making converts to their
doctrine and
discipline,
whilst the
Russians possess better maps of its vast regions than of their own
country, and
lately, owing to the persevering labour and searching
eye of my friend Hyacinth, Archimandrite of Saint John Nefsky, are
acquainted with the number of its military force to a man, and also
with the names and places of
residence of its civil servants. Yet
who possesses a map of Fez and Morocco, or would
venture to form a
conjecture as to how many fiery horsemen Abderrahman, the mulatto
emperor, could lead to the field, were his sandy dominions
threatened by the Nazarene? Yet Fez is scarcely two hundred
leagues distant from Madrid,
whilst Maraks, the other great city of
the Moors, and which also has given its name to an empire, is
scarcely farther removed from Paris, the capital of civilisation:
in a word, we scarcely know anything of Barbary, the scanty
information which we possess being confined to a few towns on the
sea-coast; the zeal of the Jesuit himself being
insufficient to
induce him to
confront the perils of the
interior, in the hopeless
endeavour of making one single proselyte from
amongst the wildest
fanatics of the creed of the Prophet Camel-driver.
Are wanderers of the Gypsy race to be found in Barbary? This is a
question which I have frequently asked myself. Several respectable
authors have, I believe,
asserted the fact,
amongst whom Adelung,
who,
speaking of the Gypsies, says: 'Four hundred years have
passed away since they
departed from their native land. During
this time, they have spread themselves through the whole of Western
Asia, Europe, and Northern Africa.' (22) But it is one thing to
make an
assertion" target="_blank" title="n.断言;主张;论述">
assertion, and another to produce the grounds for making
it. I believe it would require a far greater stock of information
than has
hitherto been possessed by any one who has written on the
subject of the Gypsies, to justify him in
asserting
positively that
after traversing the west of Europe, they spread themselves over
Northern Africa, though true it is that to those who take a
superficial view of the matter, nothing appears easier and more
natural than to come to such a conclusion.
Tarifa, they will say, the most
western part of Spain, is opposite
to Tangier, in Africa, a narrow sea only
running between, less wide
than many rivers. Bands,
therefore, of these wanderers, of course,
on reaching Tarifa, passed over into Africa, even as thousands
crossed the
channel from France to England. They have at all times
shown themselves extravagantly fond of a roving life. What land is
better adapted for such a life than Africa and its wilds? What
land,
therefore, more likely to
entice them?
All this is very plausible. It was easy enough for the Gitanos to
pass over to Tangier and Tetuan from the Spanish towns of Tarifa
and Algeziras. In the last chapter I have stated my
belief of the
fact, and that
moreover they formed certain
connections with the
Moors of the coast, to whom it is likely that they
occasionallysold children
stolen in Spain; yet such
connection would by no
means have opened them a passage into the
interior of Barbary,
which is inhabited by wild and
fierce people, in
comparison with
whom the Moors of the coast, bad as they always have been, are
gentle and civilised.
To
penetrate into Africa, the Gitanos would have been compelled to
pass through the tribes who speak the Shilha language, and who are
the descendants of the ancient Numidians. These tribes are the
most untamable and
warlike of mankind, and at the same time the
most
suspicious, and those who
entertain the greatest aversion to
foreigners. They are dreaded by the Moors themselves, and have
always remained, to a certain degree, independent of the emperors
of Morocco. They are the most terrible of robbers and murderers,
and
entertain far more
reluctance to spill water than the blood of
their fellow-creatures: the Bedouins, also, of the Arabian race,
are
warlike,
suspicious, and cruel; and would not have failed
instantly to attack bands of foreign wanderers,
wherever they found
them, and in all
probability would have exterminated them. Now the
Gitanos, such as they arrived in Barbary, could not have defended
themselves against such enemies, had they even arrived in large
divisions, instead of bands of twenties and thirties, as is their
custom to travel. They are not by nature nor by habit a
warlikerace, and would have quailed before the Africans, who,
unlike most
other people, engage in wars from what appears to be an innate love
of the cruel and
bloody scenes
attendant on war.
It may be said, that if the Gitanos were able to make their way
from the north of India, from Multan, for example, the province
which the
learned consider to be the original dwelling-place of the
race, to such an
immense distance as the
western part of Spain,
passing
necessarily through many wild lands and tribes, why might
they not have
penetrated into the heart of Barbary, and wherefore
may not their descendants be still there, following the same kind
of life as the European Gypsies, that is, wandering about from
place to place, and maintaining themselves by
deceit and
robbery?
But those who are acquainted but
slightly with the condition of
Barbary are aware that it would be less difficult and dangerous for
a company of foreigners to proceed from Spain to Multan, than from
the nearest
seaport in Barbary to Fez, an
insignificant distance.
True it is, that, from their
intercourse with the Moors of Spain,
the Gypsies might have become acquainted with the Arabic language,
and might even have adopted the Moorish dress, ere entering
Barbary; and,
moreover, might have professed
belief in the religion
of Mahomet; still they would have been known as foreigners, and, on
that
account, would have been
assuredly attacked by the people of
the
interior, had they gone
amongst them, who, according to the
usual practice, would either have massacred them or made them
slaves; and as slaves, they would have been separated. The mulatto
hue of their countenances would probably have insured them the
latter fate, as all blacks and mulattos in the dominions of the
Moor are
properly slaves, and can be bought and sold, unless by
some means or other they become free, in which event their colour
is no
obstacle to their
elevation to the highest employments and
dignities, to their becoming pashas of cities and provinces, or
even to their ascending the
throne. Several emperors of Morocco
have been mulattos.
Above I have
pointed out all the difficulties and dangers which
must have attended the path of the Gitanos, had they passed from
Spain into Barbary, and attempted to spread themselves over that
region, as over Europe and many parts of Asia. To these
observations I have been led by the
assertion" target="_blank" title="n.断言;主张;论述">
assertion that they
accomplished this, and no proof of the fact having, as I am aware,
ever been adduced; for who
amongst those who have made such a
statement has seen or conversed with the Egyptians of Barbary, or
had sufficient
intercourse with them to justify him in the
assertion" target="_blank" title="n.断言;主张;论述">
assertion that they are one and the same people as those of Europe,
from whom they
differ about as much as the various tribes which
inhabit various European countries
differ from each other? At the
same time, I wish it to be
distinctly understood that I am far from
denying the
existence of Gypsies in various parts of the
interiorof Barbary. Indeed, I almost believe the fact, though the
information which I possess is by no means of a
description which
would justify me in
speaking with full
certainty; I having myself
never come in
contact with any sect or caste of people
amongst the
Moors, who not only tallied in their pursuits with the Rommany, but
who
likewise spoke
amongst themselves a
dialect of the language of
Roma; nor am I aware that any individual
worthy of credit has ever
presumed to say that he has been more
fortunate in these respects.
Nevertheless, I repeat that I am inclined to believe that Gypsies
virtually exist in Barbary, and my reasons I shall presently
adduce; but I will here observe, that if these strange outcasts did
indeed
contrive to
penetrate into the heart of that
savage and
inhospitable region, they could only have succeeded after having
become well acquainted with the Moorish language, and when, after a
considerable
sojourn on the coast, they had raised for themselves a
name, and were regarded with
superstitious fear; in a word, if they
walked this land of peril
untouched and unscathed, it was not that
they were considered as
harmless and inoffensive people, which,
indeed, would not have protected them, and which
assuredly they
were not; it was not that they were
mistaken for wandering Moors