LECTURE II.
|1.
Map of India,
distinguishing
Burma.|
In the last lecture we visited Madras, the southernmost
and oldest province of the Indian Empire. In this lecture
we will cross the Bay of Bengal from Madras to Burma,
the easternmost and newest of the provinces, if we except
a recent sub-division of an older unit. Politically, Burma
is a part of India, for it is ruled by the
Viceroy, and commercially it is coming
every day into closer relation with the
remainder of India. In most other
respects, however, Burma is rather the first land of the Far
East than the last of India, the Middle East. In race and
language probably, in religion and social customs certainly,
it is nearer to China than to India. Geographically,
however, though placed in the Indo-Chinese peninsula
beyond the Bay of Bengal, Burma is in relation with the
Indian world, for it has a great navigable river which drains
into the Indian Ocean, and not into the Pacific as do the
rivers of Siam and Annam, the remaining countries of the
southeastward promontory of Asia.
|2.
The Shore,
Madras.|
|3.
In Madras
Harbour.|
We embark from Madras on the
steamer which is to carry us to Rangoon.
Formerly it was necessary to go out to the
vessel through the surf in specially constructed boats, for all
the Coromandel Coast is shoal, and there is not a single
natural harbour. Often the surf is very rough. Now,
however, a harbour has been made at Madras. Two
piers have been built out into the sea at right angles
to the shore. They may be seen in the distance in this
view. At their extremities they bend inward towards one
another, so as to enclose a quadrangular space within which
the steamers lie. None the less there are times when the
mighty waves sweep through the open
mouth, rendering the harbour unsafe, so
that the shipping must stand out to sea.
There have been many terrible disasters in the cyclones
which from time to time strike the east coast of India.
When the Madras harbour was half completed the works
were overwhelmed by a storm and the undertaking had
to be recommenced.
|4.
Coolies
on Steamer.|
Our vessel carries nearly two thousand coolies, natives
of Madras, going to Burma to work in the rice mills or on
the wharves, for Burma is a thinly peopled land. It has
great natural resources, which are being
rapidly developed by British capital. The
coolies take passage as deck passengers
for a few rupees, and each on landing at Rangoon has
to undergo a searching medical examination, because the
Plague is often carried from Madras to Burma. The
disease manifests itself first by swollen glands, especially
under the arms. The contagion, caused by a minute
organism, is conveyed by rats. This terrible sickness
is one of the worst scourges of modern India. It first
broke out in Bombay in August, 1896. Since that
date there have been three years in each of which a
million deaths were due to it. As time goes on the
mortality will probably decrease, for the first onslaught
of a new disease is generally deadly. We must beware,
however, of exaggerating its significance. There are three
hundred million people in the Indian Empire, and the
death rate by plague, even at its maximum, is therefore
not very high. It is, indeed, low as compared with the
death rate by malarial fever.
|5.
Chinese Junk in
the Rangoon River.|
After a probably rough passage, we approach the low-lying
shore of the great delta of the Irawaddy river, and
enter that branch of it which is known as the Rangoon river.
A stray Chinese junk reminds us of the
fact that we are entering Indo-China, and
of the trade relations of Burma with
Singapore and the regions of the Far East.
Burmese rice is sent to China, the Malay States, India,
East Africa, and Europe. Rangoon depends for her
commerce mainly on the rice harvest. In recent years,
famines in India have been mitigated by rice exported
from Rangoon.
|6.
Map of Burma.|
As we steam up the river for some miles inland, let us
consider, with the help of a map, the main
features of the geography of the land which
we are about to visit. In this map is
shown nearly the whole of the great southeastward peninsula
of Asia. The areas which are coloured green are
lowland, those which are yellow are upland, and the brown
signifies highland and mountain. A ridge of highland,
broken only at two or three points, runs southward through
the centre of the map, separating Burma and the river basins
of the Indian Ocean from Siam and the river basins of the
Pacific Ocean. This great divide of the drainage is
continued beyond the southern edge of the map through
the Malay Peninsula for some distance. It ends near
Singapore in the southernmost point of Asia, only one
degree north of the Equator.
In Burma, parallel with the dividing range, are three other ridges, striking southward side by side. These separate three valleys, through which flow severally the Salween, Sittang, and Irawaddy rivers. The valley of the Salween, as the yellow and brown colours upon the map indicate, is less deeply trenched between its bounding ranges than are the other two valleys. As we should therefore expect, the Salween river has a steeply descending course broken by rapids, and is of small value for navigation. At its mouth is the port of Moulmein. The valley of the Sittang, which is a short river, prolongs the upper valley of the Irawaddy, which latter river makes a great westward bend at Mandalay, and passes by a transverse passage right through one of the parallel mountain ridges. Beyond this passage it bends southward again, accepting the direction of its tributary, the Chindwin river. The great port of Rangoon is placed on a tidal channel at the eastern edge of the Irawaddy delta. The railway from Rangoon to Mandalay runs through the Sittang valley and does not follow the Irawaddy. There is navigation, however, by the Irawaddy past Pagan and Mandalay northward to Bhamo, which is close to the Chinese frontier. The coastal plain of Burma is known as Arakan where it runs northward from the Irawaddy delta, and as Tenasserim where it runs southward from that delta along a coast beset with an archipelago of beautiful islands. The delta itself bears the name of Pegu, or Lower Burma; while the region round Mandalay is Upper Burma.
|7.
Plan of Rangoon.|
We are in the Rangoon river. A tall, pointed pagoda
appears on a hill to the right, and presently,
as the channel bends to the west, we
approach the busy commercial front of
Rangoon city, surmounted by the golden spire of the great
Shwe Dagon Pagoda.
|8.
Shwe Dagon
Pagoda, from
across the Royal
Lakes.|
|9.
The Shwe Dagon
Pagoda, Rangoon.|
|10.
Images of the
Sitting Buddha.|
|11.
Earning Merit at
the Shwe Dagon
Pagoda.|
Rangoon, apart from its chief Pagoda, is a modern city.
Fifty years ago it was a village. To-day it has a quarter of
a million people. A wharf-fronted road, the Strand,
follows the shore of the main river for several miles. Up
the Pegu tributary to the east for several other miles
are many rice mills with tall chimneys throwing out black
smoke. The harbour is busy with shipping. There are great
timber yards, and there are oil mills, for the products of
Burma are, first and foremost, rice, and then timber,
especially great logs of teak—harder than oak, and then
petroleum. Back from the Strand is a well kept town,
with broad streets at right angles, though as yet there are
few really impressive buildings to compare with the public
buildings of Madras. There is a beautiful group of lakes,
the Royal Lakes, set in wooded public grounds, and
across these is the finest view of the
Shwe Dagon Pagoda, like a great hand-bell
placed on a low hill. This pagoda is
said to be the most frequented in the
Buddhist world, for it has as relics eight hairs of Gautama,
the founder of the Buddhist religion. It began some two
thousand years ago as a small village fane. In successive
ages the original structure has been encased afresh and
afresh, until as the result of work done in the days of
Queen Elizabeth, the great pagoda was completed which is
now the glory of Rangoon. It rises to a height of nearly
400 feet, and is solid, there being no chamber within.
The brickwork of which it is built makes a series of steps
or ledges, so that it would be possible to climb for some
distance up the spire. The whole is plated with gold-leaf,
and the gilding is constantly renewed by pious devotees, who
thus earn merit. The word “Shwe” in the name of this
pagoda signifies golden. On the summit is a “hti,” or
umbrella, of exquisite workmanship and material. It is
said to have cost sixty thousand pounds. In the vane are
5,000 gems—diamonds, rubies, and emeralds. The base of
the pagoda is surrounded first by shrines of varying sizes, and
then by a flagged courtyard, which again is fringed with
canopies and halls opening towards the pagoda, with many
carved screens and arches, and innumerable shrines and
altars, and images of Gautama. Flights of steps roofed over
with teak descend from the courtyard, and
one of the lower entries is guarded by great
grotesque figures, partly lion and partly
griffin, made of plastered bricks. We see
one of them in this view. Then we have
two very interesting pictures: the one
represents three images of the Sitting
Buddha from one of the shrines on the
flagged courtyard at the foot of the Shwe
Dagon Pagoda, and the other shows a
pilgrim “earning merit” by putting gold
leaf on to the pagoda itself.
|12.
The Sule Pagoda,
Rangoon.|
There is another considerable pagoda
in the city, the Sule Pagoda. We have
it here, with a corner of a building adjacent
of European architecture, the Municipal Offices. Observe
the watering of the streets by hand labour.
|13.
A Typical Burman.|
|14.
Burmese Gambling,
Rangoon.|
The Burmese are a short, sturdy people, merry and
happy, and akin rather to the Japanese in temperament
than to the people of the Indian Peninsula. The features of
their faces are obviously Mongolian. They have the oblique
eyes of the Chinaman. Here is a typical
Burman with a rose coloured wrap round
his head. The Burmese women, whose
praises have been sung through the world, are dainty and,
according to a more or less Chinese standard, not infrequently
beautiful. They love to clothe themselves in silks
of brilliant and delicate hue. Excessive industry is certainly
not a failing of the race, yet there are no poor. We have
here a group of Burmese gamblers at
Rangoon. The theatres play all night
and the spectators go home by daylight.
The “pwe,” or show, consists invariably of three parts—a
prince, a princess, and a clown; it may be compared with
our traditional harlequinade. Both Indians and Chinese
are migrating to Burma in great numbers, but agricultural
work is still chiefly in native hands.
|15.
Elephants lifting
Teak.|
|16.
Elephants Pushing
Teak.|
|17.
Tusker Elephant.|
|18.
Tusker Elephant
lifting Teak.|
|19.
The Same.|
One of the most curious and typical
sights of Rangoon is that of elephants
manipulating the great logs of teak wood
in the timber yards. The logs are cut in the forests
of the north of Burma, and are floated for hundreds
of miles down the Irawaddy in large rafts, until they are
stranded at a creek near Rangoon, called Pazundaung.
Elephants are then employed for the purpose of moving and
piling up the logs. The male elephant is very powerful
and has strong tusks, on which he carries the logs, preventing
them from falling with his trunk, but the female elephants
are not so strong, and do not as a rule lift the logs
off the ground, but merely drag them, or push them
with the head. We have here two
cow elephants, the one forty years old and
the other seventy. We have them here
again, one of them at the command of
her rider pushing the logs forward with
her head. In the next scene is a
male elephant with tusks. He is fifty
years old, and we realise his power in the
next two views, where we see him poising
on his tusks a great tree trunk. These huge
animals are fed entirely on a grass which
grows along the banks of the Irawaddy
not far from Rangoon. Machinery is now taking the
place of elephants in the timber yards, and Rangoon is,
therefore, likely to lose one of its most interesting sights.
|20.
A Rice Mill,
Rangoon.|
|21.
The Same.|
While we are on the river front let us
glance also at a rice mill, where a process
equivalent to thrashing is carried out, the
grain being separated from the husk.
The black smoke is from the paddy husks
used to supply the motive power of the mill. Paddy, or
unthrashed rice, is mostly brought to Rangoon by water,
though more than a million and a half tons now come
annually by rail. After the milling process is complete, the
rice is packed into bags for shipment all over the world.
|22.
A Burmese
Railway Train.|
We will take train and run by the
Burmese Sittang Railway over the broad
levels of the delta, passing through fields
from which the paddy has recently been
cut. Only the ears are lopped off, and the straw is burnt as
it stands. The Burmans are mostly yeomen, each owning
his cattle and doing his own work in the field.
Beyond Pegu we follow the Sittang River, with hill
ranges low on the eastern and western horizons, until we
come to Mandalay, once capital of the independent kingdom
of Upper Burma. This kingdom was annexed to
India in 1885 at the conclusion of the third Burmese war.
Mandalay is the last of three capitals a few miles apart,
which at different times in the past century have been the
seat of the Burmese kings. Amarapura, a few miles to
the south, was the earliest, and Ava, a few miles to the
west, was the capital from 1822 to 1837.
|23.
The 450 Pagodas
from
Mandalay Hill.|
At Mandalay we are again on the banks of the Irawaddy.
There is a hill in the northern suburbs several hundred feet
in height, from which we may look over the city. The houses
are so buried in foliage that, seen from the height, the place
appears almost like a wood of green trees. The square
Dufferin Fort, with walled and moated boundary, and
sides more than a mile in length, is distinguishable in
the centre, but for the rest there is none of the ordinary
panorama of a European city. One
striking feature, however, lies at our feet,
a little to one side. It is a square
group of 450 white pagodas, with a more
considerable gilded pagoda in the centre. Beside each
of these pagodas there stands a large stone, and on these
stones are inscribed quotations from the sacred books of
the Buddhists. In the distance to the southeast are the
hills inhabited by the Shan tribes.
|24.
The Moat, Fort
Dufferin.|
|25.
King Thebaw’s
Palace.|
|26.
The Aindaw
Temple, Mandalay.|
|27.
Maker of Temple
Htis, Mandalay.|
The Dufferin Fort was built around the Palace of King
Thebaw, the last of the Burmese dynasty. It is enclosed by a
square of red walls pierced by three gates on each side, each
gate bearing a pointed pagoda-like super-structure.
Without there is a broad moat,
a hundred yards wide, with lotus plants,
floating in it like water lilies. This moat
is crossed by five wooden bridges. Inside
the walls is the King’s Palace, of which we
have here the spire, surmounted by a “hti”
finial. This spire is called by the Burmese
the “Centre of the Universe,” since it is in the
centre of Mandalay, which they claim as in the centre of the
world. A “hti” we may observe again at
the summit of the great Aindaw Temple
in the south of Mandalay, and here we
have one before it has left the home of its
maker.
|28.
The Queen’s
Palace.|
|29.
The Verandah of
King Thebaw’s
Palace.|
|30.
Entrance to the
Arakan temple,
Mandalay.|
We return to the Fort, and to the
palaces within it. This is the Queen’s
Palace, a very beautiful building of gilded
teak, exquisitely carved, and here is the
verandah where King Thebaw in 1885
surrendered to the British generals. He was taken away
to India, and there he still lives under surveillance on
the Malabar Coast. Here we have the
entrance to the Arakan Temple, specially
venerated by Buddhists, for it contains
a great image of Gautama, over twelve feet high, made of
brass. Pilgrims gain merit by placing gold leaf upon this
figure. This is the building which Kipling spoke of as
the Moulmein Pagoda; it is not, however, a pagoda, which
is a solid spire, but a temple.
|31.
Sappers
and Miners,
Fort Dufferin.|
|32.
Crossing the Moat,
Fort Dufferin.|
|33.
A Garrison
Family.|
Burma has been gradually annexed to India as the result
of three successive wars. The first ended in 1826, and then
the low-lying coastal strips known by the names of Tenasserim
and Arakan were taken, and also the great valley of the
Brahmaputra, known as Assam. In 1852 the country of
Pegu, or Lower Burma, comprising the delta of the Irawaddy,
was annexed, but Upper Burma round Mandalay remained
independent. The last king of Mandalay was Thebaw, a
notorious tyrant, guilty of the most horrible atrocities.
Being anxious to maintain his independence, he intrigued
with the French in the lands of Tonkin and
Annam to the east of Burma, and as a result brought
upon himself the conquest of his country in the time
when Lord Dufferin was Viceroy of India. It took fully
ten years to reduce Burma to order, for the land was
infested with dacoits or robbers, as it is still in some of the
remoter districts. Every village in those days was defended
by a palisade. Here we have two views of a
party of troops in Fort Dufferin, with the
King’s Palace in the background, and
then a family scene in the married
quarters of the garrison. The Burman
does not make a good soldier, for he has
very little sense of discipline. Even the
police of the province are for the most part
Gurkhas, Sikhs, and Punjabi Musulmans.
|34.
The Bazaar,
Mandalay.|
|35.
The Flower and
Seed Market,
Mandalay Bazaar.|
The Bazaar or market of Mandalay,
as in every other Indian city, is the
centre of public life. Externally it is
of little interest, having been constructed
since the conquest, but internally it is
an epitome of the varied peoples who
have thronged of late into the growing
centres of Burmese trade. Here is a
scene in the fruit market; but it is the
silk market which delights the Burmese lady, who will
be seen there accompanied by her maid, making
purchases and enjoying the touch of more than she
buys, as in similar places in Europe. The most striking
contrast which is presented by Burma to one accustomed
to Indian life is the freedom of the women, who move
about unveiled. In Burma, under the Buddhist religion,
we have neither seclusion of women nor the distinctions
of caste. The city of Mandalay has a population of about
190,000, so that it is now smaller than the upstart Rangoon.
|36.
Ferryshaw Siding,
near Mandalay.|
|37.
Mora.|
|38.
Katha.|
Let us make a voyage up the Irawaddy to the border of
the Chinese Empire. This is a river scene
a short way above Mandalay, with a group
of white pagodas conspicuous on the bank,
and here is a village scene. There follows
a view at Katha, a large straggling
village on the Irawaddy, remarkable for
its many pagodas, most of them ruined.
The majority of the Burmese pagodas are thus dilapidated
for the reason that there is considered to be no merit in
merely restoring an existing Buddhist shrine. The wealthy
devotee prefers therefore to erect a new pagoda. The Shwe
Dagon is an exception, for it contains sacred relics.
|39.
Raft on the
Irawaddy.|
|40.
On the Irawaddy.|
|41.
In the defile
between
Katha and Bhamo.|
|42.
The Same.|
|43.
Burmese Children.|
|44.
Cart with solid
Wheels.|
|45.
Lacquer Workers.|
Here we have a raft of bamboos and
teak logs floating down the river, and then
a typical river craft with a great oar for a
rudder. Our steamer must progress with
care, measuring the depths with bamboo
poles at either bow. None the less, navigation
extends for more than nine hundred
miles from the sea. From Mandalay to
Katha the bank of the river is in most places
low and sandy, but between Katha and
Bhamo there are striking defiles, where the
ground rises with wooded fronts from the
water’s edge. There is population along the
banks the whole way, as is evidenced by
the pagodas amid the vegetation. Here
are three little Burmese villagers, and then
a rustic cart with solid wheels, and here
a picture showing the process of the
famous lacquer work of Burma. A “shell”
is first made of very thin and finely plaited bamboo, and
this is covered with a pigment which, when dry, is softened
on a primitive lathe. Then red lacquer is put on by hand,
and the bowl is dried in the sun. When dry it is buried
for some days in order that it may harden. Finally it is
engraved, and often inlaid with gold.
|46.
Bhamo from the
Irawaddy.|
|47.
China Street,
Bhamo.|
|48.
Kachin Women,
Bhamo.|
|49.
Houses at Bhamo.|
We approach Bhamo, at the head
of the Irawaddy navigation, lying low
along the bank of the river, twenty
miles from the Chinese frontier. There
are naturally many Chinese at Bhamo.
This is China Street. Here, on the
other hand, is a group of Kachin women,
heavy-faced, in picturesque costume. The
Kachins are the hill tribes of the northern
frontier of Burma, as the Shans are of
the eastern frontier and the Chins of
the western. Until quite recently the
Kachins often raided the caravans passing from Bhamo to
China. They are now becoming civilised under British
rule. The Burmese people proper, of ancient civilisation,
are a relatively small population confined
to the valley and the delta. Here we see
a row of houses at Bhamo, raised high
upon piles. The change which has come over Burma
since the British occupation may be appreciated from the
fact that twenty years ago it was no uncommon sight on
the voyage up from Katha to Bhamo to see along the river
banks, and on rafts floating down the river, the dead bodies
of Kachins who had been tortured to death under the
terrible rule of the kings of Mandalay.
|50.
The Gokteik Gorge
and Bridge.|
|51.
Native House,
Hsipaw.|
|52.
The Bazaar,
Hsipaw.|
From Mandalay a railway runs eastward
into the Shan country. At one point this
line crosses a gorge by a steel bridge,
nearly half a mile long and over 800 feet
above the water of the stream. The bridge
is so light in design that its great size and
real solidity are difficult to grasp. Beyond
this bridge we come to the chief place of the Shans,
Hsipaw. Here are a couple of scenes in Hsipaw, the one
of a Shan house, the other of a Shan market.
|53.
Pagan.|
|54.
The Ananda
Temple, Pagan.|
|55.
The Ananda
Temple, nearer
view of the west
side.|
|56.
Buddha Image at
Pagan.|
To realise the antiquity and the splendour of early
Burmese civilisation, we must descend the Irawaddy below
Mandalay to a place called Pagan. There,
for some ten miles beside the river, and
for three miles back from its bank, are the
ruins of a great capital which flourished about the time of
the Norman Conquest of England. From the centre of
the ruined city it is impossible to point in any direction
in which a pagoda or a temple is not visible. We have
here a general view of the remains, and
then the Ananda Temple, seen in the
midst of a bank of vegetation, from which
at various points rise other smaller red and white ruins.
The Ananda Temple was built more than eight hundred
years ago by the Thatons, the original inhabitants of the
country, who were overcome by the invading Burmans. Some
thirty thousand of these Thatons were brought to Pagan as
slaves, and set to build the pagodas and temples, just as
during the captivity in Egypt the Israelites were employed
in building the pyramids. Here is the
Ananda Temple close at hand, white and
glittering in the sunshine, as though built
of sugar. If we enter the great portal—there
are three other portals similar, for
the plan of the building is that of a cross—we
find facing us a huge image of the
Buddha, over ten yards in height.
Buddhism was developed from Hinduism. It originated as a revolt from the excessive ritualism of the Brahmans. We have seen that Hinduism became an all-embracing system of religious ritual and social organisation, but that alongside, as it were, of this process there was evolved a philosophical system based upon two theories: the belief in a Universal Soul as the centre of reality, and the belief in the ultimate identity of the Individual and the Universal Soul. In the sixth century before Christ India was seething and fermenting with spiritual thought. A great teacher was called for, and such a one was given to the world in Gautama, the Buddha, that is to say, the Enlightened or Awakened One.
Gautama was born on the frontiers of Nepal at the foot of the great Himalaya range about the year 557 before Christ. He was the only son of a chief or king. At the age of eighteen he was married to the daughter of the chief of a neighbouring clan, and a son was born to him. But the yearnings of a reformer were stirring within Gautama, and he could not rest. So one night in secret he left his wife and infant and went out into the world a wanderer in search of “that inward illumination on ‘great matters,’ which was the cherished dream of every thinker in that memorable era.” He followed to no purpose the paths of metaphysical speculation, of mental discipline, and of ascetic rigour, and at last on one eventful night, as he sat under the Bodhi Tree at Gaya, in Behar, “he reaped the fruit of his long spiritual effort, the truth of things being of a sudden so clearly revealed to him that from henceforth he never swerved for a moment from devotion to his creed and to the mission that it imposed upon him.”
The truth which Buddha discovered and preached to humanity was that the salvation of man lay not in sacrifices and ceremonial, nor in penances, but in spiritual effort and a holy life, in charity, forgiveness, and love. The sages of Hinduism had taught as a doctrine for the few that the Universal Soul is the only reality, and is therefore the real self of every man. Buddha gave to the world a system by which the truth of this doctrine could be realised in the life of an ordinary man.
The four-fold truth on which Buddha’s whole scheme hinges may be expressed as follows:—Life on earth is full of suffering; suffering is generated by desire; the extinction of desire involves the extinction of suffering; the extinction of desire, and therefore of suffering, is the outcome of a righteous life. But how is desire with the suffering which it generates to be extinguished? The answer of Buddhism is that the eightfold path which leads to the extinction of suffering is by “Right Belief, Right Thought, Right Speech, Right Action, Right Effort, Right Means of Livelihood, Right Remembrance and Self-discipline, Right Concentration of Thought.” In Buddha’s system, as he himself gave it to the world, doctrines and beliefs are of secondary importance. Fully alive to the truth that “what we do, besides being the outward and visible sign of our inward and spiritual state, reacts naturally and necessarily on what we are, and so moulds our character and controls our destiny,” he formulated for his followers a simple system of moral rules, obedience to which would set them on the path which leads to salvation. On this path there are successive stages, and each of these stages is marked by the breaking of some of the fetters which bind man to earth and to self, and when all the fetters are at last broken then the Holy One, as he is now called, has reached his goal. In other words, he has attained to that state which Buddhists call Nirvana, a state of “perfect knowledge, perfect love, perfect peace, and therefore of perfect bliss.”
The Buddhist system emphasises the importance of education and discipline. All over Burma there are schools conducted by Buddhist monastic orders at which instruction is gratuitously given to boys in the vernacular of the country, and one rarely finds a native of Burma who cannot read and write his own language. It is also part of the religious discipline of every Burman boy that he should become a novice in a monastic order and live for a time the life of a monk. The aim of this training is to teach obedience and self-control, and thus in these days of change, when strange and disintegrating influences are at work in the East, the Burman retains, to a certain extent at all events, his simplicity and his kindly faith. To appreciate the influence of Buddhism in Burma let us remember that a Buddhist priest is supported entirely by gifts in kind, and never touches a coin.
For some centuries Buddhism made great progress in India, the land of its birth; but in the end Hinduism re-asserted itself, and to-day there are very few Buddhists in India proper, though in Burma nearly all the people are of that faith. This is the chief cause of the difference in almost every respect between Burma and India. In the Ananda Temple, as we have seen, there are four images of Buddha, for it is the tradition of the religion that before Gautama there were in former ages of the world three other teachers who reached enlightenment and were therefore called Buddha.
|57.
The Wilderness of
Bricks, Pagan.|
|58.
Gadawpalin
Temple, Pagan.|
|59.
Vultures on a
ruined Temple
at Pagan.|
|60.
Cactus at Pagan.|
|Repeat Map No. 6.|
Here, still at Pagan, is the so-called
Wilderness of Bricks, with the Ananda
Temple in the distance to the right.
Then we have the entry to one of the other
temples, and then yet another Pagan ruin
with vultures on the summit. Finally we
have a scene of tall cactus growth, also at
Pagan, for this city stands in what is
known as the Dry Belt of Burma. The
map shows us that two ranges of mountains
extend northward, respectively to
east and west of the Irawaddy valley.
The winds of summer and autumn blow from the southwest,
from the sea, bringing moisture which falls in heavy
rains on the west sides of the mountains and over the delta.
At Rangoon there is an annual rainfall of over one hundred
inches, or more than three times the rainfall of London. To
the east of the western range, however, as we leave the delta
on our journey up the river, there is a low-lying district near
Pagan, which is screened from the sea winds by the continuous
mountain ridge, and here the rainfall is small, as little as
twenty inches in the year, but the climate is hot and
evaporation is rapid. In this district, therefore, cactus is
the typical vegetation, but elsewhere in Burma are rich
crops or the most luxuriant forests of leafy trees. These
forests supply the teak wood, which is floated down
the river. They are full of game, and the haunt of
poisonous snakes. Wild peacocks come from the woods
to feed on the rice when it is ripe, and tigers are not
unknown in the villages. Only a few years ago a tiger was
shot on one of the ledges of the Shwe Dagon Pagoda in
the midst of Rangoon.
Notwithstanding the age of some of its temples and pagodas, Burma is in the main a new country, in which Nature is still masterful. It is the largest of the provinces under the Government of India, but all told it contains but ten million people—Burmese, Chinese, Hindus, and the Hill Tribes.