Page 38 - Malay sketches
P. 38

MALAY SKETCHES

                                        is done to the food
            inquiring,  but thorough justice             ;
            and if           should ever be fortunate enough
                  you, reader,
            to take  part  in one of these  picnics, you  will declare
            that  you  never before realised how delicious a meal
            can be made of such  simple ingredients.  Some one
            has  smuggled  in a few condiments and they  add
            largely  to the success of the Malay  bouille-abaisse,
            but  people  affect not to know they  are there,  and
            you go away  assured that rice and salt did  it all.
            That is  part  of the  game.
              And now   it is time to return, the sun has  long
            passed  the  meridian,  and there  is a mile or two of
            forest before  getting  into the  open country.  The
            timid  amongst  the ladies  feign  alarm  (Malays  are
            sensible  people  who take  only  the  young  to  picnics,
            and leave the old to mind the      and a desire
                                       houses),
            to  get away  at  once,  but there are others who know
            what is in store for them.
              The  elephants  are  brought up  and each  pannier
            is found  to be loaded with  jungle fruit, large  and
                      and        hard and     but
            small, ripe   unripe,         soft,   generally
            hard as stones.  Every  one knows the meaning  of
            this  and,  as the  elephants kneel down to take their
           riders, you may  observe that  usually  two men sit in
            front, two women behind, and the latter are anxious
            about their umbrellas and show a  tendency  to  open
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