Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PART III
- PART IV
- CHAP. I MARITIME CEYLON
- CHAP. II KANDY
- CHAP. III MADRAS TO CALCUTTA
- CHAP. IV BENARES
- CHAP. V CASTE
- CHAP. VI MOHAMEDAN CITIES
- CHAP. VII SIMLA
- CHAP. VIII COLONIZATION
- CHAP. IX THE “GAZETTE”
- CHAP. X UMRITSUR
- CHAP. XI LAHORE
- CHAP. XII OUR INDIAN ARMY
- CHAP. XIII RUSSIA
- CHAP. XIV NATIVE STATES
- CHAP. XV SCINDE
- CHAP. XVI OVERLAND EOUTES
- CHAP. XVII BOMBAY
- CHAP. XVIII THE MOHURRUM
- CHAP. XIX ENGLISH LEARNING
- CHAP. XX INDIA
- CHAP. XXI DEPENDENCIES
- CHAP. XXII FRANCE IN THE EAST
- CHAP. XXIII THE ENGLISH
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAP. XIV - NATIVE STATES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PART III
- PART IV
- CHAP. I MARITIME CEYLON
- CHAP. II KANDY
- CHAP. III MADRAS TO CALCUTTA
- CHAP. IV BENARES
- CHAP. V CASTE
- CHAP. VI MOHAMEDAN CITIES
- CHAP. VII SIMLA
- CHAP. VIII COLONIZATION
- CHAP. IX THE “GAZETTE”
- CHAP. X UMRITSUR
- CHAP. XI LAHORE
- CHAP. XII OUR INDIAN ARMY
- CHAP. XIII RUSSIA
- CHAP. XIV NATIVE STATES
- CHAP. XV SCINDE
- CHAP. XVI OVERLAND EOUTES
- CHAP. XVII BOMBAY
- CHAP. XVIII THE MOHURRUM
- CHAP. XIX ENGLISH LEARNING
- CHAP. XX INDIA
- CHAP. XXI DEPENDENCIES
- CHAP. XXII FRANCE IN THE EAST
- CHAP. XXIII THE ENGLISH
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
Quitting Lahore at night, I travelled to Moultan by a railway which has names for its stations such as India cannot match. Chunga-Munga, Wanrasharam, Cheechawutnee, and Chunnoo, follow one another in that order. During the night, when I looked out into the still moonlight, I saw only desert, and trains of laden camels pacing noiselessly over the waste sands; but in the morning I found that the whole country within eye-shot was a howling wilderness. Moultan, renowned in warlike history from Alexander's time to ours, stands upon the edge of the great sandy tract once known as the “Desert of the Indies.” In every village, bagpipes were playing through the live-long night. There are many resemblances to the Gaelic races to be found in India; the Hindoo girl's saree is the plaid of the Galway peasantress, or of the Trongate fishwife; many of the hill tribes wear the kilt; but the Punjaubee pipes are like those of the Italian pfiferari rather than those of the Scotch Highlander.
The great sandy desert which lies between the Indus and Rajpootana has, perhaps, a future under British rule. Wherever snowy mountains are met with in warm countries, yearly floods, the product of the thaws, sweep down the rivers that take their rise in the glaciers of the chain, and the Indus is no exception to the rule. Were the fall less great, the stream less swift, Scinde would have been another Cambodia, another Egypt.
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- Greater Britain , pp. 313 - 327Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1868