Page images
PDF
EPUB

adorned with Chinese manufactures: but these times were comparatively modern; and, even if we should admit, that the Eighùris, who are faid to have been governed for a period of two thousand years by an I'decùt, or fovereign of their own race, were in fome very early age a literary and polished nation, it would prove nothing in favour of the Huns, Turcs, Mongals, and other favages to the north of Pekin, who feem in all ages, before MUHAMMED, to have been equally ferocious and illiterate.

Without actual inspection of the manuscripts, that have been found near the Cafpian, it would be impoffible to give a correct opinion concerning them; but one of them, described as written on blue filky paper in letters of gold and filver not unlike Hebrew, was probably a Tibetian compofition of the fame kind with that, which lay near the fource of the Irtifh, and of which CASSIANO I believe, made the firft accurate version: another, if we may judge from the defcription of it, was probably modern Turkish; and none of them could have been of great antiquity.

[ocr errors]

IV. From ancient monuments, therefore, we have no proof, that the Tartars were themfelves well-inftructed, much less that they inftructed the world; nor have we any ftronger reason to conclude from their general man

1

ners and character, that they had made an carly proficiency in arts and Sciences: even of poetry, the moft univerfal and moft natural of the fine arts, we find no genuine specimens afcribed to them, except fome horrible warfongs expreffed in Perfian by ALI' of Yezd, and poffibly invented by him, After the conquest of Perfia by the Mongals, their princes, indeed, encouraged learning, and even made aftronomical obfervations at Samarkand; as the Turcs became polished by mixing with the Perfians and Arabs, though their very nature, as one of their own writers confeffes, bad before been like an incurable diftemper, and their minds clouded with ignorance: thus alfo the Mancheu monarchs of China have been patrons of the learned and ingenious, and the Emperor TIEN-LONG is, if he be now living, a fine Chinese poet. In all these instances the Tartars have resembled the Romans, who, before they had fubdued Greece, were little better than tigers in war, and Fauns or Sylvans in fcience and art.

Before I left Europe, I had infifted in converfation, that the Tuzuc, tranflated by Major DAVY, was never written by TAIMU'R himself, at leaft not as CESAR wrote his commentaries, for one very plain reason, that no Tartarian king of his age could write at all; and, in fupport of my opinion, I had cited IBNU ARABSHA'H, who,

[ocr errors]

though justly hoftile to the favage, by whom his native city, Damafcus, had been ruined, yet praises his talents and the real greatnefs of his. mind, but adds: "He was wholly illiterate; he "neither read nor wrote any thing; and he "knew nothing of Arabick; though of Perfian, Turkish, and the Mogul dialect, he knew as "much as was fufficient for his purpose, and no "more: he used with pleasure to hear histories "read to him, and fo frequently heard the same "book, that he was able by memory to correct. "an inaccurate reader." This paffage had no effect on the tranflator, whom great and learned men in India had affured, it seems, that the work was authentick, by which he meaned compofed: by the conqueror himself: but the great in this country might have been unlearned, or the learned might not have been great enough to answer any leading question in a manner that opposed the declared inclination of a British inquirer; and, in either cafe, fince no witneffes are named, fo general a reference to them will hardly be thought conclusive evidence. On my part, I will name a Mufelman, whom we all know, and who has enough both of greatness and of learning to decide the question both impartially and fatisfactorily the Nawwab MozAFFER JANG informed me of his own accord, that no man of fense in Hindustan believed the work to have.

[ocr errors]

been compofed by TAIMU'R, but that his fa vourite, furnamed HINDU SHAH, was known to have written that book and others afcribed to his patron, after many confidential discourses with the Emir, and, perhaps, nearly in the Prince's words as well as in his person; a story, which ALI' of Yezd, who attended the court of TAIMUR, and has given us a flowery panegyrick instead of a hiftory, renders highly probable, by confirming the latter part of the Arabian account, and by total filence as to the literary productions of his master. It is true, that a very ingenious but indigent native, whom DAVY supported, has given me a written memorial on the subject, in which he mentions TAIMU'R as the author of two works in Turkish; but the credit of his information is overfet by a strange apocryphal ftory of a king of Yemen, who invaded, he says, the Emir's dominions, and in whose library the manuscript was afterwards found, and tranflated by order of ALI'SHIR, firft minifter of TAIMU'R's grandson; and Major DAVY himself, before he departed from Bengal, told me, that he was greatly perplexed by finding in a very accurate and old copy of the Tuzuc, which he de figned to republish with confiderable additions, a particular account, written unquestionably by TAIMUR, of his own death. No evidence, therefore, has been adduced to shake my opinion,

r

that, the Moguls and Tartars, before their conqueft of India and Perfia, were wholly unlettered; although it may be poffible, that, even without art or fcience, they had, like the Huns, both warriours and lawgivers in their own country fome centuries before the birth of CHRIST.

If learning was ever anciently cultivated in the regions to the north of India, the feats of it, I have reafon to fuspect, must have been Eighùr, Cafbghar, Khatà, Chin, Tancut, and other countries of Chinese Tartary, which lie between the thirtyfifth and forty-fifth degrees of northern latitude; but I fhall, in another difcourfe, produce my reafons for fuppofing, that those very countries were peopled by a race allied to the Hindus, or enlightened at leaft by their vicinity to India and China; yet in Tancut, which by fome is annexed to Tibet, and even among its old inhabitants, the Seres, we have no certain accounts of uncommon talents or great improvements: they were famed, indeed, for the faithful discharge of moral duties, for a pacifick difpofition, and for that longevity, which is often the reward of patient virtues and a calm temper; but they are faid to have been wholly indifferent, in former ages, to the elegant arts and even to commerce; though FADLU'LLAH had been informed, that, near the clofe of the thirteenth century, many

« PreviousContinue »