CHAPTER IV.
RESIDENCE IN CALCUTTA.
"DEBT IS A MAN'S HUSBAND[1]."
"i.e. A man in debt is always at the mercy of his creditors, as a woman at her husband's."
1823.—Baboo Ramohun Roy—Nāch girls—Children in India—Sickness in the
Fort—The Rains—Vessels for a Voyage on the Ganges—Indian Fever—Arrival
of Lord Amherst—Introduction of Steam-boats on the Hoogly—Interest
of Money in Calcutta—Robberies—Jamh o Deen, Prince of Mysore—The
Doorga Pooja—Images of Clay—the Races—Chinese Screens—The
Dog Crab.
1823, May.—The other evening we went to a party given by Ramohun Roy, a rich Bengallee baboo; the grounds, which are extensive, were well illuminated, and excellent fireworks displayed.
In various rooms of the house nāch girls were dancing and singing. They wear a petticoat measuring, on dit, one hundred yards in width, of fine white or coloured muslin, trimmed with deep borders of gold and silver; full satin trousers cover the feet; the doputta, or large veil, highly embroidered, is worn over the head, and various ornaments of native jewellery adorn the person.
They dance, or rather move in a circle, attitudinizing and making the small brass bells fastened to their ankles sound in unison with their movements. Several men attended the women, playing on divers curiously-shaped native instruments.
- ↑ Oriental Proverbs, No. 12.