B.3 Ch. 25: Dutch at War with Emperor of Java

B.3 Ch. 25: Dutch at War with Emperor of Java Page of 417 B.3 Ch. 25: Dutch at War with Emperor of Java Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
CHAP. XXV
ENGLISH BEER
285
injury,' continued the President, ' the Company will not trouble itself, and will not be the poorer because its beer remains unsold.' It is pot really the case that if this prohibi­tion of the Dutch General and his Council had continued it would not have been injurious to the English, for they make a considerable profit on beer, and it yields them a large sum of money annually. I have said above that it is the principal delight of the people of Batavia to see new drinks arrive, especially English beer, and that which they call mom,1 which comes from Brunswick. It is thought that they contribute to health ; and the majority fear that they will not survive till the year's end if they do not receive these supplies. Accordingly all the people murmured loudly against the General and his Council; and even the publicans risked buying beer from the English, the General shutting his eyes, and the wives of the Councillors being very glad to drink it.
As soon as I landed at Batavia one of the guards ran to the entry office to give notice that I had arrived with a cask of beer ; however, I landed it from the barque and placed it near the guard. The chief of the office came to me and said that he could not give permission for the cask to be carried to my lodging ; that I must be aware of the order of Council; and that it would be best to reship it on the barque, and send it back to Bantam. Seeing that there was no favour to be hoped for, and as there are close to the guard­house cannons, in position, for the defence of the port, and an abundance of cannon balls, I took one of these balls and with it stove in one end of the cask. That done, I cried out to the soldiers and passers-by : ' Children, come and empty this cask, and drink the health of the King of Prance, my sovereign lord, and that of the Prince of Orange', after which I mentioned the General and the members of the Council. As no one refused to drink, the cask was already half emptied when an officer on the part of the General came to tell me that I might carry my cask of beer to my lodging. Imme­diately I replaced the end of the cask and had it carried
1 Mum, German Mumme, Brunswick beer, largely imported into England in the 17th and 18th centuries (New English Diet. s. v.)
B.3 Ch. 25: Dutch at War with Emperor of Java Page of 417 B.3 Ch. 25: Dutch at War with Emperor of Java
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