Malay Sketches
Malay Sketches
Malay Sketches
"
lomcisa
D'fiCfiOEnitj
LIBRARY^
OF THE
University of California.
Class
MALAY SKETCHES
UNADDRESSED LETTERS
Crown
8vo, 6s.
Third Edition
' '
hours of the clever mongoose and tigers and crocodiles. ... Sir Frank Swettenham has a pretty
humour.
Letters'
is
The
style in
written
is
excellent."
Gazette.
8vo, 6s.
"No
Mall
Gazette.
better than
"
'
BY
SIR
JOHN LANE
9f
OF THE
MDCCCCIII
&
PRESERVATION
-,<. <r
%SS^.
ORIGINAL TO BE
RETAINED
CaL
b
-2-
COPY ADDED
MAR
'
6 1995
THIRD EDITION
Printed by
Ballantynk Hanson
London
& Edinburgh
& Co.
CONTENTS
PAGT?
INTRODUCTION
I.
II.
ix
A FISHING PICNIC
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.
XV.
XVI.
XVII.
XVIII.
XIX.
....
....
........
....
.
Amok
THE j6get
THE STORY OF MAT
XXII.
ARIS
19
25
31
38
44
53
LlTAH
64
92
83
103
BBR-HANTU
THE
KING'S
112
147
WAY
l6l
A MALAY ROMANCE
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
WITH A CASTING-NET
1 79
...
XX. A
XXI.
12
IV.
v.
THE TIGER
III.
vi.
I92
....
211
227
248
NAKODAH ORLONG
27O
EVENING
28l
163942
PREFACE
'HIS
is
is it, in
even
It is
a series
and Malay
of
character
life
in
the scenes
and amongst
the people
described.
statistics,
no history, no
no moralising, no prophecy,
awaken an
interest in
politics,
only an attempt to
known
countries in the
East.
The
traveller will
come
but while he
may
in
time,
and he
will
PREFACE
higher appreciation and
a more
artistic
touch,
paint
he
will
its
see
features
with
few of those
which,
make bold
life
trayed.
FRANK SWETTENHAM.
The Residency,
Perak, 28 March 1895.
rffl
ils
reste de la terre, et
d'une
ture
est
de
notre?"
la
espece
si
la
na-
differente
VOLTAIRI
to a land of eternal
summer,
dustan and
adventure.
and richest
is
at
her best
dawn
for
growth
still
in the
of Creation.
And Man?
Yes, he
by
is
here.
he has remained
INTRODUCTION
amongst his own
forests,
Whence
to,
name
people.
enemy has
irresistible
at last passed
your
gate,
Juggernaut of Progress
will
" civilised"
down your
of a higher morality.
moment
come
will
rapidly, but
result.
people
Isolated
is
as he
Education and
races
whose
to the
The Malays
of the
INTRODUCTION
" awakenbut they will change, and the process of
"
ing
It
in
hardly likely to
as he
is.
This
is
the
it
is
inter-
moment
of
aller
endroit habite
agreables,
nous
si
trouverons
du
nouvelles
"
'
Providence
'
'
recommandons-nous a
"
VOLTAIRI
la
OF THE
UNIVERSITY
OF
MALAY SKETCHES
I
That
or
man
cut
throat
TO
humour
his
in trouble,
and use
So
come
to those
who have
the opportunity
it.
far the
in their
own
MALAY SKETCHES
character) have fallen to few Europeans, and a very
shown an
in
whose
inclination
There are a
may
enough,
is
Scripture says
and
in the
"There
is
form of friendship
all
too rare.
ready
The
not
this,"
is
Fortunately this
is
it is
worth some
effort.
The
real
Malay
is
man, with straight black hair, a dark brown complexion, thick nose and lips, and bright intelligent
eyes.
manners are
is
worthy
is
in
it.
He
is
but he
He
slow in repaying
He
it.
is
and a
He is
consequently a gossip.
fatalist,
but he
is also
Muhammadan
very superstitious. He
is rarely an opium-
But he
smoker.
is
He is by nature a sportsman,
and kindred sports.
catches and tames elephants, is a skilful fisherman,
Above all
and thoroughly at home in a boat.
things, he is conservative to a degree, is proud and
fond of his country and his people, venerates his
ancient customs and traditions, fears his Rajas, and
resist their
to
examine them
upon him, he is
advantage. At the same time he
and,
learner,
enough
is,
if
he has time
a good imitative
His house
portance.
is
adornment
in the
Malay
something
is
that
to
it
is
in
MALAY SKETCHES
He
blood.
will
on his honour
until
for revenge.
If
he
in his
on the offender,
human being
that
this state
It is
is
will
comes
he
he cannot wreak
often been
He is
courteous
The
He
strong in him.
own
The
to
it
of
is
own.
still
Raja,
ceremony.
a custom
now
falling
into
desuetude,
marriage, a
is to
he
and make
ruler,
but
the
appointment
of
high
circumcision, ear-piercing,
As with
officers,
or
similar
low, rich
and poor
alike.
profession,
and
faith,
is
not a bigot
He
ning of religion.
the immortality of
has a sublime
faith in
God,
every individual
is
its
own
existence presents no
terrors.
Christian missionaries of
denominations have
all
is
often beautiful, a
left
some
com-
to
to
wipe
his
nose.
up
till
He
when he
if
if
his nurse
had
treated
with
is
he so desires, eats
MALAY SKETCHES
when he
is
never whipped,
is
He
later
he
sows
tion,
is
is
be avoided.
to
extravagant,
when he
Then
follows a period
and pursues
it,
or,
he seeks and obtains a position of credit and usefulness in society from which he begins at last to
earn some
profit,
he
will,
man
The Malay
little
pet
shown
forty,
of miserly
to her.
and
less consideration is
till
to say
when
about
is
five
From
old.
years
then, she is
is
When
interesting
and
work
way
fifteen or sixteen,
in
of
the padi
all
she
strange
field,
men-
often almost
is
much
fairer
in
and
teeth,
and
little
feet,
wonderful eyes
and eyebrows
The Malay
Malay boy.
girl
is
proud of a wealth
old
moon
"
of
black hair,
Unmarried
girls
are
taught
to avoid
men
riage,
it is
their
an
all
Until mar-
affectation of
or
interest
modesty
which,
in
their
This leads to
are present.
however over-
After marriage, a
woman
gets
considerable
MALAY SKETCHES
and pleasures
of
Malay
upon as a jealous, ill-conditioned
person.
The
general
those
especially
strong sense of
the
rare.
of
characteristics
of gentle
Malay women,
are
birth,
conversation, quickness
intelligent
in
humour and an
in
powers
repartee,
of
instant appreciation
hardly
They
from
ever absent
their
conversation.
language
offers,
They
sometimes
and,
up
to
fiercely
about
the
jealous,
age
of
often
forty,
extravagant
evince
an
to luxury
still
devoid of
all
Malay
sense of order.
is
many
he
is
usually
takes
much
as
If
luxury, he
wife, to divorce
part can,
kind,
classes,
children,
are
common with
people in the
upper
of property, and so
The
on.
an unknown quantity, so is
the Malay public woman
and, as there is no society
ancient maiden lady
is
bugbear, the
people
lead
lives
that
nail
are
almost
natural.
word would
All forms of
mad-
He
has even
fall
to
"
MALAY SKETCHES
am
life
might
trip
over
away
if
difficulties
wished to do so
of expression
but in
that he is
Islam,
in
spite
of
his
proneness to revenge,
sensitive
honour and
his
on a woman, and
affections
for
any reason he
is
how many
becomes
of her
physical attractions.
His reason
He
"
himself)
best,
if,
is this.
after all
will
me
wish to go further
sooner
or
later
another promises
to the conviction
new and
delightful
that life
first
with
experiences
man
to
whom
Thus some
fool
is
only after
voyage
on the ocean, she finds herself seated at the bottom
of a dry well."
It is
with truth.
ii
acquainted
II
THE TIGER
Yon
Waiting
spring
Anon.
idea of
SOME
country may best be
in
their
own
The
life.
rately sought
set to shoot
if
he
kills
seldom delibe-
is
and
is
visitor.
beauty.
a true
impression of
its
strange
THE TIGER
tion to light
of awakened
hour or
first
life, is
The
indication of
dawn
is
hills
ranges are
spreads to the
still
Western
in
The
darkness.
slopes,
light
The
hills.
fogs,
smoke and
feel
risen sun.
That grey
signal for
half-light
Malays
their
to be
stirring.
is
the
The doors
are
in
to bathe
A woman
the
leave
there
carrying a long
she
fills,
and begins
A
OF THE
f MNIVFRSITY
If
to
walk
MALAY SKETCHES
home through
Suddenly she
under
her, the
way
vessels drop from her nerveless hands, and a speechless fear turns her blood to water for there, in front
creepers
almost hiding
the
path.
of her,
is
thus
faced,
woman
sulkily
to
disappears.
returns to the
and the
Then
the spot,
and
woman,
still
weak
to the
friendly shelter
of the nearest
dwelling.
It
takes
little
time to
tell
men
news throughout
THE TIGER
the kampong, as each cluster of huts and orchards
called.
the beast.
the
kampong,
word
station
and
lead him
many
from habitations.
far
which
will
of pain,
with him
interval,
circle of
the
he
considers
safe
is
broken rudely and suddenly by a shot on the outwide surrounding ring of beaters where
skirts of the
15
MALAY SKETCHES
a young Malay has been keeping guard over a
jungle track.
only
spot
the
Instantly
find
to
rush to
the
after
firing
nearest
down
the youth
who
it.
to
and
killed
him.
regardless of the
now
it
whereas
in
to tie a
The game
is
getting serious
now and
the tiger
copse of bushes
which
it
By
it
collected.
16
The copse
is
sur-
THE TIGER
rounded and two elephants are ridden
in the
shelter.
vain hope,
wounded
when
for,
at the cover,
tiger
from his
tiger,
with a
tooth,
and,
maladies
After
want
desperate
short
and
consultation,
his friends,
heroic
a young
armed only
where he
into
execution.
lies.
in
They
steel,
wounded
b
MALAY SKETCHES
tiger is
thrusts of
The
many
circumstances,
or
spears.
Ill
A FISHING PICNIC
have given you lands to hunt
in,
LONGTILLOW
come
to a
Malay
Again,
it is
NOW
picnic.
whom
is
fifty
By
the time
fifteen elephants,
prepared to walk.
The word
hill
is
given to
rising abruptly
round the
out
make
of the
plain,
for,
way
close
into the
which
mountain-bred
lie
cliff,
MALAY SKETCHES
which with the
rice
and
salt, will
make
the coming
feast.
The road
lies
open
and
hobbled,
the
men
forest,
and
miles of
it
is
9 or
is
the
of
party
ready
for
business.
which
plan
the
is
men
make a cordon
preferred.
in,
while the
swimmers.
is
The
is to select
Two
fish that
its
women
lower end,
grasp of the
It will
fish
A FISHING PICNIC
at least
Success rewards
this
effort,
There
each.
is
weighing ten to
fifteen
pounds
known
not a large
is
tired of the
water.
There
is
the
hungry company
is
settling
itself
in
and
groups
and
salt
and
Whether
it
is
for
the
keen
appetites
31
is
is
most
not
re-
worth
MALAY SKETCHES
done
and
to the food
if
to take part in
Malay
bouille-abaisse,
know they
And now
it
is
and
rice
salt did
it
all.
open country.
The
who
young
to picnics,
what
away
is in
who know
The
is
down
to take their
A FISHING PICNIC
them here where,
are not needed.
move
It is
path, disappear.
section of elephants
The
way
past those
who
enemy
the length
of ambuscades laid
a succession
of the
pushing their
way
forest,
and
them, each
for
throughout
so,
more venturesome
the
to the front
or taking up an
all
comers,
is
nothing
left
am-
but to
which have
MALAY SKETCHES
good
humour,
straightened
miles
of
its
and,
by the time
dishevelledness,
otherwise
tedious
is
home
94
is
journey
has
found that
have
been
the party
it
tell
the
sun has
IV
is
The
graceless action of a
heavy hand
King John
Malay named
ONELenggang, who
in
made a
by hawking
living
left
He was
saying he would
call
some of
banks of the
at
this
down
stream,
river.
The
drifted
it
local
headman viewed
arouse his
suspicions,
for
it,
saw nothing
boat was full
but
the
to
of
25
MALAY SKETCHES
there were no
was duly
buried.
When
was
the matter
were
reported, inquiries
elicited nothing.
Some months
after
Malay sergeant of
arrested a
police proceeded to
number of
ledge of the
affair,
An
people,
who
denied
to
intelligent
the
all
spot,
know-
Teluk Anson.
all
if
that
would
The
follows,
Malay
It
it.
characteristic
of the
on the
bank,
asked them
26
if
it
said they
would be a good
afraid, and
were
They
some other men coming up asked one of those to
whom the proposal had been made what they were
him
to
have
dispersed.
That evening,
at
"
cries of
help, help,
river,
down
and
five or six
p.m.,
several people
heard
brilliant moonlight,
in the hawker's
Ngah
boat, the
his feet
but
it is
was
As
down
the
silence.
those
bank they
barely twenty
men
feet
by the brilliancy
they were doing
called to the
in the boat,
at their
to
work
know what
by
MALAY SKETCHES
up from off the hawker, untied the boat, one taking
a pole and another the rudder and disappeared down
The hawker
the river.
He was
dead.
The
returned
to
their
homes
and
peacefully.
slept
and
in his boat,
witnesses,
it
on the
when one
appears that
of these
really they
little
told several of
the
Mosque
calling
if
for
they
said
them,
and
was posted
upon any one who knew
till
a notice
rently
Headman.
was
but that
anything,
feet,
it
to the
at the
make a
Needless to say
that,
disclosure
who had
detail
the
to
number of those
the
first
money
own
stolen from
link left
wanting
enough
to convict
to light, the
hawker's
him
and no single
traced,
That
kampong
state of feeling in
it
will give
a real Malay
to
have
seems
any
outside influence.
the idea that he
is
at
life
in the
way
of poor people,
lost.
it
The murder
is
is
executed also
MALAY SKETCHES
in public, in the presence of a feebly expostulating
as to
how much
community
in the matter
For them
if
of the
men who
The
by the
hawker.
It is
are
only
made
the truth
when
and things
paid.
MENG-GELUNCHOR
And
falling
ing,
And
And
sprinkling
and
twinkling and
and
bounding
winkling,
And
sounding
and
rounding,
And trumping
And
Southiy
THE
selves in a form of
is peculiar to
not well
them.
amusement which,
Though
known even
here, and, as
believe,
of ancient origin,
offer
new
it
it is
sensations
to the iaded
Given a
fine
in
Perak) you
3i
that
is
what
MALAY SKETCHES
five
hills,
whence a
stiff
clear
gathering.
covered,
dashes
to
enough
In
but
now
itself
"
"
this
spate
rock
might
wildly
over
is
the
falls
it
below.
be
and
Up-
an angle
its foot,
flows steadily
down
the face.
The depth
by bamboo
of water
troughs,
of the waterfall.
viting lynn not
feet deep.
is
On
an
in-
either
MENG-GELUNCHOR
the river
side,
which
foliage through
intervals,
just
warmth and
is
the
sun
to
sufficiently
strikes
the
give
at
rare
sense
of
colour.
It is delightfully
picturesque with
all
these people
in their
"toboggan" down
lynn at
its
base.
crowd of
little
boys
down
in the shallow
front of
is
They go
in
to slide
down
top of those
other
who have
But now the men, and lastly the women, are drawn
and the fun becomes indeed both
and
furious.
The women
33
MALAY SKETCHES
half
way up
mixed
grow
bolder,
and
good
young
If
is
almost
full
constantly
which
slide is a graceful
progress, but,
straight
on the
from graceful,
the final
home,
is
scription,
is
you go
tobogganing
laughing
may even be
It
thing
undignified.
if
slide,
it
well to
become
and
to meng-gZlunchor with a
who do
at the
slightly painful,
Malay
The
sliders.
exhausted
with
fascination of the
it
inches of water,
and,
it
on two
startling
people will
down
having gained a
34
MENG-GELUNCHOR
And
way.
are not
am
yet
stiff
admit none of those things) you would mbiggllunchor with the best of them, nor be the first to
will
cry
"
It
hold, enough."
is
rock, to sit
the
women do
It
is
some
down
sliding
fibre
the
of the
importance
when
it.
It is
surprising
bumping
By
p.m. every
little
all.
one
will
probably be
tired,
care
An
dry
company
hour
will
be
way
back,
down
sunny fields, and through the forest, to the trystingplace where all met in the morning and whence they
now return to their own homes.
The
game abounding
in
possibilities,
35
but
the
players
MALAY SKETCHES
should be chosen with discrimination and with due
regard to individual
affinities.
sunny
climate
down a
stream leaping
rest
little
cutting and
polishing of stone.
there
the
Puffed
sleeves
and a
bell
skirt,
Louis
XIV.
and an eighteen inch waist, would be inconvenient and out of place when sliding down a
heels
waterfall in the
But
if
the
at
a hundred
Art to
capable of easy
is
in
36
MENG-GELUNCHOR
And
the West.
slowly
strikes
down
long
glorifying
all
the
wooded
shafts
glen,
of light
dames
stroll
their
path,
if
in their praise of
topic, will
be
Mtng-gZlunchor.
VI
Amok
There comes
When
a time
man,
in the mire,
leaps forth
Devouring
And
....
leaves the
man
Lewis Morris
MENTION
and, as
is called
"
running amuck,"
is
with
many
Mbtg-amok
attack,
and though
a body of
men
object and
term
is
in
to
is
it
to
is
war
time, or
where plunder
to arrive at
is
the
it,
the
weapon and
38
AMOK
ing and wounding
less of age or sex,
or his
own
all
who come
in his
nearest relatives.
nth
February,
Mamat
is
891, a Malay
came
the priest)
Garam on
and a golok
(that
house
the Perak
i.e.
a.
sharp,
He then approached
asked
her pardon, immeand
his own wife
similarly
his
his pardon.
She
fell,
brother-in-law's wife
wound
was
in
in the
to assist
heart.
The
who
left
the door.
At
ot
woman
39
MALAY SKETCHES
work of them.
killed,
two wounds
disposed of the
in the
mother
and
back
all this
a spear thrust
respectfully,
and
said,
" You
my
Though
this time in
Uda
terribly injured,
who
fell.
Another
Out of the
six
wounds
to
wade
Then he was
40
inflicted
on
this
fatal.
water
AMOK
news had spread up stream and
one
was aware that there was
and
every
down,
abroad an armed man who would neither give nor
By
receive quarter.
At 6
p.m.
five
He was
to spear
he could do so
told
his arms,
and to
this the
Lasam through
if
it
Lasam
it
to the ground.
spear broke
off,
In the
fall,
own
who
MALAY SKETCHES
It
was now
news and
to spread the
On
call
to the police
and
Here
to
is
the
official list
of killed and
wounded
Killed.
Mamat
Ngah Intan, wife of Bilal Abu
Puteh, daughter of Bilal Abu
Bilal
Abu, brother-in-law of
Uda Majid
Abu
.
Wounded.
Kasim, son of
Bilal
Abu
Abu
Mat Sah
Lasam
4*
aged
AMOK
It is terrible to
were
far
advanced
women
in pregnancy.
man
ilis
neighbours, and
never
however,
ing
under
the
wrong which,
burden
after
of
friends.
man was
some
It
is,
suffer-
real or fancied
long brooding,
and
this
darkened
his
insane desire
kill.
An
find
him
wound on
to
the internal
VII
THE JOGET
Every footstep fell as lightly
a sunbeam on the river
As
MALAYS
sional performers to dance for their
M the better
ment, and consider that
part
"
amuseis
with
who
those
highest respect.
The
is
a couple of women
their hands in
and swaying
that is the
and
Malay dance
it
is
accom-
boom
of a metal gong.
The
enter-
it
THE JOGET
ance, and for
Western spectators
it
immeasur-
is
dull.
ably
it
has for years been the custom for the ruler and one
or two of his near relatives to keep trained dancing
girls,
real
the u J6get
is called
"
real music,
like
The
household, they
closer tie
ment of
may even be
their lord
and his
friends,
Years ago
attached to him by a
to
are concerned,
Pahang as
it
is
probable that
it
Malay
came
originally
common
courting sleep in a
I
to
a.m. a
witness a jdget.
and
at
miserable
lodging,
picturesque,
We
accepted
well-built
to
at
inviting us
with alacrity,
the
and commodious
45
when
astdna,
house on
MALAY SKETCHES
the right bank of the
Pahang
river.
palisade
was a very
large
open on three
hall,
sides,
but
on
The
pillars.
was approached
by a wooden wall
The
three
were
steps
accommodation according to
admitted to the astdna.
to
provide
their rank
in question,
carpet, chairs
When we
four girls,
entered,
floor,
large
rest of
Malay
we
those
on the night
the guests sat
sitting
for
ideas
of
beauty, and
all
according to
gorgeously
and
picturesquely clothed.
On
their
heads
they each
manship
all
These ornaments
every movement of the wearer.
were secured to the head by twisted cords of silver
46
THE JOGET
The
and gold.
was
girls' hair,
combed down
in a fringe,
J inches wide),
passing round the neck, came down on the front of
the bodice in the form of a V, and was there
I
Round
their waists
were
The
rest of the
costume consisted of a
same
hem
skirt of cloth
reaching to the
material, fastened
hung down
to the
of the skirt.
were dressed
The
tied
under
points of the
In
was of one
On
their
material.
diamond
MALAY SKETCHES
In their ears were fastened the diamond
rings.
buttons so
much
now by Western
affected
ladies.
Their
feet,
of course,
were bare.
We
forward, their
On
gilt
in the light.
special attention
was
The
Both
these
other,
inverted
performers seemed to
have
The
directly
attitude is that
obtained
from a kneeling to a
sitting position.
48
THE JOGET
musical sound like the noise of rippling water, a
The
gambang.
other
woman
old
who
played, with a
on a gigantic gong
an
who beat a drum with two sticks, and
stick,
who
we were
and a mistress
in their craft,
order, masters
first
and
if
much
told with
vigour of execu-
the praise.
The
modating several
accom-
only
was
was concentrated on
Besides our-
it
was hard
rounding gloom.
The
orchestra
is
left
of the
From
MALAY SKETCHES
the players, and the want of regular time in the
music,
During
its
we had
entered as
performance, the
have described
but
when
rhythm
their
the
into
regular
for dancing,
fans, raised
it
hands in the
act
of
S^mbah or
use
all
their belts.
feet,
and
difficulty,
be exceeded in grace
the real
performers
whilst
are
scarcely
They danced
five
lasting
and time
in the music.
were symbolical
ing of the
soil,
was
told
till-
THE JOGET
and winnowing of the grain, might easily have been
But those
guessed from the dancer's movements.
of the audience
whom I was
were, Malay-like, unable to give me much informaAttendants stood or sat near the dancers and
tion.
in the
art of
last
best,
inspiriting,
free
The
the
management of
was perhaps
the
For the
latter half of
with a fragrant
eldest,
striking
seemed inclined
oil,
at
each
other
with
the
their
two
wands
MALAY SKETCHES
battle.
some
after
women and
trouble,
carried forcibly
out of the Hall, but not until their captors had been
made
to feel the
two younger
be "
like to
accomplish
girls,
who
looked as
if
know how
to
in
it,
The
The
me
"
Raja,
who had
months on nothing
As we
c;v,
left
mouth, the rising sun was driving the fog from the
like
shallow stream.
52
VIII
With
as I
would
worm,
firm
He
him
ARIS
never
woke
again
Whittier
was
IT
in
no occupation and
Aris, of
Salamah
country.
was a
The
interest of
in
to a distant
this
couple
The
Mat Aris
and
travellers
began
whom
their
he had conceived
journey at a spot
many
They had
to look
S3
forward to
many
days'
MALAY SKETCHES
journey through the primaeval forest, the home of
wild beasts and Sakai people, aboriginal tribes
almost as shy and untamed as the elephant, the
bison and the rhinoceros, with which they share the
forests of the interior.
part of escort.
known
to
Mat
first
day's
three, and,
Aris, that
accompany them.
and when evening came on, as there was no dwelling
to
was
built
in
the jungle
a forest that
is
in the world,
produces
all
other forests.
The reading
public,
and
difficulty
without parallel.
and one
is
it
It
may be
Whatever gruesome
peculiarities
54
so, but
own
there
troubles.
are
about
of
fair
it
seems possible
to
make
at least
To
it
ARIS
their
way through
it
at
In that respect
difficulty.
forest.
all
sizes,
feet.
know
that is
trees, treading
on each
of existence.
afford
though
by any
possible to take
it is
off
only for
stretch of
If
it
were
enough.
is
an undergrowth
Every conceiv-
her
life,
title
that
shows how
of Mother.
It is
richly
Nature deserves
a curious
shrubs,
many
of
its
fact,
number of
remarked
in contact with
its
its
creepers
MALAY SKETCHES
are
Some
all
of
are so formidable
them, and no
human
and destruction.
It
may
be
leeches that
work
their
way through
myriads of
stockings and
them there
and
and
last,
human
find a
tunity.
being,
make
when they
ant."
The names
fire
force a
possibility,
even on
all
fours
a place
is
an im-
it
is
by cutting a
path.
No
jungle
is
means
as the beasts
All Malay
way.
have described, and
to clear his
I
where a
river flows
it
the country
the
for
out of the
far
their
The
will
naturally be asked
way through
reply
is
that
how
jungle such as
travellers
make
have described.
MALAY SKETCHES
used for ages, originally no doubt formed by the
passing and repassing of wild beasts, then adopted
In other
by the Sakais, and lastly by Malays.
cases similar means of passage have been formed by
driving tame elephants through the forest from place
to place.
clad in
tion,
water and
with
is
elephants
That
the track
of
is
When
filled
it
is
falls
upon
a darkness so
of blindness.
nothing to be done
or lanterns
is
but to
day.
sit
night in the
in
his Sakai
acquaintance.
in this
neighbourhood,
was a woman
in the
ARIS
The
and saying her husband had been murdered.
Mat
Aris
was
and
saw
the
to
went
Headman
place
there and a
woman
with him.
bank of a
river, and,
Tampan, the
first
police station,
When Mat
Aris arrived
at
Kota Tampan he
woman
sergeant said
at
sional Headquarters at
made
for
Kuala Kangsar.
59
It
MALAY SKETCHES
who were
doubt of his
to
him.
natives of India,
ability, this
seizing the
site
to the oppo-
He
police
lives.
The
their uniforms, to
eluded
all
beyond
became the
all
Of
it
was
to
be living with
also
known
that
was
seen or heard.
Meanwhile the Government of Perak had established a station in the neighbourhood of the spot
lawless proceedings of
60
it,
ARIS
Eight years
is,
own
for
rectitude,
went
to the
Perak
officer
work.
and asked
in his arrest
who
is free, willing,
man
the
is in
likely to
toils.
know when
that
to Sahit,
and that
was Pah Patin the Sakai, but Pah Patin did not
speak, and Mat Aris and Salamah were the only
other people who knew what he could say.
At
appeared to be
least that
likely to
so, for
who
else
would be
As
for
seemed
Salamah, like
as
women, she
the Sabine
it
may
seem, there
61
impos-
MALAY SKETCHES
saw what took
whither the
in
place
hut in the
that
unsuspecting
forest,
Sahit
collecting
and,
attracted
by
who
stood
determined to possess.
that,
but
when once
shelter
fire
was
lighted, food
Mat
down
Aris, next
to sleep.
pretended
to
On
eaten,
A
and
to
his
Sakai.
wife
slept,
fell
into that
later
a kris stabbed
wretched
man
the
in
staggered to his
struggle up again
ARIS
feet, fell
The
and
tried to
head with a
hit the
and
softly
throat.
kill
to the
him
also.
wounded man on
Then," said
the
fire.
Before daylight
Salmah
of
still
The
night
Pah Patin
left
is rapid,
many
it
failed
even bones
times flooded
its
had gone and others grown, the landmarks were no longer the same, and possibly the
banks, trees
IX
LATAH
Ofttimes he falleth into the
oft into the
Matthew
the spring of 1892
IN
was
fire
and
water
privileged,
xvii.
14
by the
Luys, to
visit
where
There were
was
in process of gradual
relief
when
already hypnotised.
There
is
some-
LATAH
person
filled
delight
in
the
of a magnet, and
denly turned
fall
unnatural
when
towards
him,
to see
him
is
sud-
instantly
struck by light-
ning.
The
sujets (there
woman)
it
As
to the
that
and
sinister import.
tating
was deeply
own
had
(I
it is
far
more common
at certain places
than at others,
MALAY SKETCHES
parts of Perak
it is
is
pro-
speak of
more than
my own
in others.
experience
can
and what
only
have
is
I
men
to
have
killed ninety-nine
State
was not
altogether a
own hand,
his
for
had
happy one,
it
had necessitated a
when
the
visit
perpetrators,
who
fleet,
after
and
due
LATAH
inquiry appeared to be the perpetrators, had been
The
place where
mud
flat
Sultan then
it
now
rivers.
at
the
It
we
an old
Whether
deeds of violence
is
MALAY SKETCHES
was a
ence settled
who came
differ-
it
there
found
either
their
or
courage
remarked,
laconically
him
he
if
is
wounded, doctor
is
my
During
" If he
residence in
the
jealousy, stabbed a
times
with
morning
to
his
know whether
much
it,
man was
Another
stockade
side, and,
to stab
not
lady,
would
made
similar
man
like to
purchase
and
killed,
for
no
complaint.
visited
our
sentry on
one
reason,
the
The
kris she
had brought
for
that purpose.
in
Bandar
Termasa.
I
It
all
together in a stockade.
and eight
feet high,
68
mud
floor,
LATAH
Outside it was a high
thatch roof, and no doors.
watch-tower of the same materials, but the ladder
Of roads there were none,
to it had fallen down.
mud
but a
river
bank
to village, distant
My
men
The
water completely
walls were
full
through
covered the
floor,
The
of snakes.
it,
many months
say that
fit
to use
was contained
off,
in a well or
which
to
walked
police
men
had come an
in the country.
Bhar
MALAY SKETCHES
and Kasim Kkhil
that is
Minor.
twenty-five,
and
afterwards
man
realised
of
that
of about twenty.
river,
tions
saw
noticed the
at
men
teasing
latah.
questioned the
at the
bit
tree.
it
it
at
all,
it.
LATAH
accident that their comrade
was
latah, that
tree,
they had
which he had
at
that
will tie
round the
it
IO A.M.
till
the
afternoon,
when
and
tree,
left
him from
the
inspector
The
time
of
Kasim's
and of
all
was probably
how the story was
penance
that follows I
was an eye-
witness.
I
me
orderly,
and as he was
learnt that
for
any
men
appeared to lose
all
was suga
sign.
gested by
I have seen many latah people, male and female,
ever they were told to do, but whatever
71
MALAY SKETCHES
but never any quite like these two, none so susceptible to outside influence, so ready to blindly
word or a
The
obey
sign.
made him
sently explain.
The
man
latah
suddenly
startled,
or
woman
by a touch, a
if
show
all
the
fire
more or
less
ob cene, having no reference at all to the circumstance which has suddenly aroused attention.
As
a rule
they
it is
will
necessary to
startle
say or do anything to
show
and when
latah person
for
it is
so exceed-
moment
to
do ludicrous things or
LATAH
it is by far the most common
humoured and never seem to
of resenting
If
infirmity.
the
liberty
taken
with their
"
am
Idtah" as a
full
explanation
and excuse.
a Idtah person,
window
I
if
it
necessary to at least
Of
this class
I
when
influence,
this
actually
people
are
It is sufficient
undis-
proof of
this
that
than any
since.
MALAY SKETCHES
took occasion to carefully observe the
Kasims.
was impossible
It
two
prevent their
to
always
companions teasing them, especially in a place
where there was absolutely no form of amusement
were as unpleasant as
they well could be, but no harm was ever done, and
and
all
am
the conditions of
life
own
actions,
and
was
man he was
it
directly
in
any way
not conscious
was removed he
own
done something
foolish.
the
If
will,
was
that he might
of either
attention
of these
have
men was
was
told or signed to
do without
When
could
immediately obey
some distance
appeared
whether
dangerous, or painful.
on his
difficult,
hesitation,
to
it
not
man would
he
actions.
men was
that,
LATAH
having attracted the attention of
"
Kasim, go and
repeat what
own name,
you said,
man," he would invariably
hit that
was
word
said,
for
was not
It
either, if
who
Kasim would
hit
When
say,
man who
ordered me."
pretended to bite
it,
and
own
man
finger in his
mouth and
but really
his
bite
it
hard.
Similarly
have
have put
so
carried
jump
till
it
in his
far.
mouth
if
Some one
he had
swum
and infested
moment you
Kasim "), the
by
"
crocodiles.
If
at
any
"
hand and
in his
reach
done
it
MALAY SKETCHES
I
The
police
wanted firewood,
They were
were going
lazy,
were
how
they
Kasim the
tree,
and,
when once
there,
him
to
depended on
life
it,
was
rather remarkable.
gave
for this
that
up
it
until that
supply was
exhausted.
day
was
in
down
frogs,
snakes and
LATAH
other denizens of the ditches that bordered the path.
When
ing
enemy, ran
lump
after
this
mud
out, but
it
head
went about
and
to the ditch
lump of hard
his
and when
asked him
why
flying out
of the tree
at them.
saw
in the best
way he
Kasim the
elder
was
shy of
provoking him as they soon realised that his temper
made
the
amusement dangerous.
teasing
77
him,
little
MALAY SKETCHES
allowed to recover his
laughter
made
it
own
will,
suppose their
made
they precipitately
fled,
and
in a
we
had some
pleasant.
difficulty in
serve as a
flagstaff,
jammed and
it
have
fall.
About
He
doubt what
told
was perhaps
inclined to
to do.
LATAH
One morning we were
&c
the towels,
over,
and we were
my
kita terjun"
"Mart,
the
to
let
baik, Titan
(that is not
My friend said,
"
Kasim
in),
out, said
at
instantly
came up
good of you,
Why,
Kasim
us jump
jump.
jumped
three stand-
all
friend said to
(come,
tering,
in attendance carrying
splut-
sir).
did nothing,
only said
let
previous action,
his plunge,
When
it
was
possible
first
ordered to Selangor,
some
that
thought
be
and
matting.
the
mud
floor
came
chair,
to see
it
me
for
was advisable
The
roll
was not
of matting,
MALAY SKETCHES
about four feet high and two-and-a-half feet
in
smoke of
had come
myriads of mosquitoes,
middle of the stockade,
that fire
was
it
possible to
One
in the
lit
in,
forget their
own
fire.
miseries by danc-
humour
if
strangers, and
the roll
said,
"Kasim,
here
is
fetch
it
to
your
wife."
Even now
and
satisfaction
that undesirable
words
"
in
Kasim, here
matting
"
My
with
wife
is
great
my
fervour,
wife
"
constantly repeating
" Kiss
Some one
80
said,
LATAH
her!" and he kissed her
your wife
is
and
Kasim the
elder
accepted
was evident
less
fervour
rival.
up
complete
the audience,
drama
choice.
and
their joint
spouse
into the
rolled
fire
to
snakes.
It
is
detail,
which
possessed a wife.
I do not pretend to offer
any explanation of the
cause of this state of mind which Malays call latah.
81
MALAY SKETCHES
I
imagine
it
is
if it
be one,
and
is
cannot say
curable or not
I
men.
82
de saigner sur
le
cceuf
d'un ami
Paul Virlaine
THERE
Maamih
good nor
Siti
beautiful,
a white
man whom
I will
call
Grant.
work
character.
connection
If the
semblance of romance,
it
more than
satisfied
moment of
trial
the
when
affection
and
a greater
sacrifice
than this
83
woman
offered.
MALAY SKETCHES
Whilst these two were living their unattractive
came difficulties between white man and
lives there
brown
not
specially
between
this
white
man and
white
ference.
common.
war.
The
Uncivilised
fine distinctions in
not un-
known as " a
people, who do not
state of reprisals."
understand
is
is
it
and he was probably unconcerned. Therefore he went about his work and took no special
affected,
there
other white
within miles,
better than
isolated,
trouble.
To
expect
is,
sometimes, to go half
way
to meet,
at
excuse for
their presence
trivial
Grant's
There
their departure.
in
white
men under
it
would
That morning, or
it
the evening
morn-
ing
looking
He was
man and
his
all
a busy
Seen nothing,
it
was a jungly
jungle
is
certainly.
place,
and
to be ten
who
seek concealment
MALAY SKETCHES
and know the jungle, as to be
As
another
in
was most
district.
unlikely
on which information
aspire.
at
work
to induce
a Muhammadan,
who
is
not per-
Muhammadan
rate,
if
he thought about
it
Grant, at any
life.
at
all,
could hardly
would do so much
He was
still
who
for him.
p.m., a
party
in
wanted
them
to
buy
fowls.
He
At
this
instantly
good, she
murder
us."
screamed out, "They
going
But Grant said that he and she had done no harm
to
are
"
I shall
Then
will kill
men
" If
you do not go,
said,
we
who
who had done no wrong,
was
the
who
enemy
of no man,
same breath
own
learn that he
was
facing his
m There
41
Death
It is
to think
was
instinct said,
is
is
disagreeable
commonly
shun
it."
who
MALAY SKETCHES
do not know what fear
is
to
them
in
such a situa-
tion instinct
is
new
at
what he did
in that
supreme moment
his
thought
for
in his arms.
left
arm.
"They
have
killed
in the breast,
me," he
fell
and saying,
on his face
to the
ground.
but the
man
was already
to try
dead.
further notice of
the
and
departed.
her
her injuries.
The motive
of this outrage
desire
him a
made
a victim.
fell
His
same band.
know
made
seldom
call it forth
very
arise.
This
woman
before she
left
realised
to
happen
his fate.
Moreover, she
life
knew
89
that
no
sacrifice of
MALAY SKETCHES
hers could save him, and more than
all,
as affecting
men
it
in their hands.
Maamih by
kept
Grant's side
Just as there
was nothing
to
was
it
fear
by
her
an
life
directed shot
ill-
was
sacrifice
No one
can
fail
to
it
its
own
enemy and
destruction.
pro-
Even
and a
All sportsmen
know
the contrary,
by suddenly
life
of an old
clutches,
man
child's action
effect,
unknown
in
worthy an
You
inter-
XI
IN THE
NOON OF NIGHT
Her soul upheld
By some deep-working charm
Kirkje
ON
Whits
it
more
is
generally
when
the tide
of acres of mangrove
is
whose
Many
for
rivers, small
and
when
to
flat.
way
is
the tide
left
is
out a
winding about
IN
between low slimy banks, and right and left the eye
wanders over a desolation of glistening mud with an
almost imperceptible slope to the edge of the distant
sea.
That
is
The
go.
is
he
will
out
it
be hard to
fifty
the
shell-fish.
see, for
If
he
is
there at
he pushes his
or a hundred yards up a
mud
little
for
all
dug-
creek, leaves
in
the
mire.
Then
by the
and
all
sorts of particu-
wary
to a degree, they
bill.
But they
always seems to be stand-
MALAY SKETCHES
where you instinctively know the mud and sea meet,
and there they watch the gradually receding tide
with melancholy abstraction, as though they took no
real interest in the daily toil of sustaining
life.
first,
look longest,
Perhaps
it
is
mud
certain
it
is
which makes
you,
it
is
realise that
she
when
you
pointed out to
will not
even then
is there.
As
that great
it
shuts
IN THE
the great spiked
NOON OF NIGHT
tail
you
and you
will realise
will
her kind a deadly horror and loathing, and a consuming desire to slay the whole brood will seize you
then and remain with you for all time.
If it should happen to you to have to fight
wounded
crocodile
brings you
arm or
close quarters,
man who
if
accident
has just
lost
life,
will not
There are
reptiles that at
river's
at
in contact with a
river-
be softened.
mouth they
will
if
a crocodile
is
shot dead on
will
remains.
95
MALAY SKETCHES
Villages on the Malay coast are nearly always
situated
sea
the
is
full
of fish
supplemented by curing
that
is,
salting
is
and drying
them.
The whereabouts
yet a great
way
may be
when he
off.
is
fish loads
specially
hood of a fishing
the crocodile.
is
river
there are a
fishermen,
it
number
It is thriving,
and as
of Chinese as well as
Malay
boasts a police-station.
communication are
house.
at high
water
means of
inter-
At low water
to
swamp
The houses
there
is
the
IN
was
It
those
in
forty
days of
Muhammadans
fast
though
observed
by
so few of them
all
they
fast,
tells
moon
still lit
that
when
good
know why
plain
In
it
there lived a
Malay revenue
officer
with his
as
was
home, went
to sleep
about 10 p.m.
their wont.
slight breeze
was blowing
blowing
till
it
looked like a
sea, but
bordered land-
The wind
hills.
MALAY SKETCHES
the
Peace,
who showed
his
devotion to duty by
man
but no answer.
sound of approaching
followed by the
man
feet,
himself.
"
What
asleep, but
mother.
its
is
the matter,
Then
was the
at
spoke.
The
was
evidently something uncanny about this disappearance, for, in a village such as this,
are
less
more
mangrove
is
which
to look for
left in
IN
"
something ?
Yes,
through the silence of the night, wafted on the
incoming breeze, there was a distinct but faint cry
you
men long
It did
to get
down
to the
and
intervals
ever
more
till
plainly,
it
became
mud.
By
the source of
that the
woman was
Making
in sore
all
the
saw
the
woman on
the ground
being literally
worried by three crocodiles, each six or eight feet
light,
in length.
As
wake up
at
no great
length, but to
go
to sleep in
99
MALAY SKETCHES
but with half a mile
sea,
and anything
assailed
is
you,
by
like
of
enough
to kill
with
woman had
i
difficulty,
legs,
neck.
wet
"
Two
along without
effort
my own
of
leg, and, to
my
horror,
found
my arms, and
IN
while
until
you
there
all,
A woman
that.
is
is
far,
nothing
and their awakening has been to the
;
life
beyond the
grave.
Only
this
was curious
mud on
mud
at
at
all.
When
found, there
flat,
on the
was only
were
men sank
woman had
surface,
soft,
were
all
unstable
much,
Celestial
consideration,
to
abandon
her
to
the
ferocious
The woman
were
herself, her
satisfied as to the
MALAY SKETCHES
The
tion
ideal
woman,
can
Spirit of
tell
you
it
for,
when asked
God
is
We
from
the time
when
but
it is
more
the Spirit
later,
moved
on the Sea
understand
difficult to
how
The same
idea is, however, more happily conveyed in the injunction of the President of the
courage
She
which
is to
hail
when
there are
crocodiles about.
*
"The Heavenly
Twins," book
102
iii.,
chap.
iii.
XII
To whom
Popi
NOT
many months
East
met, in
dark,
type.
after
my
first arrival
club in
He was
in the
Singapore, an
quite young,
tall,
all
sorts
collected about a
hundred natives
an absolutely independent
its
inhabitants
was
MALAY SKETCHES
The Sultan was and
whom
wished to be
was
all
but he recog-
nised
opium cum
dignitate
roundings.
The
Sultan's
interested
carried
on throughout Selangor, and the feature of the disturbances was that every chief said he had the
Sultan's approval of his proceedings.
Some
this state-
later I
my
it
time
ears, I
meant.
He
His Highness
was not correct.
as
he explained
"Quite
but,
correct,"
always replied,
"
bukan
btnar
to me,
btnar ka-pdda dia,
ka-pdda
kamt" which being interpreted means, u correct in
Sultan
if
that
He was
104
evidently tickled
by
happy
own
The
his
inspiration
at
ingenuity.
declared
gossips
his
that
Highness was
to
always requested
approval in the shape of gunpowder and lead, and
that he gave
them
impartiality.
On
nothing, and
was not
but as Selangor
neighbours,
to
this
is
no more
enough
to inquire,
free
down
its
to irrespon-
sible chatter.
All this
is,
Certain Rajas
waxed
hottest
the State,
about
centre.
As
Klang,
it
when the
marriage to Tunku
in
daughter
the Sultan of
Kedah.
The
Sultan's
son-in-law
driven
MALAY SKETCHES
The Viceroy and
These Chinese were led by one Ah Loi, a remarkable man, styled the * Capitan China," whose
instincts were distinctly warlike and his authority
with his countrymen supreme.
who
ball
rolled
money,
merrily
along.
Dame
fickle,
and success
was now with the Viceroy and now with Mahdi and
his friends.
his
man who
effort
Then would
follow dire
months and
was
result
years,
that
side,
was
was always
The
mines.
becoming involved
plete
success
of
in debts
one
side
by
lasting
still
distracted
by
all this
trouble
was
in funds,
It
107
MALAY SKETCHES
Singapore with which they hoped to deal an effective
blow
I
to their enemies.
have said
Hagen, who
less.
took
was
told that
he had been an
Van
know
of
I
officer in the
man
His heterogeneous
force,
composed of natives of
its
way with
guides through
themselves on a
in its defence.
hill
was
daily harassed
by the
fire
They were
108
OF
but their
difficulties
became so great
that
evils,
they
and
as
was no
track visible.
It is
road
unknown
to
all,
a feeling of
The main
after a
body, with
the evening,
Pataling,
utterly exhausted,
only
four
miles
from
Cavaliero,
food, arrived in
a place called
Kuala Lumpor
at
Pataling
MALAY SKETCHES
wanderers walked straight into their arms and gave
themselves up without a struggle.
before leaving
and
himself
offered
his
services,
which
were
and
file;
and
told to find
For the
they
officers
liberty
State.
fate.
Lumpor
The
mines,
their
lives.
I
do not think
this
alternative
Cavaliero.
was
offered to
number of
no
it
was
skeletons, the
who had
Selangor's internecine
fallen
strife.
As many
as sixteen
One
day,
were thus
not
in
men
They
face to face,
and
XIII
vengeance
Lewis Morris
ON
fifty
miles from
its
is
large
village a
ticularly well-favoured
fact
girl
in this
notoriety,
and
her
attractions
The
were
soon
the
dar
were
with her.
112
called
to
fiting
by
that
opportunity,
Nuh was
in the
house
and the
the
first
the lovers
knew
of their danger
was
be admitted.
The
to
if
at the front
was being
opened.
the
was about
to descend the
He drew
been perceived.
113
What
h
are
MALAY SKETCHES
you doing
in
my
house at
this
Come down on
time?
to the ground."
Mat Nuh was alone and Megat Raja was accompanied by two other men, but the youth unsheathed
and went down ready
his kris
of a hand-to-hand struggle.
knowing
three
men
hesitated.
their
in
woman
guilt, for
in the house.
kill
him,
As
the
men
stood
whom
self
on
and questioned one of the servant-women, but dissatisfied with what he heard he dashed out again
determined to attack Che Nuh.
The
latter
had, however,
taken
advantage
of
his friends.
call,
Che Nuh
bid
his adversary
he pleased.
it,
still
not.
On
tion
was
to at least
make
short
him.
action.
On
was
guilty
any of
own
and declined
to let
possessions or to remove
his.
This action was considered a very serious indignity by Meriam's friends, and it so happened that
a relative named PSnglima Prang
an
of the Sultan's Wazir, the
adherent
Semaun,
Raja Bendahara, and he was reputed one of the
she
possessed
"5
MALAY SKETCHES
Bandar and
laid
Raja, demanding to
into his
The Chief
shame.
He was
Shabandar.
courage,
was
the
also
one
Orang Kaya
man renowned
was wealthy, a
named
for
his
of the village.
He
latter
wound up
Prang Semaun,
his complaint
if
by
he
" If
you have no gold,
saw
it
is
well
cannon,
The
it is
"
It is
and
was meant
in
you have no
well for
me
tell
have
it
heart,
cannon to
will
well to put
but
if
is
better to be quiet."
advice
taunt, but
latter
sing small
to
it
as the
saying
jingals
and
my
kris."
116
to think
how
down
stream, and he
resist
knew
that
enough
to
them.
Meanwhile, Che
Nuh had
wrath
tntfiert
his
felt it
necessary
"7
kill
wrath to
MALAY SKETCHES
Accordingly the Penglima went up river to Blanja
where the Bendahara lived, told his tale and asked
for leave to kill the Shabandar.
The
" If
reply of the Bendahara was,
you think
operations.
The
determined to wreak their vengeance on the Shabandar on the Rdya Haft, the day to which the
most religious Muhammadans prolong the fast of
Ramthan.
On
made a formal
visit to
Ali,
it
no one besides
down
The
five
men waited
until they
saw
the Sumatran
honour,
attended, accompanied
there bid
him
him
and un-
to the river-bank
and
farewell.
for the
development of the
plot.
Penglima Prang Semaun took leave of the Shabandar and shook hands with him. Haji Ali, a very
big powerful man, then also took leave and grasped
the Shabandar's hand, but instead of letting
it go he
drew the Datoh towards him, and the reply to his
question of what this meant was a stab in the back
The
thrust
all
iris.
the
same
it
result,
kris,
him
Haji Ali
in turn.
119
the
plunged
useless
it
time
and the
who
bent,
and each of
MALAY SKETCHES
Leaving the body lying on the bank, the men
rushed straight back into the house, shut the gates
of the enclosure and immediately prepared to defend
The news
carried
for a
closed,
windows
rifled
and
the house
those things
himself of
all
lacked, sat
down
which
to calmly await
he previously
the development
of events.
The
instantly avenged,
it
it
wife
come
and her
to
harm
sister,
who were
in the assault.
120
wellnigh sure to
who
people,
had
stockades, and
all
surrounded
that could be
the
house
done was
with
to prevent
The
be resorted
to, for
suffered.
The moment
the deed
Semaun proclaimed
that he
and
it
at
was arranged
a safe-conduct to the
left their
shelter
and embarked
in boats
the ladies,
who were
reach.
to this appeal
following,
121
by taking
descended the
MALAY SKETCHES
Once there, he availed
Panjang.
himself of an ancient custom called tkat-diri- that
river to Pasir
"
to " bind yourself
is,
people, he
and, accompanied by
all
his
all
Pardon,
my
dmpun
lord,
was
air
filled
like prisoners in
to
That
settled
the
affair.
The
Sultan's minister
who
Ali,
man
knew
was
that this
in succession to
gift
make
for
intention of leaving
exploit,
The
Prang was
in his village
made
be
who
to the Bendahara,
contrary
to
custom
to
replied that
attack the
was duly
Application
it
would
Penglima
but that
if
they
they
pleased.
MALAY SKETCHES
Mecca a man
called Haji
Haji
man
Musah was
at this
He
for
permission
to
attack
the
Penglima, and,
if
The Sultan
made
an expedition against
arrogant a
Haji
Musah
to silence so
foe.
carry
out
his suggestion,
Penglima's proposal.
124
It
was
Musah's
(Haji
all
before
for
the
The
to
fill
two
had started
village)
men
Batak Rabit
down-stream
their intention.
that the
set
when
the ripe grain hangs heavily in the ear, his knowledge of the beauties of Malay scenery
is
very in-
complete.
flat
wide,
plain covered
feet
above the
One yellow
This sea
trees in
The
beams of
saffron
MALAY SKETCHES
wide expanse of grain bounded by
How greedily one
drinks
it
in
all
the
and, as
lower, there
its
closing lids
all
too soon
by the pale
damp
earth, spreads
to a
sickle rises
hills
it
silver
shines upon
above a motionless
drift
of snow-like cloud.
On
by groves of coco-nuts
in the
neighbourhood
nipah palm.
The
structure
surrounding yard.
wooden
piles,
as
usual,
piles
the
on
but
with
it
by a platform.
was here
It
that
rest of their
of darkness.
The
enterprise
perilous one.
men
all
had
they
undertaken
was a
about thirty
Prang Semaun had, however, calculated the chances, and he counted on a sucPenglima
cessful surprise
those
tactics
if
and,
need
be,
the
pursuit
at
of
Bandar,
found so useful.
was
cautiously
approached,
and, the
gate being
and the whole party noiseestablished themselves beneath the house and
locked,
lessly
was
it
scaled,
Haji
127
Musah and
his wife,
MALAY SKETCHES
Hawah, and their daughter and
latter named Haji Sahil.
Haji
son-in-law, the
the kitchen.
her might.
real
tug-of-war
was
carried
on
for
a few
effort
The man
fell
'
watering
of expressing a disaster.
By
a polite
to the
The Penglima,
way
man
"
had
Musah had
wound on
man
alone.
Musah
will not
surrender."
"
will
"Burn
else
you
was the
reply.
like,
said Haji
but
will
in."
i
MALAY SKETCHES
11
AH
Let us burn
it,"
But Haji
protested.
shelter
it,
and then
in a basket,
us,
what
will
become of us?"
The wisdom
it
of this advice
was necessary
was
apparent, and as
work
house
to devise another
plan.
An
evil inspiration
came
to the Penglima,
Musah
and he
into conversation
all
manner of
large
it.
hole
was
rent in
the
all
floor,
and, the
directions,
one of
The
hit,
assailants realised
called
we
yield, but
he declined utterly
"
said,
do, better
Musah stubbornly
"
Haji
"Let them do
their worst, I
girl
had
left
sitting terrified
in
some corner
Now, however,
it
was
have
As a matter
happened.
strange
On
men and
all
was
failed
must
of
fact
nothing
the
first
was
had
closed and
in the kitchen.
The enemy
women
first
MALAY SKETCHES
came
out,
girl
The moment
Haji
Hawah was
convinced her
was an
intolerable idea.
girl
were
restored.
At
first
must be
in
discovered her.
house than
it
was
Musah
sible
and
of further resistance.
132
who
The Penglima's
successful, and as
tactics
it
was impossible
the investing
whereby he might
by
it.
The Shabandar's
was the
river
to
landward.
In
front
fleet
of guard-boats.
it
to
would
MALAY SKETCHES
have been impossible to seize them without being
exposed to fire from the house, to which no reply
could be made.
month went
by,
and
his wife,
Musah,
fairly recovered
from
their injuries.
guarded
man
this
Through
there
was the
if
best
chance of
over.
This sentry,
was a
was getting
tired of
like the
the band,
the
outlook
situation
foreigner, he
or see
to
the
rate
to
make
their
that
gave
privacy to
the
women.
Guided by the traitor, their movements hidden in
Cimmerian darkness, the little party made its way
in safety to the friendly shelter of the
He was
stockade.
Shabandar's
was
in
the
toils.
He
in this
not be rushed.
was
It
The
Penglima
all
who when
them was
they got up in
dead men.
called
his
its
followers
together,
an
attempt to pass
MALAY SKETCHES
run the gauntlet of the guard-boats, where capture
was, as he said, certain.
The men
Lambor con-
enemy's
lines,
way through
if
the
they succeeded
Of
these
thought
foe.
there
was
little
tight-
and in
had expected
by Haji Ali
and a few of his particular associates, he made for
the river and got into one of his boats, cast off and
pulled out into the stream.
very wily
man was
in the guard-boats
the Penglima.
was on the
Every one
shouts from the shore had warned them that the fox
in the covert,
136
him
in full cry.
uncertainty about
it,
Still
there
and that
The
He knew
it
well
man
was
whence
but as
still
it
some one
boats
disappeared
towards
the
am
turning round
other
line
the craft
of
river-
sentinels.
No
MALAY SKETCHES
bold disguise as that, and, pulling straight for the
for the
escape,
No
and
rival battle-shouts
heed as to which
The Shabandar on
his part
made no long
tarry-
and
were
in his
light.
dollars
and every-
easily portable.
muddy ground
way went
the Penglima
Prang Semaun.
that
way.
all
The
evidence to the
He
had made
for
not
There
one boat.
number
ten,
was
still
river's
to
lift
swept
in
fleet
of boats
to
pull
line
out to sea.
time.
MALAY SKETCHES
'Twixt the devil behind and the deep sea in front,
he had no
safety
difficulty in
determining which
way
lay
could not be an
it
hour,
it
nerve, and
into
an
all
after a
would dream of
its
The
existence.
it
Here the
altogether
happy day,
for they
were
safe,
to
still
moment they
their leader
thirty in
men
of
number, were
line of stockades.
Some
were shot, others were speared and krised in handto-hand encounters, while a few got away to the
forest
darkness.
it
But when
was a choice
reckoning.
None of
this
band returned
Lambor, and if
and made an unprovoked
it
day there
is
is
to
no wasted
affection
MALAY SKETCHES
refuge would be found in those inhospitable depths,
little
in their
and
thither,
nightfall
many appeared
Then an hour
to
rising tide.
and
as,
the vessel
his friends
had regained
their
was pushed
for
rowers
their
The
at
river as
it
asleep,
or
had
returned
already
night
until,
fugitives
up-stream,
the
were unmolested
5 a.m., in
intervals
At
it
was impossible
Of
At any
was an
rate this
two
hardened
men.
snow compared
to those of these
two arch-criminals,
had
all
into a well
Why
was
it
were going
how
they
of their enemies,
was
but
it
that
moment
is
of
common
occurrence,
(now
of
drifting majestically to
MALAY SKETCHES
and branch and
Malay
be
may
seen
sailing every
day down a
was so
cular island
was miraculous.
It is possible that to
it
man
another
moment
remembered
at
which
that the
to
than
in
to get
take
Malays
their
way.
her.
call
Here he
these
floating
craft
better
then
he
promptly steered right into the back of this Satansent refuge, and, forcing
covering
it
as well as
it
in
was
the huge
was a
deal of shouting
So passed
Queens
Semaun
not to
One can
sails
down
to
moment
the
at
Blanja
We
to
read that
when
it
was
many
startling deeds,
which
let
us hope
it is
fallen into
was
desue-
mere man.
*
MALAY SKETCHES
Malays are perhaps, in some respects, a few
hundred years behind the age, and I like to think
that in this veracious story
Semaun made
of a lady in distress.
146
champion
XIV
BER-HANTU
Striving to reach the mystic source
of things, the
secrets
of
the
earth
air
L. Morris
WE
could
all
hill
phenomenon appeared
in the sky,
above the
Malacca.
cover that
fertile plain.
palm-thatched wooden
PT '"
^WWWWWW r 'H**i'- -r
-.///
,,-.;
rWw^rf
...
.,
WF^W wJJWwWw^
wf^wrw&wf&wfw-
<
pfw
wrr^r
rrr^
vftw
wn
fWrrw^
'' "
tilt iilawi.i
#*
f
tt^ FitMa
',
..
ffwrww Nw
"
tHwt
l#
NWtI WWW
)..-., w
WfWWW'
WTWT
..
rTf
WT
-
k
rw
WPW
M PIIW
db
JWTTTT
aa4
ft
ifrrtiiwtfJ
rw wwrwwwwnWw
,,
Wf* r^P* Wf
*rM
**./ Wm'
//i'
WWrwrWWWWf
.,
.1
w wnwww WfPPWI
rw/tfrWfff \w
Imc
....'
wrw
'"
mmA WW
WWWWW
u iwiffaf
tkrt*
n m#af?f
jrnmr* w mi ft
wrvf MJMitttr
rm*wrrwf
Wwtf
"
rw #fff
WWW
<'\fwwM
wJWr*rwrrfff
wrf
wffw
rWwrwwff
wi fwwwwwwfyf to foffflfffptf
WW
WW
mw-
ww
'
"
'"
'
"
"'
'
'"
'
""
wnHwjfa
Hfww wwjwwf
'''
''
Wwfw
lr*
fftrfrfWrf
vMpHMr wf www
wWU'wrwWfT*(M
'
"
!'
Www
FK
rw
-<'
><t
'
'
<
4 flirwkH
mwiwrHmt
mwfw
>
rwywmmW mw WwvWTwr
"-.
mtf$wfwUu
cms
H2U
awWMnvrinjr*
*r$ %
M MR
*
ifl
MALAY SKETCHES
into greater contrast the deep
shadows that
lie
under
Four miles
In front
ground which rises abruptly on our left.
and on either side, range after range of jungle-
covered
sands
over
hills,
from
fifteen
of feet in height.
all
hundred
There
is
to several thou-
a luminous haze
all
unsubstantial, yet
satisfying
infinitely
that
sense
perfect beauty.
kings,
forgotten.
But hark
distance
Yes, there
now much
nearer,
slowly
is
itself
through
and now
the
between the
before our
air
ing
its
uncertain,
purposeless
wend-
way through
the
BER-HANTU
dark wings, a head disproportionately large, and
As it slowly passed and
horns, veritable horns
!
mcaned
childlike
its
no reasonable being
plaint,
senger of death.
and though we
felt
was
sealed,
down
the
hill,
took
boat
man
lay.
building
was
scene.
said the
The unsteady
light of several
were
full
MALAY SKETCHES
There must have been between one and
the floor.
The
were
room
con-
that, despairing
by native
it
doctors,
was intended
to try a little
Ber-hantu.
That seemed
to
me
what
to fall in
is called
very well
was
may
devil or spirit,
is
a ghost,
to devil, to raise
Malay
is
traditions
a treatment
and surroundings
commonly
other remedies
fail.
will permit.
resorted to in Perak
When, however,
the friends of
the sick
man
or
woman
them but
It
when
to
have
it,
be~r-
and
152
BER-HANTU
ance, there is
still
the satisfaction of
knowing that
them which love and skill
il- Allah,
This
La~
" There
of faith
confession
pious
is
has, however,
nothing to do with the btr-hantu; it comes in afterwards when the seal of death is so evidently on the
lips of the sufferer that his friends
commend
The
btr-hantu
to God.
cease to
call
man
of course, a survival of
or say they do
on
little
it,
careful,
To
Art
In the middle
of the floor
mat, at
woman
jacket,
tightly
dressed
man
in
short-sleeved
mat was a
stick.
like
i53
An
MALAY SKETCHES
The woman
in
male
attire
own
people.
In ordinary
life
scion of the
reigning
the fingers.
The
was
the
sat
began to sing a
was the
pleasing
spirit
to
language
the air
a particular Jin,
was one
or Spirit,
was
told
specially
and the
besought him
come from the mountains or the sea, from under-
As
the
song
continued,
accompanied
by the
Pdwang
sat
BER-HANTU
sambau
at top
tied
and bottom.
all
eyes
it
now supposed
floor
to
made obeisance
round
it
fumed water ;
the
the
she
to
By some means
the candle.
was manifest
to
this,
and
with saffron-coloured rice and perthen, rising to her feet and followed
present
in
member
the room,
murmuring
all
the while a
This
up a
different air,
him
I
to
come and
its
own
MALAY SKETCHES
and there are even some
duals.
of the Firmament
Air
Mahkota
Spirits
State.
As one
star exceeds
another in
glory, so
I
were hung
when they
in the
is
Only
sung by
at
own
peculiar music,
and led by a
The Jin
BHuan
ka-rdja-an
is
entitled to
drummers
if
his presence
is
have described.
devils
iS6
who
look after
common
BER-HANTU
people
of politeness
last
is
feelings.
Then
there
K&ndla
is
ajdib,
the
"Wonderful
host of others.
their
own
special
one
spirit after
that
feel
it
society.
Pdwang's
decorated
an
enormous
while round
corated
rice
delicacies
just
room
it
its
centre
candle,
specially
to sit
on
prized
this
by Jin.
There was
stand, which
seat
is
of
called
this
MALAY SKETCHES
particular
many
veil
shape), and
attendants,
was placed on
were put
the
by
Sultan, supported
sat
upon
it.
in his hands,
he spread the
rice
round the
The Sultan
some
time, occasionally
when
this taper
had duly flared up and all the rites had been performed, His Highness was conducted back again to
his
Pdwang
trations alone.
down
fell
me
down.
The cause
of offence
spirits
who
cannot
dawn
there
cat,
bear the
and so
on.
BER-HANTU
The Jin Ka-rdja-an
appearance in a swoon.
had taken possession of the sick body, and the mind
all
little
its
owner's control.
to
He
me he
told
his people
and he added,
just
now
and because
"
did not
was a very
it
The King
was sent
for
expected
Death
to live
all
was
till
was not
the contrary,
there
doing."
on
was not
for a time.
old custom,
me
its
it,
saw
it
sitting
later,
that
ka-tampi.
it
It
horns.
It
omened
it
is
an
ill-
MALAY SKETCHES
and
it
which are
"Nail the
called respectively
coffin/'
Tumbok
larong, that is
birds."
160
are
said
The
to
be
of these "ghost
XV
THE
KING'S
We
WAY
or Hell
may
bring
But no
the
man knoweth
the
mind of
King
Rudyard Kipling
HE
was
but to those
the people,
man
in his
who
MALAY SKETCHES
been elected
to a high office,
him
and
when
later,
his
in
entitled
be
to
resistance
to
own
These
indis-
putable,
be
fair,
at
this
to over-stoutness
strength
of
mind,
the
obstinacy
of
character,
to
some ex-
tent
over -large.
162
THE
KING'S
WAY
The King affected gay colours, and his appearance, when he took his walks abroad, was striking,
many
bining
violent
had a high
this jacket
collar
The
fastened by
nether garment
many
yards of a
silk
scarlet
was a
trousers
silk
waist-
cloth.
the
com-
calf
of
the
leg,
leaving a
fair
expanse
On
of
one
feet.
ear, the
King
flat on
in
Koran.
In his waist-cloth the King usually carried a short
knife in a polished
ing he leant
mottled
averred,
wooden
feet
sheath, and
whiteness,
by eating the
caused,
flesh
His
Highness
MALAY SKETCHES
For people with
an
whom
article
It is
charitable
had embittered
He was
he possessed good qualities.
undeniably intelligent, and had a wider knowledge of
his country and its ancient customs than any other
his
life,
man
in
mined
for
it.
He knew
to obstinacy,
his
deter-
He
having
and,
own
own
sulted his
with his
faith
were
interest
still
On
a merit.
his
defects
likely
incredibly mean,
he was
overbearing to
cruelty,
any of
to
wishes, a
who
gambler who
those
and
vin-
win, and in matters where the other sex were concerned, decidedly unreliable.
He was not an
opium-
THE
KING'S
WAY
its
"
in his
own
outward forms.
It
was
good odour
in
was needed
vouch
to
The
and
to support
Muhammadan
writings.
the
persistence
man found
was a
little
discouraging
but
there
methods
came an
estrangement.
the
moment
indignity.
who
of his
It
return
was
appeared that
faced
someone
by a serious
in this place
summons
163
local
MALAY SKETCHES
The King, being
amount necessary
raised the
musical-box and
Then " a
own
bill,
and
State with
the
tricycle.
who
Priest as to
meet the
to
their
to
"
things.
For the
appeared
in
first
opposition
time
these
firm
friends
to
of Arbitration.
First the
King
He knew
music,
noises
He
and
did
made by
understand
not
the
for
discordant
heard
it
in the least,
it
played.
As
how in
the
name of misfortune
The bare idea of a
THE
man
laughed consumedly
up).
tricycle ?
WAY
was
make a dog bark (and here His Highness
to
enough
jured
KING'S
at
seen him
to ride
it
ride
?
Was
tricycles
"
it
would not
Office ?
man whom
he had heard over and over again say that the one
thing he desired was a tricycle, something on which
about his
money
to
Malays did not understand things that ran on three wheels without ever
a horse or a bullock, or even a buffalo to pull them.
might
fall
He saw
MALAY SKETCHES
heard the priest haggling with someone about the
price, but he would take any oath that the priest or
mons because
of the
who
priest's
extravagant tastes,
it
would not
be he.
Then the
Long
him
told
desire
Priest
before they
that
to
strains of
left
this visit
purchase a musical-box
(in
it
three-wheeled
to start with
silent
and nothing
was
his
the sweet
the beautiful
cost
tricycle,
carriage which
wanted
no horses, nor harness, nor expensive and impertinent horse-keepers, which never shied at bullocklittle
carts or ran
to keep,
them.
By the express order of the King the priest
had bidden the owners bring them to the house in
which the King was lodging, and there the whole
details
of
the
two
transactions
168
were
arranged.
THE
KING'S
WAY
The
deed, the
to see
them
hung a heavy
curtain,
and while
King sat on the other, and not only heard all that
was said, but in the end, when the priest went
behind the curtain to consult his royal master, had
expressed his entire approval of the price, only
stipulating that he should first hear the box sing
with
some
little
horse.
This
difficulty,
he
had
because the
So they
had
MALAY SKETCHES
under the house, and the King looked upon the
machine and said it was good and cheap and would
eat nothing.
my
men came
"The
to be paid,
four
and
day
Priest
sent
them away
In this
way
and
till
the
the things.
come again
to
told the
When
it
at last
was not
men they
his
could take
the box and the carriage back because they did not
please
afraid lest
was
master, and
my
a poor
on the
not of
in the
the King
knows
ride
exhort
whose duty
My
master
THE
KING'S
WAY
"They
Bahtek;
are
solace."
like
their
Indeed,
it
own
"
"
as,
It is
somein the
Raja's business on
who had
clerk
bestowed upon
his care.
The King
also
women
with hardly
tired of the
woman, as
MALAY SKETCHES
was simple enough, but to get back his gifts
they would serve again as they had done
that
(for
same time
his
way
was
a liaison
dust
to be
on
that
King
guilt
little
on
carrying
throw a
back.
arrested
to
was the
alleged possession
The
by
clear proof of
the
woman
of a
it
man accused by
in spite
failed to
the
to get the
was done
to
to him.
facts, for
he declined to
usually in tartan,
is
172
sort of skirt,
THE
out,
what
KING'S
in their uncivilised
WAY
minds they count as
man
the injured
when
the offender
of lesser rank.
is
a raja and
The person
of a
Muhammadan
as the
new
He
the
had succeeded
wives,
when
in
new
named Raja
smiles,
cessful,
Then
The
application,
Sarefa, con-
for
the usual
suc-
King
fell ill
no native medicine-man
of
some
fell
disease that
i73
MALAY SKETCHES
evil
spirit,
had
its will
must
all
men
said the
King
die.
During an interval of temporary return to consciousness, when for a few hours the patient
seemed
have a
to
rest
be sent
priest.
parties,
own, and a
Then, against the earnest wishes of both
he insisted upon these young people being
Raja Sarefa.
He was
fulness at
recovery,
seeing
him so
said that I
him with
ill,
well
on
my
the
thank-
way
to
extraordinary
i74
devotion,
never
THE
WAY
KING'S
you
At once he
replied that
said,
I
had
am
how
carefully
now you
for
it,
an allowance."
In the presence of the lady, even though she did
not raise her eyes from the floor,
to recognise that, if curses
it
was
difficult
come home
to
not
roost,
tumour on the
brain, caused
by
and
growth
tumour contracted, and
the pressure on the brain was removed.
But the
mischief was there, and a sudden rapid development
was
write
to, in
a manner, canonise
i75
its
Sultans.
now
At the
MALAY SKETCHES
when
burial,
body
the
moment
known.
to his earthly
Thus, there
life.
at
Al-merhum or
is
Medium
died
The
is
given a
dead man
late
and so on.
When
this
King was
Note.
Rafir- Allah,
name
conferred
him."
Home News :
following in the
"In
buried, the
Fischer
Brown,
Saville,
to
sum
of 73,
the defendants,
received no consideration.
money
for
in
paid by the
perambulator, which
was
It
to be given to
176
His Highness
THE
KING'S
by
his secretary,
lator
was
to
WAY
a birthday present
Patalia, as
Sham
Shir Sing.
The perambu-
plaintiffs
on July
be ready for
order that
it
4,
shipment
Bombay by Aug.
should reach the Rajah by Oct.
work
to
15, in
in time,
1,
The defendants
and the Rajah's
be sent back.
drawn a
and
wheels
been
and springs
agreed,
should
of
the
perambulator,
be electro-plated, but
it
would not
He was
The
it
when
suit the
told this
177
had
MALAY SKETCHES
could not be done in time, and
it
was implied by
should
have
elephant-headed
handles
and
The
amount claimed."
178
XVI
A MALAY ROMANCE
Every heart in which heaven has
set
Mosque
name be
its
Love
it is
or Synagogue,
written in the
freed
from the
Book
if
of
fear of Hell,
Khayyam
A QUARTER
youthful wife.
at the point
tide,
for
twenty
Maimunah.
Exceeding
fair, for
and
feet,
an oval face and splendid eyes, glistening bluewhite wells in which floated, lotus-like, the dark
iris,
flashing
or
wooing
in
179
changeful expression
fen* iwi
nn
Ip-
a& Mtefcol
A MALAY ROMANCE
When
wear a
Maimdnah would
Mack or white gossamer
Over
this, again,
waa
and n lumber of
<n
diamond
cs hi the ears
fflfftafr
mond
<*
nmm mm
inordjnate,
a*
mn
MALAY SKETCHES
continually led
him
into difficulty,
and he smoked
He begins
Malay Raja has many wives.
and
the
until
early
changes often,
rings
(especially
if he have pretensions to become ultimately the
ruler of his country, as
own
of his
rank.
be
divorced,
and, that
place.
write,
to
is
all
its
injunctions
A MALAY ROMANCE
tion, and, while their claims are clear, the concubine
has none.
To neglect a wife for a concubine is a
dire offence to Malay women, and the slight is enor-
lived
was
mouth of the
river,
water,
muddy
banks, and
flat
surroundings.
Raja
life
suited
him and
like
many
people
with
extravagant
tastes,
his
Amongst
time was a
a neighbouring State.
183
a stranger from
MALAY SKETCHES
It
have
might
been the
cock-fighting
or the
in the society of
might
have
also
been
the
Raja
It
society of
congenial
Maimunah's
Whatever the
attractions.
lodestone,
water, but
it
was
a building of mat
muddy
earth on
wooden
piles,
flight
damp and
of steps led
The
interior
accommodation con-
The edges
and
of steaming
that sleep
was
flat
and
in the heat
mud and
seemed
shelterless plain
to force itself
on
was so
great
insect, reptile,
A MALAY ROMANCE
At night the myriads of
fireflies
sparkling in the
some
hardly appreciated
flies
relief to
tired eyes
but the
was
gain in the
when
began
Under
such
circumstances
and
amidst
such
life
of
Maimunah.
He was
between
the
two men.
manners
fail
goods
worldly
he
had
little
enough, and
small
if
was
woman
fell
hope-
morning and
follow her with his eyes for the few
185
failed,
MALAY SKETCHES
moments when she slowly wended her way from
house to river and back again.
Meanwhile, Maimunah, suffering from the spretce
injuria formce and chafing under the monotony of
existence,
had heard
all
to
deeds.
the
and as he
for her
it
Malay
and so
carefully
is
this
art
cultivated,
never
fail
so
and witnesses
themselves
and
it
without
was with
the
exchange of a
perfect
confidence that
friendly aid
of a messenger.
and his
himself, to notice
Had
he
A MALAY ROMANCE
realised the state of affairs
must be
his,
should
It is
un-
if
munah had
it
seem possible
for
Least of
all
would
a foreigner supported by a
However
hazards
if
his
equal to his
own
to her as to
own
risk.
(for failure
dreaming over
was carrying
off his
very eyes.
187
MALAY SKETCHES
Once
silently
in
but
to pull
traversed,
in to the bank,
fasten
waste the precious time, for with the dawn the elopement would be
discovered and Iskander would be in pursuit before
It
to
by anticipations of capture or
husband's fury.
On
own
country.
A MALAY ROMANCE
Raja Iskander received this missive whilst yet
undecided what course to take in the untoward
disaster that
The
discussing with
his
chiefs
who
not
letter did
to arrive at a decision,
and he was
should have
when
started
Maimunah
The
in safety to his
own
disconsolate husband,
people
ever
Sle*man carried
country.
in
and
science.
It
is
the
punishment
painful
fact
of his
that
own
this
con-
conduct
five,
continently strangled.
As
for
MALAY SKETCHES
peer in
beauty.
common and
is
The
is
Maimunah
of a malignant disease
own
but Slgman
the courteous
man,
lives in his
still
bearing and
inten-
quiet repose of
chief
for
happy home.
this
But
they are Muhammadans, and seldom allow themselves the luxury of burning mora! convictions.
I
many
years ago
was
who seemed an
He
told that a
full
of zeal
A MALAY ROMANCE
a promising subject.
learn,
The missionary
Malay
showing great
told
The
interest in
have
killed her."
I9X
XVII
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
There are more things
in
heaven and
earth, Horatio,
Than
are
MALAY
antecedent
to
it is
amount of evidence
is
a certain
it
was
a form of Brahmanism and that no doubt had succeeded the original Spirit Worship.
interesting.
I
is
known
as bfr-
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
reminds one of a casting out
the name of Beelzebub the Prince of the
and
it
might here give some of the incantations commonly spoken by the exorcist, but one
devils"
will
suffice.
Here
is
most
translation of a
the
malevolent
the
demons
thousand
of
attacks
lesser
Imam
child of
Hakim
name
the
Baisuri,
Thou
of the
path
Heigh
known
me
think
you are
know your
flame
origin,
spawn of
If
this person.
will curse
you disobey,
the Most High, saying, "
I
Hell's spouting
The
the
name of
the Almighty
193
out the
is
demon by using
curious as showing
N
MALAY %KWTCHU
hew
is that
l.u/.il/.n
certain
//I,.,
will,
-.puil.
pirieHI
instance of their owner*, enter into and plague
one
whom
:,J,.l.l
may be
it
....
-.,..//..
deeired to injure.
..::
/'n/nn,;,
/w/,,///;,
tM
;.t
any
These
evil
I 'th.it,
;,||f|
craft,
!....,/!.
i
..I
'i
which
in
their
it
possession
idr
.'immunity U
reasonable as the "proof" of the exerciM
i..
i, ......
tie
.-,.,,.,1.,,
'..
". ".i
.ii v
W.
in will
I.
mil
Ji
in.iny
',<:
'
in
bV
IM|.l..lli:,
-I
vlll
'
will.
I. .11
.,;.
.11
..I
,,
U..I
......
....
I.
III.
I.
Ill.iy
l.r
The
the attacks,
.1... I.. I,
....I
dl
suggestlm.
H'l "" I'.'l'
'"!"
I. .11.
'
..I
(I..
without
,.,.,
l\
'
.,
||
v...h... r
in
It,
V"
"...
call
....
104
-.1
native
.....
i<
I.
III
.. ii.i.
II,
piri.m
.V.I
i:,
arise
',. Ii.ill
,\, ,.<;;
..
mil.
will
Impression
..I
'"h.
I'M'
,,UM.
il..
will
...Ily
..
II"
I"'-
tX.ll
mrlliiMl
III
relatives
..i N
.....I
my
,....1
In U.,.1
(.11
ll.r
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
patient is in
state of delirium
is the
who
is
the truth.
P*w*H *
skilled in dealing
call in
with wixards
(m
That
course he will
the
pass through
ordeal without
fctiMfn
trial,
fall
wherever
off in
it
is
a corre-
this
test
It
of guilt
is
not
always employed.
is that
when
several
MALAY SKETCHES
of the place lodge a formal complaint against the
ills
punished.
it
was the
many
years
ago.
I
remember a case
Perak
in
who was
village accused
present Sultan,
State, told
bdjang
if
if
would
kill
him.
and
river.
effects
On
on a
raft
and
their arrival at
The
is
supposed
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
to be the abiding-place of a familiar
who,
solicitations
until
spirit
of someone
to
come
forth.
latter
where
it
is
for Bdjatig,
is
Kedah lady
it
who
the method of
" on the
said,
go out,"
night before
the full moon and stand with your back to the moon
and your face to an ant-hill so that your shadow
falls
Then you
on the ant-hill
(incantations),
recite certain
try to
jampi
embrace
make a
three
nights in
all.
If
till
the
night
necessary
Sooner or
later
i97
you
will
succeed, and,
MALAY SKETCHES
as you stand there in the brilliance of the moonlight,
you will see that you have drawn your shadow into
yourself,
shade.
Go home and
will
never
again cast
whether sleeping
in the night,
when you
and the
It
life
put
and
a bottle
pelsit is yours."
keeps a
in
it
is
not surprised
who
is
anybody,
pelsit.
and she
will
It is all
their
attractions,
elfin children.
shadows
but
and
entreaties,
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
and
feet tied,
down
who
Those
add that
after
uncommonly
two or three examples had been made
to
The
of the origin
of
all
and
other
spirits.
He
to
for
man.
Then He
body with
fashioned
vitality
figure.
it
of the
first
sea and
air.
it
and was
reft in
Those fragments
air.
MALAY SKETCHES
one
into this
it
He wrought some
it
iron,
so that
when
When
they lose
it,
their proto-
first failure.
Another
the
little
people
article of
of a small State in
is
Sumatra
that
called
vengeance
injure.
still
Not
the gift
is
pretty
down from
man
slips
district of Perak,
bury
it !
local
headman
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
On
men appeared
in a
vomited chicken-feathers
It is
fair to
only
visit
of a tiger, but
and shortly
to the
however,
elhnu
it
is
Even
in
there,
only those
the occult
stht'r,
Chenaku
of transforming themselves
into
tigers,
and the
Chenaku
district.
me
to
take
the
who
name of
method of
fear that
detection, but
had no great
I
no one with an
faith in this
lived
MALAY SKETCHES
in
it
was
first
tried to
was
impressive personality.
travelling
persuade him
when
to return with
He
promised to follow me by an early steamer.
he would be able to tell me all about the
said
robbery,
who committed
it,
all
me
what he sought.
He told
and prayer, he would
to see
lay in his
there would be
He
declared
that, after
divining-glass,
the
figure of a
little
old man.
this Jin,
it
inquirer
first
recognised
this
the
202
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
up the scene of the robbery, when all the details
would be re-enacted in the liquid glass under the
eyes
of
describe
the
that
all
before, only
gazer,
it
who would
he saw.
had heard
me
and then
there
all
this
it
lie
The Arab,
to let
me
see
directions.
it
for myself, if I
Unfortunately,
my
local
Chief, however,
if
me
skill,
he said that a
difficulty
it
mothers
of
tender-aged
and
state.
All the
possibly
truthful
My
friend
was
not,
however,
203
at
MALAY SKETCHES
resources, and, though only an amateur in divination,
he undertook
For
to try
by other methods
to find
me
to give
purpose he asked
him the names of everyone in the house
the culprit.
the robbery
this
was committed.
at the
time
my
presence.
to repeat
That afternoon
two men
whom
We all sat
to
in a
copy
him the
This was
was asked
present in the
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
men
of his right
above the
The
floor.
it
was then
that
and placed
it
on the
floor
and face
to face.
It
The Chief
vessel.
commenced when
round from
fifth
left to right,
"
"
That," said the Chief,
is
the
name
of the thief."
It
by him.
I
tion to the
205
MALAY SKETCHES
we began
name
afresh,
and
on the
and
floor
was
Then
was
the vessel
when
surprised
said
told him.
I
that
Each time
the other
went from
till I
It
was
moreover,
and
was so placed
satisfied,
over.
moved, and
it
it
was
till it
wrote,
so.
Then
all
exactly
did not
my corner and
placed a
name
was
they made
it
it,
fingers
The name
disclosed
by
206
this
experiment was
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
whom
Another plan
suspected person
is
person
for
surprising
get into the
is to
sleeping,
and
after
all
the
learnt nothing.
the
of a
secret
room where
making
that
certain passes
when he may
answer
was most
there
I
truthfully
This
is
place in the
is to
hand of a
He
wooden
wards
if
there
is
no deception.
you prefer
it)
from
its
down-
in his left
to the effect
it
show
to
it
hand proceeds
to
MALAY SKETCHES
up and down the
moving
his fingers
little
point of the
krt's,
a cup.
will then hand round the blade and
will find
this
from the
fall
fill
no
The
tell
"
pawang
you
"
pawang
"
can render
it
krt's
it
"
bend
to
you
making two or three passes over the
it
After
blade.
by
the
cannot
be bent.
One evening
and a
is useless.
did
The guru,
is
the translation
" First
praise to God, the Giver of all good, a
of
Fountain
Compassion to His servants.
"From
Haji
Wan Muhammad,
Teacher of His
who
MALAY SUPERSTITIONS
'The whole earth
He
whom He
will of
for those
who
is
in the
it
gives
as an inheritance to
end arrive
at real greatness.
No
Most Mighty.
"I make ten thousand
inquire
oneself
about the
mad and
salutations.
of
practice
wish
to
driving
b&r-hantu,
Perak
is
Resident, or
deadly
those
sin
is
to
not?
it
the
who engage
in
Muhammadan
it
Faith,
into
right according to
it
because
and waste
some of them
scatter
it
cast
it
broadcast
want you
for this
in
MALAY SKETCHES
or fowls, and
stated.
all
this
According
is
to the
Muhammadan
religion
"(Signed) Haji
aio
XVIII
WITH A CASTING-NET
Where
between,
And sun and shadow chequer-chased
the green
JJLmi
is
PERAK
of the
it
is
and
it is
all
ancient rites
is
now
the
in
their
lives
than
MALAY SKETCHES
when Albuquerque was
ing,
and
it
In the
lull
rains, that is
heavy
when
in considerable
tain convenient
known
The
to him.
river-turtle is a great deal smaller than the
sea-turtle, but
it
WITH A CASTING-NET
As soon
feet
The
times.
to thirty-five
nests are
eggs each.
When
turtles
the
first set
turtles.
the watchers
river,
The second
set
of nests
is
left
to hatch,
There
no
is
sitting, the
young
simply emerge from the sand, walk
down into the river and swim away.
turtles
It is said that if
left
open them
that
the turtles
with
the
neighbouring
chiefs
and
their
Pasir Telor.
Fifteen or twenty large house-boats
213
and several
MALAY SKETCHES
bamboo
fifty
rafts
make an imposing
people
and
The
procession.
from
four
to sixteen
graceful and
foundation
very
little
is
polers;
picturesque
of which
barges,
the
wood drawing
raised
is
by the
on a
slight
privacy.
in
curtains secure
mats
and cushions
friends.
boat,
owner and
the
where they
sit
and
lie
on
his family or
sit
from whence he
is
the cabin-roof.
The covered
the Sultan's
white
scarlet-bordered
stand
all
day
umbrellas.
long, just
Two
six
officers
held close
together and
214
erect.
The
royal
WITH A CASTING-NET
bugler sits on the extreme end of the prow, and
call
on the antique
silver
all
noise,
riverine.
all
many
still
all
their
in arms),
turtle-eggs.
The
ladies
and wear
are
their
in
smartest
It is
garments
a blaze of
of bright
flashing
with
the
light
of diamonds
and
rubies.
in jackets, trousers,
striking hues;
but
and sarongs
the horror of
innate
sense of
MALAY SKETCHES
all this
strand.
down on
the gaily-clad
its
shadow
burden
to
a charming picture.
the
reach
handed
nest,
up.
showing how
garments
rivalry of
little
should
whose
it
trail
matters
in the
that
the
sand, there
costliest
is
the
number of
WITH A CASTING-NET
Anything over twenty-five
eggs.
is
considered a
satisfactory find.
By
the time
all
rifled,
the
boats,
the finery
manner
that
the
all
is
is
exchanged
for
of the
refreshing
sun-scorched
fortunate
enough
to see
how
it
is
possible to be
strange
so he
only on
is
man
is
such
occasions
as this
that a
near them
at
all
off into
MALAY SKETCHES
flotilla
glides
reach,
in
on
course
its
down
deeply-shadowed
heavily-wooded,
round a
headland,
past
another bourne
The
is
till
reached.
is
headed for
it
mdkan but
t
is
santap.
country
when
When
case of a Raja
that a
classes,
there is
WITH A CASTING-NET
rather that
old
Scotch
clan,
respect
and
rajas
chiefs,
children
and
parents,
and
tions that
mark
and
sisters,
fine
Boys
observance of these
and
in the
wherein
pleasure
individual
life
joy
one week
may grow
shared by many.
Future possibilities do not disturb our friends,
whose guiding principle is rather " insufficient
greater in the knowledge that
for the
day
is
the
desire
is
it
is
strong
219
They have
enough, but
these
kill,
fits
MALAY SKETCHES
are rare, and
when
sometimes
This
is
disposed
in reality.
of, all
the
men
by a thorough wetting.
a narrow
and
it
from what
called poachers.
in the
shallow
is
staked
West would be
now been made wide enough to admit of the pasThe Sultan's barge and a few other
sage of boats.
house-boats have passed the barrier, and these are
accompanied by a fleet of fifty uncovered dug-outs,
each with a light grating of split-bamboos over half
its
length,
one of
whom
local
is
small,
length varies
owner
to cast
it.
is
five
or six
twelve or thirteen
cubits,
WITH A CASTING-NET
accuracy
so that
it
reaches
it
is
the
skilful
water
hand.
perfectly
The bottom
is
The
net
is
usually dyed a
done
slightly in the
On
one side
it
By
most
barges, a dozen
some of the
oldest
and
young
rajas
men from
to join in
the sport.
The
off slowly
and
at
once form
themselves
into
The
MALAY SKETCHES
boats
make a simultaneous
completed, and
at
the
in-turn, the
moment when
circle is
becomes
it
is cast,
covering
the
paddlers
drawn
back-water,
to the surface
and the
is
slowly
fish
pound
The
fish,
fifty
bright
of
each.
operation
boats works
its
is
fleet
haul,
indifferently.
is
insecure foothold to
some-
the rest
all
is
it
up
in
up part of the
Then with
222
his left
hand he takes
and hangs
it
over his
WITH A CASTING-NET
right
The game
will
up
into
it
and you
water at the
an inextricable knot.
first
is
are
the
moment
is
gloomy.
on every bow a
fifty
In that instant
223
it
flashes
MALAY SKETCHES
across the spectator's
fell
mind
that
some mystic
Then heigh
zone.
Abracadabra
fifty
rite
The word
of
magic
fly
is
out
But the
skilful
lead, will
diameter of forty
feet,
He
nary capture.
made an
extraordi-
little
way, and
struggling
mass of
fish.
is
lifted
By
interested.
this
single
cast
who
are keenly
fish,
and his
"
tails."
Just as
backwater
is
comes down
shelter
and there
in torrents,
and dry
clothes.
The
224
is
a race for
WITH A CASTING-NET
or four paddlers easily beat the barges with a dozen,
is
fish,
warm
in the
IO
p.m.,
happy
when they
in the
still
till
Amongst these
and most
comers
late
ardent
dug-
outs.
That
is
how
party takes
time
its
similar
expedition
an old
is
is
rather different
float
MALAY SKETCHES
than by the means employed in Perak.
It
is
not
much
state
is
fish
conducted with
to scoop
many a spear
flies
men
wide of
its
mark.
comer
if
tried to describe,
he
You
will
226
XIX
WOODFORD BIRCH
JAMES WHEELER
friend,
formed on the
and
downright
man
Whittiir
the
November
2nd
Mr.
James
Wheeler Woodford Birch, British Resident
of Perak, was assassinated by Malays at a place
ON
1875,
this
propose
mitted.
Mr.
Birch began
He
Royal Navy.
ment employment
best years of his
as a
midshipman in the
abandoned the sea for Govern-
in
life,
life
to
be Gov-
was appointed
Colonial
Settlements, and
Secretary
of
when Major-General
227
the
Sir
Straits
Andrew
MALAY SKETCHES
Clarke, R.E., then Governor of the Straits Settle-
the
Government and
difficult
the
At
Malay
Of
all
the States in
was
officer.
and who were saturated with ancient customs, prejudices, and superstitions that had to be learned,
and with many of which it was difficult to symIt had an unusual number of Rajas and
pathise.
Chiefs, each with
some kind of
228
privilege or vested
interest.
revolting
practice
of debt-slavery,
under which
wrongs, was
rife in
to the
clung to by
torn
Muhammadan
by
rivalries
all
the
internal
dissensions, the
jealousies
and
Sultanship
knew very
little
all
on a
man
to sit
difficulties.
down
He was
in the face of
knowledge
defeat,
and
to
MALAY SKETCHES
those
who
disliked interference,
accustomed.
Mr. Birch lived in Perak as
its
why
strained
till
to
sufficient
It is
facts.
First,
it is
He was
already given.
all
white, he
restless,
have
was a Christian
climbed
hills
and
and
other
evil-doers,
he
constantly
bothered the Sultan about business and kept pressing him to introduce reforms, while every change
is
ness,
some
admitted
make a
attention.
this,
and,
if it
it
is
because Europeans
did not
for
With
is
By September
lock.
down-stream
country,
was a
come
to a
was
called the
dead-
Abdullah,
Sultan,
appointed
tion
Resident
Abdullah's opposi-
effective,
compel
"
its
adoption,
his
voice
was
that
of one
Up-stream there
was
Then
ship in
lived
there
still
further
to the Sultan-
Muda
was so great
best,
Jusuf,
who
his claims
his personal
unpopu-
him as Sultan.
The
MALAY SKETCHES
depended on the existence of mutual confidence and
friendship between Sultan and Resident. That was,
unfortunately, wanting, and, as after
many months
W.
and see
what chance there was of establishing administrative authority, collecting revenue, and otherwise
carrying out the provisions of the Pangkor Treaty.
As
the result
of interviews
was made
name by
He
British officers.
hesitated for
some days,
but,
when
was
left
the
these last
events occurred.
It
is
not
negotiations
an
with
talking,
sit
up
discussing
WOODFORD BIRCH
JAMES WHEELER
concerned
in
fast as
the chiefs,
to
scheme and
is
they only
movements
political
people do not
it
the
who are
common
it
is
to
and
they determined
be
not
only
got rid
that
of,
the
but one
visited
him.
This man, the Maharaja Lela, was a chief of considerable rank, after the Sultan he was the seventh
He
on the right
thirty miles above
the residence of Sultan Abdullah, and about forty
in the State.
five
He
avoided Mr.
Birch whenever
it
MALAY SKETCHES
the government of the country to Mr. Birch.
whom
raja
in silence
This
by the
others,
was doubtless no news, but the MahaLela said, u Even if your Highness has done
so, I
it
do not care
at
all.
never acknowledge
I will
Pasir Salak."
The Sultan
said,
"
Do you
really
mean
replied,
"
that,
Truly
arrangement."
Another
chief, the
lived
on the
u What the
Maharaja Lela does
will
do."
Two
month
small island
At
tions
proclamations
my kampong
those proclamations.
If
'*
said,
Very
To
well."
left,
and having
own kampong.
Pasir Salak
collection of
Malay
was
comparatively new
arily
substantial
own
kind, round
which he had
for
months past been digging a great ditch and throwing up a formidable earthwork crowned by a
These preparations had been duly noted
palisade.
by the Resident.
Arrived at his
out messengers to
immediate neighbourhood,
collected
235
MALAY SKETCHES
Birch was coming up the river in a few days, and
to
kill
him.
said that,
if
those
The
Maharaja Lela, they would carry them out.
handed his sword to a man called Pandak
chief then
self.
two days
dispersed.
It
was one or
at
Pasir
Salak.
accompanied
Perak.
left
Sir
When
the State
W.
Jervois
in
was
Novem-
was
had
one,
his journey
to
him
chiefs.
arrangement.
and
new
printed,
returned to
at
himself
me
directed
in
to
down-river
the
go up
districts,
and
having distributed
important villages from
chiefs, and,
the proclamations at
all
in
a state bordering on
in
but by the
their
senses,
down stream
for
at the
left
Bandar
same
time.
in
midstream.
The
MALAY SKETCHES
1st
November was
the
Hdri Raya,
the
first
day
At daylight his boats went alongside the bank, and the Resident's own boat was
after the
Fast.
made
fast
jeweller,
whose
little
Chinese
party.
conversation, which
was held
went
to the
in
the
Mr. Birch's
The news
of the Resident's
arrival
and
in
all
had
been
those in the
every direction,
neighbourhood were ordered to come in.
By this
time, sixty or seventy men had assembled and were
spread
now
to
They were
all
armed with
him
who
took them on
to the
MALAY SKETCHES
Almost immediately, Pandak Indut, the Maharaja
Lela's father-in-law, tore them down and took them
the Maharaja
off to
dictum, was
u Pull
Lela's
down
That chiefs
house.
if
Then
them."
kill
be
may
preter
to
replace those
removed,
breakfast,
loaded revolver.
common
in
to
and on them
built
The
back.
structure is
so moored that
it
floats
up inside
it
threatening attitude
Malays
a.m.,
and
in spite of the
standing in groups
240
WOODFORD BIRCH
JAMES WHEELER
anxiously
fearing
expectant,
the
boded
signs
catastrophe.
men came
house.
The crowd
asked,
"What
are
Chiefs
the
orders ?
Pandak Indut
replied,
He
me."
Going
tearing
straight
down
up
to the
the inter-
made
took
abdomen.
his
spear
fell
into the
down
over-
man's
the bank
let
the stream.
241
into
MALAY SKETCHES
The
" Here
out,
let
us
kill
Pandak Indut
cried
shouting amok,
dmok they
t
leapt
on to the
floating
came
Some
it
disappeared
moment
after
he
at the
door of the bath-house, jumped into the river without any warning to his master,
swam
off to
one of
The
killed,
river- bank
melee.
supported
With
in.
the
grievously
swimming
wounded
it
interpreter.
As
two
while they
man
on the Malays,
but they said they could not do so without an
order
He accordingly gave the order, and some
fire
moment
with two men in
bank.
small boat
down stream
lower
to intercept
cleared the
it
put out
After this
Long
Mr.
bank, was
place, and with great
The
attack, the
his in-
minutes.
Whilst
bloodthirst
still
the
passion
of strife
and
Maharaja Lela
Instantly
It is well,
He
then called a
243
man
forward
MALAY SKETCHES
and
"
said,
killed
Go and
Mr. Birch."
the Resident's
own
and
it
may
subject,
he sent with
it
boat.
be of some interest
to
add
that the
house.
An
attack
men
upon the
started on
began
party
to rain,
and a man
at
but
called told
reception,
and
it
Sagor, having
stockade their villages, and those stockades were
Sooner or
later
those
all
who were
Some
indirectly responsible.
fell
during
outlaw in the jungle.
The
brought
first
in to
man
would
have
been
A wilder
hard
me
to
looking creature
find.
He was
For many
sorcerer.
was almost
He
described to
He was
Bandar Bharu
sat
preferable to the
on the
floor
and
ment
that
who had
The
for his
own
MALAY SKETCHES
actions
was a
and he learnt
doctrine that
was strange
it
December
by
to him,
it.
1876,
the
November 1875.
Bar.
After
which lasted
trial
first
named.
fullest
like
was
by the
evidence, were banished from the State, and
sentence
Ismail and
established
some of
the ex-Sultan
his adherents.
"
"
years of advice could hardly have accomplished.
That was not all, for the events of those twelve
246
on the inner
light
life
It is all
or disregard
its
known, threw
of the Malay and his
to be fully
was
in the nature of a
teachings.
47
XX
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
Haud multum
abfuit
quin
interfi-
ceretur
Horacx
to
Queen's Commissioner,
Governor of
TExtract
the Straits.
Larut, November
:1
gth,
1875.
instant, Sergeant
ham)
at
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
he found that Mr. Swettenham had unfortunately
left, to return by the river a few hours previously
;
to the
owing
rapidity
of the current,
the
boats
day.
Malay, to
if
possible,
remains
the
of
unfortunate
these
officers."
and
will explain
why
Blue Book,
Captain Speedy had every
in a
how
it
was
that
my
death, and
my
just then.
Bandar Bharu
mentioned that
I left
at
November.
Besides the Malay boatmen,
celebrated Selangor chief
life
had with
me
a very
come through
it
scathless he
command
His
in jungle
latest exploit
re-
had been
MALAY SKETCHES
ment with Her Majesty's troops
State (Sungei Ujong), and as
in a neighbouring
had subsequently
Singapore and give himself
I
persuaded him to go to
up to the Governor, he had attached himself to
me
possibility of trouble in
Perak.
Then
on
coxswains
the
river,
marvellous dancer of
Mahmud
himself
Mahmud had
and
a couple of
men devoted
Lastly,
to himself,
not
till
of Sultan
Ismail.
who
declined to recognise
influential
either Jusuf or
far superior
claims),
was
we reached
As Ismail
it
felt
aggrieved,
nor did
suppose that
weeks since
had been
at Blanja
250
It
was only
six
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
and again a fortnight later I went there alone. Since
then Ismail (or his advisers in his name) had
summoned nearly all the principal people of the
upper country, and a very large number of boats
at Blanja, bringing all the chiefs and
had arrived
their retainers.
known
adherents
majority in the
I
Upper House.
said
They
delay longer,
said
would
call
left
on Ismail
As a piece ot
back in a few days.
news they told me a customs station had been
established at Blanja, and everyone who passed
on
my way
I said I
would be taxed, white men or Malays.
should be glad to see the collector, and he was in-
me
my journey.
If
MALAY SKETCHES
Blanja people, disturbances (war, they called
it)
were
imminent.
was
Raja Muda's
at the
He
also
village,
was
He
for
it.
be seen,
all
the chiefs
The
people
hardly
count,
That night
informed
me
called
Kangsar were
The shops
Kota Lama.
all
that she
closed,
in
Kuala
The
latest excitement
man
two
district of Larut,
saw a
foreign
Malay
children.
When
the
man
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
out of the mud, and as Raja Alang considered this
disrespectful to him, he called to the
man and
told
them there
till
the
money was
paid.
After a couple
Raja Alang said he would sell the woman and children to raise the amount of the fine.
Just at dawn
Then he
struck out
wounded
his
own
of Raja Alang,
own two
while
he
wife.
showing the
state of society,
my
and because
arrival,
this inci-
Kangsar.
On
the ist
November
253
MALAY SKETCHES
clamations in Kuala Kangsar, and on the following
day
He
some
copies,
Amongst
me
which
ill-treated the
I
the crowd
Patani man.
my surprise
days
were not of daily occurrence, lookthe infamous way in which the people were
kept in those
that I expressed
ing to
racter), that
of
all
he wished to go
to
to
be obliged
On
if
society),
and would
purpose
(the desire
for the
Mecca
dollars
November
the 3rd
tions in villages
and
in
254
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
prided
on
themselves
neighbours called
independence ; their
A few months
impudence.
it
their
apology
later,
to the place.
I
had been
in
this
a grudge
against
him, and
They
had
settled
it
in
and
It
was a wooden
the ground.
it,
now went
to see this
man
MALAY SKETCHES
village, talked to the people,
the
headman
sent
and
his
for
in the
deputy.
absence of
He came
teeth,
its
It
so
happened that we had come away without the proclamations, and I asked the headman to send to
Kuala Kangsar, when I got back, and I would give
the papers, that he might post them in Kota Lama.
He
said
them
"
necessary instructions, but inquired,
the Sultan ?
a long
you
if
"
way
To which
off.
you want
to
told
What
about
They added,
it
"We
won't hinder
friendly talk,
and
it
left
them.
Raja
Mahmud
they knew
well enough
who he
nothing, but
was, and
it
is
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
not been there.
was so amazed
that he
at
On
felt it
at
The
being done,
I
down
started
river
my journal,
referring to
8.30 a.m.
and, again
" No
:
left,
find that
at
my work
he said
made without
They
opposition.
here
as soon as
we
are quiet
you go they
Mahmud
will
If
he thought
it,
was
to settle matters
but
his pre-
means required
It
was my
my
boats reached
intention
my
if
at
was over-sanguine.
was
continue
are
Little as
diction
begin again.
to
spend
and
Ismail,
MALAY SKETCHES
The
left
bank, which
is
The
strip of sand.
who
boats of those
here
call
in
waded out
my
to
boat and
We
came on board.
This Haji
of
life,
Ali, a tall,
was the
well-made
man
genial person of
in the
evil
prime
reputation
Notwithstanding this
fact the
Haji
common
had sone
my
who had
news was so
startling that
258
mur-
then attacked
all
the Sikhs
flight.
This
it
and
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
said so, but the
man
assured
me
it
was
true,
and
men who
had
had
killed
brought
Mr. Birch he had better keep his boat, and the
messengers had accordingly left with it only two
it
At
Ali's
Haji
caught up
arrival.
first
his kris,
me
his
by con-
information
knew
it
impassable for
was
the country.
He
no one
else
knew
As soon
as he had
left
the boat
Mahmud, who
259
held a hasty
said
it
would
MALAY SKETCHES
be madness to land
like rats in a trap,
once and at
The
all
at Blanja,
where we should be
it
was
therefore discarded at
my
once.
All the
men
in both
decided
one boat and only take those who volunThat question was very soon settled,
man
declined the journey ; my Manila
Perak
every
boy took the rudder, three foreign Malays and
to leave
teered to go.
and
servant, he
I thought he
remain where he was, for they all
realised that the danger would be in staying with
would prefer
When
to
me.
if it
came
to close quarters
account of himself.
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
shore.
true
at
if his
story
was
How
once.
far
He
said,
stream
"It
is
in
is
We
destruction."
told
we were
going, and
the boat
was moving
much time
to
we
him
it
is
certain
whatever
it
was
into
get out
that
if
the shore.
He got out, and it was rather deep, but
he stood there and shouted, " No doubt you think
yourselves very fine fellows, but you will be killed
all
the same."
He was
still
when
distance, and as we passed outside the long line of boats the many people on
shore realised that we had started again and were
rapidly dropping
that for
The
down
stream.
seemed
to us
It
believe every
for
man
myself
in
the boat
last
rate
us long and
certainly
can
speak
a journey of which sudden death was the inevitable
bourne.
261
MALAY SKETCHES
The
Resident,
truth of that
we were
told,
at Pasir Salak,
report.
Then
the Residency
in
both
for miles
was
people on
the
the river at
to bank,
and
if
Pasir Salak
worst of
up
we
it
to that time
we
like
we
night's
If the conditions
stated,
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
and as we believed them
two
rifles
The
at
river
was
and just
Fastened by an island
we saw
'
own
Mr. Birch's
all
doubt as
boat,
to his
was
at
an end.
we might
we
decided that
was un-
it
As we passed
about
the boat
we
it.
The
enough
night
when we were
the Perak
is
in the
a river
most
at
side
in
difficulties,
times very
clear
to conceal us
But
skilful pilot.
were driven
enough
and
where
to
starlit, fine
close
to
the
banks.
for,
263
while
it
lasted,
it
was
MALAY SKETCHES
impossible to see half a boat's length in any direc-
The
tion.
mist
lifted
and
fell
again at intervals
was
it
all
that at one
we
calculated that
once
we
it
if
It
light,
was
possible because
was so
tired that
could no
were not
some time
at
all
certain
we
by the
succession of watch-fires on the banks and the
realised,
it
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
seemed evident
hours
before
quietly
that
we
About
dawn.
the
should reach
place
Mahmud
1.30 a.m.
We
knew
that
to
it
was
place
As
vive.
noise-
and we made
Just at this
men
and under
down, the
its
for the
we
sheltering cover
deep
moment
the
river,
glided swiftly
though
when
that
fire-lit
feel
haze.
the shock of
we had determined
In the darkness
we meant
265
to try
and force
MALAY SKETCHES
our way through or take one of the enemy's boats
on the down-stream side of the stakes.
We
could
realise
hardly
the
truth
when we
The
giving, the
bow
fast.
We
were so close
to
warning.
To my
dismay,
fire
that
were
distinct
enough
two of the
in spite of the
266
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
was the next
"
Where
inquiry,
lowed, but by
and we were
time the
this
bow
of the boat
was
off
As
the distance
stop,
the answers
fog.
to
felt
required of
It
at
was
him
we had yet
true that
Bandar Bharu,
had been
told this
confident
Residency
we
in the
we were
to pass the
five
was
all.
that
we had
nothing more to
fear.
We passed
Bandar Bharu
quietly,
we saw
a light
men
veniently en Evidence.
Ten
MALAY SKETCHES
and
in a
steam-launch.
but
we
further than
was necessary
we nad snown
later
in the
watches
in the night
him not
it
for
his
friends
professed
passed
had arrived
Pasir Salak
at
landed
at
was
had
to immediately
attack
left
men were
of their
A PERSONAL INCIDENT
As we saw nothing
and successfully carried out.
of them I conclude they did not exert themselves to
overtake us.
fell
some
me
there
is
no anger
find
him
great sorrow as of a
the world and
of
to see
it.
It is
t69
XXI
NAKODAH ORLONG
Two
all
things
are,
One
is
War
Rudyard Kipling
ON
my
arrival at
Bandar Bharu,
rifles.
member
was then
in civil
When
the
news of Mr.
Birch's
employ as
in
Penang.
murder reached
was
sent
with
force
to
Residency.
270
take
of
charge
that
Innes
of
the
NAKODAR ORLONG
not
It is
my
understanding of an
man
death of a
is
incident connected
called
with the
Malay.
With
Lieut.
about
fifty
attack
so-called
four
his
R.N.,
Abbott,
Sikhs,
bluejackets,
and
was determined
it
to
An
immediate
might look
still
like
our indecision.
With
Easterns, to
sit
probably, under
is
We
was decided
it
to
take
it,
two
The
was
five
miles,
vegetation of
yard
every
some
sort,
morning,
we
the
it
covered
with
of
It
was, therefore,
November,
271
in
boats,
that
we
MALAY SKETCHES
should pole up stream two miles and walk the rest,
the guns being served by the bluejackets from two
boats that would be kept
party.
All that
the way,
and
of scouts to feel
There
two
his
got
such
short
Late
notice.
that
evening,
was enough
We
men
were up
into boats,
without
at
and made a
difficulty,
pressed for
after
hands
we had
however, for we
do the poling.
I
it
the
were
It
hard
was only
been abandoned, a
all
to
started that
start
turned out.
very unfor-
To
attack,
The
272
NAKODAH ORLONG
means delay and hard work,
trouble
justify
The
river journey
incident,
moved
whatever the
but,
off.
will
came
last
ioth Regiment.
We
to
we came
The
the ground
On
we opened
hill-padi,
out to cover
when
half
way
men
called
Alang
on
to the right of
my
273
left
him one of
his
MALAY SKETCHES
We
way from
Pasir Salak)
to
the end of the cover, for the last few feet of the
when we were
greeted by
a volley from the enemy concealed behind a stockade
not a dozen yards in front of us.
was
Probably
Mahmud
obliged to
Manila
out
unhesitatingly to get
my
intention
said,
" Stand
was apparent,
and
fast
boy and
of the way.
for
shoot."
Raja
I
was
we had no
tence
The
its
shelter whatever,
to their
want of
skill.
of a brisk fusilade
in our rear.
274
That decided us
NAKODAH ORLONG
and we stepped back under cover, and then moved
Arrived
to the sheltering trunk of the fig-tree.
there
we found
whose
that besides
fate there
was the
last
seen him,
man on
we concluded
that
killed.
was
at
enemy doing
at
thought it
rate from shooting us.
We
know
we were
of our position.
us,
was no
and
it
and
fires,
any
use,
no
was some
In that
time
we
realised
fire.
safest.
same uncomfortable
behind
me was
with
me
as
position,
made a determined
we were
Once
attack on the
men
MALAY SKETCHES
and
in spite of
It is true,
of
effort, that
went
straight
home
left
waste
this
That was
to stop them.
by
dispirited
they incontinently
no sense
in
they were not his men, and he had never seen them
The Penang
had
masse
retired en
at
an even
much
police
earlier hour,
force, that
it
and
was
The enemy's stockade was a long rampart imit was faced by a deep and
penetrable to bullets
;
with one
in high jungle.
commanded by
father-in-law
The
were
murderers.
I
am
attack,
not
it is
to prove
now concerned
how
were
sufficient to
ineffective,
The
and as they
276
all
NAKODAH ORLONG
the stockade were greeted by the jeers of the enemy.
We
we
week
abled us, a
learnt
carry this
later, to
and a succession
About
officers,
the
men
the
way
it
was a hopeless
task.
We
We
enemy, while we were entirely at their mercy.
had to retire with the loss of Captain Innes killed,
both the officers of the 10th (Lieutenants Booth and
Elliott) severely
men
to
casualties.
If
distance
if
the tree-tops.
The Malay's
it
that
277
MALAY SKETCHES
place, the
and
enemy
retired,
only
we
did not
know
it
then.
We were
wounded
engaged
and organising an orderly retreat, for it was late, we
had some miles to go, and we expected the Malays
would leave their shelter and come after us.
Perin
was
in the centre
been
We
We
me
About 8
started.
body of
down
p.m.
his chief
278
NAKODAH ORLONG
When Nakodah
got away
Orlong
fell,
and the
rest of us
was
morning
till
A man even
abandon the corpse.
came out from the stockade and attacked him with
declining
kris,
him
to
off.
all
to
clear,
it
into the
it
when
went down
Nakodah Orlong ;
had seen him last, except that
he looked just as I
his hair and clothes were drenched with water and
there
was a
279
MALAY SKETCHES
out a long day to guard his chiefs dead body, without thought of gain or praise, only determined that
and
has
its
its sting.
was to-day a
friend
be corruption?
280
and to-morrow
will
XXII
EVENING
Phoebus loosens
all his
golden hair
THE
failed
to bring
Macxay
If I
have
you
you could see into his heart, understand something of his life, and perhaps even sympathise with
that
the
courage and
The
self-sacrifice,
him
to
acts
is
of high
mine.
ness
these
are the
home
ride
up
this
let
us leave the
the wealth
MALAY SKETCHES
and the magnificence of tropical jungle, and look
on
brilliant
colours,
great
stretches of
sea
and
forest,
beasts measured
birds
are
This path, by which we slowly rise to cooler altitudes and a new flora, would excite in the stranger
feelings of
The road
itself is
shade of terra
cotta,
delight.
cut through
the colour
all
soil
of a deep
on red
soil,
massive tree-trunk, intensifying colour and deepenHere and there are seen glimpses of
ing shadow.
the plains below, the distant sea, the peaks and
valleys of other hill ranges, and the ear constantly
of numerous
steep mountain
streams
sides
in
cascades
foam.
The path
twists
282
EVENING
and then by an even steeper ascent,
gain the summit of the mountain.
The
Stand here.
till
limit of vision is
at last
wide
we
you
two hundred
miles.
Eastward, those
hundred miles away, and
soon on the western horizon the sun will meet the
far short of
That
faint
indistinct, is
to
blue peak
Gunong
in
the
Jerai in Kedah,
veil, is
Penang.
through a golden
grey streak of water shot with
it
and
Dinding coast,
eyes.
lie
flat
and
fertile,
an unbroken expanse of dark jungle, mostly mangrove, for all this land from hill-base to sea-shore is
of comparatively recent formation, the erosion from
the hills carried down seawards and covered with a
excessive
MALAY SKETCHES
heat and excessive moisture of this forcing tropical
No
climate.
rocks,
no bare
no arid
hills,
plains,
all
their
wide
streets,
You might
all its
many
public buildings.
And
all
They
The
we
stand,
They
are
why
it
is difficult
to understand
the sea.
eye
themselves
is
caught by twenty
sun loves to
linger,
little
lakes,
on which the
when
EVENING
the setting in which these jewels
They
are
fragments
lie
has turned to
of estuaries,
deep
waveless lagoons winding through the mangroves,
purple.
and showing
broken
The
and these
mud
it
when
the tide
is
high.
flats, in
Turning
to
valley
lies
and
Bintang,
Further
mountains,
running
Biong and
Inas
eastward
is the country
near the sources of the
Perak River, and across the narrow valley, through
which its upper waters dance in a succession of
Now we
it
The
ridge on which
we
stand
MALAY SKETCHES
same
which the
valley through
On
Gunong
The spurs
high.
east
to the
In the south-east,
southwards nearly to the coast,
across the Perak River, rise five or six ranges of
hills
of ever-increasing height.
Over the
first
range
many
its
then
Those
hills
fading
As we
now grown
a deep crimson,
is sink-
There
is
is
on the horizon.
moment
later
it
itself
disappeared
is
fire
and
EVENING
shoots rays of gold over Penang in the north and
the
belt of
gaining in intensity,
it
and
fills
the empyrean.
to
be
to
caress,
fills
kiss
the
the
effulgence, then
hills
whole
hill
'Twixt
lies
still
swamp and
river, and,
its
night garb
faint mist
spreading
has
itself
Soon
this light
wanes
287
MALAY SKETCHES
colours fade from sky and sea, only the shore-line
keeps
its
white
sheen.
clouds,
marshes
like
Then
this too
coming from
out
and great
and
dies,
the mines
foothills
of
Here,
at
this elevation,
the night
is
not quite
yet.
Close around us
still
moss and
The
tree to tree.
is
waning
light.
in
resistless
to
darkness
all
things
is
the
fitful
is
peaks spreads a
EVENING
silvery sheen, herald of that great orb of splendour
over
forest, plain,
and
sea, softening
what
is
crude,
cold
There
is
nothing
Seen, half-risen,
it
glitters
it
soars
and purity.
cinder
longing,
should
be
only
a gigantic
r'HE
recognised as
Malay
States.
"
Roya/"
is
%aja
is
the special
Malay
class.
of %dja
to
of7{aja
official position,
or to chiefs
%ajas
of white
is
Malay
of yellow
no
to
who have
of the
birth.
s aja
It
this
confined to the
of
cotton.
yellow, in others
it
is
the
special privilege of
In Terak
%aja
class.
heir
ted
{sty
the
Sultan,
{the
respectively,
his
and
his
white, yellow,
State,
Wazir
and black
The
photographed for
are
in
the
good
types
The
of the Malay
originals of these
this design.
F.
Xmat
day,
iS^J.
'
<*:?
J.
S.
BERKELEY
Return to desk from which borrowed.
This book is DUE on the last date stamped below.
JAN12196S6 3
REC'D
JAN
6 '66 -5 PM
LOAN DEPT.
C 6
1974
ttct>e*c ***
LD
,!Ut
21-95m^ll,*50(2877sl6)476
V74
Td lOIOO
-,LBERKELEY LIBRARIES
mm
ILWfc-
1>S
S92.
Su
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY
&.