bruised by the iron rail and hood of the buggy, and my right arm was greatly swollen.
My recovery was brought about by having four women to shampoo me for five hours daily, and by going into a vapour-bath belonging to the Rajah of Benares. In the bath the women shampooed, and twisted, and pinched my limbs, until I could walk without assistance—that vapour-bath was a great relief.
One morning the rajah sent me a bouquet of flowers, they were beautifully made of ubruk (talc, mica) and coloured wax, the first I had seen well executed.
My husband at the billiard-table, said: "I am uncertain respecting that stroke, I wish A
S was here." "Do you not know he is dead?" said his opponent, "he died in consequence of his fall with that Arab pony at Papamhow." We were greatly shocked.Jan. 29th.—We quitted our kind friends at Benares to return home: ill-luck pursued us—the first stage the horse fell lame, and we reached our tent with difficulty. During the night a heavy storm came on; the tent being old was soon saturated, and the water poured in on our chārpāīs. The horses picketed outside were drenched, they neighed and shook their chains; the sā'īses crept under the corners of the rāwtī, and we had the floorcloth put over us, to protect us from the rain and cold.
The next day we galloped to our second tent, which we found soaked through from the rain of the night. There was the tent, and nothing else. One of the camels having fallen lame, the servants had made it a pretext for not continuing their march, and we were planté in the jungle without food, bedding, or warm clothing! A camel-driver caught a chicken, and drawing out a long queer crooked blade, killed it, and dressed an excellent curry in a few minutes; having had no food all day, and much exercise, we devoured it to the last grain of rice. I thought of the saying, "If you ask a hungry man how much two and two make—he answers, 'Four loaves[1].'" The night
- ↑ Oriental Proverbs, No. 25.