The Young Are
Obedient To The Wishes Of Their Elders, And Seem To Feel None Of
That Propensity To Mischief Which European Boys Exhibit.
How long
would tame squirrels continue to inhabit trees in the vicinity of
an English village, even if close to the church?
They would soon
be pelted and driven away, or snared and confined in a whirling
cage. I have never heard of these pretty animals being tamed in
this way in England, but I should think it might be easily done
in any gentleman's park, and they would certainly be as pleasing
and attractive as they would be uncommon.
After many inquiries, I found that a day's journey by water above
Palembang there commenced a military road which extended up to
the mountains and even across to Bencoolen, and I determined to
take this route and travel on until I found some tolerable
collecting ground. By this means I should secure dry land and a
good road, and avoid the rivers, which at this season are very
tedious to ascend owing to the powerful currents, and very
unproductive to the collector owing to most of the lands in their
vicinity being underwater. Leaving early in the morning we did
not reach Lorok, the village where the road begins, until late at
night. I stayed there a few days, but found that most all the
ground in the vicinity not underwater was cultivated, and that
the only forest was in swamps which were now inaccessible. The
only bird new to me which I obtained at Lorok was the fine long-
tailed parroquet (Palaeornis longicauda). The people here assured
me that the country was just the same as this for a very long
way - more than a week's journey, and they seemed hardly to have
any conception of an elevated forest-clad country, so that I
began to think it would be useless going on, as the time at my
disposal was too short to make it worth my while to spend much
more of it in moving about. At length, however, I found a man who
knew the country, and was more intelligent; and he at once told
me that if I wanted forest I must go to the district of Rembang,
which I found on inquiry was about twenty-five or thirty miles
off.
The road is divided into regular stages of ten or twelve miles
each, and, without sending on in advance to have coolies ready,
only this distance can be travelled in a day. At each station
there are houses for the accommodation of passengers, with
cooking-house and stables, and six or eight men always on guard.
There is an established system for coolies at fixed rates, the
inhabitants of the surrounding villages all taking their turn to
be subject to coolie service, as well as that of guards at the
station for five days at a time. This arrangement makes
travelling very easy, and was a great convenience for me. I had a
pleasant walk of ten or twelve miles in the morning, and the rest
of the day could stroll about and explore the village and
neighbourhood, having a house ready to occupy without any
formalities whatever.
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