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قراءة كتاب From Jungle to Java The Trivial Impressions of a Short Excursion to Netherlands India

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From Jungle to Java
The Trivial Impressions of a Short Excursion to Netherlands India

From Jungle to Java The Trivial Impressions of a Short Excursion to Netherlands India

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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FROM JUNGLE TO JAVA

THE TRIVIAL IMPRESSIONS OF A
SHORT EXCURSION TO NETHERLANDS INDIA.

 

 

BY
ARTHUR KEYSER,
AUTHOR OF
"Our Cruise in New Guinea," "Cut by the Mess,"
"An Exile's Romance," etc., etc.

 

logo of publisher

 

THE
ROXBURGHE PRESS,
LIMITED,
Fifteen, Victoria Street,
Westminster.


CONTENTS.


PAGE
I. A Select Community 1
II. The Start 7
III. Singapore 14
IV. On the Way to Java 19
V. Batavia 23
VI. An Official Call 34
VII. A Concert at the Concordia Club 39
VIII. Concerning the Lomboh War 44
IX. Buitenzorg 49
X. Customs and Costumes 56
XI. An Untimely Call 62
XII. A Model Estate 66
XIII. Among the Roses 76
XIV. Garvet 84
XV. Baths and Volcanoes 89
XVI. The Quest for a Mother 94
XVII. The Quest Continued. Tjilatjap 99
XVIII. The Quest Successful. The Wodena's House 109
XIX. A Village Home in Java 115
XX. Back to the Jungle 120

FROM JUNGLE TO JAVA


CHAPTER I.
A SELECT COMMUNITY.

Mr. X., whose impressions and mild adventures I have undertaken the task of editing, has asked me to narrow his personal introduction to such limits as is consistent with the courtesy due to my readers, if haply I find any. He prefers, as his pseudonym implies, to remain an unknown quantity. I need only explain that he is an officer employed in one of the small States of the Malay Peninsula, which are (very much) under the protection of the Colonial Government of the Straits Settlements. The latter, with careful forethought for their ease-loving rulers, appoints officers to relieve them of all the cares and duties of administration, and absolves them from the responsibility of a Government somewhat more progressive in its policy than might commend itself to Oriental ideas, if left without such outside assistance.

As the title intimates, Mr. X.'s duties compel him to make his home in the jungle. The word has many significations in the East, where it is often used to express a region remote from civilization, although perhaps consisting of barren mountains or treeless plains. Mr. X.'s jungle, however, is one realizing what it represents to the untravelled Englishman. It is a land of hill and dale covered with thickly growing forest trees, with here and there by the side of the rivers, which are Nature's thoroughfares, or the main roads made by man, small oases of cultivation. It is a beautiful country, with a climate which those who live in it—and they are the best witnesses—declare to be healthy and agreeable. And the members of the small community who form the European population take a personal pride in the amenities of their beautiful retreat, with its perennial verdure, and glory in their "splendid isolation." Criticisms are resented, and

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