At Mataram We Called At The House Of Gusti Gadioca, One Of The
Princes Of Lombock, Who Was A Friend Of Mr. Carter's, And Who Had
Promised To Show Me The Guns Made By Native Workmen.
Two guns
were exhibited, one six, the other seven feet long, and of a
proportionably large bore.
The barrels were twisted and well
finished, though not so finely worked as ours. The stock was well
made, and extended to the end of the barrel. Silver and gold
ornament was inlaid over most of the surface, but the locks were
taken from English muskets. The Gusti assured me, however, that
the Rajah had a man who made locks and also rifled barrels. The
workshop where these guns are made and the tools used were next
shown us, and were very remarkable. An open shed with a couple of
small mud forges were the chief objects visible. The bellows
consisted of two bamboo cylinders, with pistons worked by hand.
They move very easily, having a loose stuffing of feathers
thickly set round the piston so as to act as a valve, and produce
a regular blast. Both cylinders communicate with the same nozzle,
one piston rising while the other falls. An oblong piece of iron
on the ground was the anvil, and a small vice was fixed on the
projecting root of a tree outside. These, with a few files and
hammers, were literally the only tools with which an old man
makes these fine guns, finishing then himself from the rough iron
and wood.
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