This work should have been
introduced to the world long ere now. The proper time to have brought it
forward would have been about twenty years ago, (It has been brought down,
however, to the present time.) when the subject was nearly altogether new,
and when popular feeling, in Scotland especially, ran strongly toward the
body it treats of, owing to the celebrity of the writings of the great
Scottish novelist, in which were depicted, with great truthfulness, some
real characters of this wayward race. The inducements then to hazard a
publication of it were great; for by bringing it out at that time, the
author would have enjoyed, in some measure, the sunshine which the fame of
that great luminary cast around all who, in any way, illustrated a subject
on which he had written. But for Sir Walter Scott's advice—an advice that
can only be appreciated by those who are acquainted with the vindictive
disposition which the Gipsies entertain toward those whom they imagine to
have injured them—our author would have published a few magazine articles on
the subject, when the tribe would have taken alarm, and an end would have
been made to the, investigation. The dread of personal danger, there is no
doubt, formed a considerable reason for the work being so long withheld from
the public: at the same time, our author, being a timid and nervous man, not
a little dreaded the spleen of the party opposed to the literary society
with which he identified himself, and the idea of being made the subject of
one of the slashing criticisms so characteristic of the time. But now he has
descended into the tomb, with most of his generation, where the abuse of a
reviewer or the ire of a wandering Egyptian cannot reach him.
Since this work was written
there has appeared one by Mr. Borrow, on the Gitanos or Spanish Gipsies. In
the year 1838, a society was formed in Scotland, under the patronage of the
Scottish Church, for the reformation of the wandering portion of the body in
that country, with some eminent men as a committee of management, among whom
was a reverend gentleman of learning, piety, and worth, who said that he
himself was a Gipsy, and whose fine swarthy features strongly. marked the
stock from which lie was descended. There are others in that country of a
like origin, ornaments to the same profession, and many in other respectable
walks of life, of whom I will speak in my Disquisition on the Gipsies, at
the end of the work.
Although a few years have elapsed since the principal details of this work
were collected, the subject cannot be considered as old. The body in
Scotland has become more numerous since the downfall of Napoleon; but the
improved system of internal order that has obtained since that period, has
so very much suppressed their acts of depredation and violence toward the
community, and their savage outbursts of passion toward those of their own
race who had offended them, that much which would have met with only a
slight punishment before, or in some instances been passed over, as a mere
Gipsy scuffle, would now be visited with the utmost penalty the law could
inflict. Hence the wild spirit, but not the number, of the body has been
very much crushed. Many of them have betaken themselves to regular callings
of industry, or otherwise withdrawn from public observation ; but, in
respect to race, are as much, at heart, Gipsies as before. Many of the
Scottish wandering class have given way before an invasion of swarms of
Gipsies from Ireland.
It is almost unnecessary to give a reason why this work has been introduced
here, instead of the country in which it was written, and of which, for the
most part, it treats. Suffice it to say, that, having come to this country,
I have been led to bring it out here, where it may receive, sooner or later,
more attention from those at a distance from the place and people it treats
of, than from those accustomed to see and hear of them daily, to many of
whom they appear as mere vagabonds; it being a common feature in the human
mind, that that which comes frequently under our observation is but little
thought of, while that at a distance, and unknown to us, forms the subject
of our investigations and desires.
["Men of letters, while
eagerly investigating the customs of Otaheite or Kamschatka, and losing
their tempers in endless disputes about Gothic and Celtic antiquities, have
witnessed, with apathy and contempt, the striking spectacle of a Gipsy
camp—pitched, 1perhalps, amidst the mouldering entrenchments of their
favourite Picts and Romans. The rest of the community, familiar from infancy
with the general character and appearance of these vagrant hordes, have
probably never regarded them with any deeper interest than what springs from
the recollected terrors of a nursery tale, or the finer a-sociations of
poetical and picturesque description."—Blackwood's Magazine.
"Tinkler is the name generally applied to the
Scottish Gipsies. The wandering, tented class prefer it to the term Gipsy.
The settled and better classes detest the word: they would much rather be
called Gipsies; but the term Egyptian is the most agreeable to their
feelings. Tinkler has a peculiar meaning that can be understood only by a
Scotchman. In its radical sense it means Tinker. The verb tink, according to
Jamieson's Scottish Dictionary, means to "rivet, including the idea of the
noise made in the operation of riviting; a Gipsy word."]
In taking this view of the
subject, the Ianguage of Dr. Bright may be used, when he says: "The
condition and circumstances of the Gipsy nation throughout the whole of
Europe, may truly be considered amongst the most curious phenomena in the
history of man." And although this work, for the most part, treats of
Scottish Gipsies, it illustrates the history of the people all over Europe,
and, it may be said, pretty much over the world; and affords materials for
reflection on so singular a subject connected with the history of our common
family, and so little known to mankind in general. To the American reader
generally, the work will illustrate a phase of life and history with which
it may be reasonably assumed lie is not much conversant; for, although he
must have some knowledge of the Gipsy race generally, there is no work, that
I am aware of, that treats of the body like the present. To all kinds of
readers the words of the celebrated Christopher North, as quoted in the
author's Introduction, may be addressed:
Few things more sweetly vary civil life
Than a barbarian, savage Tinklert tale."
It is a singular circumstance that, until
comparatively lately, little was known of this body in Scotland, beyond
their mere existence, and the depredations which they committed on their
neighbours; no further proof of which need be given than a reference to the
letters of Sir Walter Scott and others, in the Introduction to the work, and
the avidity with which the few articles of our author in Black-wood's
Magazine were read. The
higher we may rise in the scale of general information and philosophic
culture, the greater the attractions will this moral puzzle have for our
contemplation—the phenomenon of a barbarous race of men, free as the air,
with little but the cold earth for abed, and the canopy of heaven for a
covering, obtruding itself upon a civilized community, and living so long in
the midst of it, without any material impression being made on the habits of
the representative part of it; the only instance of the kind in the modern
history of the world. In this solitary case, Having nothing from which to
reason analogously as to the result, observation alone must be had recourse
to for the solution of the experiment. It is from this circumstance that the
subject, in all its bearings, has been found to have such charms for the
curious and learned; being, as it were, a study in history of the most
interesting kind. It may be remarked that Professor Wilson, the Christopher
North of Blackwood, is said to have accompanied some of the tribe in their
peregrinations over parts of England and Wales. Without proceeding to the
same length, our author, in his own peculiar way, prosecuted his researches
with much indefatigability, assiduity, and patience. He kept an open house
for them at all times, and presented such allurements as the skillful
trapper of vermin will sometimes use in attracting the whole in a
neighbourhood ; when if one Gipsy entered, many would follow; although he
would generally find them so shy in their communications as sometimes to
require years of such baiting to ensure them for the elucidation of a single
point of their history. In this way he made himself appear, in his
associations with them, as very odd, and perhaps not of very sound mind, in
the estimation of the wise ones around him.
The popular idea of a Gipsy, at the present day,
is very erroneous as to its extent and meaning. The nomadic Gipsies
constitute but a portion of the race, and a very small portion of it. A
gradual change has come over their outward condition, all over Europe, from
about the commencement of the first American war, but from what time
previous to that, we have no certain data from which to form an opinion. In
the whole of Great Britain they have been very much mixed with the native
blood of the country, but nowhere, I believe, so much so as in Scotland.
There is every reason to suppose that the same mixture has taken place in
Europe generally, although its effects are not so observable in the southern
countries—from the circumstance of the. people there being, for the most
part, of dark hair and complexion—as in those lying further toward the
north. But this circumstance would, to a certain extent, prevent the mixture
which has taken place in countries the inhabitants of which have fair hair
and complexions. The causes leading to this mixture are various.
The persecutions to which. the Gipsies were
exposed, merely for being Gipsies, which their appearance would readily
indicate, seem to have induced the body to intermarry with our race, so as
to disguise theirs. That would be done by receiving and adopting males of
our race, whom they would marry to females of theirs, who would bring up the
children of such unions as members of their fraternity. They also, adopted
the practice to give their race stamina, as well as numbers, to contend with
the people among whom they lived. The desire of having servants, (for
Gipsies, generally, have been too proud to do menial work for each other,)
led to many children being kidnapped, and reared among them; many of whom,
as is customary with Oriental people, rose to as high a position in the
tribe as any of themselves. [Mr. Borrow labours under a very serious mistake
when he asserts that "The unfounded idea, that Gipsies steal children, to
bring them up as Gipsies, has been the besetting sin of authors, who have
attempted to found works of fiction on the way of life of this most singular
people." The only argument which he advances to refute this belief in regard
to Gipsies, which is universal, is the following: 'They have plenty of
children of their own, whom they can scarcely support; and they would Emile
at the idea of encumbering themselves with the children of others." This is
rather inconsistent with his own words, when he says, "I have dealt more in
facts than in theories, of which I am, in general, no friend." As a matte)
of fact, children have been stolen and brought up as Gipsies, and
incorporated with the tribe.]
Then again, it was very necessary to have people
of fair complexion among them, to enable them the more easily to carry on
their operations upon the community, as well as to contribute to their
support during times of persecution. Owing to these causes, and the
occasional occurrence of white people being, by more legitimate means,
received into their body, which would be more often the case in their palmy
days, the half, at least, of the Scottish Gipsies are of fair hair and blue
eyes. Some would naturally think that these would not be Gipsies, but the
fact is otherwise ; for, owing to the dreadful prejudice which has always
attached to the name of Gipsy, these white and parti-coloured Gipsies,
imagining themselves, as it were, banished from society, on account of their
descent, cling to their Gipsy connection ; as the other part of their blood,
they imagine, will not own them. They are Gipsies, and, with the public,
they think that is quite enough. r1hey take a pride in being descended from
a race so mysterious, so ancient, so universal, and cherish their language
the more from its being the principal badge of membership that entitles them
to belong to it. The nearer they approach the whites as regards blood, the
more acutely do they feel the antipathy which is entertained for their race,
and the more bitter does the propinquity become to them. The more
enlightened they become, the stronger becomes their attachment to the sept
in the abstract, although they will despise many of its members. The sense
of such an ancient descent, and the possession of such an ancient and secret
language, in the minds of men of comparatively limited education and
indifferent rearing, brought up in humble life, and following various
callings, from a tinker upward, and even of men of education and
intelligence, occupying the position of lawyers, medical doctors, and
clergymen, possess for them a charm that is at once fascinating and
enchanting. If men of enlightened minds and high social standing will go to
such lengths as they have done, in their endeavours to but look into their
language, how much more will they not cling to it, such as it is, in whose
hearts it is? Gipsies compounded for the most part of white blood, but with
Gipsy feelings, are, as a general thing, much superior to those who more
nearly approach what may be called the original stock ; and, singularly
enough, speak the language better than the others, if their opportunities
have been in any way favourable for its acquisition.
The primitive, original state of the Gipsies is
the tent and tilted cart. But as any country can support only a limited
number in that way, and as the increase of. the body is very large, it
follows that they must cast about to make a living in some other way,
however bitter the pill may be which they have to swalIow. The nomadic Gipsy
portion resembles, in that respect, a water trough; for the water which runs
into it, there must be a corresponding quantity running over it. The Gipsies
who leave the tent resemble the youth of our small seaports and villages;
for there, society is so limited as to compel such youth to take to the sea
or cities, or go abroad, to gain that livelihood which the neighbourhood in
which they have been reared denies to them. In the same manner do these
Gipsies look back to the tent from which they, or their fathers, have
sprung. They carry the language, the associations, and the sympatides of
their race, and their peculiar feelings toward the community, with them;
and, as residents of towns, have generally greater facilities, from others
of their race residing near them, for perpetuating their language, than when
strolling over the country.
The prejudice of their fellow creatures, which
clings to the race to which they belong, almost overwhelms some of them at
times; but it is only momentary; for such is the independence and elasticity
of their nature, that they rise from under it, as self-complacent and proud
as ever. They in such cases resort to the to quoque--the tit for tat
argument as regards their enemies, and ask, "What is this white race, after
all? What were their forefathers a few generations ago? the Highlands a nest
of marauding thieves, and the Borders little better. Or society at the
present day—what is it but a compound of deceit and hypocrisy? People say
that the Gipsies steal. True; some of them steal chickens, vegetables, and
such things; but what is that compared to the robbery of widows and orphans,
the lying and cheating of traders, the swindling, the robberies, the
murders, the ignorance, the squalor, and the debaucheries of so many of the
white race? What are all these compared to the simple vices of the Gipsies ?
What is the ancestry they boast of, compared, in point of antiquity, to
ours? People may despise the Gipsies, but they certainly despise all others
not of their own race: the veriest beggar Gipsy, without shoes to his feet,
considers himself better than the queen that sits upon the throne. People
say that Gipsies are blackguards. Well, if some of them are blackguards,
they are at least illustrious blackguards as regards descent, and so in
fact; for they never rob each ether, and far less do they rob or ruin those
of their own family." And they conclude that the odium which clings to the
race is but a prejudice. Still, they will deny that they are Gipsies, and
will rather almost perish than let any one, not of their own race, know that
they speak their language in their own households and among their own
kindred. They will even deny or at least hide it from many of their own
race. For all these
reasons, the most appropriate word to apply to modern Gipsyism, and
especially British Gipsyism, and more especially Scottish Gipsyism, is to
call it a caste, and a kind of masonic society, rather than any particular
mode of life. And it is necessary that this distinction should be kept in
mind, otherwise the subject will appear contradictory.
The most of these Gipsies are unknown to the
public as Gipsies. The feeling in question is, for the most part, on the
side of the Gipsies themselves; they think that more of them is known than
actually is. In that respect a kind of nightmare continually clings to them;
while their peculiarly distant, clannish, and odd habits create a kind of
separation between them and the other inhabitants, which the Gipsy is
naturally apt to construe as proceeding from a different cause. Frequently,
all that is said about them amounts only to a whisper among some of the
families in the community in which they live, and which is confidentially
passed around among themselves, from a dread of personal consequences.
Sometimes the native families say among themselves, "Why should we make
allusion to their kith and kin? They seem decent people, and attend church
like ourselves; and it would be cruel to cast up their descent to them, and
damage them in the estimation of the world. Their cousins, (or second
cousins, as it may be,) travel the country in the old Tinkler fashion, no
doubt; but what has that to do with them?" The estimate of such people
never, or hardly ever, goes beyond the simple idea of their being "descended
from Tinklers;" few have the most distant idea that they are Gipsies, and
speak the Gipsy Ianguage among themselves. It is certain that a Gipsy can be
a good man, as the world goes, nay, a very good man, and glory in being a
Gipsy, but not to the public. He will adhere to his ancient language, and
talk it in his own family ; and he has as much right to do so, as, for
example, a Highlander has to speak Gaelic in the Lowlands, or when he goes
abroad, and teach it to his children. And he takes a greater pride in doing
it, for thus he reasons: "What is English, French, Gaelic, or any other
living language, compared to mine? Mine will carry me through every part of
the known world: wherever a man is to be found, there is my language spoken.
I will find a brother in every part of the world on which I may set my foot;
I will be welcomed and passed along wherever I may go. Freemasonry indeed!
what is masonry compared to the brotherhood of the Gipsies? A language—a
whole Ianguage—is its pass-word. I almost worship the idea of being a member
of a society into which I am initiated by my blood and language. I would not
be a man if I (lid not love my kindred, and cherish in lay heart that
peculiarity of my race (its language) which casts a halo of glory around it,
and makes it the wonder of the world!"
The feeling alluded to induces some of these
Gipsies to change their residences or go abroad. I heard of one family in
Canada, of whom a Scotchman spoke somewhat in the following way "I
know them to be Gipsies. They remind me of a brood of wild turkeys, hatched
under a tame bird; it will take the second or third descent to bring them to
resemble, in some of their ways, the ordinary barn-door fowl. They are very
restless and queer creatures, and move about as if they were afraid that
every one was going to tramp on their corns." But it is in large towns they
feel more at home. They then form little communities among themselves; and
by closely associating, and sometimes huddling together, they can more
easily perpetuate their language, as I have already said, than by
straggling, twos or threes, through the country. But their quarrelsome
disposition frequently throws an obstacle in the way of such associations.
Secret as they have been in keeping their language from even being heard by
the public while wanderers, they are much more so since they have settled in
towns. The origin of
the Gipsies has given rise, in recent times, to many speculations. The most
plausible one, however, seems to be that they are from Hindostan; an opinion
our author supports so well, that we are almost bound to acquiesce in it. In
these controversies regarding the origin of the Gipsies, very little regard
seems to have been had to what they say of themselves. It is curious that in
every part of Europe they have been called, and are now called, Egyptians.
No trace can now be found of any enquiry made as to their origin, if such
there was made, when they first appeared in Europe. They seem then to have
been taken at their word, and to have passed current as Egyptians. But in
modern times their country has been denied them, owing to a total
dissimilarity between their language and any of the dialects of modern
Egypt. A very intelligent Gipsy informed me that his race sprung from a body
of men—a cross between the Arabs and Egyptians—that left Egypt in the train
of the Jews. [The intelligent reader will not differ with me as to the
weight to be attached to the Gipsy's remark on this point.] In consulting
the record of Moses, I find it said, in Ex. xii. 38, "and a mixed multitude
went up also with them" (the Jews, out of Egypt). Very little is said of
this mixed multitude. In Lev. xxiv. 10, mention is made of the son of an
Israelitish woman, by an Egyptian, being stoned to death for blasphemy,
which would almost imply that a marriage had taken place previous to leaving
Egypt. After this occurrence, it is said in Num. xi. 4, " and the
mixed multitude that was among them fell a lusting" for flesh. That would
imply that they had not amalgamated with the Jews, but were only among them.
The Scriptures say nothing of what became of this mixed multitude after the
Jews separated from them (Neh. xiii. 3), and leave us only to form a
conjecture relative to their destiny.
We naturally ask, what could have induced this
mixed multitude to leave Egypt? and the natural reply is, that their motive
was the same that led to the exodus of the Jews—a desire to escape from
slavery. No commentator that I have read gives a plausible reason for the
mixed multitude leaving Egypt with the Jews. Scott, besides venturing four
suppositions, advances a fifth, that "some left because they were distressed
or discontented." But that seems to fall infinitely short of the true
reason. Adam Clark says, "Probably they were refugees who carne to sojourn
in Egypt, because of the dearth which had obliged them to emigrate from
their own countries." But that dearth occurred centuries before the time of
the exodus ; so that those refugees, if such there were, who settled in
Egypt; during the famine, could have returned to their own countries
generations before the time of that event. Scott says, "It is probable some
left Egypt because it was desolate ;" and Henry, " Because their country was
laid waste by the plagues." But the desolation was only partial ; for we are
told that "lie that feared the word of the Lord among the servants of
Pharaoh, made his servants and his cattle flee into the houses ;" by which
means they escaped destruction from the hail, which affected only those
remaining in the field. We are likewise told that, although the barley and
flax were smitten by the same hail-storm, the wheat and rye, not being grown
up, were left untouched. 'These two latter (besides fish, roots and
vegetables) would form the staples of the food of the Egyptians; to say
nothing of the immense quantities in the granaries of the country. If the
Egyptians could not find bread in their own country, how were they to obtain
it by accompanying the Jews into a land of which they knew nothing, and
which had to be conquered before it could be possessed? Where were they to
procure bread to support them on the journey, if it was not to be had at
home? The other reasons
given by these commentators for the departure of the mixed multitude from
Egypt are hardly worth controverting, when we consider the social manners
and religious belief of the Egyptians. We are told that, for being
shepherds, the Israelites were an abomination unto the Egyptians (Gen. xlvi.
34); and that the Egyptians considered it an abomination to eat bread with a
Hebrew, (Gen. xliii. 32,) so supreme was the reign of caste and of
nationality at that period in Egypt. The sacrifices of the Jews were also an
abomination to the Egyptians (Ex. viii. 26). The Hebrews were likewise
influenced by feelings peculiar to themselves, which would render any
alliances or even associations between them and their oppressors extremely
improbable ; but if such there should have been, the issue would be
incorporated with the Hebrews.
There could thus be no personal motive for any
of the Egyptians to accompany the Hebrews; and as little could there be of
that which pertains to the religious; for, as a people, they had become so
"vain in their imaginations," and had "their foolish hearts so darkened," as
to worship almost every created thing—bulls, birds, serpents, leeks, onions
and garlic. Such a people were almost as well nigh devoid of a motive
springing from a sense of elevated religion, as were the beasts, the
reptiles and the vegetables which they worshipped. A miracle performed
before the eyes of such a people would have no more salutary or lasting
influence than would a flash of lightning before the eyes of many a man in
every day life; it might prostrate them for a moment, but its effects would
be as transitory. Like the Jews themselves, at a subsequent time, they might
credit the miracle to Beelzebub, the prince of devils; and, like the
Gergesenes, rise up in a body and beseech Moses and his people to "depart
out of their coasts." Indeed, after the slaying of+the first-born of the
Egyptians, we are told that "the Egyptians were urgent upon the people that
they might send them out of the land in haste; for, they said, We be all
dead men." Considering how hard a matter it was for Moses to urge the Jews
to undertake the exodus; considering their stiff-necked and perverse
grumbling at all that befell them; notwithstanding that to them "pertained
the fathers, the adoption, the glory and the covenant;" the commands and the
bones of Joseph; the grievous bondage they were enduring, and the almost
daily recourse to which Moses had for a miracle to strengthen their faith
and resolution to proceed; and we will perceive the impossibility of the
"mixed multitude" leaving Egypt on any ground of religion.
This principle might even be urged further. If
We consider the reception which was given to the miracles of Christ as " a
son over his own house, and therefore worthy of more glory than Moses, who
was but a servant," we will conclude that the miracles wrought by Moses,
although personally felt by the Egyptians, would have as little lasting
effect upon them as had those of the former upon the Jews themselves ; they
would naturally lead to the Hebrews being allowed to depart, but would serve
no purpose of inducing the Egyptians to go with them. For if a veil was
mysteriously drawn over the eyes of the Jews at the advent of Christ, which,
in a negative sense, hid the Messiah from them (Mark iv.,11, 2; Matt. xi.
25, 26; and John xii. 39, 40), how much more might it not be said, "He bath
blinded their eyes, and hardened their hearts, that they should not see with
their eyes, nor understand with their hearts," and let the people of Israel
go, "till they would thrust them out fence altogether;" and particularly so
when the object of Moses' mission was to redeem the Israelites from the
bondage of Egypt, and spoil and smite the Egyptians.
The only reasonable conclusion to which we can
conic, as regards a motive for the " mixed multitude" leaving Egypt along
with the Jews, is, that being slaves like themselves, they took advantage of
the opportunity, and slipped out with them. [Since the above was written, I
have read Hengstenberg on the Pentateuch, who supposes that the `'mixed
multitude" were an inferior order of workmen, employed, like the Jews, as
slaves, in the building of the pyramids.]
'Ile Jews, on being reduced to a state of
bondage, were employed by Pharaoh to " build treasure cities, and work in
mortar and brick, and do all manner of service in the field," besides being
" scattered abroad through all the laud of Egypt, to gather stubble in place
of straw," wherewith to make their tale of bricks. In this way they would
come nitich in contact with the other slaves of the country ; and, as "
adversity makes strange bed-fellows," they would naturally prove
communicative to their fellow-sufferers, and expatiate on the history of
their people, from the days of Abraham downward, were it only from a feeling
of vanity to make themselves appear superior to what they would coin sider
the ordinary dross around them. They would also naturally allude to their
future prospects, and the positive promise, or at least general idea, which
they had of their God effecting their deliverance, and leading them into a
country (Gen. 1. 24, 25) where all the miseries they were then enduring
would be forgotten. They would do that more especially after Moses had
returned from his father-in-law in Midian, to bring them out of Egypt; for
we arc told, in Ex. iv. 29-31, that the elders of the children of Israel
were called together and informed of the intended redemption, and that all
the people believed. By such means as these would the minds of some of the
other slaves of Egypt be inflamed at the very idea of freedom being perhaps
in immediate prospect for so many of their fellow-bondsmen.
Thereafter happened the many
plagues ; the causes of which must have been more or less known to the
Egyptians generally, from the public manner in which Moses would make his
demands (Ex. x. 7) ; and consequently to their slaves; for many of the
slaves would be men of intelligence, as is common in oriental countries.
Some of these slaves would, in all probability, watch, with fear and
trembling, the dreadful drama played out (Ex. ix. 20). Others would
,perhaps, give little heed to the various sayings of the Hebrews at the time
they were uttered ; the plagues would, perhaps, have little effect in
reminding them of them. As they experienced their effects, they might even
feel exasperated toward the Hebrews for being the cause of them ; still it
is more probable that they sympathized with them, as fellow-bondsmen, and
murmured against Pharaoh for their existence and greater manifestation. But
the positive order, nay the, entreaty, for the departure of the Israelites,
and the passage before their eyes of so large a body of slaves to obtain
their freedom, would induce many of them to follow them; for they would, in
all likelihood, form no higher estimate of the movement than that of merely
gaining that liberty which sIaves, in all nations, and under all
circumstances, do continually sigh after.
The character of Moses alone was a sufficient
guarantee to the slaves of Egypt that they might trust themselves to his
leadership and protection (!lot to speak of the miraculous powers which lie
displayed in his mission) ; for we are told that, besides being the adopted
son of Pharaoh's daughter, he was learned in all the wisdom of the
Egyptians, and mighty in word and deed. Having been, according to Josephus,
a great commander in the armies of Egypt, lie must have been the means of
reducing to bondage many of the slaves, or the parents of the slaves, then
living in Egypt. At the time of the exodus we are told that he was "very
great in the land of Egypt, in the sight of Pharaoh's servants, and in the
sight of the people" (Ex. xi. 3). The burying of the "first-born" was not a
circumstance likely to prevent a slave gaining his freedom amid the dismay,
the moaning, and groaning, and howling throughout the land of Egypt. The
circumstance was even the more favourable for his escape, owing to the
Hebrews being allowed to go, till it pleased God again to hardeb and stir up
Pharaoh to pursue them (Ex. xiv. 2–5 and 8), in order that his host might x
e over thrown in the Red Sea.
The Jews, while in Egypt, seem to have been
reduced to a state of serfdom only—crown slaves, not chattels personal;
which would give them a certain degree of respect in the eyes of the
ordinary slaves of the country, and lead them, owing to the dignity of their
descent, to look down with disdain upon the "mixed multitude" which followed
them. While it is said that they were "scattered over the land of Egypt," we
are told, in Ex. ix. 4, that the murrain touched not the cattle of Israel;
and in the 26th verse, that "in the land of Goshen, where the people of
Israel were, there was no hail." And Moses said to Pharaoh, "Our cattle also
shall go with us; there shall not an hoof be left behind; for thereof we
must take to serve the Lord our God" (Ex. x. 26). From this we would
naturally conclude, that such of the Jews only as were capable of work, were
scattered over the land of Egypt to do the work of Pharaoh, while the rest
were, left in the land of Goshen. By both the Egyptians and their slaves,
the Hebrews would be looked upon as a mysterious people, which the former
would be glad to send out of the land, owing to the many plagues which they
had been the cause of being sent upon them ; and while they got quit of
them, as they did, there would be no earthly motive for the Egyptians to
follow them, through a wilderness, into a country of which the Hebrews
themselves knew nothing. But it would be different with their slaves; they
had everything to hope from a chancre of condition, and would readily avail
themselves of the chance to effect it.
The very term "mixed multitude" implies slaves;
for the Hebrew word hasaphsuph, as translated by Bochartus, means populi
colluvies undecunque collecta—"the dregs or scum of the people gathered
together from all parts." But this interpretation is most likely the literal
meaning of a figurative expression, which was intended to describe a body of
men such as the slaves of Egypt must have been, that is, a mixture that was
compounded of men from almost every part of the world known to the
Egyptians; the two principal ingredients of which must have been what may be
called the Egyptian and Semitic. Moses seems to have used the word in
question in consequence of the vexation and snare which the mixed multitude
proved to him by bringing upon the camp of his people the plague, inflicted,
in consequence of their sins, in the midst of •them. At the same time the
Hebrews were very apt to term "dregs and scum" all who did not proceed from
the loins of their father, Abraham. But I am inclined to believe that the
bulk or nucleus of the mixed multitude would consist of slaves who were
located in Goshen, or its neighbourhood, when the Jews were settled there by
Pharaoh. These would be a mixture of the shepherd kings and native
Egyptians, held by the former as slaves, who would naturally fall into the
hands of the Egyptian monarch during his gradual reconquest of the country ;
and they would be held by the pure Egyptians in as little esteem as the Jews
themselves, both being, in a measure, of the shepherd race. In this way it
may be claimed that the Gipsies are even descendants of the shepherd kings.
After leaving Egypt, the Hebrews and the "mixed
multitude," in their exuberance of feeling at having gained their freedom,
and witnessed the overthrow of their common oppressor in the Red Sea, would
naturally have everything in common, till they regained their powers of
reflection, and began to think of their destiny, and the means of supporting
so many individuals, in a country in which provisions could hardly be
collected for the company of an ordinary caravan. Then their difficulties
would begin. It was enough for Moses to have to guide the Hebrews, whose
were the promises, without being; burdened and harassed by those who
followed them. Then we may reasonably assume that the mixed multitude began
to clamour for flesh, and lead the Hebrews to join with them; in return for
which a plague was sent upon the people. They were unlikely to submit to be
led by the hand of God, and be fed on angels' food, and, like the Hebrews,
leave their carcasses in the wilderness for their religious sentiments, if,
as slaves of Egypt, they had religious Sentiments, would be very low indeed,
and would lead them to depend upon themselves, and leave the deserts of
Arabia, for some other country more likely to support then) and their
children. Undoubtedly the two people then separated, as Abraham and Lot
parted when they came out of Egypt.
How to shake off this mixed multitude must have
caused Moses many an anxious thought. Possibly his father-in-law, Jethro,
from the knowledge and sagacity which he displayed in forming the government
of Moses himself, may have assisted him in arriving at the conclusion which
he must have so devoutly wished. To take them into the promised land with
him was impossible ; for the command of God, given in regard to Ishmael, the
son of Abraham, by Hagar the Egyptian, and which was far more applicable to
the mixed multitude, must have rung in his ears: "Cast out this bondwoman
and her son, for the son of this bondwoman shall not be heir with my son,
Isaac;" "for in Isaac shall thy seed be called." As slaves of Egypt they
would not return to that country; they would not go north, for that was the
heritage of the people of Israel, which had to be wrested from the fierce
tribes of Palestine; they would not go north-east, for there lay the
powerful empire of Assyria, or the germs out of which it sprung; they could
not go South, for the ocean hemmed them in, in that direction; and their
only alternative was to proceed east, through Arabia Petrea, along the gulf
of Persia, through the Persian desert, into northern Hindostan, where they
formed the Gipsy caste, and whence they issued, after the lapse of so many
centuries, in possession of the language of Hindostan, and spread themselves
over the earth. What a strange sensation passes through the mind, when such
a subject is contemplated! Jews and Gipsies having, in a sense, the same
origin, and after such vicissitudes, meeting each other, face to face, under
circumstances so greatly alike, in almost every part of time world, upward
of 3000 years after they parted company. What destiny awaited the Jews
themselves on escaping from Egypt? They had either to subdue and take the
place of some other tribe, or be reduced to a state of slavery by it and
perhaps others combined; or they might possibly have been befriended by some
great empire as tributaries; or failing these three, what remained for their
was the destiny that befell the Gipsies.
On Ieaving Egypt, the Gipsies would possess a
common language, which would hold them together as a body; as slaves under
the society of an Egyptian monarchy, they would have few, if any, opinions
of a religious nature; and they would have but little idea of the laws of
meum and tuum. The position in which they would find themselves
placed, and the circumstances surrounding them, would necessitate them to
rob, steal or appropriate whatever they found to be necessary to their
existence ; for whether they turned to the right hand or to the left, they
would always find territory previously occupied, and property claimed by
some one; so that their presence would always be unwelcome, their persons an
intrusion everywhere; and having once started on their weary pilgrimage, as
long as they maintained their personal independence, they would never
attain, as a body, to any other position than they have done, in popular
estimation, for the last four hundred and fifty years in Europe.
In entering Hindostan they would meet with a
civilized people, governed by rigid caste, where they would have no
alternative but to remain aloof from the other inhabitants. Then, as now,
that country had many wandering tribes -within its borders, and for which it
is peculiarly favourable. Whatever might have been the amount of
civilization which some of the Gipsies brought with them from Egypt, it
could not be otherwise than of that quasi nature which generally
characterizes that of slaves, and which would rapidly degenerate into a kind
of barbarism, under the change of circumstances in which they found
themselves placed. As runaway slaves, they would naturally be shy and
suspicious, and be very apt to betake themselves to mountains, forests and
swamps, and hold as little intercourse with the people of the country in
which they were, as possible. Still, having been reared within a settled and
civilized state, they would naturally hang around some other one, and nestle
within it, if the face of the country, and the character and ways of the
people, admitted of it. Having been bondsmen, they -would naturally become
lazy after gaining their freedom, and revel in the wild liberty of nature.
They would do almost anything for a living rather than work ; and whatever
they could lay their hands on would be fairly come by, in their imagination.
But to carry out this mode of life, they would naturally have recourse to
some ostensible employment, to enable them to travel through the country,
and secure the toleration of its inhabitants. Here their Egyptian origin
would come to their assistance; for as slaves of that country, they must
have had many among them who -would be familiar with horses, and working in
metals, for which ancient Egypt was famous; not to speak of some of the
occult sciences which they would carry with them from that country. In the
first generation their new habits and modes of life would become chronic; in
the second generation they would become hereditary; and from this strange
phenomenon would spring a race that is unique in the history of the human
family. What origin could be more worthy of the Gipsies? What origin more
philosophical? Arriving
in India a foreign caste, the Gipsies would naturally cling to their common
origin, and speak their common language, which, in course of ages, would be
forgotten, except occasional words, which would be used by them as
catch-words. At the present day my Gipsy acquaintances inform inc that, in
Great Britain, five out of every ten of their words are nothing but common
Hindostanee. How strange would it be if some of the other words of their
language were those used by the people of Egypt under the Pharaohs. Mr.
Borrow says: "Is it not surprising that the language of Petulengro, (an
English Gipsy,) is continually coming to my assistance whenever I appear to
be at a loss with respect to the derivation of crabbed words. I have made
out crabbed words in Ęschylus by means of his speech; and even in my
Biblical researches I have derived no slight assistance from it." "Broken,
corrupted and half in ruins as it is, it was not long before I found that it
was an original speech, far more so, indeed, than one or two others of high
name and celebrity, which, up to that time, I had been in the habit of
regarding with respect and veneration. Indeed, many obscure points connected
with the vocabulary of these languages, and to which neither classic nor
modern lore afforded any clue, I thought I could now clear up by means of
this strange, broken tongue, spoken by people who dwell among thickets and
furze bushes, in tents as tawny as their faces, and whom the generality of
mankind designate, and with much sernblance of justice, as thieves and
vagabonds." A
difficulty somewhat similar to the origin of the Gipsies has been started in
reference to their language; whether it is a speech distinct from any other
surrounding it, or a few slang words or expressions connected together by
the usual languages of the countries in which the race is to be found. The
slightest consideration will remove the doubt, and lead us to the former
conclusion. It is true there must needs be some native words mixed up, with
it; for what language, in ancient or modern times, has come down free of a,
mixture with others? If that be the case with languages classified, written,
and spoken in a community, with no disturbing elernent near it to corrupt
it, is it to be expected that the speech of a people like the Gipsies-can be
free of similar additions or .substitutions, when it possesses none of these
advantages for the preservation of its entirety and purity? From the length
of time the people have been in Europe, and the frequency of intercourse
which they have been forced by circumstances, in modern times especially, to
have with its natives, it would appear beyond measure surprising that even a
word of their language is spoken at all. And this fact adds great weight to
Sir Walter Scott's remark, when he says that "their language is a great
mystery;" and to that of Dr. Bright, when he speaks of its existence as
being "little short of the miraculous." But when we consider, on strictly
philosophical principles, the phenomenon of the perpetuation of the Gipsy
language, we will find that there is nothing so very wonderful about it
after all. The race have always associated closely and exclusively together;
and their language has become to them like the worship of a household
god—hereditary, and is spoken among themselves under the severest of
discipline. It is certain that it is spoken at the present day, by some of
the race, nearly as well as the Gaelic of many of the immediate descendants
of the emigrants in some of the small Highland settlements in America, when
it has not been Iearned by book, even to the extent of conversing on any
subject of ordinary life, without apparently using English words. But, as is
common with people possessing two languages, the Gipsies often use them
interchangeably in expressing the smallest idea. Besides the way mentioned
by which the Gipsy language has been corrupted, there is another one
peculiar to all speeches, and which is, that few tongues are so copious as
not to stand in need of foreign words, either to give names to things or
wants unknown in the place where the language originated, or greater meaning
or elucidation to a thing than it is capable of; and preeminently so in the
case of a barbarous people, with few ideas beyond the commonest wants of
daily life, entering states so far advanced toward that point of
civilization which they have now reached. But the question as to the extent
of the Gipsy language never can be conclusively settled, until some able
philologist has the unrestricted opportunity of daily intercourse with the
race; or, as a thin(, more to be wished than obtained, some Gipsy take to
suitable learning, and confer a rarity of information upon the reader of
history everywhere : for the attempt at getting a single word of the
language from the Gipsies, is, in almost every case, impracticable. Sir
Walter Scott seems to have had an intention of writing an account of the
Gipsies himself; for, in a letter to Murray, as given by Lockhart, lie
writes: "I have been over head and ears in work this summer, or I would have
sent the Gipsies; indeed I was partly stopped by finding it impossible to
procure a few words of their language." For this reason, the words furnished
in this work, although few, are yet numerous, when the difficulties in the
way of getting them are considered. Under the chapter of Language will be
found some curious anecdotes of the manner in which these were collected.
Of the production itself little need be said.
Whatever may be the opinion of the public in regard to it, this may be borne
in mind, that the collecting of the materials out of which it is formed was
attended with much trouble, and no little expense, but with a singular
degree of pleasure, to the author; and that but for the urgent and latest
request of him whom, when alive or dead, Scotchmen have always delighted to
honour, it might never have assumed its present form. It is what it
professes to be—a history, in which the subject has been stripped of
everything pertaining to fiction or even colouring ; so that the reader will
see depicted, in their true character, this singular people, in the
description of whom, owing to the suspicion and secrecy of their nature,
writers generally have indulged in so much that is trifling and even
fabulous. Such as the
work is, it is offered as a contribution toward the filling up of that void
in literature to which Dr. Bright alludes, in the introduction to his
travels in Hungary, when, in reference to Hoyland's Survey, and some
scattered notices of the Gipsies in periodicals, he says: "We may hope at
some time to collect, satisfactorily, the history of this extraordinary
race." It is likewise intended as a response to the call of a writer in
Blackwood, in which he says: "Our duty is rather to collect and store up the
raw materials of literatore---to gather into our repository scattered facts,
hints and observations—which more elaborate and learned authors may
afterwards work up into the dignified tissue of history or science."
I deem it proper to remark that, in editing the
work, I have taken some liberties with the manuscript. I have, for example,
recast the Introduction, re-arranged some of the materials, and drawn more
fully, in some instances, upon the author's authorities; but I have
carefully preserved the facts and sentiments of the original. I may have
used some expressions a little familiar and perhaps not over-refined in
their nature; but my excuse for that is, that they are illustrative of a
subject that allows the use of them. |