This Street Is Usually Thronged With A Native
Population Of Bugis And Macassar Men, Who Wear Cotton Trousers
About Twelve
Inches long, covering only from the hip to half-way
down the thigh, and the universal Malay sarong, of gay
Checked
colours, worn around the waist or across the shoulders in a
variety of ways. Parallel to this street run two short ones
which form the old Dutch town, and are enclosed by gates. These
consist of private houses, and at their southern end is the fort,
the church, and a road at right angles to the beach, containing
the houses of the Governor and of the principal officials. Beyond
the fort, again along the beach, is another long street of native
huts and many country-houses of the tradesmen and merchants. All
around extend the flat rice-fields, now bare and dry and
forbidding, covered with dusty stubble and weeds. A few months
back these were a mass of verdure, and their barren appearance at
this season offered a striking contrast to the perpetual crops on
the same kind of country in Lombock and Bali, where the seasons
are exactly similar, but where an elaborate system of irrigation
produces the effect of a perpetual spring.
The day after my arrival I paid a visit of ceremony to the
Governor, accompanied by my friend the Danish merchant, who spoke
excellent English. His Excellency was very polite, and offered me
every facility for travelling about the country and prosecuting
my researches in natural history.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 293 of 419
Words from 79857 to 80109
of 114260