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214                                    TIPPERA                             book iii
CHAPTER XVI
Concerning the Kingdom of Tippera.
Some persons up to this hour believe that the Kingdom of Pegu bounds China, and I myself shared this error until three merchants of the Kingdom of Tippera corrected me. They passed as Brahmans in the hope that they might be treated with special respect, but they were in truth only merchants who came to Patna and Dacca, where I saw them, to buy coral, yellow amber, tortoise-shell, and sea-shell bracelets, and other toys which, as I have said in the preceding chapter, are made in these two towns of Bengal. I saw one of them at Dacca, and met the two others at Patna, and invited them to dine with me. They were people who spoke but little, either because it was their nature, or the usual custom of their country ; one of them knew the Indian language. When they bought anything they made their calculations with small stones resembling agates, and of the size of the finger nail, upon which there were figures. They each had scales made like steelyards.1 The arms were not of iron, but of a kind of wood as hard as bresil,2 and the ring which held the weights, when put in the arm to mark the livres, was a strong loop of silk. By this means they weighed from a dram up to ten of our livres. If all the inhabitants of the Kingdom of Tippera resemble these two merchants whom I met at Patna, one might conclude that this nation loves drinking very much ; and I experienced a pleasure in giving them sometimes spirits, sometimes Spanish wine, and other kinds, such as those of Shlraz, Rheims, and Mantua, never having been without a supply in all my journeys, except during the last, in the deserts of Arabia, which I was unable to traverse in less than sixty-five days, for the reasons I have elsewhere stated. I should have been able to learn
1  See H. Ling Roth, ' Oriental Steelyards and Bismars', Journal, Royal Anthropological Institute, xlii, 1912, p. 200 fi.
2  The Brazil wood of commerce is at present derived from Caesalpinia Brasiliensis, a native of Pemambuco. (Ency. Brit., iv. 463.) The Indian Sappan wood is Csesalpinia Sappan : Watt, Economic Products, 194 fi. (See Yule, Hobson-Jobson, 113.)