On the Coromandel Coast
ON THE
COROMANDEL
COAST
F. E. PENNY
ON
THE COROMANDEL COAST
BY
F. E. PENNY
AUTHOR OF THE 'INEVITABLE LAW' ETC.
LONDON
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
1908
CRITICS ANCIENT AND MODERN
'We must receive with discrimination what we are told about India, for it is the most distant of lands and few of our nation have seen it. Those, moreover, who have seen it, have seen only a part, and most of what they say is no more than hearsay, Even what they saw they became acquainted with only while passing through the country with an army in great haste. Yea, even their reports about the same things are not the same, although they write as if they had examined the things with the greatest care and attention. Some of the writers were fellow soldiers and fellow travellers, yet ofttimes they contradict each other.'
Strabo
'One thing is sure; they [the natives of India] are much the most interesting people in the world and the nearest to being
incomprehensible. At any rate the hardest to account for. Their
character and their history, their customs and their religion
confront you with riddles at every turn riddles which are a trifle
more perplexing after they are explained than before. You can get the facts of a custom like caste and suttee and thuggee and so on and with the facts a theory which tries to explain them, but never quite does it to your satisfaction. You can never quite understand how so strange a thing could have been born, nor why.'
Mark Twain.
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CONTENTS
CHAPTER PAGE I. 1 II. 15 III. 27 IV. 44 V. 61 VI. 75 VII. 87 VIII. 97 IX. 108 X. 124 XI. 138 XII. 153 XIII. 163 XIV. 177 XV. 191 XVI. 204 XVII. 216 XVIII. 229
XIX. 245 XX. 260 XXI. 274 XXII. 288 XXIII. 301 XXIV. 314 XXV. 331 351