The Tribes Of Gedumah, Jaffnoo,
And Ludamar, Though Not So Numerous As The Former, Are Nevertheless
Very Powerful And Warlike, And Are Each Governed By A Chief, Or
King, Who Exercises Absolute Jurisdiction Over His Own Horde,
Without Acknowledging Allegiance To A Common Sovereign.
In time of
peace the employment of the people is pasturage.
The Moors, indeed,
subsist chiefly on the flesh of their cattle, and are always in the
extreme of either gluttony or abstinence. In consequence of the
frequent and severe fasts which their religion enjoins, and the
toilsome journeys which they sometimes undertake across the desert,
they are enabled to bear both hunger and thirst with surprising
fortitude; but whenever opportunities occur of satisfying their
appetite they generally devour more at one meal than would serve a
European for three. They pay but little attention to agriculture,
purchasing their corn, cotton, cloth, and other necessaries from the
negroes, in exchange for salt, which they dig from the pits in the
Great Desert.
The natural barrenness of the country is such that it furnishes but
few materials for manufacture. The Moors, however, contrive to
weave a strong cloth, with which they cover their tents; the thread
is spun by their women from the hair of goats, and they prepare the
hides of their cattle so as to furnish saddles, bridles, pouches,
and other articles of leather. They are likewise sufficiently
skilful to convert the native iron, which they procure from the
negroes, into spears and knives, and also into pots for boiling
their food; but their sabres, and other weapons, as well as their
firearms and ammunition, they purchase from the Europeans, in
exchange for the negro slaves which they obtain in their predatory
excursions. Their chief commerce of this kind is with the French
traders on the Senegal river.
The Moors are rigid Mohammedans, and possess, with the bigotry and
superstition, all the intolerance of their sect. They have no
mosques at Benowm, but perform their devotions in a sort of open
shed, or enclosure, made of mats. The priest is, at the same time,
schoolmaster to the juniors. His pupils assemble every evening
before his tent; where, by the light of a large fire, made of
brushwood and cow's dung, they are taught a few sentences from the
Koran, and are initiated into the principles of their creed. Their
alphabet differs but little from that in Richardson's Arabic
Grammar. They always write with the vowel points. Their priests
even affect to know something of foreign literature. The priest of
Benowm assured me that he could read the writings of the Christians:
he showed me a number of barbarous characters, which he asserted
were the Roman alphabet; and he produced another specimen, equally
unintelligible, which he declared to be the Kallam il Indi, or
Persian. His library consisted of nine volumes in quarto; most of
them, I believe, were books of religion - for the name of Mohammed
appeared in red letters in almost every page of each.
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