ addicted 
to love and poetry, and to nothing else, and who 
ruled his subjects with an easy yoke." The fol- 
lowing is the personal description of Rajadhi 
Rajah Siugha, given by Boyd in his " Miscella- 
neous Works :" — 

10 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 293 

** He is about thirty-six, or thirty-seven years 
of age, of a grand majestic appearance, a very 
large man, and very black, but of an open, intelli- 
, gent countenance^ as I found after\\'ards on a 
nearer approach. On the whole, his figure and 
attitude put me in mind of our Harry the Eighth. 
He wore a large crown, which is a very important 
distinction from the other princes of the East.*' 

In the following year, 1798, Ceylon, was made 
a King s Colony, and the Hon. Frederick North, 
afterwards Earl of Guilford, and a worthy suC" 
cessor to his learned and philanthropic progenitor, 
was appointed governor of the island, and arrived 
there in the month of October. 

Historians differ, as to whether it was a nephew 
of one of the queens, or a son of a sister of one of 
the concubines of the late king, that Pilimi Ta- 
lawe, the first adikar or prime minister, raised to 
the throne of Kahdy, under the title of Sri Wik- 
rama Rajah Singha, to the exclusion of the royal 
family ; as Prince Mootoo Sawme, the chief or 
first queen^s brother, was the legitimate heir to 
the crown. This step was taken by Pilimi Talawe 
to further his own ambitious views, as Sri Wik- 
rama was but an automaton, on the throne, whose 
actions were directed by the first adikar, Pilimi 
Talawe, who imprisoned the chief queen of the 



294 CETLON AND THE CINOALESB. 

late monarch Rajadhi, and several relatives of the 
royal family ; whilst Prince Mootoo Sawme, with 
his adherents and followers, made their escape 
frdm Kandy, and placed themselves under the. 
protection of the British government at Colombo. 
During the following year^ the importation of 
islaves was prohibited, and torture and barbarous 
modes of punishment abolished in our possessions 
in Ceylon. In the month of February, Governor 
North granted an interview to Pilimi Talawe^ and 
the prime minister appears to have been most cau- 
tious in his mode of proceeding with our govern- 
ment, as this inlerview was merely a complimen- 
tary one ; but in a subsecutive one, in September, 
he offered to assassinate the monarch, Sri Wik- 
rama, whom he had raised to that dignity, if the 
English would assist him to ascend the throne, 
that he, Pilimi Talawe, would govern Kandy as 
the English would dictate. This ignominious 
proposition was rejected in the manner it merited, 
and the governor made Pilimi Talawe understand, 
that neither the monarch, nor nation, which he had 
thehonomr to represent,«ither aided or abettedmur- 
der, or assassins ; but, undaunted by this prompt 
and determined refusal of Governor North to aid 
him in his criminally nefarious project, Pilimi 
Talawe made many after-communications of the 



CETLON AND THE CINOALESE. 295 

same nature, which were rejected with the ficom 
and contumeliousness they merited. 

The first English seminary was established at 
Colombo, for the instruction of natives within the 
year; thus we find that immediately after Mr. 
North hield the reins of goTernment, and when 
naturally in a new colony, there were many im- 
portant political, and commercial subjects to 
engross the governor's attention and time; that 
gentleman had been employing his leisure hours 
in ^ideavouring to ameliorate the sufferings, and 
improve the condition of his sable fellow-man. 
Governor North abolished the importation of 
slaves, torture and barbarous modes of punish- 
ment, and established a seminary for the instruc- 
tion of the ignorapt and benighted natives, and 
that within the space of twelve months. Noble 
conduct of this nature needs no comment or praise, 
and each one in reading this may apply the fol- 
lowing text to himself, ^^ Go and do thou like- 
wise." 

In the following year, 1800, Governor North 
agreed to send an ambassador to the king of 
Kandy, as the first adikar, Pilimi Talawe, had 
made overtures of an honourable nature, in the 
name of Sri Wikrama, in his official capacity of 
prime-minister. The Rev. Mr. Cordiner writes : — 



296 CETLON AND THE CTHGALBSB. 

'' In order to elude the arts of the adikar, the 
governor promised that Major^General Macdowall 
should be sent as ambassador, if the consent of 
the king were preriously obtained to his carrying 
with him a sufficient military force to maintain 
his independence. It was at the same time pro- 
posed, that if the king should approve of it> he 
should transport his person and his court for 
greater safety to the British territories, there to 
enjoy all his royal rights, and to depute to Pilimi 
Talawe, the adikar, the exercise of his power in 
Kandy.'* 

The king of Kandy consented to the requisition, 
and General Macdowall started for Kandy on his 
embassy, escorted ^^by the light company, and 
four battalions of his Majesty's I9lh foot, five 
companies of the second battalion of the 6th regi- 
ment of coast sepoys, five companies of the Malay 
regiment, a detachment of the Bengal artillery, 
with four six-pounders and two howitzers."" Now, 
the utility of the caution evinced by Governor 
North in sending an ambassador^ with a powerful 
escort, was displayed, as on the road the deputa- 
tion met with opposition from the natives, and 
several skirmishes resulted, not without suspicion 
that Pilimi Talawe had secretly instigated the 
rebels to this contumacious mode of proceeding. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE, 297 

Our ambassador and his escort finally, reached 
Kandy, where a series of lengthened interviews 
ensued between Sri Wikrama and Genisral Mac - 
dowaU, which terminated in the general returning 
to Colombo, without having been able to effect a 
new treaty, or alter the position of affairs then ex- 
isting between the British and Kandian govern- 
ments. 

Events of an historical nature remained in statu 
quo during the year 1801, but the following yea? 
'was fraught with circumstances of interest, as well 
as with those of deep importance in a political 
point of view. The Supreme Court of Judicature 
was now first established, and vaccine innocula- 
tion was introduced. At the beginning of the 
year, the king of Kandy sent his second adikar as 
ambassador to our government at Colombo, when 
a satisfactory treaty was entered into, which 
ensured the safety, and permission to carry on 
commercial intercourse, to the subjects of the two 
powers. Shortly after the new treaty was ratified, 
it was violated by the Kandians, who committed 
the first act of aggression, by plundering some 
British subjects, who had purchased Areka-nuts 
in the Kandian dominions. Governor North de- 
manded that restitution should be made of the 
stolen property, or that the parties should be reim^ 

o 5 



298 CBfLON AKD THB CliirGALESl^ 

boned to the MI valae of their mercfaandice* 
This demand Pilitni Talawe, in the name of his 
soTereigD, promised to^ comply with, bat postponed 
the fiilfilment of his promise, and after repealed 
demands had been made by onr government for 
the required compensation, which were constantly 
met by pnerile evasions, Oovemor North 'threat-^ 
ened the £ing of Elandy with hostile proceedings, 
if the demanded and promised restitution was not 
forthwith made. 

War was declared against the Kandians in 
the January of 1803, and General Macdowall, at 
the head of a considerable force, marched for 
Kandy. These troops consisted of *^ two incom* 
plete companies of Bengal artillery, with the usual 
proportion of gun-ladcars, two companies of his 
Majesty's 19th regiment of footj the entire of the 
51st regiment (8^5 strong,) one thousand Ceylon 
native infantry, one company of the Malay regi* 
ment, and a small corps of pioneers." Colonel 
Barbut also set out for Trincomalee, commanding 
^^ one company of the Madras artillery, five com* 
panies of the 19th regiment, the greater part of the 
Malay regiment, and a necessary proportion of 
lascars and pioneers." These divisions, in their 
respective marches, did not m^et with the slightest 
resistance, and, although each had pursued differ- 



C£YL0K AI7D tH£> CIN0ALES£« 299 

ent routes, arrived almost simultaiieously at the 
Kandian seat of goteroment^ which they found 
undefended and. deserted^ and our large arniy^ 
which consisted of more than three thousand many 
took undisturbed possession of Lanka-diva's 
capital, the palace of which had been fired before 
the retreat of thie Kandians^iand was partially de- 
stroyed ; but in some of the apartments were found 
^^ pier glasses, statues, particularly those of Bud- 
dha, sets of glass and china-ware, and a few 
golden cups adorned with silver filagree*'' In the 
arsenal, or what was used for the store-house for 
their warlike weapons, a large quantity of arms 
of various descriptions were found by our troops, 
and appropriated. 

Mootoo Sawme was now proclaimed king by 
Governor North, and he was crowned with all 
due ceremony at Kandy. This prince was the 
legitimate heir to the Eandiaa throne, as he was 
the brother of Rajadhi's chief queen, and he had 
placed himself under the protection of the British 
government, when Pilimi Talawe placed Sri Wik* 
rama on the throne, after the decease of Sajadhi 
without male issue. A treaty was ratified by 
Governor North and Mootoo Sawme, to the efiect 
that the British merchants and soldiers should be 
indemnified for losses sustained previously to^ and 



800 CETLON AND THE GIKOALESB. 

doring the war, that a portion of land was to be 
given up for the purpose of constmcting a road 
from Colombo to Trincomalee, that the province 
of the Seven Korles, which is a tract along the 
western coast, should be made over for ever to the 
British, that the king should not form anj alliance 
without the concurrence of his Britannic Majesty, 
and that an European force should be kept hi 
Kandy, for the preservation of order. To all 
these considerations, Mootoo Sawme readily 
agreed. 

A force was now sent to Hangrenketty, about 
sixteen miles from Kandy, commanded by Colonel 
Barbut, in pursuit of the fugitive Sri Wikrama, 
which was nearly drawn into an ambuscade, 
but, owing to the caution of the colonel, a timely 
retreat was effected, although the object for which 
the troops were sent remained unaccomplished. 
Pilimi Talawe evinced much penetration in the 
mode of warfare which he adopted widi our troops, 
being fully conscious of the inferiority of tiie 
Kandian soldiers if opposed to them in regular 
engagement He harassed them by hovering 
about the capital, cutting off supplies, and all 
communication between Kandy, Colombo, and 
Trincomalee. A detachment of our men were 
neariy taken by Pilimi Talawe, which had been 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 301 

sent out to commence a negociation with some 
chief in the vicinity, and our soldiers barely 
escaped annihilation, and were necessitated to 
retreat into Kandy precipitately. A reward of 
ten rupees was set on the head of each European, 
and five rupees on that of any of the native troops 
in the service of the British. 

This harassing mode of warfare was beginning 
to make inroads on the health of our troops, when 
a negotiation was opened with General Macr 
dowall by Pilimi Talawe. The adikar proposed 
to surrender the person of the deposed monarch, 
Sri Wikrama, into the hands of the British, on the 
condition that he, Pilimi Talawe, should huve 
supreme authority in Kandy, under the title of 
Octoan Komarayan, or great and supreme prince, 
and that Mootoo Sawme should retire to Jaffna- 
patam, receiving a pension from the Kandian 
government. 

Unfortunately for the honour of Britain, this 
degrading proposal was acceded to by General 
Macdowall, who returned to Colombo, withdraw- 
ing a large body of the troops, leaving Kandy 
under the command of Major Davie, with a gar- 
rison of only one thousand men. Pimili Talawe 
having found that his nefarious scheme for obtain- 
ing power, aud raising himself to the highest dig- 



I 

r 

I 



S02 CBtLON AND THE CIN0ALB8E. 

nitj bad succeeded, now resolTed apon attempting 
to obtain possession of the person of Qovemor 
Nortb, and for tbis purpose requested a conference 
migbt take place at Dambadiva, about fifty-seven 
miles east of Colombo, and which had been a 
royal residence. Governor North being most 
anxious for peace, and to avoid bloodshed, acqui- 
esced most readily to Pilimi Talawe's proposi- 
tion. 

A day having been fixed upon for the confer- 
ence, namely, the 3rd of May, the governor went 
to Dambadiva, attended by a numerous suite and 
guards, whilst a detachment of three hundred 
soldiers met Governor North at that place. These 
precautions were necessary to guard i^ainst the 
treacherous designs of the perfidious Pilimi Ta- 
lawe ; and, had it not been for this armed force 
accompanying the governor, in all probability he 
would have been made prisoner, as the adikar had 
a body of armed men awaiting the governor's 
arrival, but he had not any proposal, or firesh ne- 
gotiation to. enter into. Finding it impossible to 
seize the person of Governor North in the face of 
his escort, Pilimi Talawe. broke up the conference, 
after a nominal ratification of the former treaty. 

General Macdowall returned to Kandy, and 
took the command of the garrison on the i6th of 



_ N 



CEYX.ON AND fHE CINGALESE, 303 

May, and most ttnforiuiiately for the sake of 
faumaiiity^ and of Great Britain's honour^ he was 
taken seriously ill, and compelled to leave Kandy 
on the 11th ofJutie following, leaving the gairison 
under the command of Major Davie^ Our pen 
idmost refuses to perform its task, and record the 
horribly sickening details of the fearful massacre 
and sacrifice of human life, brought about, and 
entailed on his victims by the cowardice and pusiU 
lanimity of one man, who dishonoured and dis- 
graced the country that gave him birth, the king 
he served, the commission he held, the uniform he 
wore, and the sword which he ought to have 
wielded. So long as there is power in language, 
or truth in history, the name of Major Davie will 
be execrated and loathed, as denoting all that is 
vile, despicable, dastardly, treacherous, and 
mean — 

" Veritatis simplex oratio est;" 

Therefore, we resume our history. 

Prom concomitant circumstances, we are in* 
duced to believe, that Pilimi Talawe only waited 
for the absence of General Macdowall to attack 
the weakened garrison of Kandy ; the power of 
the troops was diminishing daily, either by deser* 
tion, or sickness. They were Under the command 



304 CBTLON AMD THE CINGALBSB. 

of Major Davie, a creature anworthy the name of 
man, who had neither the courage nor ability for 
an office which placed in his keeping and power 
the honour of his country, and the lives of his 
felIow*CTeatures. 

Within a few days after the general was forced 
to leave Kandy, Pilimi Talawe besieged the garri- 
son, and Major Davie surrendered by capitula- 
tion ; and it was stipulated that Kandy should be 
delivered up forthwith, with the whole of* the 
military stores, and that the British troops should 
retire to Trincomalee, being allowed to retain 
their arms. Before sunset on the day the surren- 
der had been made, our garrison had evacuated 
Kandy. Major Davie, marching at the head of 
our troops, leaving 150 9ick Europeans in hos* 
pitalf who had not been named in the articles of 
capitulation, and for whom no provision was 
made, to be dealt with as their savage, barbarous 
enemies might choose. 

Our troops, consisting of seventeen officers, 
twenty British* soldiers, two hundred and fifty 
Malays, one hundred and forty gun lascars, ac- 
companied by Mootoo Sawme and bis attendants, 
reached Wattapolawa on the Trincomalee road, 
when their progress was intercepted by the river 
Mahavelliganga, at all times a rapid stream, but 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 305 

at that season much increased by the late rains. 
Major Davie in vain attempted to get the men 
across; and no mention had been made of this 
river in the articles ; therefore their enemies, the 
Kandians, were not bound to provide them with 
canoes, or rafts; and they now stood on the sur- 
rounding heights, jeering at the position our 
troops were placed in. Mootoo Sawme, Major 
Davie, and the officers, with their followers, re- 
mained on the banks of the river during the night, 
and their attempts to procure rafts the following 
morning proved abortive. Observing their irreso- 
lution, some Kandian chiefs opened a communi- 
cation with Major Davie, and his perplexed foU 
lowers, and these chiefs offered to provide boats, 
on the condition that Mootoo Sawme was delivered 
into the power of the Kandians. Major Davie 
for a short time hesitated, but finally agreed to 
this dishonourable^ base^ infamous^ atrocious pro* 
position^ and communicated his determination to 
the unfortunate prince, or rather king, Mootoo 
Sawme. 

"Is it possible," he exclaimed, **that the tri- 
umphant arms of England can be so humbled, as 
to fear the menaces of the Kandians ?*' 

But his expostulations were lost upon the das- 
tardly, cowardly Davie, and Mootoo Sawme was 



306 C£IXON AND TfiE CIK6AXE8E. 

delivered to his enendee — a living bolocanst, pre- 
sented by British officers to the demons of disgrace 
and cowardice. 

No language is sofficientlj powerful to express 
the dishonour brought on the name of Great Bri** 
tain by this infamous act The law of nations, as 
well as those of good faith and honour were vio- 
lated : Mootoo Sawme fled to us for protection, 
placed his person in our keeping, confiding in our 
honour ; we accepted the trust reposed — ^nay 
more, caused him to be crowned king in his own 
dominions, and entered into an alliance with him ; 
then broke our faith with him, by listening to, 
and accepting the overtures of a rebel, thus depos- 
ing the monarch whom we ourselves had crowned. 
He retreated with our troops, still trusting in 
British probity, when he was shamelessly handed 
over to his enemies, by one of that nation to whom 
he had confided the safe-keeping of his person. 
And the man who was guilty of this atrocity was 
a soldier^ and one who ought to have guarded the 
honour of his country, and the persons of those 
who placed themselves under the protection of 
Oreat Britain. Shame on the name of Davie ! — 
dishonoured it is, and will be as long as time shall 
endure, and we spurn the name from our pen, as 
we would a loathsome reptile from our path. 



CEYLON AND tH£ CINGALESE. 307 

Mootoo Sawme was *takeD before the usurper, 
Sri Wikrama and his adikar, when Pilimi Talawe 
put the following question to him : — 

" Was it proper for you, being, as you are, of 
the royal family, to fly to the English for protec- 
tion, and join them in fighting against your coun* 
try?" 

" I am at your mercy," the unfortunate Mootoo' 
Sawme meekly replied. 

Some further questions were put, and received 
humble replies, when this wretched prince was 
ordered to suffer the most barbarous tortures, and 
be impaled alive, thus meeting death in his most 
terrific and agonizing form. This sacrifice of 

« 

Mootoo Sawme did not appease the insatiate 
Kandians, who, finding that their former demands 
had been agreed to, now refused to provide the 
promised boats, insisting that the British troops 
should lay down their arms, and return to Kandy. 
No attempt at resistance was made by Major 
Davie to this unprecedented demand — ^uo expos* 
tulation used as to the breach of faith now exfai* 
bited by the Kandians; all they required was 
readily agreed to, and Major Davie, with hiis offi" 
cers, were separated fi'om their men, and the arms 
of the whole party taken fi'om them. The men 
were then marched into a narrow pass, strongly 



308 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

guarded by their armed Eandian escort, and 
ordered out, two by two, and the question put if 
they would senre under the Kandian king ? When 
a negative was given, these poor fellows were 
taken some distance from the main body, and 
butchered in the most horrible manner by their 
savage enemies. At the conclusion of this revolt- 
ing slaughter of the soldiers, the officers shared 
the same fate — but three European and one 
Malay officer being spared. The names of these 
were. Major Davie, Captains Rumley, Humphreys, 
and Nouradeen. The first three lingered out their 
lives in a wretched captivity among the Kandians, 
but Captain Nounideen's fate merits more parti- 
cular and honoui'able notice. 

The Kandians, not yet glutted with blood, 
returned to Kandy, and murdered the whole of 
the hundred-and-fifty sick European soldiers in 
hospital. What must have been the agony of 
these men, whilst this revolting massacre was 
taking place? Left unprotected, in a hostile 
country, by their commanding officer, whose duty 
it was to have provided for their safeguard, pros- 
trated by sickness or wounds they had received 
whilst fighting under their country's banner, and 
in her monarch's cause, unprovided with arms, 
prostrated by bodily infirmity, prevented thus 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 809 

from availing themselves of the means of self- 
defence, with which nature had provided them, 
their mental sufferings must, indeed, have been 
most terrible. Nor can we be surprised, if, in 
their dying agony, they forgot their duty as Chris- 
tians, and cursed the man whose cowardice, want 
of firmness, and humanity, had left them to 
meet death, inflicted by the hands of barbarous 
enemies. 

I'wo of our men most miraculously escaped 
from the fearful slaughter ; the first was Corporal 
Bamsley of the 19th regiment, he received a deep 
sword-cut on his neck, and had his head , laid 
open by blows from a club, but he contrived to 
extricate himself from the heap of slain, and roll 
over a bank into a paddy-field^ where he lay con- 
cealed until night. He then swam across the 
river, and received assistance and food from some 
kind Samaritans, who followed the precepts of 
Buddha, succouring the sick and needy, although 
the suppliant was not one who believed in their 
god. After much suffering and difficulty, the 
poor fellow reached our garrison at Matel6, and 
finally recovered from his wounds. 

The other soldier was in hospital at Kandy, 
was torn out of his bed, had a blister pulled off 
bis chest, and was knocked on the head with the 



310 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

butt end of a musket, and thrown with his mur« 
dered companions into a deep pit. He made his 
way from among the dead bodies, and crawled 
into a neighbouring drain, from whence he was 
dragged in the morning, and hung to a tree : the 
rope broke, and he was again suspended, and left 
to die, but strange to say the rope again gave way, 
and he contrived to secrete himself in a neigh- 
bouring cave for ten days, during which period he 
subsisted upon the grass that grew from the 
sides. 

A Kandian who had seen him twice hanged 
accidentally found him, and was so astonished at 
his preservation, that he determined to inform the 
king. The superstitious tyrant declared that the 
soldier must be under the especial protection of 
the gods, thus to have escaped with life, and 
ordered him to be provided with food, raiment, and 
a dwelling, and eventually he, as well as Bamsley, 
had the gratification of being restored to their 
families. We believe if these accounts were read 
in a work of imagination, they would be declared 
to be beyond the bounds of probability, so true 
it is — 

" That truth is strange, stranger than fiction." 
The wretched being, Davie, died in 1810, and it is 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 311 

asserted that in appearance and dress be had 
become essentially Kandian — and that he cohabi- 
ted with a low caste woman, by whom he had a 
family, and it is said that grandchildren of his are 
now in Kandy. Military men affirm that our 
government tried to ransom this contemptible 
creature, but as the Kandian king demanded a sea* 
port to be given up in consideration for his libera- 
tion, it was impossible to accede to such terms, 
and Davie was left to linger among a people who 
with all their faults are not cowardly ; consequently, 
they must have despised him for his want of 
bravery. 

It is the bounden duty of an historian to be 
impartial, and draw notice to the conduct of those 
placed in responsible positions; therefore we deem 
it necessary to animadvert upon the line of policy 
adopted by General Macdowall. In the first 
place, it was a decided breach of faith, and vio* 
lation of our treaty with Mootoo Sawme, the mo- 
narch whom we had crowned^ to enter into a 
negotiation with Pilimi Talawe, and agree that 
he should be the viceroy of Kandy, thereby de- 
posing Mootoo Sawme, and promising that he 
should retire to Jafibapatam. The overtures of 
the crafty, Pilimi Talawe, had not the excuse of 
being made in the name of the king, whom he 



312 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

acknowledged, and whose prime miDister he was, 
namely, Sri Wikrama, but were made in his own 
name and for his own benefit, as he consented to 
deliver the person of his monarch into the hands 
of the British. General Macdowall evinced but 
an imperfect knowledge of human nature^ even in 
listening to, much more in acceding to, the pro- 
positions of a man who was alike a rebel and a 
traitor to his king and country. He who was 
faithless to the country w^hich gave him birth, 
and the monarch whose confidential servant he 
was, could not be relied upon, or be expected to 
keep faith with the British, whom he only availed 
himself of to use as a step in ascending the ladder 
of his ambition. 

lu the second place. General Macdowall is to 
be censured, for prematurely withdrawing so large 
a body of troops from Kandy, leaving only one 
thousand men in garrison, in the midst of a hos^ 
tile, treacherous nation, who could, from the 
natural defence of the country, cut ofi* all com- 
munication and supplies; added to which, this 
small body of men was left under the command of 
an officer totally incapable and unfit to have so 
important a trust reposed in him. The fearful 
consequences attendant upon the whole of the 
mistaken line of policy pursued by General Mac- 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 318 

dowall in this disastrous business, has been seen 
in the fatal results recorded in previous pages. 

No attempt at palliation can be made for Major 
Daviess misconduct ; and, for the credit of Great 
Britain, such transgressions of the laws of honour 
and humanity are rare. The result of Davie's 
pusillanimous cowardice^ in acceding to all the 
unconscionable demands of his Kandian enemies, 
met with awful retribution in his own person, 
and those of his brother officers ; but their suffer- 
ings could not restore to life the hundreds of 
slaughtered men who had fallen victims to the 
savage brutality of the Kandians. To a well- 
regulated mind, death is always preferable to 
dishonour, and this feeling is generally deeply 
imprinted on the heart of the British defender of 
his country; and fortunate it is that the contrary 
sentiment is rarely met with among Britain^s 
sons; for, were it otherwise, and conduct such 
as Major Davie's of frequent occurrence, we 
should become a byword among the nations of 
the earth, instead of being honoured and re- 
spected where the name of England is known. 

We expressed our intention of noticing the 
heroic conduct of Captain Nouradeen, whose life 
was spared at Wattapolowa by the Kandians. 
This o^cer was a Malay, then commanding the 

VOL. 1. p 



314 C£YLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Malay regiment; and Pilimi Talawe had used 
every persuadon during the period our troope 
occupied Kandy, to induce Captain Nouradeen 
to leave our service, and enter that of the Kan- 
dian, promising him high rank and riches. All 
these offers were steadfastly refused ; and, when he 
was made prisoner, Pilimi Talawe renewed them, 
tempting Captain Nouradeen with life, rank, and 
riches, if he would serve Sri Wikrama ; but the 
answer he received was, ^^ that he (Captain Nou- 
radeen) was already the servant of a mighty king, 
whose uniform he wore, and that he could not 
serve two masters." Finding all entreaty and 
persuasion useless, threats and tortures were es- 
sayed ; but these proved alike futile, in inducing 
Captain Nouradeen to become traitor to the coun- 
try which he served; and this noble, heroic fellow 
was put to death by Pilimi Talawe. The contrast 
presented in the character and conduct of Noura- 
deen and Davie needs no concluding comment. 

In August, desultory warfare and ravage com- 
menced between the British and Kandians, when 
Sri Wikrama, stimulated and intoxicated by his 
late successes, threatened to attack Colombo, but 
refrained from doing so ; and, in September, he 
besieged Hangwelle, a fort of little importance, in 
our possession, and suffered a severe defeat. 



mmemmmmmBmmmmsmsmmtammesBmaES^ 



OETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 315 

At the commenc^ent of the ycAr 1804, the 
Kaodians prepared and attempted a general inva- 
sion of the British settlements, but were repulsed 
on all sides ; great havoc was m^e among th^ir 
troops, and the losses they sustained were con«- 
siderable. Shortly after this, Pilimi Talawe again 
made overtures of an amicable nature to our go- 
vernment ; but the serere punishment the British 
had met with previously, aft» listening to his 
treacherous propositions in 1808^ were too vividly 
impressed on their minds to permit them tQ bold 
fiuther intercourse of a friendly description with 
so treacherous a man ; and, therefore, the over* 
tures made by Pilimi Talawe were rejected with 
the contempt they called for. 

In the month of February of the year 1805, the 
Kandians again invaded the British territories ; 
but the result was the same ajs that which they 
experienced the preceding year, viz., that of loss 
and defeat. A body of our troops, consisting only 
of three hundred men, followed by numerous 
coolees and servants, and com^^i^nded by Major 
Johnson, were ordered to the int^or. This br^ve 
officer fought his way from Batticalloa to Kandy, 
and was there surrounded by the troops of Sri 
Wikrama. Nothing daimied^ he cut bis way 
through them, and proceeded iu his road to 

p 2 



316 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Trincomalee, although constantly harassed by 
the Kandian troops, who opposed the progress 
of this undaunted body of men. This small army, 
headed by Major Johnson, reached their destina- 
tion with comparatively small loss, having had to 
pass through a hostile country, and constant skir- 
mishes having taken place between them and the 
Kandian troops— thus showing what energy and 
bravery could perform when commanded by an 
officer possessing firmness and valour. The war 
was carried on with much determination and 
bravery on both sides ; and the king of Kandy 
proposed a cessation of hostilities, which was 
agreed to by the British, although no formal 
treaty was entered into, and peace continued till 
1814. 

In July of this year, 1805, Governor North was 
relieved by Sir Thomas Maitland, who succeeded 
to the appointment of Governor of Ceylon. 
Governor North returned to England with the 
good wishes of all the natives and British subjects 
of that island ; and certes. Great Britain is in- 
debted to the abilities of the Hon, Frederick 
North, the first English Governor of Ceylon, for 
retaining this bright colonial gem in the British 
diadem. Governor North left the colony in a 
comparative state of tranquillity, no fresh hos- 



mmmmmmmmmsmmsmsBmBBmsBBasmBrnm 



CEYLON AKD the CINGALESE. 317 

tilities having been renewed with the Kandians 
until 1814; and he found it a scene of disorder, 
warfare, and bloodshed. Mr. North left Lanka- 
diva^s verdant shores with the satisfactory con- 
viction, that he had done much to ameliorate the 
condition, physically and morally, of the be- 
nighted inhabitants of Ceylon. 



318 CETLON AND THE CINQALBSB. 



CHAPTER XII. 



From 1805 to 1844 — Sri Wikrama's tyranny — ^First Adikar 
family murdered — ^Affecting account of the execution — 
Heroic conduct of the wife and son — Babe taken from 
the mothers breast to be decapitated — ^Rebellion in 
Kandy — ^Martial law proclaimed — ^Tranquillity restored — 
Dalada relic — ^Death of the King of Kandy — Governor Sir 
Colin Campbell — His policy — Bishopric of Colombo con- 
stituted — The first Bishop Dr. Chapman — His exertions 
and character — Rebellion in Kandy — ^The Priests causes 
of dissatisfaction — ^New taxes and first disturbance — ^Pre 
tender proclaimed — His progress — Rebels enter and 
destroy the public buildings at Matele — Troops march 
from Kandy — Conflict with rebels — Martial law proclaimed 
—Reward ofiered for Pretender — ^Destruction of KumegaUe 
— Observer newspaper exciting discontent — Alarming 
meeting of natives near the seat of Government — ^Attack 
of the police — Mr. EUiot addresses the mob — Reinforce- 
ments sent to Kandy — The Commandant takes possession 
of the Dalada relic— Pretender's brother shot — ^Result of 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 319 

Courts Martial-^Special sessions of Supreme Court — ^The 
Chief Justice's charge — His recommendatioii to mercy- 
Lord Torrington's reply. 

Although there was a cessation of hostilities 
between the British and Kandians, we were not 
uninterested observers of the political events oc- 
curring in Kandy, which were most important, 
as the monarch, Sri Wikrama, was no longer the 
weak, supine youth — a mere automaton, placed 
on the throne by Pilimi Talawe, and whose ac- 
tions were subservient to, and dictated by, his 
adikar, or prime minister. The footing upon 
which Pilimi Talawe had been with Sri Wikrama, 
during the first part of his reign, when the Kan- 
dians were engaged in war with the British, could 
not subsist during peace. The authority of Pilimi 
Talawe gradually declined, as the monarch held 
more securely the reins of government, and felt 
himself seated fastly on the throne. Sri Wikrama 
now exhibited his real character, which was that 
of a despotic tyrant,, and he evinced his determi- 
nation to govern, as his predecessors had ruled 
Kandy, with absolute power; whilst Pilimi 
Talawe^ on his side, was in like manner resolv^ 
to retain, and maintain, his influential hold over 
the Kandian monarch and his court. 

Mutual distrust between the monarch and his 



4 I 



320 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

adikar existed for years, ontil 1812, when Pilimi 
Talawe excited the jealous fears of Sri Wikrama, 
by reqaestiDg that the illegitimate daughter of 
the last king, Rajadhi, might be given in marriage 
to his son. Sri Wikrama was highly incensed at 
this presumptuous proposal of the adikar, as he 
viewed it as a covert attempt to be enabled to 
claim affinity with the royal blood, and sum- 
moned the whole of his chiefs to court, and pre- 
ferred various charges of misconduct, and arrogant 
assumptions, against Pilimi Talawe. 

The chiefs listened with becoming gravity to 
the complaints made by their king, and Pilimi 
Talawe was condemned by Sri ^Wikrama, with 
the concurrence of the assembled chiefs; when, to 
the surprise of all, the king pardoned the adikar, 
declaring his reluctance to punish so old a ser- 
vant, and reinstated Pilimi Talawe in his office of 
adikar. 

It is difficult to fathom the motive which ac- 
tuated Sri Wikrama : it must have been dictated 
either by the most noble generosity, or by the 
most subtle cunning ; but Pilimi Talawe enjoyed 
his position as adikar only for a short time after 
he bad been reinstated in his office, as his con- 
duct again excited the king's displeasure, who 
banished him to his province, forbidding him to 



\ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 321 

leave it without his (the king's) pennission, and 
depriving him of his rank and honours. 

Scarcely was Pilimi Talawe in his province, 
before he hired Malays to murder the king. This 
conspiracy was discovered by Eheylapola, for- 
merly the second adikar, but whom the king 
had made first adikar when he disgraced Pilimi 
Talawe; the conspirators were taken, tortured, 
and condemned to be trodden to death by ele- 
phants, trained to that purpose; whilst Pilimi 
Talawe and his nephew were tortured and be- 
headed. 

The demons of cruelty and suspicion now 
reigned lords paramount in the breast of Sri 
Wikrama; he condemned his chiefs to death 
without just cause, and feared rebellion to exist 
in every breath his subjects drew. Eheylapola, 
who at that time was devoted to his king, Sri 
Wikrama, regarded with distrust : province after 
province the king declared to be in a state of re- 
bellion, although Eheylapola vouched for their 
allegiance ; nevertheless, Sri Wikrama fined some 
of the inhabitants, imprisoning, torturing, and 
mutilating others. In some districts, the king 
ordered the priests and Moormen to quit, for- 
bidding all women, except natives of those dis- 
tricts, to remain in them. The domestic wretch- 

p 5 



822 CBTLON AND THE CIKeALBSB. 

edness this edict caused is well described by Dr. 
Davj, who was in Ceylon at the time. 

'^ Wiyes were separated from their husbands ; 
mothers irom their children ; the yoong bride and 
the aged parent — all indiscriminately were tern 
from the bosom of their families, and driven from 
their homes, producing scenes alike of distress 
and anger, which might well shake the firmest 
loyalty.*" 

Thus we see how Sri Wikrama contrived to 
goad into rebeUion his stanchest adherents and 
subjects. In the year 1814, for some trivial 
neglect of duty, Eheylapola was ordered to his 
district of Saflfragam, and thither he retired, in 
obedience to the king's command ; but as Ehey- 
lapola was beloved sincerely by the inhabitants 
of Saffragam, they exhibited every demonstration 
of joy at the return of Eheylapola. This Sri 
Wikrama chose to copstf ae into an act of rebel- 
lion, and proclaimed Saffiragam to be in a state 
of insurrection, and despatched troops there, to 
make Eheylapola prisoner, and bring him to the 
capital, alive, or dead; and these were com- 
manded by MoUigodde, formerly the second 
adikar, but upon whom Sri Wikrama had be- 
stowed the place of Eheylapola. This nobleman, 
however, with several chiefs, took refuge in Co- 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 323 

lombo, placing themselres mnder the protection 
of the British goverament, whilst MolUgodde 
took prisoners many of his adherents, and re- 
turned triumphantly to Kandy, carrying with him 
the adherents of Eheylapola. ' 

The fury of the king at the escape af Ehey- 
lapola knew no bounds, and he wreaked his 
yengeance on the victims within his grasp. Exe- 
cutions, tortures, impalements, mutilations, con-, 
fiscations, and imprisonments, were now the 
daily — almost hourly — occurrences. The place 
of torture and execution flowed with human gore 
*-the air was filled with the shrieks of victims, 
under the hands of the torturer, and Kandy was 
now one vast slaughtering-place. 

As Sri Wikrama could not get the person of 
Eheylapola into his power, he determined to 
obtain possession of his wife and children. Ac- 
cordingly, they were made prisoners, with Ehey- 
lapola's brother and his wife, the tyrant resolving 
to wreak his vengeance on all. They were, forth- 
with, brought to Kandy, condemned to suffer 
death for being the wife, offspring, and relations 
of a rebel, and were to be executed pubHcly in 
the market-place of Kandy, in the presence of the 
whole court and population. 

The day appointed for this horrible butchery 



324 CETLON ANB THE CINGALESE. 

arrived, and the wife of Eheylapola, with his 
four children (the eldest boj being bat eleren 
years of age, and the youngest an in&nt of a few 
months old, sacking at its mother s breast,) were 
led to the place of execation. The wife, a woman 
of majestic mien and noble deportment, attired 
in her court-dress, and adorned with all her jewels 
of state, befitting her high rank and station, ad- 
vanced boldly to meet her fate, declaring her 
husband's integrity, and expressing her hope that 
the life which she was about to give up might 
be of benefit to him. She was ordered to stand 
back, as it was the king^s command that she was 
to die last — to stand by and see her children but- 
chered. She uttered no remonstrance, but em^ 
braced her eldest boy, telling him to submit to 
his fate as became Eheylapola's son. The child . 
hesitated, and terrified, clung to his mother 
for protection, when his brother, two years 
younger, stepped forward boldly, embraced his 
mother, and told his brother not to disgrace his 
father by such cowardly conduct, and that he 
would show him how to die as became Eheyla- 
pola's son ; advanced with firm step to the exe- 
cutioner—one blow — a lifeless trunk, deluged in 
blood, falls to the earth, and the young noble 
spirit had taken its flight. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 325 

But the refinement of barbarous cruelty was 
not to terminate in compelling a mother to stand 
and see her offspring butchered; the trunkless 
head was thrown into a paddy-pounder, the 
pestle placed in the mother's hand, and she was 
ordered to pound the head of her child, or she 
should be disgracefully tortured. The mother 
hesitated ; but the feelings of innate delicacy im- 
planted in the high-born woman's breast pre- 
vailed — every mental anguish would be prefer- 
able to the public exposure of her person — she 
lifted up the pestle, closing her eyes, and let it 
fall on the skull of her dead child. 

This hideous scene was enacted with the two 
other children, and the wretched mother had to 
endure the same mental torture. At last, it was 
the infant's turn to die, and it was taken from its 
mother's arms, where it lay sleeping, and smiling, 
in tranquil unconsciousness. Eheylapola's wife 
pressed her babe convulsively to her bosom ; then, 
in mute agony, allowed the executioner to take her 
last child from her. lu a moment the little head 
was severed from the delicate body. The milk 
that had been drawn a short time previously from 
the mother's breast, v^diS seen distinctly Jlounng ^ 
and mingling ttith the sanguine stream of life.. 

The Kandian matron then advanced eagerly to 



J I 



326 CBTLON AND THE OINGALBSB^ 

meet death. With a firm step, she walked towards 
the executioner, but with caution^ to avoid step^ 
ping in the bloody or treading on the lifeless, 
mutilated bodies of her children. Her face was 
calm*— almost wore an expression of satisfaction 
^*-the worst had happened — she had seen her 
children slaughtered^^ihey were out of the tyrant 
Sri Wikrama^s power. The hand of the execu- 
tioner is laid on her, to lead her to her watery 
grave. * She thrusts him aside, telling him not to 
pollute a high-bom Kandian matron with his 
touch; to remember that she was Eheylapola^s 
wife, and had stood calmly to see her children 
murdered ; would she therefore shrink from meet- 
ing them in death I Bade adieu to her brother- 
in-law, telling him to meet death as became his 
birth; called to her sister-in-law not to unman 
her husband by useless wailings, bat to follow 
her; then walked towards the tank, (contiguous 
to Kandy,) two executioners following and pre- 
ceding, carrying large stones. 

They have arrived at the tank ; Eheylapola's 

* Eheylapola's wife and sister were condemned to be 
drowned ; the brother and children to be beheaded. The 
details of this trafi^edy and attendant circumstances were 
described to the writer by a Kandian chief, who was an eye- 
witness to this horrible butchery. 



CEYLON AND THB CINGALESE. 327 

wife gazes fixedly on the tranquil water, whereon 
the sunbeams glitter sportiyelj in millions of fays ; 
the sister weeps as the executioner commences 
attaching the heavy stones to her slender throat. 
It is firmly secured ; the weight bears her fi-agile 
form to the earth ; and the executioners are com* 
pelled to carry her to the tank. She shrieks 
wildly as they near the tank ; they hold her over 
the waters— 'more piercing screams rend the air. 
A sudden splash — then the waters close over a 
tyrant s victim, serenely unconscious of the atro- 
city perpetrated. 

Eheylapola*s wife had stood motionless during 
this period, a slight expression of scorn passing 
over her features, as her sister's shrieks filled the 
atmosphere. 'Tis now her turn to die. The 
executioners advanced towards her, carrying the 
ponderous stone. She motions them off. They 
still advance — are quite close to her 5 the cords 
that are to attach the weight to her throat already 
touch her person ; she asks them to. desist, assur- 
ing them that she will not make any resistance 
or attempt to save her life. The executioners 
refuse, stating they must adhere to their orders 
and one lays his hand roughly on her shoulder. 
She shrieks, and eludes his foul touch, for with a 



328 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

boand she darts towards the tank, and leaps into 
the water : they close over her form in eddying 
circles, and her spirit has flown for ever. The 
executioners depart, palm-trees droop gracefally 
over the waters, and the sunbeams glitter sportively 
in millions of sparkling rays, as the stream mur- 
murs a requiem over the murdered wife and sister 
of Eheylapola. 

The butchery in the market was not completed 
when Eheylapola's wife quitted it, for her hus- 
band's brother was still to die. The headsman 
advances towards him, sword in hand, lays his 
blood-stained hand on the chief's shoulder, 
attempting to raise his head. The chief, with an 
indignant exclamation, throws the audacious hand 
off his person, plants his feet firmly on the earth, 
draws himself up to his full height, standing with 
majestic dignity, and scornfully desiring the 
executioner to fulfil the tyrant's command. Has 
the chiefs stem gaze unnerved the headsman ? 
A blow was struck ! a stream of red blood gushes 
forth ! — but, horrible ! the head is not wholly 
struck off I The sword is again poised in the air 
— a flash of light falls on the glittering weapon of 
destruction : it descends on the muscular, manly 
throat ; the sword is now reeking with red blood ! 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 829 

A headless trunk falls to the ground, whilst the 
head, with glaring eye-balls, rolls along the earth, 
and is thrust aside rudely by the executioner's 
foot. The bloody tragedy is finished I 

Before the temples of the gods Nata and Vishnu, 
and opposite to the queen's palace, was this 
fearful scene enacted. Sri Wikrama laid all feel- 
ings aside save those of revenge ; for, by the Kan- 
dian laws, it was forbidden that human blood 
should be shed near a temple ; also to wound or 
shed the blood of a woman was considered a 
heinous crime, and one of the innocent children 
of Eheylapola was a girl. 

During the time this revolting butchery was 
going on, women shrieked, closing their eyes to 
exclude the terrific reality ; men groaned in mental 
torture, burying their heads in their hands ; whilst 
many of the noble Kandian youths, in anguish 
rolled on the earth, their mouths pressing close to 
the sod to stifle their cries. We will wind up 
this fearful account by quoting a contemporaneous 
author: — 

^' During this tragical scene the crowd, who had 
assembled to witness it, wept and sobbed aloud, 
unable to suppress their feelings. Palihapaul 
Depaaul was so afiected that he fainted, and was 
expelled his office for showing such tender 



SSO CEYLON AND THE CINGALBSE. 

sensibility. During two days the whole of Kandy^ 
with the exception of the tyrant's court, was as 
one house of mourning and lamentation, and so 
deep was the grief, that not a fire, it is said, was 
kindled, no food dressed, and a general fast was 
held." 

We believe the savage cruelty of this barbarous 
tyrant to be unparalleled in ancient or modern 
history : the crimes imputed to the Roman em-^ 
perors, Nero and Caligula, were trivial, when com- 
pared with those constantly practised by Sri 
Wikrama, and our astonishment is extreme that 
any nation — more especially a warlike one, such 
as the Kandians— -should have submitted for a 
lengthened period to the cruel tyranny exercised 
by their monarch. Sri Wikrama spared neither 
age nor sex — the sucking infant, children, old and 
young women, were all alike condemned to be 
tortured in the most revolting, disgusting manner, 
mutilated and executed, if they or their relations 
incurred his displeasure, or from the caprice of 
the instant. We can comprehend man viewing 
with apathy the destruction of his fellow-man ; but 
we cannot understand how men could permit the 
slaughter of the delicate woman, or the helpless 
child — every feeling implanted in our nature 
rebels against the bare supposition that the 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 3S1 

creatares whom, from very instinct^ we feel our- 
selves bound to protect, should be slaughtered 
before our ejes, for no crimes which they had 
committed, but simply for being the wife of the 
bosom, and the offspring of a man who had in- 
curred a tyrant's displeasure. It is an enigma 
how this debased specimen of human nature^ Sri 
Wikrama, escaped assassination by the hands of his 
subjects ; but the scourge of retribution was near, 
hovering in his path, although the punishment he 
met with in this world did not equal his deserts. 

At the end of this year, Sri Wikrama cruelly 
tortured ten native traders (British subjects) who 
had gone into his territories for merchandize. 
They made their escape from Kandy, coming to 
Colombo in a mutilated condition, some without 
ears, others without eyelidsr— the remainder either 
noseless, footless, or handless^ — and made com- 
plaint to the Govemor^general, Sir Robert Brown- 
rigg. On the 10th of January, 1815, war was 
declared against the King of Kandy, not against 
the Kandian nation, ^^ but against that tyrannical 
power which had provoked, by aggravated out- 
rages and indignities, the just resentment of the 
British nation, which had cut off the most noble 
families in the kingdom, deluged the land with 
the blood of its subjects, and, by the violation of 



i^- 



33*2 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

eveiy religious and moral law, bad become an 
object of abhorrence to mankind." 

The British troops entered the Kandian territo- 
ries on the following day, and fighting com- 
menced. The Kandians gave battle, not as men 
fighting for liberty and their land, but as merce- 
naries in the service of a tyrant, who, for gold, 
fought against the British, who were disposed to 
befi-iend them ; and skirmish after skirmish ensued, 
and war was carried on by the Kandians without 
spirit, or energy. Mollegodde, the successor of 
Eheylapola, at this critical period, deserted his 
cruel master, Sri Wikrama; and, as he was the 
only efficient commander whom he possessed, and 
one whose place it was impossible to refill, the 
loss Sri Wikrama sustained was irreparable. 
Mollegodde had been long disgusted with the 
tyrant's service, and awaited the opportunity 
of joining the English, which had been only 
deferred until he could get his wife and children 
from Sri Wikrama's court. The tragical execu- 
tion of Eheylapola's family warned Mollegodde 
what would be the fate of his wife and children, 
if he abandoned his office of adikar, leaving these 
sacred ties in the clutches of the savage king. 
But no sooner had he effected the withdrawal of 
his family from the Kandian territories, than he 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 838 

offered his aid to the British, to assist in dethron- 
ing Sri Wikrama. 

On the 14th February, Sir Robert Brownrigg 
established his head-quarters at Kandj ; but the 
king had made his escape from thence a few days 
before, and it was reported that he had fled to 
Doombera, about twelve miles from Kandy ; and 
as part of our troops, which were advancing to 
the capital, had fallen in with two of the king's 
wives, a quantity of jewels and treasure which 
were captured, the report bore every appearance 
of being a correct one. Sir Robert Brownrigg 
lost not an instant in forming plans to ensure the 
capture of Sri Wikrama. Detachments from 
Colonel O'Connell's, Majors Kelly and Rook's 
divisions, were ordered to scour the country 
round, making every possible search for the tyrant, 
to cut off all retreat. 

Energetic and efficient as these officers were, 
their search was fruitless ; and, in all probability, 
the English never would have succeeded in cap- 
turing Sri Wikrama, had not his own subjects 
aided them. Eheylapola's followers were looking 
with lynx-eyed vengeance, for the wretch who 
had butchered the wife and children of their be- 
loved chief. They sought' him with unwearied 
perseverance, found him ; and, although the 



334 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Malabar escort which surrounded the tyrant, Sri 
Wikrama, fought nobly in defence of their blood- 
stained monarchy captured the fugitive king, 
bound him haod and foot, reviled him with the 
atrocities he had committed, and the murders he 
had caused, spat upon him, telling him that it 
waa Eheylapola^s slaves — the slaves of the woman 
he had butchered— that thus treated him, in re- 
venge for his savage brutality ; that they now 
intended to drag him to a neighbouring village, 
that he might be execrated by the multitude as he 
went along. Curses loud and deep were showered 
on the head of Sri Wikrama, by his own subjects, 
as he passed along the road ; almost each inquired 
of him for a murdered or mutilated relation or 
friend ; curses and missiles were hiu'led at him ; 
he was subjected to every species of ignominious 
reproach ; and, finally, was banded over a pri- 
soner to the British. 

Sri Wikrama, the last king of Kandy, was 
taken prisoner at Galleehewatte, in Doombera, on 
the 18th of February, 1815, being exactly four 
days after Sir Robert Brownrigg had established 
his head-quarters in the capital of his dominioos- 
Some historians, with a misplaced, maudlin sen* 
sibility, have deprecated the tre^tm^t that Sri 
Wikrama met with at the hands of EJbeylapola's 

6 



CJBYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 335 

followers. Although Christianity teaches us to 
forgive our enemies^ and those who have inflicted 
injuries upon us^ the best Christian finds it a 
most difficult precept to follow. Can we, then, 
wonder at the reproaches and ignominy, which 
these men showered on one, who had condemned 
the innocent children and wife to a cruel death, 
solely because he could not lay hands on the per* 
son of their chief? — more especially as these men 
did not profess Christianity, but were heathens, 
followers of Buddha. On the contrary, these 
men are to be commended for the forbearance 
they exhibited in placing Sri Wikrama alive, un- 
tortured and unmutilated, immediately after they 
had made him prisoner, in the hands of the 
British. 

The personal appearance of Sri Wikrama was 
not unprepossessing, except when he was excited, 
then his eye gleamed with the fire of a demon, 
and the face wore an expression of malignant 
cruelty. He was tall, well-made, slightly enbon- 
paint : the features of the face good, and the ex- 
pression intelligent ; the complexion of a clear, 
rich, dark brown ; the head well formed, (although 
the animal organs predominated over the intellec- 
tual,) with are dundaacy of long, thick raven-black 
hair. He took great delight in adorning his per- 



336 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

son, ODd wore a profusion of costly jewels at all 
times ; but on state occasions, the cap and dress 
in which he habited himself glittered with gems 
of inestimable value. We need only say of his 
character, " Ex uno disce omnes.''^ 

On the 2nd of March, Sri Wikrama was finally 
and formally dethroned ; and a convention con - 
eluded between Sir Robert Brownrigg and the 
Kandian chiefs, together with the chief oliicers of 
the Kandian territories. The official notice pub- 
lished on the occasion states : — " This day a 
solemn conference was held in the audience-hall 
of the palace of Kandy, between his Excellency 
the Governor and Commander in-chief of the 
Forces, on behalf of his Majesty, and of his Royal 
Highness the Prince Regent, on the one part, and 
the adikars, dissaaves, ratramahatmeers, and other 
principal chiefs of the Kandian provinces, on the 
other part, on behalf of the people, and in pre- 
sence of aratchegays, coraals, vidhans, and other 
subordinate headmen from the different provinces, 
and a great concourse of inhabitants. A public 
instrument of treaty, prepared in conformity to 
conditions previously agreed upon, for establishing 
his Majesty's government in the Kandian pro- 
vinces, was produced, and publicly read in Eng- 
lish and Cingalese, and unanimously assented to. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 337 

The British flag was then, for the first time, 
hoisted, and the establishment of the British do- 
minion in the interior was announced by a royal 
salute." 

The second article of the treaty stated — " Sri 
Wikrama was, by consent of his subjects, formally 
declared to be deposed, his family and relations 
for ever debarred from ascending the throne, and 
all the rights and claims of his race to be extin- 
guished and abolished." 

The two succeeding articles were devoted to 
minor political arrangements. 

The fifth article declared — " That the religion 
of Buddha was inviolable ; its rights, ministers, 
and places of worship were to be maintained and 
protected." 

The sixth and seventh articles were of an im- 
material nature. 

By the eighth and eleventh it was declared — 
" That the laws of the country were to be still 
recognised according to established forms, and by 
the ordinary authorities, and that the royal dues 
and revenues were to be levied, as before, for the 
support of the government."* 

* We have merely given the outlines of the treaty, and 
what we considered most probably would interest the 
general reader. 

VOL. i. Q 



340 CBTLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

sacrifice of human life was terrible od both sides. 
Our soldiers were now beginning to sink under 
the effects of the unwholesome atmosphere of 
Kandj, and, day by day, events assumed a more 
gloomy aspect for the British, whilst the Kandi- 
ans grew bolder, and held a grand meeting at 
Deyabetmewala, at which the pretender and 
chiefs were present. Dr. Davy, in his ** Ceylon," 
writes: — 

^^ During the three following months our affairs 
assumed a still more gloomy aspect. Our little 
army was much exhausted and reduced by 
fatigue, privation, and disease ; the rebellion 
was still unchecked — all our efforts had been 
apparently fruitless — not a leader of any conse- 
quence had been taken, and not a district sub- 
dued or tranquillized. This was a melancholy 
time to those who were on the scene of action, 
and many began to despond, and augur from bad 
to worse, and to prophesy that the communica- 
tion between Colombo and our head-quarters at 
Kandy would be cut off, and that we should very 
soon be obliged to evacuate the country, and fight 
our way out of it." . 

These gloomy forebodings were not destined to 
be realized : disunion of a serious nature now 
manifested itself among the chiefs, and the pre- 
tender was taken prisoner by an adverse party, 
who set up a chief of their own selection. Kapit- 
tipola, their most able general, was defeated in 



CEYLON AND THB CINGALESE. 341 

several engagements, and, in October, was taken 
prisoner, with Pilimi Talawe, by the British ; one 
by one, the chiefs were taken, tried, convicted of 
high treason, and beheaded. Notwithstanding 
these stringent, but necessary measures, a spirit 
of rebellion still continued to manifest itself, 
and it was not imtil February, 1819, that the 
administration of martial law in the Kandian 
provinces ceased. 

We purposely omitted mentioning the capture 
of the Dalada relic, which they say is a tooth of 
their god Buddha, and which they hold sacred, until 
this page. This relic was taken, towards the end 
of the late rebellion, and, trifling as this incident 
may appear at the first glance, we believe we are 
borne out by facts, that it is owing to the circum- 
stance of having given up the possession of the 
Dalada relic to the charge of the priests, which 
has, in a great measure, occasioned the late insur- 
rection in Ceylon, 1848, the full particulars of 
which will be given subsequently. The Cinga- 
lese tradition is, ^^ That whoever obtains posses- 
sion of that sacred relic, obtains with it the 
government of Ceylon ;" and no sooner was it 
made known that the Dalada was in the posses- 
sion of the British, than the followers of Buddha 
returned to their allegiance, district after district 
laid down their arms, and acknowledged the 
sovereignty of Great Britain. A new convention 



342 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE • 

was now entered into with the chiefs, by which it 
was stipulated — 

'*That all personal services, excepting those 
required for making and repairing roads and 
bridges, should be abolished, and that all taxes 
should be merged into one, a tax of one-tenth 
on the produce of the paddy-land. That justice 
should be administered by the board of commis- 
sioners at Kandy, and by the agents of gOTem- 
ment in the different provinces, aided by the 
native Dissaaves, who were henceforth to be 
remunerated, not by the contributions of the peo- 
ple, but by fixed salaries." 

In January, 1820, a man of the second caste 
assumed the title of king of the Kandians, and 
collected some few of the Yeddahs, or aborigines, 
at Bintenne, and created new disturbances ; but, 
as the self-elected king of the Kandians was 
apprehended immediately after, his assumption 
of that dignity, his followers quickly dispersed. 

The Dalada relic was placed in the keeping of 
the government-agent of the Kandian provinces, 
and was publicly exhibited to the priests and 
people, for worship, at stated periods. Whether 
it was consistent with our character as a Chris- 
tian nation to have aught to do with, or sanction 
the heathen vTO^ship, of a piece of yellow ivory, 
we will not enter upon here. 

The island was now in a state of tranquillity; for 



CEYLON AND THE CINOALESB. 343 

although trivial disturbances took place amongst a 
few, which were quelled as soon as they arose, 
the nation appeared to be satisfied with our go- 
vernment. Attention was directed to the forma- 
tion of schools of instruction for the natives, both 
by our government and by the missionaries, and 
attempts were made to induce them to embrace 
Christianity. Literary and agricultural societies 
were formed; means of communication, by the 
formation of roads from one part of the island 
to the other, were planned and commenced; 
bridges were thrown over rivers ; and every 
facility offered for the transit of passengers and 
merchandise. In short, we tried to convince 
the natives of Ceylon, by every honourable 
means, that we were not a nation of warlike 
bigots, or of grasping adventurers ; but wished 
to improve their moral condition, and contribute 
to their happiness, whilst they conducted them- 
selves as loyal subjects of the crown of Great 
Britain, to whom they had sworn allegiance. 

The political horizon of Ceylon remained un- 
clouded for years ; the colony gradually improved 
under our management. In 1832, the ex-king of 
Kandy died at Vellore, of dropsy ; and until 1835 
no event occurred worthy of especial remark. 
In the January of that year, MoUegodde, the 
first adikar, and Dunewille Looko Banda, who 
was related maternally to one of Sri Wikrama's 
queens, with several others of lesser note^ were 



344 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

charged with high treason, an^ for having con- . 
spired against our gOTemment. A mass of con- 
tradictory evidence was gone into ; and, although 
they were acquitted, little doubt remained on the 
minds of many that a conspiracy had been con- 
cocted, but which had been frustrated before the 
plot had ripened. Regular lists were found, 
appropriating the various places held under our • 
government to the Kandian chiefs. This the 
officials did not approve of, and still less did 
they admire the list whereon the names of their 
wives were inscribed, each lady being allotted 
to some particular chief, and to those of the high- 
est rank, two of England*s matrons were appor- 
tioned. 

The conspirators tried to prove that these 
documents were forged ; and did so to the satis- 
faction of the jury, who acquitted them. M0II6- 
godde lost his rank as first adikar, another chief 
being appointed in his stead; but he was rein- 
stated in his office in March, 1843, having given 
proofs, during the intervening period, of his loy- 
alty. Dunewille Looko Banda was also taken 
into the service of our government; and in this 
year died the son of Sri Wikrama, in exile. 

From the year 1835 until 1848, no attempt at 
revolt, or rebellion, agitated Ceylon. Since the 
colony had come into our possession, various 
charitable, scientific, scholastic, literary, and 
agricultural societies were established; a legis- 



• 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 345 

\ •' lative council was formed, and a supreme court 

t /- ■ instituted. In short, Ceylon enjoys all the ad- 
vantages of our most flourishing colony ; and 
by many political .economists is considered the 

' ^ . most promising (Colony we possess. 

• In justice to the late efficient governor of 

Ceylon, Lieutenant-General Sir Colin Campbell, 

« ' who assumed that appointment in 1841, we must 

state what his exertions have done for that co- 
lony. He found it a burthen to the mother 
country. The valuable land sold at five shillings 
per acre ; and government servants enriched 
themselves at the expense of the country, by 
purchasing this laud, turning it into coffee and 
sugar estates, and neglecting their official duties, 
(to discharge which they were paid by their 
country,) they devoted their time to the culti- 
vation and improvement of these estates. Go- 
vernor Sir Colin Campbell prohibited, by a 
government minute, the sale of crown land 
under the sum of twenty shillings per acre ; 
and at this advanced price found numerous and 
ready purchasers, and frequently a much higher 
sum was realized. By the unbiassed representa- 
tions of the Governor to the home government, 
civil servants were forbidden to purchase or re- 
tain land for agricultural purposes, and were 
required to devote their whole time and atten- 
tion to the duties of the respective offices which 
they held under government. 

q5 



346 CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

Sir Colin Campbell met with most determined 
opposition on this point from the colonial corps ; 
and vituperation of the most disgraceful nature 
was heaped upon his head, by those members of 
it who were amassing large fortunes by these 
agricultural pursuits, to the neglect of their of- 
ficial duties. Undauntedly, however, did Sir 
Colin Campbell pursue the straight path of 
honest duty to his sovereign and country, and 
was rewarded by his own conscience, and by the 
approbation of all right-minded men. Sir Colin 
Campbell used every exertion in his power to 
have the salaries of the Ceylon civil servants in- 
creased, and was successful in his efforts; thus 
benefiting the men who had so lavishly censured 
him for performing, to the best of his ability, the 
duties of his office as Governor of the colony, by 
insisting that the paid servants of the crown 
should perform those duties that required their 
undivided attention, and for which they were re- 
munerated. 

lff^l846, Ceylon was constituted, by letters 
patent under the great seal of England, an 
episcopal see, by the title of the Bishopric of 
Colombo, as previously it had been included in 
the see of Madras ; and the Rev. Dr. Chapman 
was appointed the first bishop. The bishop ar- 
rived in Colombo in 1846. We believe that the 
exertions of this truly pious, benevolent man, have 
done more towards the conversion of the heathen. 



GBYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 347 

since his arrival, than had been effected during 
the previous centuries, that nominal Christians 
had formed settlements in Ceylon. 

Every part of his diocese is visited constantly 
by Dr. Chapman ; unwearied in his duty, un- 
daunted by the fear of contagion, he >^visits hos- 
pitals, jails, and the unwholesome jungle — sedu- 
lously learning the native language, whereby he 
may be enabled to communicate with and preach 
to the Cingalese, without the aid or intervention 
of an interpreter. He has made the natives 
understand that his is not to be a temporary 
residence, but that it is bis intention to pass his 
life among them. No words can express his 
resolve so beautifully as his own, and which he 
addressed to a native congregation, shortly after 
he entered upon the duties of his sacred ojBice — 
" I have come to Ceylon to live among you, and 
learn your language; with God*s blessing to 
benefit you, and with his permission to die in 
your country." Possessing great piety, learning, 
and humility. Dr. Chapman is blessed witB^great 
eloquence, fluency of language, facility of express- 
ing ideas, extreme urbanity of manner, unbounded 
benevolence, a most prepossessing exterior ; and 
devotes the whole of his time and attention to the 
arduous duties of his office. 

In conclusion, we can only say, that Dr. Chap- 
man is a worthy, though humble, follower of his 
Great Lord and Master ; that his appointment 



348 CEYLON AND TBE CINGALESE. 

83 bishop, and residence in the colony, are calcu- 
lated to benefit professing Christians, as well as 
the benighted heathen, for the force of his ex-- 
ample^ coupled with his precepts, must influence 
and counteract, to a great extent, the effect which 
the lax morality practised by many Europeans 
in Ceylon, has had on the hearts and minds of 
the rising generation, both of English and Cin- 
galese. 

Nothing worthy of remark occurred until 
1848, when the rebellion broke out which has 
drawn so much attention to the colony ; to 
understand the events connected with it clearly 
the reader must remember, that Ceylon is the 
stronghold of the purest and most enthusiastic 
Buddhism, and the priests of this religion have 
long been dissatisfied with a government over 
which they have no control, but with which 
until lately they might have considered them- 
selves in some measure connected. This con- 
nection was severed when our government sur- 
rendered to the priests the custody of the tooth 
of Buddha, which had ever been regarded as the 
palladium of Cingalese sovereignty. The aban- 
donment of this sacred charge on the part of the 
government has been regarded by its present 
sacerdotal guardians, not only as a breach of 
faith, and a mark of great disrespect, but also as 
an exhibition of political weakness ; in reference 
to the ancient tradition before referred to, namely. 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 349 

that whoever possessed this sacred relic should 
govern the island. 

In 1842, the priests fomented rebellion, and 
sacceeded in raising a puppet- pretender to the 
Kandian throne, who with many of his adherents 
were tried and convicted of high treason ; and 
the former made a full confession of his guilt, as 
well as the manner in which he had been in- 
duced to lend his name to the rebels. The dame 
of rebellion thus raised was only smothered, and 
the priests availed themselves of the dissatisfac- 
tion expressed by the people at certain financial 
regulations introduced in 1848, known as the 
road-tax, gun-tax, dog-tax, and slop-tax, to refan 
the smouldering combustibles. 

In this effort the chiefs were not inactive, and 
early in July of the same year Gonegallegodde 
Banda, stated to be a descendant of Rajah 
Singha, who had been previously sojourning in 
the house of a native, following the occupation 
of a wederaltty or doctor, resided for five days in 
Kandy, acting as the chief leader of the mal- 
contents. While therci he was an inmate of the 
Dalada Maligawa, whose priests maintained him. 
He had figured in two previous rebellions, and 
was tried for high treason in 1843, and acquitted. 

On the 6th of July a large concourse of people, 
amounting it is said to four thousand, assembled 
from various districts in Kandy, stating that they 
desired to have an interview with Mr. BuUer, 



n 



350 G£YLON AMD THE CINGALESE. 

the government agent ; this gentleman, on re- 
ceiving intelligence, went to meet them at the 
Cutcherry, but owing to their violence he was 
obliged to retire to the Maligawe. Here he 
attempted to address the multitude without ef- 
fect. Many of the crowd became excited with 
ardent spirits, and their violence increasing, the 
police attempted unsuccessfully to disperse the 
mob and arrest the ringleaders. 

The civil anthorities were met by the people 
with determined resistance, and the latter be- 
coming more and more irritated, armed them- 
selves with branches of trees, and knocked down 
and injured some of the police. A company of 
the 15th regiment was then called out, who 
assisted the police to disperse the people. The 
apparent object of the crowd was to extort a pro- 
mise, that the obnoxious tax ordinances should 
be repealed. It is a remarkable fact, that none 
of the headmen or chiefs *wer^ present on this 
occasion ; and there can be but little doubt, that 
having stimulated the people to take this step, 
they abstained from implicating themselves pub- 
licly with the demonstration, while they anxiously 
awaited the result of the movement. 

The local authorities now took effective mea- 
sures to inform the people, that the colonial 
secretary^ Bir Emerson Tennent, would receive 
the chiefis iemd small deputations from the various 
districts, at the Pavilion, on the 8th of July. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 3S1 

In the meantime every precautionary measure, 
which was practicable, was adopted to preserve 
the public peace. Special constables, both Euro- 
pean and Malays, were sworn in, notices were 
posted at the various entrances to the town, and 
at the ferries, intimating, that no persons bearing 
arms would be permitted to enter. As evil-de- 
signing persons had circulated a list of thirty 
articles, on which they asserted the government 
were about to levy taxes, the government agent 
issued a notice contradicting it^ and giving correct 
information, relative to the new taxes. 

It having been intimated to Sir Emerson Ten- 
nent in the early part of the day on the 8th of 
JuJy, that the people, who were assembling in 
the Esplanade, were principally composed of the 
inhabitants of Upper and Lower Doombera, he 
sent for the Ratra-mahatmeers of those districts, 
who stated that they had failed to counteract the 
false reports, or inddce their people to remain 
quiet. On hearing this reply. Sir Emerson Ten- 
nent informed them, that as they had lost control 
over the people, they had forfeited the confidence 
of the government, and he accordingly suspended 
them from their respective offices. 

In the afternoon of this day, the colonial secre- 
tary entered the Pavilion, which was crowded 
with the chiefs and their followers. He ad- 
dressed the meeting at considerable length in 
favour of the new ordinances, applauding the 



352 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

chiefs, who had supported the governmeDt, and 
expressing the dissatisfaction which must inevi- 
tably follow an opposite course. After the meet- 
ing had broken up, the chiefs and their attendants 
dispersed among the crowd, about two thousand 
in number, which gradually disappeared, and the 
town was restored to perfect quiet. 

When the people withdrew from Kandy, Gone-, 
gallegodde Banda retired for a day into a jungle 
called Danha Oalla, where he received the homage 
of a large body of Kandians as their king. From 
thence he proceeded to the forest of Dambool, 
from which he was escorted by an armed body of 
men, sent by Golla-bella Ratra-mahatmeer, to a 
cave in the forest of Dahe Yatte Madda Gallinna, 
to await reinforcements. Here the pretender was 
joined by four hundred followers well armed and 
provisioned, and an ola was written by his order 
to Golla-bella Ratra-mahatmeer, desiring him to 
state why he had not forwarded clothing for his 
use ; on the 26th of July an answer was sent, 
accompanied with various articles for the pre- 
tender's use, stating that they were for " My 
Lord the King, until such time as you shall pass 
Ballacadua, where I shall join you with the Maha 
Nilime and clothes for five kings." 

The following day, the pretender came with his 
armed escort to Dambool Vehara, and at half- 
past eleven o^clock a.m. he was invested with the 
sword of state^ and proclaimed King of Kandy. 



CETLON AMD THE CINOAIfESE. 353 

The morning of the 28th, the whole body 
marched to Selleman Galla, where a palanqueen 
was brought, volleys were fired, and other rejoic- 
ings took place. From this place the pretender 
proceeded in his palanqueen with an increased 
retinue to Pallaputwelle, where they halted for 
the night. On his arrival on the following day 
at Wariapulla, the pretender abandoned his pa- 
lanqueen, and proceeded during the night with 
four of his attendants to Doomborka Owelle, to 
visit EttepuUa Banda, leaving the command of 
his small army to his prime minister. 

It was not until the 27tb, however, that a re- 
port reached the authorities at Kandy, that the 
people were assembled at Matel6 " with swords 
and fire-arms," and that a king had been crowned 
at Dambool the preceding night at the fortunate 
hour. It was further ascertained that the post- 
office communication was stopped on the Trinco- 
malee road,- and crowds of armed people were 
assembling in all directions. On the 28th, Mr. 
Buller proceeded in person to Matel6 to ascer- 
tain the true state of afiairs, and was met a short 
distance from Kandy by the police magistrate of 
Matele, who was hastening to Kandy for assist- 
ance. This gentleman brought the intelligence 
that four thousand armed men were in the neigh- 
bourhood of Matel6, who had entered the town 
at noon on that day in a riotous manner, beating 
tom-toms and blowing horns, drove out the police 
stationed there, destroyed the public buildings. 



354 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

inclading the magistrate's residence, and burnt 
down the Bazaar. 

Mr. Bailer hastened back to Kandy accom- 
panied by Mr. Waring, and at ten o'clock the 
same night a detachment consisting of one cap« 
tain, two subalterns, four sergeants, one bugler, 
and one hundred rank and file of her Majesty's 
16th regiment ; and one captain, four subalterns, 
four sergeants, and one hundred rank and file of 
the Ceylon Rifles, under the command of Captain 
Lillie of the Ceylon Rifles, an old and expe- 
rienced officer, well acquainted with the country, 
and accompanied by the government agent, and 
deputy Queen's advocate. 

The progress of the troops was veiled in dark- 
ness, until their arrival at the Rest-house of Balla- 
cadua, when the day broke. After the detachment 
had marched nine miles and a half, a shot was fired 
within a few yards of them, which did not take 
efiect. Two shots were fired half a mile further 
on the road, close to the rear of the troops, which 
possibly were only intended as signals. Another 
shot was fired half way down the pass from a 
gingal gun with the same object in view. A 
mile from Matel^, some armed natives were 
observed on the side of the Matele road, and 
on that leading to Wariapoola. Those in front 
seemed disposed to parley, and some of the troops 
went up to them unmolested ; while some were 
ordered to move on their flank to get to their 
rear ; a few of the rebels escaped, but most of 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 355 

those in front were taken prisoners. The insur- 
gents who were concealed in the jungle on the 
side of the hill, now commenced firing, by whom 
one man of the 15th regiment was slightly 
wounded. 

The Rifles now entered the jungle on the 
flank of the rebels ; a conflict ensued, in which 
the latter were completely routed, with the loss 
of six killed and several wounded, and eight of 
the latter were taken prisoners. The 15th regi- 
ment remained on the high road in reserve. The 
jungle was cleared by the Rifles, after which it 
was ascertained that the insurgents had pos- 
sessed themselves of a bungalow on the Waria- 
poola estate, about half a mile from the high 
road. Captain Lillie marched with the Rifles to 
attack them, under the guidance of Mr. Adams, 
a volunteer civilian. The natives, however, for- 
sook the house as soon as the party came in 
sight ; the latter pursued them, and were fired 
upon by a party of rebels stationed in the jungle 
on their flanks, most happily without eflect. 

Here the palanqueen of the pretender was 
found, and broken in pieces by the Malays, be* 
fore Captain Lillie could save it. Some thirty 
pounds of gunpowder were also discovered ; and 
in the verandah of the bungalow, Mr. Baker, the 
superintendent of the estate, was found tied by 
his legs and arms to the railing, suffering great 
agony from the tightness of the ligatures and the 
position he was kept in by the ropes : on being 



356 CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 

released his skin was found to be quite disco- 
loured ; he was then removed to Matel6 for 
medical aid. 

Captain Lillie returned the next day to Kandy 
with the detachment of the 15th regiment, leav- 
ing that of the Ceylon Rifles under the command 
of Captain Watson, to protect Matele. 

On the 29th of July, a proclamation was issued 
offering a reward of £150 for the apprehension 
of the pretender, and placing the Kandian dis- 
tricts under martial law. On the 28tfa, an urgent 
application was made for military assistance from 
Kurnegalle, which is about twenty-five miles from 
Kandy, but owing to the troops which had been 
dispatched to Matel6, Colonel Drought was un- 
able to accede to it. 

On the following day, however, one of the 
magistrates came in person to seek assistance, 
when thirty men and two officers of the Ceylon 
Rifles were dispatched ; on their arrival after a 
forced march, they found Kurnegalle already in 
possession of the insurgents. The Cutcherry had 
been entered and plundered, all the records and 
papers were being burnt or torn, and the mob 
were in the act of breaking open the treasure- 
chest, when the troops advanced upon them. 
The Court House had been plundered and its 
records destroyed, the gaol had been broken 
open and the prisoners liberated, while the ba- 
zaar was burnt down, and nearly every building 
more or less damaged. 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 357 

The Rifles opened a fire upon the armed mob, 
who attacked them in return as they approached, 
but soon after took to flight : twenty prisoners 
were taken, and six-and-twenty bodies of the 
insurgents were afterwards buried. Notwith^ 
standing this loss, the rebels, amounting to four 
thousand strong, made a second attack upon the 
town two days later, and after sufiering loss were 
again driven out by the Rifles ; and on the same 
day they made another equally unsuccessful at- 
tempt, with some further loss, but no casualty 
occurred on either of these occasions to the 
Malay troops. 

After the afiray at Wariapoola, the Pretender 
proceeded to Eleadua with a few followers, where 
he remained until he received an ola and provi- 
sions from Dulledewe Maha Nileme, when he 
immediately started for Kurnegalle, at which 
place he arrived in time to lead on the second 
attack. After the defeat, he turned towards 
Dambool, but for some unknown cause he altered 
his course and entered the forest of Madaoelputta, 
where he remained for some time in concealment, 
being closely pursued by various detachments 
sent out in search for him. 

We must here break the narrative of events in 
Kandy, as they occurred in chronological order, 
and request our readers to accompany us to 
Colombo, to enable them clearly to understand 
the causes of the late rebellion. 



^ 



358 CBTLON AND THE CIN6ALESB. 

A newspaper, called the ** Observer," is pub- 
lished in Colombo, whose editor for several years 
has endeavoured to excite a spirit of opposition, 
amongst the Burgher and Cingalese community, 
against all the measures of the local government, 
and of jealousy against the European inhabitants. 
This newspaper has a large circulation therefore 
amongst that portion of the community to whom 
it is particularly addressed, and especially the 
Burghers, to which class, almost all the proctors 
and notaries belong. On the 3rd of July, 1848, 
a letter was published in the ** Observer," in the 
Cingalese language, purporting to be translated 
from the English, and signed ** an Englishman," 
which was prefaced by certain observations of the 
editor ; we subjoin a literal translation of both. 

** We have pleasure in publishing a letter 
written by an English gentleman, who is kindly 
disposed to men, without distinction of colour or 
race, concerning the injustice of the new taxes 
lately imposed by government. The Cingalese 
people should consider, that to all persons, sub- 
ject to the English government, there is a legal 
right of making known their pleasure, before 
they expend money in paying taxes. Therefore, 
those persons who say, that to Cingalese men 
there is not understanding enough to establish in 
Ceylon a council including natives to represent 
the inhabitants, should consider the present con- 

8 



CEYLON AND TH£ CINQALlSSE* 359 

stitution of the coancil of France, and its results. 
Certainly the Cingalese people are not more an- 
learned or foolish than the greater part of the 
individuals, who elected members for the French 
council. Certainly the Cingalese men are not 
more unlearned or foolish than the Tamul men 
of Pondicherry belonging to France. It is now 
appointed that a Tamul man of that country 
should represent the inhabitants in the French 
council. If the men of this country wish to be 
freed from paying improper taxes and other 
wrongs, let them request a council, where they 
may be able to discuss their affairs, not nominally, 
but in a right manner. 

'^ In order to show the wrongs inflicted on the 
inhabitants of this country, and the justice which 
they should receive, we translate this letter into 
Cingalese, and publish it. 

(Signed) " We the Persons who publish 

the paper called the 
* Colombo Observer." ' 

** To the Gentlemen publishing the * Colombo 

Observer' 

" Gentlemen, 
" By residing in an out-station, and constantly 
conversing with the natives by privilege, I have 
an opportunity of knowing the great displeasure 
that is stirred up among the inhabitants concern* 
ing the new taxes lately imposed upon them, and 



360 CETLON AMD THB CINGALESE. 

also their thoughts and words on the subject. 
Further, if the government dare by forcible means 
to collect these taxes, I can think that the dis- 
pleasure among the inhabitants will be much 
more increased, and from this many serious con- 
sequences will follow. Although there are many 
reasons on account of which the people should 
resist the government appointed from time to 
time, still up to this time they, without manifest- 
ing an opposition^ have been obedient. However, 
if they should pay the money required for these 
taxes, so unjust, and impossible to be borne, 
lately imposed by government, obediently, and 
sit quiet without imposing their whole power, 
the Cingalese people will not only be considered 
a race of slaves, obedient to everything, just or 
unjust, done by government, but the world will 
not regard them as a race of men of good mind, 
and submitting to justice, and not to injustice 
{u e. to justice only). No person says that it is 
not right for government to collect taxes for the 
protection of the people, but should not this 
collection of taxes be according to the ability of 
the rich and the poor inhabitants ? 

" Many persons are displeased on account of the 
taxes* collected from the people of England, 
and it is not proper to impose such taxes unless 
the government be very poor ; however, we can- 

* By this tax we mean a portion of the annual income of 
the English people paid to government. 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 361 

not say that it is altogether unjust, since they are 
collected according to the circumstances of the 
rich and the poor. In England they are not 
collected from hundreds of thousands (lacs) of 
workmen and poor. They collect Id. on each 
£\ of the yearly income of the rich only, but, 
according to the taxes lately appointed in Ceylon^ 
the poorest men will have to pay the new tax of 
Ss. in the £1. 

" Is there a greater injustice than this ? All 
persons know that there are thousands of inha- 
bitants in this Island, who do not possess three or 
four cocoa-nut trees, or the fourth or fifth part of 
a field, and who do not receive into their hands 
10«. in the year. However, according to the 
new taxes, such people are bound to pay Is, or 
8^. yearly to government. A gun is a very 
necessary thing for the protection of their crops. 
By some poor people the gun is the only valu- 
able article possessed. To rear a dog is also 
necessary ; and for these 45. must be paid, toge- 
ther with the 6rf. paid for writing the certificate ; 
the gun-tax is 3«., and for the dog 1^ ; and again 
3«. are collected yearly from each person for 
making roads. If there be more than one dog, 
there is another charge. 

"In this manner, a poor person will have to pay 
7^. or 8«. to government. This sum is sufficient 
for the maintenance of one person for two 
months. If other persons were to pay in this 

VOL. I. a 



362 CETLON AND THB CINGALESE. 

manner, a European who receives £300 annu- 
ally must pay £60, or two months' pay, for new 
taxes; he who receives £600 must pay £100. 
An English padre (clergyman) receiving £700 a 
year, must pay £1 16, and a little more ; an agent 
receiving £l000, must pay £166, and a little 
more. The gentleman, Emerson Tennent, Great 
Secretary, must pay about £500^ and the Gover- 
nor £1.000. 

" Some may say that 7^. or 8«. are not sufficient 
to maintain a single man for two months, but I 
know very well that to the poor people in the 
Galle and Jaffna districts this sum is quite suffi- 
cient for two months. Very well ; let us say 
that Is. or 8^. are sufficient for the expense of 
one month, yet, according to this, what a great . 
and unbearable sum goes to the government 
yearly ! 

" What European is there who submits to this 
payment ? Even when there is a war-rumour, 
or when the government is heavily poor, no 
European will submit to such an unjust payment. 
But these taxes are imposed, not only at a time 
when not only is there peace, but when the 
people should be relieved as much as possible 
from other heavy taxes paid to government. 
What, theui is the intention of the Governor, 
since he lays such a heavy burthen upon the 
poor, and delivers the rich from it ? 

*^The saying that the collection of this tax is 



CETLON AND THE CINGALESE. 368 

imposed by the unanimous vote of the legislative 
and executive coutieils of this island, is not a true 
saying. The government is trying to make even 
those gentlemen of the Legislative Council, not 
belonging to government, to agree to any thing 
that is done ; those gentlemen of that Council 
who are under government cannot oppose 
government on account of this. Though there 
is a saying that this matter is sanctioned (ap« 
pointed) by the Council, it is not a true saying. 

'* The government of Ceylon is doing injustice, 
like the government of Russia. I see no differ- 
ence between those two governments except in 
name. It is now understood and acted upon by 
many countries in the world, that when people 
pay taxes to a government, they must consider 
whether it is a tax that can be borne by the peo- 
ple, and that they mtist have the privilege of ex- 
pressing their opinion to government, and also 
whether the money raised by the tax is vainly 
spent) or whether it is spent to the advantage of 
the people. Not long ago millions of the people 
received this right : some Cingalese people wbo 
understood things right to be done, expected that 
they would receive a part of this right; but, 
according to circumstances, it now appears that 
in proportion as other races are delivered from 
injustice, more and more injustice is coming 
upon the inhabitants of this country. 

" Now I say, is it proper that the Cingalese 

R 2 



864 CETLON AND THE CIN6ALESB. 

people should submit to such severe injustice ? 
Will they do so? It is altogether improper to 
submit. I hope they will not act so. I think the 
Cingalese people will show they are not a race of 
slaves, without doing (not doing) such severe 
things as Europeans lately did in order to be 
delivered from injustice. Justice will be done to 
them if the reasons against injustice are rightly 
expressed by petitions to the great Legislative 
Council, called the Parliament of England. I 
think the Cingalese people know this, and I have 
no doubt they will believe it. Petitions should 
be written, and sent to the different districts of 
the Island, and signed by all collectively. Let 
all the inhabitants of Ceylon demand of the En- 
glish government to be delivered from injustice, 
and to have justice done. 

" Gentlemen, who print newspapers, I request 
you will publish to the Cingalese under the pay- 
ment of taxes like a burthen, that the govern- 
ment is doing injustice, and that you will inform 
the people of high office, that injustice, as a devil 
(or demon of injustice) driven from the place 
where he formerly was* will not be permitted to 
come and live in this Island, If you do so, Cin- 
galese people are not an ungrateful race. 

« I am, 

" An Englishman." 

Theforegoing wasnotconfined to the circulation 
of the " Colombo Observer," but they were struck 



^ ^m^ ^MM.^jLj.Aa ^m^^^a^^m'^ ^i j,. "i n n , i _"-i *^ 



CEYLON AND THE CINGALESE. 365 

off on slips of paper, which were extensively dis- 
tribated amongst the people even in the most 
remote parts of the country, by political agitators ; 
and in Kandy they were known to have been 
explained, and enlarged upon, to the natives by 
dissatisfied or disappointed Europeans, connected 
with the coffee estates. We must bear in mind 
that the publication of the letter took place three 
days before the disturbances broke out in Kandy, 
and such a document, with its notes and com- 
ments, must have been calculated to excite the 
minds of the people, upon whom it had a more 
injurious effect from their belief that it was 
penned by an Englishman, 

An ordinance had been passed about the same 
time with those already complained of, which 
was intended *' to provide for the registration and 
license of certain traders," to resist which an 
attempt was made by the wealthier shopkeepers, 
by whom a combination was formed to intimi- 
date their more necessitous brethren, to force 
them to close their shops, and to prevent the sale 
of the necessaries of life. The fear of this event 
enabled these wealthy conspirators to effect a 
rapid sale of all their own stock at exorbitant 
prices. Eventually the poorer class of shop- 
keepers were suffered to continue their trade 
uninterruptedly, while the conspirators, to whom 
the payment of one pound per annum could not 
be an object, contented themselves with present- 



366 CBYJUON AND THE CaNGALSSB. 

ing a petition to the Governor, praying the 
suspension of the law, which of course eould not 
be acceded to. 

At the same time* a large number of copies of 
a petition purporting to be addressed to the 
House of Commons, mis-stating and exaggerating 
facts, calculated to inflame the minds of the 
people, were secretly circulated among the 
natives in the vicinity of Colombo, as well as in 
more remote districts, by agents employed to 
obtain signatures. The substance, expressions, 
and misrepresentations, contained in it, so very 
closely corresponded with a letter, which subse- 
quently appeared in the '' Colombo Observer," 
bearing the signature of Mr. Elliott, the editor, 
that he has been generally considered as the 
author of the document, and the instigator of its 
circulation. The following is also the translation 
of a document, copies of which were circulated 
with great activity throughout the villages for 
many miles round Colombo. 

" Notice. 

" His Excellency the Governor has, for the 
present, enacted several taxes to be levied from 
the inhabitants of this island, viz. : — 

" Upon fire-arms, dogs, men, boats, and bou- 
tiques (shops) ; and, in addition to this, it is also 
enacted to levy, in a few months more, a tax 
upon trees, lands, cattle, and all useful quadru- 



GBYLOH AND THB GINGALESB. 367 

peds. We, the inhabitants of several villages, 
have consulted and agreed upon a petition about 
the matter. 

" It is therefore kindly requested, that the in- 
habitants (both great and small) of all the villages 
will assemble at seven o'clock in the morning of 
Wednesday, the 26th instant, prepared for the 
same.'^ 

The authors of this movement most cautiously 
kept themselves out of view. In the meantime, 
precautionary measures were taken by the 
government, and, amongst the rest, a circular was 
addressed to the headmen, reminding them, that 
they would be held responsible for the conduct of 
the people. 

On the morning of the 26th, the people poured 
in large numbers towards the town from the 
neighbourhood and from distant villages, and as- 
sembled at a place called Borellae, a spot where 
several roads met, close to the Wellicadde gaol, 
about a mile from the tawn. The mob having 
collected, marched upon the police, who were 
drawn across the road to prevent their approach 
to the town. Their intention was evidently to 
force a passage through the civil force, tne super- 
intendent was struck down, and several of his 
men more or less injured. In the midst of the 
contest, Mr. £lliott arrived, and holding up 
hands was recognised by the mob, many of 



368 CBTLON AND THB CINGALBSE. 

whom were iatoxieated, and bis infiaence became 
immediately apparent, as tbey were soon tranquil- 
lized, and listened witb great attention and satisfac- 
tion to bis barangae. In the midst of this pro- 
ceeding, the Gorernor, accompanied by the major- 
general and some troops, arrived, but finding the 
excitement of the people quelled, the Governor 
and military soon after returned to Colombo. 

The ostensible object of this meeting was to 
petition, and before the crowd dispersed a great 
number of signatures were obtained on separate 
sheets of paper, which were undertaken to be 
presented by Mr. Elliott, along with a document 
in Cingalese previously prepared ; indeed it has 
been stated that these signatures were all attached 
to the petition at the office of the " Observer " 
previously to the meeting. This gentleman is 
reported to have demeaned himself upon the oc- 
casion, in such a manner as to induce a belief, 
that he was accidentally present ; but he is stated 
to have shown that he had such influence over 
those who guided the mob, that little doubt was 
entertained of his being the instigator of the 
movement. 

Some of the paragraphs of this petition, which 
was afterwards presented to the governor by Mr. 
Elliott, recapitulate much of the substance con- 
tained in the letter of the '* Englishman," and 
concludes with the following sentence : '^ But if 



CBTLON AND TBE CINGALBSE. 369 

your Excellency will not mercifully give us a 
favourable reply, we certainly will not obey any 
of these new laws." 

Lord Torrington states, that had he been aware 
of the concluding paragraph, he would have de- 
clined to receive it, and would have held Mr. 
Elliott responsible for the presentation of such a 
document. The editor of the " Observer '* ex- 
cuses himself on the grounds that the petition 
being in Cingalese, he had only an imperfect and 
general knowledge of its contents, and his own 
name was not appended to it. This defence must 
be admitted, by the most prejudiced mind, to be 
a criminal admission by Mr. Elliott that he had 
omitted a public duty, by neglecting to inform 
himself fully of the opinions and wishes of those 
whom he volunteered to support. 

The government having been informed that 
other meetings would be attempted, under the 
plea of petitioning the Governor, the following 
notice was issued : — 

" Information having been received that the 
inhabitants of the interior, and of some of the 
Korlls in the neighborhood of Colombo, are, 
unHer the advice and encouragement of evil-dis- 
posed persons, assembling in large numbers, 
under pretence of presenting petitions to the 
Governor. Notice is hereby given, that his Ex- 
cellency the Governor, although willing at all 

ft 6 



370 CE7LON AND THE CINGALESE. 

times to receive and consider petitions from any 
of the inhabitants, if presented in a proper 
manner, will not allow large assemblages of the 
people for this purpose, and he will take strong 
measures to prevent meeting^s of this nature, 
which can tend only to cause breaches of the 
peace. 

** By His Excellency's command, 

(Signed) " W. Morris, 
*' Acting assistant Colonial Secretary. 

" Colonial Secretary's Office, Colombo, 
July 28, 1848." 

The government took active measures, by 
posting police and military in the vicinity of 
those places where meetings were proposed to be 
held, and by this means the peace of the western 
province was preserved. 

But, to return to Kandy. Reinforcements 
marched to the proclaimed districts from Co- 
lombo ; the military pensioners, of whom there 
are about three hundred in the Island, were called 
out ; two divisions of road-pioneers were brought 
in to assist the troops and escort the baggage, 
while the " Lady Mary Wood " steamer was 
despatched to Madras, and returned with three 
companies of her Majesty's 37th regiment and a 
large supply of ammunition. 

It must have been also gratifying to the 
government to find, that all the respectable in- 



CBTLON AND THE CINGALESE. 371 

habitantsof the town and neighbourhood of Kandy 
placed themselves at the disposal of the com- 
manding officer, for the protection of the town ; 
by which means he was enabled to send out de- 
tachments to various localities, where their pre- 
sence was urgently required, both as a protection 
to the Europeans and peaceably disposed amongst 
the natives, against rebels and plunderers, and as 
an encouragement to the Malabar coolees, who, 
it was feared, through terror might be driven 
from the coffee-estates. Ammunition was distri- 
buted amongst the planters, and most fortunately, 
wherever the coolees received moderate en- 
couragement, they were found to resist all inti- 
midation on the part of the Kandians. Thus, 
although nearly all the estates about Matele 
were recklessly injured and plundered, in all 
other districts, wherever the proprietors or super- 
intendents remained at their posts and encouraged 
their coolees, the properties have remained un- 
injured* 

Knowing the great importance that is placed 
by the Kandians in the possession of Buddha's 
tooth, and fearing that it might be made use of 
as a great stimulant to, if not inspire confidence 
in, the rebels, the commandant demanded the 
keys of the temple from the priests, and examined 
the shrine in the presence of the government 
agent. The object of superstitious worship had 



372 CBTLON AND THB CIKGALE8B. 

not been removed, but the commandant, deeming 
it prudent to secure integrity on the part of 
the priests, kept possession of the keys. This 
step was soon followed by an order prohibit- 
ing the beating of tom-toms, and the collecting 
of crowds in the temples. 

Several prisoners, who had been captured since 
the proclamation of martial law, were tried and 
shot ; and amongst them one of the most despe- 
rate robbers in the island, who had, on wore than 
one occasion, broken prison, and for whose appre- 
hension a reward had long previously been 
offered. This individual was the most active 
agent of, and an attendant upon, the pretender; 
he died exclaiming, *^ If the king had had three 
men about him as bold and determined as myself 
he would have been master of Kandy." 

On the 4th of August, Dingeralle Hanguran- 
ketty, who called himself the elder brother of the 
pretender, was, with several of his followers, 
taken prisoner by a party of the Ceylon rifles, in 
the neighbourhood of Kurnegalle. Amongst these 
was one Calle Banda, an ex-ratramahatmeer, 
who acted as adigar to Dingeralle, who had 
assumed the title of king in the district of the 
Seven Korles. This aspirant to royalty was shot 
on the following day, under the sentence of a 
court-martial. It is said to have been the inten- 
tion of the two brothers, who were playing the 



CEYLON AND THB CINGALBSE. 373 

parts of kings, to have united their followers at 
Karnegalle, which was frustrated by the un- 
expected arrest of Dingeralle^ 

We find that happily the disturbances were 
entirely confined to those districts where they 
first broke out, and that the loss of life was also 
limited to the unfortunate rebels. Several 
hundred prisoners were taken, of whom one 
hundred and twenty were tried by courts-martial : 
eighteen of these were shot, twenty eight tran- 
sported for various terms ; four were imprisoned 
with hard labour ; twenty-nine suffered corporal 
punishment with imprisonment ; thirty-three suf- 
fered corporal punishment alone, and eight were 
acquitted. 

The Governor having excluded in the procla- 
mation of martial law that portion of the town of 
Kandy wherein the Court House is situate, a 
special sitting of the Supreme Court was opened 
on the 28th of August, by the Chief Justice, Sir 
A. Oliphant. Of eighteen prisoners who were 
arraigned for high treason, eight were convicted, 
and the Queen^s advocate abandoned the trials of 
a similar number of prisoners on the same charge, 
holding them over for minor offences to be tried 
at the regular sessions, or gaol delivery. We 
have much pleasure in giving the followino' 
extracts from the Chief Justice's address in dis- 
charging the jury at the close of the special 
sittings, breathing as it does that humane spirit 



374 CEYLOK AND THB CINGALBSB. 

which ought to be predominant in the breast of 
every British judge. His Lordship having observed 
that the crown prosecutor had informed him that 
there were no more prisoners to be tried on that 
occasion, said, 

" It is now my duty, and I must say it is a 
pleasant one, to thank you in the name of the 
country, and of the court, for the unwearied and 
patient attention with which you have listened to 
the court, the bar, and the witnesses, during the 
investigation of these trials. Your verdicts have 
invariably been those of men of sound sense and dis- 
cretion ; and, while you have thought it your duty 
to support the laws and uphold the government 
of this country in the proper discharge of your 
functions, you have considered it also incumbent 
upon you to make recommendations to mercy, 
which will be backed by me, and I hope they 
will be allowed to have their due weight in the 
proper quarter. 

'' I am myself determined to recommend all 
the prisoners to the merciful consideration of the 
government, and thus go a step even further than 
the jury have done. I have attended to all the 
cases brought for trial, which perhaps some of 
yoo may not have been in a position to do, from 
not having sat upon the trial of all the cases ; 
and I think I can perceive with tolerable clear- 
ness the cause of this rebellion, and I venture to 
express my belief, that the origin of it is the 



CBTLON AND THS CINQALE8E. 376 

feeling remainiDg in the minds of the people that 
they are a conquered nation. It may not be the 
immediate cause, and the feeling may principally 
exist amongst the local and petty headmen, who 
are discontented because they have not a govern- 
ment of their own — the original government. 
They have not arrived at a participation of our 
feelings, and do not see the superiority of our 
government, nor the benefit of our free institu- 
tions ; but, on the contrary, would restore their 
old laws and institutions. 

*' It is quite possible that the imposition of new 
taxes fanned the flame, and precipitated them 
into the commission of this crime. The petty 
headmen availed themselves of this opportunity, 
to revive old feelings ; which in fact had never 
been lost sight of, but I trust this will never occur 
again ; indeed, I may say I feel confident there 
will be no more rebellions of this sort. 

*^ The people must see that any attempt against 
the British government is now a hopeless one, 
and, as a witness said yesterday, * that thereby 
they will only lose their lives.' For, as deposed to 
by Lieutenant Annesly, only eleven men marched 
out of Kurnegalle, and of these only two had 
shewed themselves, when thethreeorfourthousand 
Kandians assembled in their front ran away ; 
there can therefore be little fear for future occur- 
rences. But we must not teach our subjects to 
fight, war is an art too easily learnt. 



376 GETLON AND THE CINGALEBE. 

'* The legislature, I am confident, will only 
enact, in a paternal spirit, such laws and regula- 
tions as will prove beneficial to the subject ; and 
I trust they will send the schoolmaster amongst 
the people, who will educate them in the arts of 
peace, and teach them the sin and folly of taking 
up arms against lawful authorities. The duty of 
the governing and governed is mutual, the one 
paternal, and the otiier allegiant. 

"There is a large portion of this country, whose 
wants and circumstances are quite unknown, 
where no European has been seen for thirty 
years, except upon some hunting expedition. It 
is not only expedient but necessary for us to 
teach the inhabitants of these districts, that the 
white man has been sent here, not only to impose 
and collect taxes, but to elevate the moral and 
intellectual character of the people. • . . 

" The duty of a juror is a most important one 
to the community. It is the bulwark of justice 
and liberty ; and upon it depends the due admi- 
nistration of justice. The prisoner's counsel will 
sometimes press hard upon the jury for the ac- 
quittal of his client, and the counsel for the crown 
will, on the other hand, urge them for a convic- 
tion, while the judge may very often take an 
improper view of the case, for he is not exempt 
from human infirmity. 

" It is then to the sound sense of the jury alone 
that the country must look for discrimination. 



CEYLOK AND THE CINGALESE. 377 

All rests with the jury. It is for them to weigh 
the guilt and innocence of the prisoner ; and I 
can only express in conclusion my own hope, that 
all future juries in this country will weigh the 
cases which may be brought before them, with 
the same care and attention, as you have bestowed 
upon those which have been tried during the 
present sessions." 

In conformity with the opinion expressed by 
his lordship, the Chief Justice addressed the fol- 
lowing despatch to the Governor : — 

*' Colombo, September 23, 1848. 

" My Lord, — I have the honour to transmit 
herewith notes of evidence, sentence of the court, 
recommendation to mercy by the jury, and cer- 
tain petitions, in the case of the Queen v. Pene- 
lebodde Kuralle and others, and marked No. 2. 

" Also notes of the evidence, sentence of the 
court, and recommendation to mercy by the jury, 
in the case of the Queen v. Tunamalua Kekooa 
Banda Karale, and another, marked No. 3. 

" Also notes of the evidence, sentence of the 
court, recommendation to mercy by the jury, 
and certain petitions, in the case of the Queen 
V. Kandapulle Banda and others, and marked 
No. 4. 

" Also notes of the evidence, sentence of the 
court, and recommendation to mercy by the jury, 
in the case of the Queen v. Wijayasoondere Mu- 

6 



378 CEYLON AND TAB CINQALESB, 

dianselay Appoohamy and others, and marked 
No. 5. All cases of high-treason tried by me at 
the sessions lately holden at Kandy, for the 
special purpose of trying persons implicated ia 
the late rebellion. 

" I have to report to your excellency that the 
several convictions in the said cases respectively 
were obtained in due course of law. I have also 
to state that I recommend as fit and proper 
objects for your excellency's clemency, as far as 
regards the punishment of death, not only all the 
persons recommended by the jury for the reasons 
given by them, but also all the prisoners who 
have been found guilty. 

'' The most culpable of these appear to me to 
be Penelebodde Keerale, Warapitia Ettapolla 
Banda, Kandapulle Banda, Wannenayeke Mu- 
dianselagey Punchiralle, Wijaysoondere Mudian- 
selay Appoohamy, and Kolambulamulle Mo- 
hattelay Appohamy ; and under different circum- 
stances, I should have recommended your excel- 
lency to have executed such three or four of 
those last mentioned as should, after minute inves- 
tigation into their respective cases by the law- 
officers of the crown, have appeared to have been 
most guilty. 

^* To have carried out the last penalty against 
these would have been necessary for the vindica- 
tion of justice, order, and good government, and 
for an example to others. But I find that that 



OETLON AND TBB CINGALS8B. 379 

• 

example has been already made. I learn that 
some twenty persons have been already shot for 
their share in this rebellion by the courts-mar- 
tial; I therefore think, when it is considered 
that no one European has been put to death, — 
that one soldier only has been wounded by the 
rebels, — that no persons have appeared in war- 
like array against the troops since the outbreaks 
at Matel6 and Kurnegalle, — that the blood 
which has been already spilt is sufficient for all 
purposes, whether of vindication of the law, or 
for example. 

*^ I advise that the prisoners last above men- 
tioned be transported for life, that the others, not 
recommended to mercy by the jury, be trans- 
ported for fourteen years; and that those who 
have been recommended be imprisoned and kept 
to hard labour for such short periods as, after 
consideration with the crown-lawyers, may be 
deemed due to them respectively. I have, &c., 

(Signed) ** A Oliphant, C. J. 

" The Right Honourable Viscount Torrington." 

It is with deep regret that we feel ourselves 
called upon to supply the reader with the answer 
of the Governor to the foregoing recommenda- 
tion of the Chief Justice ; conceiving it as we do 
so much at variance with that spirit of justice 
tempered with mercy, which should be the cha- 
racteristic attribute of the crown, or the crown's 
representative. 



380 CEYLON AND THE CINOALBfiB. 

''The Queen's House, Colombo, September 25, 1848. 

" Sir, — I have the honour to acknowledge 
your letter of the 23rd instant, transmitting the 
notes of evidence, and sentences of death passed 
on the prisoners convicted of high treason at the 
last session of the Supreme Court held at Kandy 
for the special purpose of trying persons impli- 
cated in the late rebellion. 

" I have given to this communication, not only 
the respectful attention becoming your high 
authority, but that painful and anxious consider- 
ation inseparable from the solemn question of life 
and death, suggested by your recommendation of 
all the prisoners for a commutation of punish- 
ments. But, after soliciting the advice and 
opinions of the Executive Council, it is with re- 
luctance, that 1 feel myself unable to concur with 
you in the propriety of that course towards some 
of those men, convicted in due course of law, and 
whose guilt has been so clearly established, that 
the strict line of your duty, uninfluenced by other 
considerations, would have led you, as you state, 
to recommend to me to inflict on them the last 
penalty of the law, in vindication of justice, order, 
and good government. 

" These considerations, I must observe, are un- 
connected with the judicial question on which it 
was properly within your province to assist me 
with your advice; but, irrespective of this, I am 
compelled to say, that neither they nor the rea- 



OEYLON AND THE CINGALESE 381 

soning founded on them, which has induced you 
to adopt a different line in recommending these 
parties to mercy, has produced the same result in 
my mind ; whilst at the same time such publicity 
has unfortunately been given to your opinions on 
this subject, as would involve the government in 
embarrassment were 1 to set aside your recom- 
mendation to mercy, and leave these individuals 
for execution. 

" On the other hand, I foresee much practical 
inconvenience likely to result from this summary 
review of all the proceedings of the highest civil 
tribunal in the Island, followed by a sweeping 
modification of its judgment upon men convicted 
oi the gravest offences known to our laws. 

"Upon a deliberate calculation, however, of 
the comparative evils of either course, and feeling 
strongly the disadvantage at which I am placed 
in acting on my own judgment, I have deemed it 
best to lean to the side of mercy, and to adopt so 
much of your recommendation as regards the 
commutation of all capital punishments, substi- 
tuting transportation for life in the instance of 
those convicts, who have not been recommended 
to mercy by the juries, and transportation for 
fourteen years in all the other cases. I have, &c., 
(Signed) " Tobrington. 

" The Hon. Sir A. Oliphant, Kt., C. J." 

END OF VOL. I, 



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