EAST OF SUEZ
PRESENT-DAY EGYPT
By Frederic Courtland Penfield, Former American Diplomatic Agent and Consul-General to Egypt.
* * * * *
_Secretariat du Khedive_
RAS-EL-TEEN PALACE, ALEXANDRIA, 4th November, 1899
FREDERIC C. PENFIELD, ESQUIRE, Manhattan Club, New York.
My dear Sir:
I am commanded by H. H. The Khedive to acknowledge the receipt of the copy of your book "Present-Day Egypt," which you have so kindly forwarded for his acceptance.
I am to say that His Highness has read it with much pleasure and interest, as it is the only book published on Egypt of to-day by an author thoroughly acquainted with the subject through long residence and official position in the country.
I have the honor to be, Sir, Your obedient servant, (Signed) ALFRED B. BREWSTER, Private Secretary to H. H. the Khedive.
* * * * *
Revised and Enlarged Edition. Fully illustrated. Uniform with "East of Suez." 8vo. 396 pages. $2.50
The Century Co., Union Square New York
[Illustration: GULF OF MANAR PEARLING BOAT, AND DIVERS RESTING IN THE WATER]
EAST OF SUEZ CEYLON, INDIA, CHINA AND JAPAN
By Frederic Courtland Penfield Author of "Present-Day Egypt," etc.
Illustrated from Drawings and Photographs
"East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet, Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God's great Judgment Seat." _Kipling._
[Illustration]
NEW YORK THE CENTURY CO. 1907
Copyright, 1906, 1907, by THE CENTURY CO.
_Published, February, 1907_
THE DE VINNE PRESS
TO THE MEMORY OF KATHARINE
Introductory
If books of travel were not written the stay-at-home millions would know little of the strange or interesting sights of this beautiful world of ours; and it surely is better to have a vicarious knowledge of what is beyond the vision than dwell in ignorance of the ways and places of men and women included in the universal human family.
The Great East is a fascinating theme to most readers, and every traveler, from Marco Polo to the tourist of the present time, taking the trouble to record what he saw, has placed every fireside reader under distinct obligation.
So thorough was my mental acquaintance with India through years of sympathetic study of Kipling that a leisurely survey of Hind simply confirmed my impressions. Other generous writers had as faithfully taught what China in reality was, and Mortimer Menpes, Basil Hall Chamberlain, and Miss Scidmore had as conscientiously depicted to my understanding the ante-war Japan. Grateful am I, as well, to the legion of tireless writers attracted to the East by recent strife and conquest, who have made Fuji more familiar to average readers than any mountain peak in the United States; who have made the biographies of favorite geishas known even in our hamlets and mining camps, and whose agreeable iteration of scenes on Manila's lunetta compel our Malaysian capital to be known as well as Coney Island and Atlantic City--they have so graphically portrayed and described interesting features that of them nothing remains to be told. But to know Eastern lands and peoples without an intermediary is keenly delightful and compensating.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: East of Suez by Frederic Courtland Penfield
- 2: But America's real opportunity is in Asia
- 3: And not by methods most easily invoked
- 4: Vii the vicarious maharajah of jeypore
- 5: Agra 182 scene on the ganges
- 6: Through the warning of his favorite oracle
- 7: The magnificent Ismail borrowed in such a wholesale manner
- 8: De Lesseps died in a madhouse and practically a pauper
- 9: Within a few hours' journey of the canal
- 10: 000The Suez company pays enormously
- 11: To study the returns of the Suez enterprise
- 12: The isthmian short cut to Oceanica and Asia
- 13: A higher tariff would probably produce less
- 14: With labor to produce any conceivable commodity
- 15: Does it deal with spicy breezes
- 16: The 'rickshaw in Colombo is a splendid convenience
- 17: The Cingalese are mostly Buddhists
- 18: The last kraal failed dismally
- 19: Is unquestionably the Ceylon pearl fishery
- 20: Which in time become coated with nacre
- 21: The line of banks they are paars
- 22: This slender frame is covered with cadjans
- 23: But the structure of material interest is the kottu
- 24: And those hailing from Paumben were Moormen
- 25: Each diver was faithfully attended by a manduck
- 26: With every boat headed for Marichchikkaddi
- 27: The count in the kottu is soon completed
- 28: The initial bid was thirty rupees
- 29: Marichchikkaddi probably has no equal
- 30: The most prosperous of all Manar fisheries
- 31: In a suburb of Colombo the sacred Kelani River is crossed
- 32: Controlled for centuries by the Kandyan kings
- 33: Matters little its fountainhead is Kandy
- 34: Glance where you will in Kandy
- 35: Rodiya girls wander the country as dancers and jugglers
- 36: Illustration TREES IN PERADENIYA GARDEN
- 37: The first time I went to Peradeniya
- 38: Another set deals with common pekoes
- 39: The Jeejeebhoy family is intensely Parsee
- 40: Illustration PARSEE TOWER OF SILENCE
- 41: Corpses being considered unclean by Parsee standards
- 42: England secured Bombay in 1661
- 43: Who took up his residence in Bombay
- 44: Torab stalked into the apartment
- 45: Generations the senior of Jeypore
- 46: In Jeypore there are grandees and warriors
- 47: Or having work done by persons not of the Hindu faith
- 48: Who knows the ways of maharajahs
- 49: This explains why Ambir is now deserted
- 50: Arjamand had many titles of rank and endearment
- 51: The Taj garden is perhaps a half mile square
- 52: The Taj is the antithesis of Akbar's mausoleum
- 53: Aurangzeb promptly adopted Delhi as his capital
- 54: And the costly Muti Masjid mosque in Agra Fort
- 55: The Benares operation is sanitary and practical
- 56: Now sanctified by Mother Ganga
- 57: Later he climbs the ghat to his favorite temple
- 58: Harmonizing in appearance to a reader's conception of thugs
- 59: A Hooghly pilot is the very maximum of a nautical swell
- 60: Calcutta fairly throbs with recollections of Job Charnock
- 61: The automobile has many devotees in Calcutta
- 62: Illustration SHIPPING ON THE HOOGHLY
- 63: The lieutenant governor of Bengal
- 64: While marriage is universal in India
- 65: The 'rickshaw coolie of Singapore
- 66: The name Hong Kong is variously interpreted
- 67: Were Hong Kong a port of origin
- 68: Then he gives still more chits
- 69: Hong Kong is filled with unfortunate remittance men
- 70: That section of Canton known as Shameen
- 71: Everything is dumped in the gorgeous palanquin
- 72: Carried by coolies in the way that chairs are borne
- 73: Is announced by three rows of brackets
- 74: Are the antithesis of the sampans
- 75: And piracy as an occupation has passed with them
- 76: The Eurasian class is strikingly numerous
- 77: The Lusiad was first published in 1572
- 78: To commemorate the eight or ten years he passed in Macao
- 79: And dollars between Hong Kong and Macao
- 80: MACAO Then he orders refreshments brought
- 81: As an appellation for the august William
- 82: Her enormous tea bill to China is paid yearly in money
- 83: Is to the Kaiser a perpetual nightmare
- 84: The assassination in the streets of Pekin
- 85: What of the German colony in China Kiau chau
- 86: In William II's capital on Kiau chau Bay
- 87: Were America to cease exporting raw cotton
- 88: All these nations hold Asiatic possessions
- 89: Make little complaint of fiscal burden
- 90: Many Tokyo bankers believed the loan unnecessary
- 91: Japan grows the tea consumed in the country
- 92: Japan is advantageously located
- 93: The American asks the man of Japan
- 94: At Nagasaki among the largest in the world
- 95: In its unwrought state it enters the country free
- 96: The Japanese are athirst for knowledge
- 97: For whom Taj Mahal was erected
- 98: Orthodoxy of Maharajah of Jeypore
- 99: Advertisements announcing a fishery
- 100: Stated page numbers were 312 314 but 312 is a blank page
