<h2> <SPAN name="CHAPTER_V"></SPAN><span>CHAPTER V</span><br/><br/> <span class="chapsub1">CLIMATE AND NATURAL FEATURES</span> </h2>
<p>The last chapter left me with the chief and elders of the Chang-pas
starting on 'a round of visits,' and it was not till nightfall that the
solemn ceremony was concluded. Each of the fifty tents was visited: at
every one a huge, savage Tibetan mastiff made an attempt to fly at me,
and was pounced upon and held down by a woman little bigger than
himself, and in each cheese and milk were offered and refused. In all I
received a hearty welcome for the sake of the 'great father,' Mr.
Redslob, who designated these people as 'the simplest and kindliest
people on earth.'</p>
<p>This Chang-pa tribe, numbering five hundred souls, makes four moves in
the year, dividing in summer, and uniting in a valley very free from
snow in the winter. They are an exclusively pastoral people, and possess
large herds of <i>yaks</i> and ponies and immense flocks of sheep and
goats, the latter almost entirely the beautiful 'shawl goat,' from the
undergrowth at the base of the long hair of which the fine Kashmir
shawls are made. This <i>pashm</i> is a provision which Nature makes
against the intense cold of these altitudes, and grows on <i>yaks</i>,
sheep, and dogs, as well as on most of the wild animals. The sheep is
the big, hornless, flop-eared <i>huniya</i>. The <i>yaks</i> and sheep
are the load carriers of Rupchu. Small or easily divided merchandise is
carried by sheep, and bulkier goods by <i>yaks</i>, and the Chang-pas
make a great deal of money by carrying for the Lahul, Central Ladak, and
Rudok merchants, their sheep travelling as far as Gar in Chinese Tibet.
They are paid in grain as well as coin, their own country producing no
farinaceous food. They have only two uses for silver money. With part of
their gains they pay the tribute to Kashmir, and they melt the rest, and
work it into rude personal ornaments. According to an old arrangement
between Lhassa and Leh, they carry brick tea free for the Lhassa
merchants. They are Buddhists, and practise polyandry, but their young
men do not become <i>lamas</i>, and owing to the scarcity of fuel,
instead of burning their dead, they expose them with religious rites
face upwards in desolate places, to be made away with by the birds of
the air. All their tents have a god-shelf, on which are placed small
images and sacred emblems. They dress as the Ladakis, except that the
men wear shoes with very high turned-up points, and that the women, in
addition to the <i>perak</i>, the usual ornament, place on the top of
the head a large silver coronet with three tassels. In physiognomy they
resemble the Ladakis, but the Mongolian type is purer, the eyes are more
oblique, and the eyelids have a greater droop, the chins project more,
and the mouths are handsomer. Many of the men, including the headman,
were quite good-looking, but the upper lips of the women were apt to be
'tucked up,' displaying very square teeth, as we have shown in the
preceding chapter.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="image_19"></SPAN> <SPAN href="images/gs19.png"><ANTIMG src="images/gs19s.png" alt="Image" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption"><br/>A TIBETAN FARM-HOUSE</span></div>
<p>The roofs of the Tsala tents are nearly flat, and the middle has an
opening six inches wide along its whole length. An excavation from
twelve to twenty-four inches deep is made in the soil, and a rude wall
of stones, about one foot high, is built round it, over which the tent
cloth, made in narrow widths of <i>yak's</i> or goat's hair, is extended
by ropes led over forked sticks. There is no ridge pole, and the centre
is supported on short poles, to the projecting tops of which prayer
flags and <i>yaks'</i> tails are attached. The interior, though dark, is
not too dark for weaving, and each tent has its loom, for the Chang-pas
not only weave their coarse woollen clothing and hair cloth for
saddlebags and tents, but rugs of wool dyed in rich colours made from
native roots. The largest tent was twenty feet by fifteen, but the
majority measured only fourteen feet by eight and ten feet. The height
in no case exceeded six feet. In these much ventilated and scarcely
warmed shelters these hardy nomads brave the tremendous winds and winter
rigours of their climate at altitudes varying from 13,000 to 14,500
feet. Water freezes every night of the year, and continually there are
differences in temperature of 100° between noon and midnight. In
addition to the fifty dwelling tents there was one considerably larger,
in which the people store their wool and goat's hair till the time
arrives for taking them to market. The floor of several of the tents was
covered with rugs, and besides looms and confused heaps of what looked
like rubbish, there were tea-churns, goatskin churns, sheep and goat
skins, children's bows and arrows, cooking pots, and heaps of the furze
root, which is used as fuel.</p>
<p>They expended much of this scarce commodity upon me in their
hospitality, and kept up a bonfire all night. They mounted their wiry
ponies and performed feats of horsemanship, in one of which all the
animals threw themselves on their hind legs in a circle when a man in
the centre clapped his hands; and they crowded my tent to see my
sketches, and were not satisfied till I executed some daubs professing
to represent some of the elders. The excitement of their first visit
from a European woman lasted late into the night, and when they at last
retired they persisted in placing a guard of honour round my tent.</p>
<p>In the morning there was ice on the pools, and the snow lay three inches
deep. Savage life had returned to its usual monotony, and the care of
flocks and herds. In the early afternoon the chief and many of the men
accompanied us across the ford, and we parted with mutual expressions of
good will. The march was through broad gravelly valleys, among
'monstrous protuberances' of red and yellow gravel, elevated by their
height alone to the dignity of mountains. Hail came on, and Gyalpo
showed his high breeding by facing it when the other animals 'turned
tail' and huddled together, and a storm of heavy sleet of some hours'
duration burst upon us just as we reached the dismal camping-ground of
Rukchen, guarded by mountain giants which now and then showed glimpses
of their white skirts through the dark driving mists. That was the only
'weather' in four months.</p>
<p>A large caravan from the heat and sunshine of Amritsar was there. The
goods were stacked under goat's hair shelters, the mules were huddled
together without food, and their shivering Panjābi drivers, muffled in
blankets which only left one eye exposed, were grubbing up furze roots
wherewith to make smoky fires. My baggage, which had arrived previously,
was lying soaking in the sleet, while the wretched servants were trying
to pitch the tent in the high wind. They had slept out in the snow the
night before, and were mentally as well as physically benumbed. Their
misery had a comic side to it, and as the temperature made me feel
specially well, I enjoyed bestirring myself, and terrified Mando, who
was feebly 'fadding' with a rag, by giving Gyalpo a vigorous rub-down
with a bath-towel. Hassan Khan, with chattering teeth and severe
neuralgia, muffled in my 'fisherman's hood' under his turban, was trying
to do his work with his unfailing pluck. Mando was shedding futile tears
over wet furze which would not light, the small wet corrie was dotted
over with the Amritsar men sheltering under rocks and nursing hopeless
fires, and fifty mules and horses, with dejected heads and dripping
tails, and their backs to the merciless wind, were attempting to pick
some food from scanty herbage already nibbled to the root. My tent was a
picture of grotesque discomfort. The big stones had not been picked out
from the gravel, the bed stood in puddles, the thick horse blanket was
draining over the one chair, the servant's spare clothing and stores
were on the table, the <i>yaks'</i> loads of wet hay and the soaked
grain sack filled up most of the space; a wet candle sputtered and went
out, wet clothes dripped from the tent hook, and every now and then
Hassan Khan looked in with one eye, gasping out, 'Mem Sahib, I can no
light the fire!' Perseverance succeeds eventually, and cups of a strong
stimulant made of Burroughes and Wellcome's vigorous 'valoid' tincture
of ginger and hot water, revived the men all round. Such was its good
but innocent effect, that early the next morning Hassan came into my
tent with two eyes, and convulsed with laughter. 'The pony men' and
Mando, he said, were crying, and the coolie from Leh, who before the
storm had wanted to go the whole way to Simla, after refusing his supper
had sobbed all night under the 'flys' of my tent, while I was sleeping
soundly. Afterwards I harangued them, and told them I would let them go,
and help them back; I could not take such poor-spirited miserable
creatures with me, and I would keep the Tartars who had accompanied me
from Tsala. On this they protested, and said, with a significant
gesture, I might cut their throats if they cried any more, and begged me
to try them again; and as we had no more bad weather, there was no more
trouble.</p>
<p>The marches which followed were along valleys, plains, and
mountain-sides of gravel, destitute of herbage, except a shrivelled
artemisia, and on one occasion the baggage animals were forty hours
without food. Fresh water was usually very scarce, and on the Lingti
plains was only obtainable by scooping it up from the holes left by the
feet of animals. Insect life was rare, and except grey doves, the 'dove
of the valleys,' which often flew before us for miles down the ravines,
no birds were to be seen. On the other hand, there were numerous herds
of <i>kyang</i>, which in the early mornings came to drink of the water
by which the camps were pitched. By looking through a crevice of my tent
I saw them distinctly, without alarming them. In one herd I counted
forty. They kept together in families, sire, dam, and foal. The animal
certainly is under fourteen hands, and resembles a mule rather than a
horse or ass. The noise, which I had several opportunities of hearing,
is more like a neigh than a bray, but lacks completeness. The creature
is light brown, almost fawn colour, fading into white under his body,
and he has a dark stripe on his back, but not a cross. His ears are
long, and his tail is like that of a mule. He trots and gallops, and
when alarmed gallops fast, but as he is not worth hunting, he has not a
great dread of humanity, and families of <i>kyang</i> frequently grazed
within two hundred and fifty yards of us. He is about as untamable as
the zebra, and with his family affectionateness leads apparently a very
happy life.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="image_20"></SPAN> <SPAN href="images/gs20.png"><ANTIMG src="images/gs20s.png" alt="Image" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption"><br/>LAHUL VALLEY</span></div>
<p>On the Kwangchu plateau, at an elevation of 15,000 feet, I met with a
form of life which has a great interest of its own, sheep caravans,
numbering among them 7,000 sheep, each animal with its wool on, and
equipped with a neat packsaddle and two leather or hair-cloth bags, and
loaded with from twenty-five to thirty-two pounds of salt or borax.
These, and many more which we passed, were carrying their loads to
Patseo, a mountain valley in Lahul, where they are met by traders from
Northern British India. The sheep are shorn, and the wool and loads are
exchanged for wheat and a few other commodities, with which they return
to Tibet, the whole journey taking from nine months to a year. As the
sheep live by grazing the scanty herbage on the march, they never
accomplish more than ten miles a day, and as they often become footsore,
halts of several days are frequently required. Sheep, dead or dying,
with the birds of prey picking out their eyes, were often met with.
Ordinarily these caravans are led by a man, followed by a large goat
much bedecked and wearing a large bell. Each driver has charge of one
hundred sheep. These men, of small stature but very thickset, with their
wide smooth faces, loose clothing of sheepskin with the wool outside,
with their long coarse hair flying in the wind, and their uncouth shouts
in a barbarous tongue, are much like savages. They sing wild chants as
they picket their sheep in long double lines at night, and with their
savage mastiffs sleep unsheltered under the frosty skies under the lee
of their piled-up saddlebags. On three nights I camped beside their
caravans, and walked round their orderly lines of sheep and their neat
walls of saddlebags; and, far from showing any discourtesy or rude
curiosity, they held down their fierce dogs and exhibited their
ingenious mode of tethering their animals, and not one of the many
articles which my servants were in the habit of leaving outside the
tents was on any occasion abstracted. The dogs, however, were less
honest than their masters, and on one night ran away with half a sheep,
and I should have fared poorly had not Mr. —— shot some grey
doves.</p>
<p>Marches across sandy and gravelly valleys, and along arid mountain-sides
spotted with a creeping furze and cushions of a yellow-green moss which
seems able to exist without moisture, fords of the Sumgyal and Tserap
rivers, and the crossing of the Lachalang Pass at an altitude of 17,500
feet in severe frost, occupied several uneventful days. Of the three
lofty passes on this route, the Toglang, which is higher, and the
Baralacha, which is lower, are featureless billows of gravel, over which
a carriage might easily be driven. Not so is the Lachalang, though its
well-made zigzags are easy for laden animals. The approach to it is
fantastic, among precipitous mountains of red sandstone, and red rocks
weathered into pillars, men's heads, and numerous groups of gossipy old
women from thirty to fifty feet high, in flat hats and long circular
cloaks! Entering by red gates of rock into a region of gigantic
mountains, and following up a crystal torrent, the valley narrowing to a
gorge, and the gorge to a chasm guarded by nearly perpendicular needles
of rock flaming in the westering sun, we forded the river at the chasm's
throat, and camped on a velvety green lawn just large enough for a few
tents, absolutely walled in by abrupt mountains 18,000 and 19,000 feet
in height. Long after the twilight settled down on us, the pinnacles
above glowed in warm sunshine, and the following morning, when it was
only dawn below, and the still river pools were frozen and the grass was
white with hoar-frost, the morning sun reddened the snow-peaks and
kindled into vermilion the red needles of Lachalang. That camping-ground
under such conditions is the grandest and most romantic spot of the
whole journey.</p>
<p>Verdureless and waterless stretches, in crossing which our poor animals
were two nights without food, brought us to the glacier-blue waters of
the Serchu, tumbling along in a deep broad gash, and farther on to a
lateral torrent which is the boundary between Rupchu, tributary to
Kashmir, and Lahul or British Tibet, under the rule of the Empress of
India. The tents were ready pitched in a grassy hollow by the river;
horses, cows, and goats were grazing near them, and a number of men were
preparing food. A Tibetan approached me, accompanied by a creature in a
nondescript dress speaking Hindustani volubly. On a band across his
breast were the British crown, and a plate with the words
'Commissioner's <i>chaprassie</i>, Kulu district.' I never felt so
extinguished. Liberty seemed lost, and the romance of the desert to have
died out in one moment! At the camping-ground I found rows of salaaming
Lahulis drawn up, and Hassan Khan in a state which was a compound of
pomposity and jubilant excitement. The <i>tahsildar</i> (really the
Tibetan honorary magistrate), he said, had received instructions from
the Lieutenant-Governor of the Panjāb that I was on the way to Kylang,
and was to 'want for nothing.' So twenty-four men, nine horses, a flock
of goats, and two cows had been waiting for me for three days in the
Serchu valley. I wrote a polite note to the magistrate, and sent all
back except the <i>chaprassie</i>, the cows, and the cowherd, my
servants looking much crestfallen.</p>
<p>We crossed the Baralacha Pass in wind and snow showers into a climate in
which moisture began to be obvious. At short distances along the pass,
which extends for many miles, there are rude semicircular walls, three
feet high, all turned in one direction, in the shelter of which
travellers crouch to escape from the strong cutting wind. My men
suffered far more than on the two higher passes, and it was difficult to
dislodge them from these shelters, where they lay groaning, gasping, and
suffering from vertigo and nose-bleeding. The cold was so severe that I
walked over the loftiest part of the pass, and for the first time felt
slight effects of the <i>ladug</i>. At a height of 15,000 feet, in the
midst of general desolation, grew, in the shelter of rocks, poppies (<i>Mecanopsis
aculeata</i>), blue as the Tibetan skies, their centres filled with a
cluster of golden-yellow stamens,—a most charming sight. Ten or
twelve of these exquisite blossoms grow on one stalk, and stalk, leaf,
and seed-vessels are guarded by very stiff thorns. Lower down flowers
abounded, and at the camping-ground of Patseo (12,000 feet), where the
Tibetan sheep caravans exchange their wool, salt, and borax for grain,
the ground was covered with soft greensward, and real rain fell. Seen
from the Baralacha Pass are vast snowfields, glaciers, and avalanche
slopes. This barrier, and the Rotang, farther south, close this trade
route practically for seven months of the year, for they catch the
monsoon rains, which at that altitude are snows from fifteen to thirty
feet deep; while on the other side of the Baralacha and throughout
Rupchu and Ladak the snowfall is insignificant. So late as August, when
I crossed, there were four perfect snow bridges over the Bhaga, and
snowfields thirty-six feet deep along its margin. At Patseo the <i>tahsildar</i>,
with a retinue and animals laden with fodder, came to pay his respects
to me, and invited me to his house, three days' journey. These were the
first human beings we had seen for three days.</p>
<p>A few miles south of the Baralacha Pass some birch trees appeared on a
slope, the first natural growth of timber that I had seen since crossing
the Zoji La. Lower down there were a few more, then stunted specimens of
the pencil cedar, and the mountains began to show a shade of green on
their lower slopes. Butterflies appeared also, and a vulture, a grand
bird on the wing, hovered ominously over us for some miles, and was
succeeded by an equally ominous raven. On the excellent bridle-track cut
on the face of the precipices which overhang the Bhaga, there is in nine
miles only one spot in which it is possible to pitch a five-foot tent,
and at Darcha, the first hamlet in Lahul, the only camping-ground is on
the house roofs. There the Chang-pas and their <i>yaks</i> and horses
who had served me pleasantly and faithfully from Tsala left me, and
returned to the freedom of their desert life. At Kolang, the next
hamlet, where the thunder of the Bhaga was almost intolerable, Hara
Chang, the magistrate, one of the <i>thakurs</i> or feudal proprietors
of Lahul, with his son and nephew and a large retinue, called on me; and
the next morning Mr. —— and I went by invitation to visit
him in his castle, a magnificently situated building on a rocky spur
1,000 feet above the camping-ground, attained by a difficult climb, and
nearly on a level with the glittering glaciers and ice-falls on the
other side of the Bhaga. It only differs from Leh and Stok castles in
having blue glass in some of the smaller windows. In the family temple,
in addition to the usual life-size images of Buddha and the Triad, there
was a female divinity, carved at Jallandhur in India, copied from a
statue representing Queen Victoria in her younger days—a very
fitting possession for the highest government official in Lahul. The <i>thakur</i>,
Hara Chang, is wealthy and a rigid Buddhist, and uses his very
considerable influence against the work of the Moravian missionaries in
the valley. The rude path down to the bridle-road, through fields of
barley and buckwheat, is bordered by roses, gooseberries, and masses of
wild flowers.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="image_21"></SPAN> <SPAN href="images/gs21.png"><ANTIMG src="images/gs21s.png" alt="Image" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption"><br/>GONPO AT KYLANG</span></div>
<p>The later marches after reaching Darcha are grand beyond all
description. The track, scaffolded or blasted out of the rock at a
height of from 1,000 to 3,000 feet above the thundering Bhaga, is
scarcely a rifle-shot from the mountain mass dividing it from the
Chandra, a mass covered with nearly unbroken ice and snowfields, out of
which rise pinnacles of naked rock 21,000 and 22,000 feet in altitude.
The region is the 'abode of snow,' and glaciers of great size fill up
every depression. Humidity, vegetation, and beauty reappear together,
wild flowers and ferns abound, and pencil cedars in clumps rise above
the artificial plantations of the valley. Wheat ripens at an altitude of
12,000 feet. Picturesque villages, surrounded by orchards, adorn the
mountain spurs; <i>chod-tens</i> and <i>gonpos</i>, with white walls and
fluttering flags, brighten the scene; feudal castles crown the heights,
and where the mountains are loftiest, the snowfields and glaciers most
imposing, and the greenery densest, the village of Kylang, the most
important in Lahul as the centre of trade, government, and Christian
missions, hangs on ledges of the mountain-side 1,000 feet above Bhaga,
whose furious course can be traced far down the valley by flashes of
sunlit foam.</p>
<p>The Lahul valley, which is a part of British Tibet, has an altitude of
10,000 feet. It prospers under British rule, its population has
increased, Hindu merchants have settled in Kylang, the route through
Lahul to Central Asia is finding increasing favour with the Panjābi
traders, and the Moravian missionaries, by a bolder system of irrigation
and the provision of storage for water, have largely increased the
quantity of arable land. The Lahulis are chiefly Tibetans, but Hinduism
is largely mixed up with Buddhism in the lower villages. All the <i>gonpos</i>,
however, have been restored and enlarged during the last twenty years.
In winter the snow lies fifteen feet deep, and for four or five months,
owing to the perils of the Rotang Pass, the valley rarely has any
communication with the outer world.</p>
<p>At the foot of the village of Kylang, which is built in tier above tier
of houses up the steep side of a mountain with a height of 21,000 feet,
are the Moravian mission buildings, long, low, whitewashed erections, of
the simplest possible construction, the design and much of the actual
erection being the work of these capable Germans. The large building,
which has a deep verandah, the only place in which exercise can be taken
in the winter, contains the native church, three rooms for each
missionary, and two guest-rooms. Round the garden are the printing
rooms, the medicine and store room (stores arriving once in two years),
and another guest-room. Round an adjacent enclosure are the houses
occupied in winter by the Christians when they come down with their
sheep and cattle from the hill farms. All is absolutely plain, and as
absolutely clean and trim. The guest-rooms and one or two of the Tibetan
rooms are papered with engravings from the <i>Illustrated London News</i>,
but the rooms of the missionaries are only whitewashed, and by their
extreme bareness reminded me of those of very poor pastors in the
Fatherland. A garden, brilliant with zinnias, dianthus, and petunias,
all of immense size, and planted with European trees, is an oasis, and
in it I camped for some weeks under a willow tree, covered, as many are,
with a sweet secretion so abundant as to drop on the roof of the tent,
and which the people collect and use as honey.</p>
<p>The mission party consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Shreve, lately arrived, and
now in a distant exile at Poo, and Mr. and Mrs. Heyde, who had been in
Tibet for nearly forty years, chiefly spent at Kylang, without going
home. 'Plain living and high thinking' were the rule. Books and
periodicals were numerous, and were read and assimilated. The culture
was simply wonderful, and the acquaintance with the latest ideas in
theology and natural science, the latest political and social
developments, and the latest conceptions in European art, would have led
me to suppose that these admirable people had only just left Europe.
Mrs. Heyde had no servant, and in the long winters, when household and
mission work are over for the day, and there are no mails to write for,
she pursues her tailoring and other needlework, while her husband reads
aloud till midnight. At the time of my visit (September) busy
preparations for the winter were being made. Every day the wood piles
grew. Hay, cut with sickles on the steep hillsides, was carried on human
backs into the farmyard, apples were cored and dried in the sun,
cucumbers were pickled, vinegar was made, potatoes were stored, and meat
was killed and salted.</p>
<p>It is in winter, when the Christians have come down from the mountain,
that most of the mission work is done. Mrs. Heyde has a school of forty
girls, mostly Buddhists. The teaching is simple and practical, and
includes the knitting of socks, of which from four to five hundred pairs
are turned out each winter, and find a ready sale. The converts meet for
instruction and discussion twice daily, and there is daily worship. The
mission press is kept actively employed in printing the parts of the
Bible which have been translated during the summer, as well as simple
tracts written or translated by Mr. Heyde. No converts are better
instructed, and like those of Leh they seem of good quality, and are
industrious and self-supporting. Winter work is severe, as ponies,
cattle, and sheep must always be hand-fed, and often hand-watered. Mr.
Heyde has great repute as a doctor, and in summer people travel long
distances for his advice and medicine. He is universally respected, and
his judgment in worldly affairs is highly thought of; but if one were to
judge merely by apparent results, the devoted labour of nearly forty
years and complete self-sacrifice for the good of Kylang must be
pronounced unsuccessful. Christianity has been most strongly opposed by
men of influence, and converts have been exposed to persecution and
loss. The abbot of the Kylang monastery lately said to Mr. Heyde, 'Your
Christian teaching has given Buddhism a resurrection.' The actual words
used were, 'When you came here people were quite indifferent about their
religion, but since it has been attacked they have become zealous, and
now they <i>know</i>.' It is only by sharing their circumstances of
isolation, and by getting glimpses of their everyday life and work, that
one can realise at all what the heroic perseverance and self-sacrificing
toil of these forty years have been, and what is the weighty influence
on the people and on the standard of morals, even though the number of
converts is so small. All honour to these noble German missionaries,
learned, genial, cultured, radiant, who, whether teaching, preaching,
farming, gardening, printing, or doctoring, are always and everywhere
'living epistles of Christ, known and read of all men!' Close by the
mission house, in a green spot under shady trees, is God's Acre, where
many children of the mission families sleep, and a few adults.</p>
<p>As the winter is the busiest season in mission work, so it is the great
time in which the <i>lamas</i> make house-to-house peregrinations and
attend at festivals. Then also there is much spinning and weaving by
both sexes, and tobogganing and other games, and much drinking of <i>chang</i>
by priests and people. The cattle remain out till nearly Christmas, and
are then taken into the houses. At the time of the variable new year,
the <i>lamas</i> and nuns retire to the monasteries, and dulness reigns
in the valleys. At the end of a month they emerge, life and noise begin,
and all men to whom sons have been born during the previous year give <i>chang</i>
freely. During the festival which follows, all these jubilant fathers go
out of the village as a gaudily dressed procession, and form a circle
round a picture of a <i>yak</i>, painted by the <i>lamas</i>, which is
used as a target to be shot at with bows and arrows, and it is believed
that the man who hits it in the centre will be blessed with a son in the
coming year. After this, all the Kylang men and women collect in one
house by annual rotation, and sing and drink immense quantities of <i>chang</i>
till 10 p.m.</p>
<p>The religious festivals begin soon after. One, the worshipping of the <i>lamas</i>
by the laity, occurs in every village, and lasts from two to three days.
It consists chiefly of music and dancing, while the <i>lamas</i> sit in
rows, swilling <i>chang</i> and arrack. At another, which is celebrated
annually in every house, the <i>lamas</i> assemble, and in front of
certain gods prepare a number of mystical figures made of dough, which
are hung up and are worshipped by the family. Afterwards the <i>lamas</i>
make little balls which are worshipped, and one of the family mounts the
roof and invites the neighbours, who receive the balls from the <i>lamas'</i>
hands and drink moderately of <i>chang</i>. Next, the figures are thrown
to the demons as a propitiatory offering, amidst 'hellish whistlings'
and the firing of guns. These ceremonies are called <i>ise drup</i> (a
full life), and it is believed that if they were neglected life would be
cut short.</p>
<p>One of the most important of the winter religious duties of the <i>lamas</i>
is the reading of the sacred classics under the roof of each
householder. By this means the family accumulate merit, and the longer
the reading is protracted the greater is the accumulation. A
twelve-volume book is taken in the houses of the richer householders,
each one of the twelve or fifteen <i>lamas</i> taking a page, all
reading at an immense pace in a loud chant at the same time. The reading
of these volumes, which consist of Buddhist metaphysics and philosophy,
takes five days, and while reading each <i>lama</i> has his <i>chang</i>
cup constantly replenished. In the poorer households a classic of but
one volume is taken, to lessen the expense of feeding the <i>lamas</i>.
Festivals and ceremonies follow each other closely until March, when
archery practice begins, and in April and May the people prepare for the
operations of husbandry.</p>
<p>The weather in Kylang breaks in the middle of September, but so
fascinating were the beauties and sublimity of Nature, and the virtues
and culture of my Moravian friends, that, shutting my eyes to the
possible perils of the Rotang, I remained until the harvest was brought
home with joy and revelry, and the flush of autumn faded, and the first
snows of winter gave an added majesty to the glorious valley. Then,
reluctantly folding my tent, and taking the same faithful fellows who
brought my baggage from Leh, I spent five weeks on the descent to the
Panjāb, journeying through the paradise of Upper Kulu and the
interesting native states of Mandi, Sukket, Bilaspur, and Bhaghat; and
early in November reached the amenities and restraints of the
civilisation of Simla.</p>
<p class="center">
<b>THE END.</b></p>
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