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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1856
  • Page 14
  • PENCILLINGS EROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OE A MA...
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Nov. 1, 1856: Page 14

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Pencillings Erom The Sketch-Book Oe A Ma...

demanded , in what we thought a very pompous manner , who we were , and what we wanted ? The young gentleman having received an official answer , together with a list of the passengers , re-entered his boat and returned to his ship .

Immediately a clatter might be heard below , arising from the fastening of trunks , cording of boxes , rattling of keys , and slamming to and fro of cabin-doors ; the steward and his assistants , obsequiously bowing , came down for presents as a remuneration for promoting our comfort on the passage ; but great as was the confusion and buBstle below , it was as nothing in comparison with that

on deck ; for , about six o ' clock , crowds of Doobashees or native agents , small bazaar merchants , and black servants , were admitted up the gangway from Musoolah boats , vessels built expressly to weather the surf . A scene , moreover , characteristic of the country we had come to , attracted general notice ; perhaps it is scarcely necessary for me to observe here , that it is an invariable custom in

the East , when addressing a superior , to speak in the third person ; to say " you , " or " thou , " is only proper when applied to an inferior or equal : thus natives , having any knowledge of the English language , use the words " master , " or " your honour , " in speaking to Europeans ; and as we came out of the cuddy we were accosted by them something after this fashion : " Tour honour got

good sea-cot blanket ? All things master choose I buy ! " Another would say , " Master , want hand-servant ? I plenty good characters got , master like I show , " very ludicrously suiting the action to the word by gestures in the most unapproved style of theatrical ranting ; but we were not to be caught . We had been duly warned of the attempts of these gentry by our seniors on board . The characters

often exhibited in this manner , though they have the appearance of being genuine , may be either direct forgeries , or probably those of gentlemen by whom the men presenting them had never been hired as servants , but had purchased them for a rupee or so from an original holder . It would be folly for any one to engage such persons as thus offer themselves , for a few hours will suffice to procure respectable

servants ashore , through the agency of any gentleman ' s butler resident in Madras , whom the cadet may visit , or when he has arrived even at his temporary home—the cadet quarters . I recollect the first sight of these longcloth-garment and muslin-turbanwearing creatures impressed me with an idea that they looked more

like old women , especially the more corpulent ones , than beings of the masculine gender . Eastern costume seems supremely ridiculous and effeminate till the eye becomes accustomed to it ; but after the novelty has worn off , and a gradual insight into native habits and customs has borne down the barriers of prejudice in his mind , the European is easily reconciled to these external distinctions of dress

and manner . Most of these men who visited the ship looked extremely artful , and certainly afforded ns , by their self-confident , pushing behaviour , no very favourable notion of the people among whom we were about to pass a long part of our existence .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-11-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 21 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01111856/page/14/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
MASONIC PHILOSOPHY. Article 1
« THINGS NOT GENERALLY KNOWN."* Article 6
LINES TO A NEWLY-INITIATED BROTHER. Article 11
PENCILLINGS EROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OE A MADRAS OFFICER. Article 12
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 20
ANNIVERSARY OF A LODGE. Article 22
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 23
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 36
METE0P0LITAN. Article 50
PROVINCIAL. Article 54
ROYAL ARCH. Article 72
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED KITE. Article 74
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 74
MAKE MASONRY. Article 75
SCOTLAND. Article 75
COLONIAL. Article 77
INDIA. Article 79
AMERICA. Article 80
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR OCTOBER. Article 82
OBITUARY. Article 83
NOTICE. Article 84
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Page 14

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Pencillings Erom The Sketch-Book Oe A Ma...

demanded , in what we thought a very pompous manner , who we were , and what we wanted ? The young gentleman having received an official answer , together with a list of the passengers , re-entered his boat and returned to his ship .

Immediately a clatter might be heard below , arising from the fastening of trunks , cording of boxes , rattling of keys , and slamming to and fro of cabin-doors ; the steward and his assistants , obsequiously bowing , came down for presents as a remuneration for promoting our comfort on the passage ; but great as was the confusion and buBstle below , it was as nothing in comparison with that

on deck ; for , about six o ' clock , crowds of Doobashees or native agents , small bazaar merchants , and black servants , were admitted up the gangway from Musoolah boats , vessels built expressly to weather the surf . A scene , moreover , characteristic of the country we had come to , attracted general notice ; perhaps it is scarcely necessary for me to observe here , that it is an invariable custom in

the East , when addressing a superior , to speak in the third person ; to say " you , " or " thou , " is only proper when applied to an inferior or equal : thus natives , having any knowledge of the English language , use the words " master , " or " your honour , " in speaking to Europeans ; and as we came out of the cuddy we were accosted by them something after this fashion : " Tour honour got

good sea-cot blanket ? All things master choose I buy ! " Another would say , " Master , want hand-servant ? I plenty good characters got , master like I show , " very ludicrously suiting the action to the word by gestures in the most unapproved style of theatrical ranting ; but we were not to be caught . We had been duly warned of the attempts of these gentry by our seniors on board . The characters

often exhibited in this manner , though they have the appearance of being genuine , may be either direct forgeries , or probably those of gentlemen by whom the men presenting them had never been hired as servants , but had purchased them for a rupee or so from an original holder . It would be folly for any one to engage such persons as thus offer themselves , for a few hours will suffice to procure respectable

servants ashore , through the agency of any gentleman ' s butler resident in Madras , whom the cadet may visit , or when he has arrived even at his temporary home—the cadet quarters . I recollect the first sight of these longcloth-garment and muslin-turbanwearing creatures impressed me with an idea that they looked more

like old women , especially the more corpulent ones , than beings of the masculine gender . Eastern costume seems supremely ridiculous and effeminate till the eye becomes accustomed to it ; but after the novelty has worn off , and a gradual insight into native habits and customs has borne down the barriers of prejudice in his mind , the European is easily reconciled to these external distinctions of dress

and manner . Most of these men who visited the ship looked extremely artful , and certainly afforded ns , by their self-confident , pushing behaviour , no very favourable notion of the people among whom we were about to pass a long part of our existence .

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