"There is nothing hid that shall not be revealed."
In giving an account of the Gipsies, the subject would be
very incomplete, were not something said about the manner in which they have
drawn into their body the blood of other people, and the way in which the
race is perpetuated ; and a description given of their present condition,
and future prospects, particularly as our author has overlooked some
important points connected with their history, which I will endeavour to
furnish. One of these important points is, that he has confined his
description of the present generation of settled Gipsies to the descendants
of those who left the tent subsequently to the commencement of the French
war, to the exclusion of those who settled long anterior to that time. It is
also necessary to treat the subject abstractly—to throw it into principles,
to give the philosophy of it—to ensure' the better understanding, and
perpetuate the knowledge of it, amid the shifting objects that present
themselves to the eye of the world, and even of the people described.
Gipsydom may, in a word, be said to be literally a sealed
book, a terra incognita, to mankind in general. The Gipsies arrived
in Europe a strange race; strange in their origin, appearance, habits and
disposition. Supposing that their habits had never led them to interfere
with the property of others, or obtain money by any objectionable way, but
that they had confined their calling to tinkering, making and selling wares,
trading, and such like, they would, in all probability, still have remained
a caste in the community, with a strong feeling of sympathy for those living
in other countries, in consequence of the singularity of their origin and
development, as distinguished from those of the other inhabitants, their
language and that degree of prejudice which most nations have
for foreigners settling among them, and particularly so in the case of a
people so different in their appearance and mode of life as were the Gipsies
from those among whom they settled. That may especially be said of tented
Gipsies, and even of those who, from time to time, would be forced to leave
the tent, and settle in towns, or live as tramps, as distinguished
from tented Gipsies. The simple idea of their origin and descent, tribe and
language, transmitted from generation to generation, being so different from
those of the people among whom they lived, was, in itself, perfectly
sufficient to retain them members of Gipsy-dom, although, in cases of
intermarriages with the natives, the mixed breeds might have gone over to
the white race, and been lost to the general body. But in most of such cases
that would hardly have taken place ; for between the two races, the
difference of feeling, were it only a slight jealousy, would have led the
smaller and more exclusive and bigoted to bring the issue of such
intermarriages within its influence. In Great Britain, the Gipsies are
entitled, in one respect at least, to be called Englishmen, Scotchmen, or
Irishmen; for their general ideas as men, as distinguished from their being
Gipsies, and their language, indicate them, at once, to be such, nearly as
much as the common natives of these countries. A half or mixed breed might
more especially be termed or pass for a native; so that, by clinging to the
Gipsies, and hiding his Gipsy descent and affiliation from the native race,
he would lose nothing of the outward character of an ordinary inhabitant;
while any benefit arising from his being a Gipsy would, at the same time, be
enjoyed by him.
But the subject assumes a totally different aspect when,
instead of a slight jealousy existing between the two races, the difference
in feeling is such as if a gulf had been placed between them. The effect of
a marriage between a white and a Gipsy, especially if he or she is known to
be a Gipsy, is such, that the white instinctively withdraws from any
connexion with his own race, and casts his lot with the Gipsies. The
children born of such unions become ultra Gipsies. A very fine illustration
of 'this principle of half-breed ultra Gipsyism is given by Mr. Borrow, in
his "Gipsies in Spain," in the case of an officer in the Spanish army
adopting a young female Gipsy child, whose parents had been executed, and
educating and marrying her. A son of this marriage, who rose to be a captain
in the service of Donna Isabel, hated the white race so intensely, as, when
a child, to tell his father that he wished he (his father) was dead. At
whose door must the cause of such a feeling be laid? One would naturally
suppose that the child would have left, perhaps despised, his mother's
people, and clung to those whom the world deemed respectable. But the case
was different. Suppose the mother had not been prompted by some of her own
race, while growing up, and the son, in his turn, not prompted by the
mother, all that was necessary to stir up his hatred toward the white race
was simply to know who he was, as I will illustrate.
[This Spanish Gipsy is
reported by Mr. Borrow to have said: "She, however, remembered her blood,
and hated my father, and taught me to hate him likewise. When a boy, I used
to stroll about the plain, that I might not see my father; and my father
would follow me, and beg me to look upon him, and would ask me what I
wanted; and I would reply, ' Father, the only thing I want is to see you
dead!'"
This is certainly an extreme instance of the result of
the prejudice against the Gipsy race; and no opinion can be formed upon it,
without knowing some of the circumstances connected with the feelings of the
father, or his relations, toward the mother and the Gipsy race generally.
This Gipsy woman seems to have been well brought up by her protector and
husband; for she taught her child Gipsy from a MS., and procured a
teacher to instruct him in Latin. There are many reflections to be drawn
from the circumstances connected with this Spanish Gipsy family, but they do
not seem to have occurred to Mr. Borrow.]
Suppose that a great iron-master should fancy a
Cinderella, living by scraping pieces of iron from the refuse of his
furnaces, educate her, and marry her, as great iron-masters have done. Being
both of the same race, a complete amalgamation would take place at once:
perhaps the wife was the best person of the two. Silly people might sneer at
such a marriage; but if no objection attached to the personal character of
the woman, she might be received into society at once, and admired by some,
and envied by others, particularly if she had no " low relations" living
near her. She might even boast of having been a Cinderella, if it happened
to be well known ; in which case she might be deemed free of pride, and
consequently a very sensible, amiable woman, and worthy of every admiration.
But who ever heard of such a thing taking place with a
Gipsy? Suppose a Gipsy elevated to such a position as that spoken of; she
would not, she dare not, mention her descent to any one not of her own race,
and far less would she give an expose of Gipsydom; for she
instinctively perceives, or at least believes, that, such is the prejudice
against her race, people would avoid her as something horridly frightful,
although she might be the finest woman in the world. Who ever heard of a
civilized Gipsy, before Mr. Borrow mentioned those having attained to such
an eminent position in society at Moscow ? Are there none such elsewhere
than in Moscow ? There are many in Scotland. It is this unfortunate
prejudice against the name that forces all our Gipsies, the moment they
leave the tent, (which they almost invariably do with their blood diluted
with the white,) to hide from the public their being Gipsies ; for they are
morbidly sensitive of the odium which attaches to the name and race being
applied to them. It is quite time enough to discover the great secret of
Nature, when it is unavoidable to enter
"The undiscovered country from whose bourne
No traveller returns."
As little disposition is manifested by these Gipsies to
"show their hands:" the uncertainty of such an experiment makes the very
idea dreadful to them. Hence it is that the constant aim of settled Gipsies
is to hide the fact of their being Gipsies from other people.
It is a very common idea that Gipsies do not mix their
blood with that of other people. Now, what is the fact? I may, indeed,
venture to assert, that there is not a full-blooded Gipsy in Scotland: [It
is claimed, by some Scottish Gipsies, that there are full-blood Gipsies at
Yetholm, but I do not believe it. This, I may venture to say, that there can
be no certainty, but, on the contrary, great doubt, on the subject. But,
after all, what is a pure Gipsy ? Was the race pure when it entered
Scotland, or even Europe? The idea is perfectly arbitrary.] and, most
positively, that in England, where the race is held to be so pure, all that
can be said of some families is, that they have not been crossed,
as far as is known; but that, with these exceptions, the body is much
mixed: "dreadfully mixed" is the Gipsies' description, as, in many
instances, my own eyes have witnessed. This brings me to an issue with a
writer in the Edinburgh Review, who, in October, 1841, when reviewing the
"Gipsies in Spain," by Mr. Borrow, says, "Their descent is purity itself; no
mixture of European blood has contaminated theirs......They, (the stranger
and Gipsy,) may live together; the European vagrant is often to be found in
the tents of the Gipsies; they may join in the fellowship of sport, the
pursuit of plunder, the management of their low trades, but they can never
fraternize." A writer in Blackwood's Magazine, on the same occasion, says,
"Their care to preserve the purity of their race might, in itself, have
confuted the unfounded charge, so often brought against them, of stealing
children, and bringing them up as Gipsies." More unfounded ideas than those
put forth by these two writers are scarcely possible to be imagined. [It
would be interesting to know where these writers got such ideas about the
purity of the Gipsy blood. It certainly was not from Mr. Borrow's account of
the Gipsies in Spain, whatever they may have inferred from that work.]
This mixture of " the blood" is notorious. Many a full or
nearly full-blood Gipsy will say that Gipsies do not mix their blood with
that of the stranger. In such a case he only shuffles ; for he whispers to
himself two words, in his own language, which contradict what he says ;
which words I forget, but they mean " I belie it;" that is, he belies what
he has just said. Besides, it lets the Gipsies down in their imagination,
and, they think, in the imagination of others, to allow that the blood of
their race is mixed. It is also a secret which they would rather hide from
the world. [An instance of this kind of
shuffling is given by Mr. Borrow, in the tenth chapter of the " Romany Rye,"
in the person of Ursula, a full or nearly full-blood Gipsy. She confines the
crossing of the blood to such instances as when a Gipsy dies and leaves his
children to be provided for by "gorgios, trampers, and basket-makers,
who live in caravans;" but she says, "I hate to talk of the matter When Mr.
Borrow asked her, if a Gipsy woman, unless ťompelled by hard necessity,
would have anything to do with a gorgio, she replied, "We are not
over-fond of gorgios, and we hate basket-makers and folks that live
in caravans." Here she makes a very important distinction between gorgios,
(native English,) and basket-makers and folks that live in caravans,
(mixed Gipsies.) She does not deny that a Gipsy woman will intermarry
with a native under certain circumstances. A pretty-pure Gipsy, when angry,
will very readily call a mixed Gipsy a gorgio, or, indeed, by any
other name.] I am intimate with English Gipsy families, in none of
whom is full blood; the most that can be said of them is, that they range
from nearly full, say from seven-eighths, down to one-eighth, and perhaps
less. Suppose that a fair-haired common native marries a full-blood Gipsy:
the issue of such an union will show some of the children, in point of
external appearance, perfectly European, like the father, and others
Gipsies, like the mother. If two such European-like Gipsies marry, some of
their children will take after the Gipsy, and be pretty, even very, dark,
and others after the white race. n crossing a second time with full white
blood, the issue will take still more after the white race. Still, the Gipsy
cannot be crossed altogether out; he will come up, but of course in a
modified form. Should the white blood be of a dark complexion and hair, and
have no tendency, from its ancestry, to turn to fair, in its descent, then
the issue between it and the Gipsy will always be dusky. I have seen all
this, and had it fully explained by the Gipsies themselves.
The result of this mixture of the Gipsy and European
blood is founded, not only on the ordinary principles of physiology, but on
common sense itself; for why should not such issue take after the European,
in preference to the Gipsy ? If a residence in Europe of 450 years has had
no effect upon the appearance of what may be termed pure Gipsies, (a point
which, at least, is questionable,) the length of time, the effects of
climate, and the influence of mind, should, at least, predispose it to
merge, by mixture, into something bearing a resemblance to the ordinary
European; which, by a continued crossing, it does. Indeed, it soon
disappears to the common eye : to a stranger it is not observable, unless
the mixture happens to be met with in a tent, or under such circumstances as
one expects to meet with Gipsies. On paying a visit to an English Gipsy
family, I was invited to call again, on such a day, when I would meet with
some "Welsh Gipsies. The principal Welsh Gipsy I found to be a very quiet
man, with fair hair, and quite like an ordinary Englishman ; who was
admitted by his English brethren to "speak deep Gipsy." He had just arrived
from "Wales, where he had been employed in an iron work. Unless I am
misinformed, the issue of a fair-haired European and an ordinary Hindoo
woman, in India, sometimes shows the same result as I have stated of the
Gipsies ; but it ought to be much more so in the case of the Gipsy in
Europe, on account of the race having been so long acclimated there. Indeed,
it is generally believed, that the population of Europe contains a large
part of Asiatic blood, from that continent having frequently been overrun by
Asiatics, who mixed their blood with an indigenous race which they
met with there.
Of the mixed Spanish Gipsy,
to whom I have alluded, Mr. Borrow says, that "he had flaxen hair; his eyes
small, and, like ferrets, red and fiery ; and his complexion like a brick,
or dull red, chequered with spots of purple." This description, with,
perhaps, the exception of the red eyes, and spots of purple, is quite in
keeping with that of many of the mixed Gipsies. The race seems even to have
given a preference to fair or red hair, in the case of such children and
grownup natives as they have adopted into their body. I have met with a
young Spaniard from Corunna, who is so much acquainted with the Gipsies in
Spain, that I took him to be a mixed Gipsy himself; and he says that
mixtures among the Spanish Gipsies are very common; the white man, in such
cases, always casting his lot with the Gipsies. None of the French, German,
or Hungarian Gipsies whom I have met with in America are full blood, or
anything like it; but I am told there are such, and very black too, as the
English Gipsies assert. Indeed, considering how " dreadfully mixed" the
Gipsies are in Great Britain and Ireland, I cannot but conclude that they
are more or less so all over the world. [Grellmann evidently alludes to
Gipsies of mixed blood, when he writes in the following manner: "Experience
shows that the dark colour of the Gipsies, which is continued from
generation to generation, is more the effect of education and manner of life
than descent Among those who profess music in Hungary, or serve in the
imperial army, where they have learned to pay more attention to order and
cleanliness, there are many to be found whose extraction is not at all
discernible in their colour." For my part, I cannot say that such language
is applicable to full-blood Gipsies. Still, tlie change from tented to
settled and tidy Gipsydom is apt to show its effects of modifying the
complexion of such Gipsies, and tc a much greater degree in their
descendants.]
The blood once mixed, there
is nothing to prevent a little more being added, and a little more, and so
on. There are English Gipsy girls who have gone to work in factories in the
Eastern States, and picked up husbands among the ordinary youths of these
establishments. And what difference does it make ? Is not the game in the
Gipsy woman's own hands? Will she not bring up her children Gipsies,
initiate them in all the mysteries of Gipsydom, and teach them the language?
There is another married to an American farmer "down east." All that she has
to do is simply to "tell her wonderful story," as the Gipsies express it.
Jonathan must think that he has caged a queer kind of a bird in the English
Gipsy woman. But will he say to his friends, or neighbours, that his wife is
a Gipsy? Will the children tell that their mother, and, consequently, they
themselves are Gipsies? No, indeed. Jonathan, however, will find her a very
active, managing woman, who will always be a-stirring, and will not allow
her "old man" to kindle the fires of a morning, milk his cows, or clean his
boots, and, as far as she is concerned, will bring him lots of chabos.
Gipsies, however, do not like such marriages; still they
take place. They are more apt to occur when they have attained to that
degree of security in a community where no one knows them to be Gipsies, or
when they have settled in a neighbourhood to which they had come strangers.
The parents exercise more constraint over their sons than daughters ; they
cannot bear the idea of a son taking a strange woman for a wife ; for a
strange woman is a snare unto the Gipsies. If a Scottish Gipsy lad shows a
hankering after a stranger lass, the mother will soon "cut his comb," by
asking him, "What would she say if she knew you to be a loon of a Gipsy?
Take such or such a one (Gipsies) for a wife, if you want one." But it is
different with the girls. If a Gipsy lass is determined to have the stranger
for a husband, she has only to say, "Never mind, mother; it makes no earthly
difference ; I'll turn that fellow round my little finger; I'll take care of
the children when I get them." I do not know how the settled Scottish
Gipsies broach the subject of being Gipsies to the stranger son-in-law when
he is introduced among them. I can imagine the girl, during the courtship,
saying to herself, with reference to her intended, " I'll lead you captive,
my pretty fellow!" And captive she does lead him, in more senses than one.
Perhaps the subject is not broached to him till after she has borne him
children ; or, if he is any way soft, the mother, with a leering eye, will
say to him at once, "Ah ha, lad, ye're among Gipsies now!" In such a case,
the young man will be perfectly bewildered to know what it all means, so
utterly ignorant is he about Gipsies ; when, however, he comes to learn all
about it, it will be mum with him, as if his wife's friends had
burked him, or some "old Gipsy" had come along, and sworn him in on the
point of a drawn dirk. It may be that the Gipsy never mentions the subject
to her husband at all, for fear he should " take her life ;"
she can, at all events, trust her secret with her children.
Why should there be any hard feelings towards a Ghosy for
"taking in and burking" a native in this way? She does not propose—she only
disposes of herself. She has no business to tell the other that she is a
Gipsy. She does not consider herself a worse woman than he is a man, but, on
the contrary, a better. She would rather prefer a chabo, but, somehow
or other, she sacrifices her feelings, and takes the gorgio, "for
better or worse." Or there may be considerable advantages to be derived from
the connexion, so that she spreads her snares to secure them. Being a Gipsy,
she has the whip-hand of the husband, for no consideration will induce him
to divulge to any one the fact that his wife is a Gipsy—should she have told
him ; in which ease she has such a hold upon him, as to have "turned him
round her little finger" most effectually. "Married a Gipsy! it's no'
possible!" " Ay, it is possible. There!" she will say, chattering her words,
and, with her fingers, showing him the signs. He soon gets reconciled to the
"better or worse" which he has taken to his bosom, as well as to her
"folk," and becomes strongly attached to them. The least thing that the
Gipsy can then do is to tell her "wonderful story" to her children. It is
not teaching them any damnable creed ; it is only telling them who they are;
so that they may acknowledge herself, her people, her blood, and the blood
of the children themselves.
And how does the Gipsy woman bring up her children in
regard to her own race? She tells them her "wonderful story"—informs them
who they are, and of the dreadful prejudice that exists against them, simply
for being Gipsies. She then tells them about Pharaoh and Joseph in Egypt,
terming her people, "Pharaoh's folk." In short, she dazzles the imagination
of the children, from the moment they can comprehend the simplest idea. Then
she teaches them her words, or language, as the "real Egyptian," and
frightens and bewilders the youthful mind by telling them that they are
subject to be hanged if they are known to be Gipsies, or to speak these
words, or will be looked upon as wild beasts by those around them. She then
informs the children how long the Gipsies have been in the country; how they
lived in tents; how they were persecuted, banished, and hanged,
merely for being Gipsies. She then tells them of her people being in every
part of the world, whom they can recognize by the language and signs which
she is teaching them ; and that her race will everywhere be ready to shed
their blood for them. She then dilates upon the benefits that arise from
being a Gipsy—benefits negative as well as positive ; for should they ever
be set upon—garroted, for example—all that they will have to do will be to
cry out some such expression as "Biene rate, calo chabo," (goodnight, Gipsy,
or black fellow,) when, if there is a Gipsy near them, he will protect them.
The children will be fondled by her relatives, handed about and hugged as "
little ducks of Gipsies." The granny, while sitting at the fireside, like a
witch, performs no small part in the education of the children, making them
fairly dance with excitement. In this manner do the children of Gipsies have
the Gipsy soul literally breathed into them. [Mr.
Offor, editor of a late edition of Bunyan's works, writes, in "Botes and
Queries," thus: "I have avoided much intercourse with this class, fearing
the fate of Mr. Hoyland, who, being a Quaker, was allot by one of Cupid'a
darts from a black-eyed Gipsy girl; and J. S. may do well to be cautious."
Mr. Offor is not far wrong. A Gipsy girl can sometimes fascinate a "white
fellow," as a snake can a bird—make him flutter, and particularly so, should
the "little Gipsy" he met with in some such dress as black silks and a white
polka. This much can he said of Gipsy women, which cannot be said of all
women, that they know their places, and are not apt to usurp the rights of
the rajahs; they will even "work the nails off their fingers" to make them
feel comfortable. I should conclude, from what Mr. Offor says, that the
Quaker married the Gipsy girl. If children were born of the union, they will
be Gipsy-Quakers, or Quaker-Gipsies, whichever expression we choose to adopt
it is the most natural thing in the world for them to do. What is it to look
back to the time of James V., in 1540, when John
Faw was lord-paramount over the Gipsies in Scotland ? Imagine, then, the
natural curiosity of a young Gipsy, brought up in a town, to look at
something like the original condition of his ancestors. Such a Gipsy will
leave Edinburgh, for example, and travel over the south of Scotland, "
casting his sign," as he passes through the villages, in every one of which
he will find Gipsies. Some of these villages nre almost entirely occupied by
Gipsies. James Hogg is reported, in Blackwood's Magazine, to say, that
Lochmaben ia " stocked" with them.]
In such a way—what with the
supreme influence which the mother has exercised over the mind of the child
from its very infancy; the manner in which its imagination has been dazzled
; and the dreadful prejudice towards the Gipsies, which they all apply,
directly or indirectly, to themselves— does the Gipsy adhere to his race.
When he comes to be a youth, he naturally enough endeavours to find his way
to a tent, to have a look at the "old thing." He does not, however, think
much of it as a reality ; but it presents something very poetical and
imaginative to his mind, when he contemplates it as the state from which his
mysterious forefathers have sprung. [I have picked up quite a number of
Scottish Gipsies of respectable character, from their having gone in their
youth, to look at the "old thing."] It makes very little difference, in the
case to which I have alluded, whether the father be a Gipsy or not; the
children all go with the mother, for they inherit the blood through her.
What with the blood, the education, the words, and the signs, they are
simply Gipsies, and will be such, as long as they retain a consciousness of
who they are, and any peculiarities exclusively Gipsy. As it sometimes
happens that the father, only, is a Gipsy, the attachment may not be so
strong, on the part of the children, as if the blood had come through the
mother; still, it likewise attaches them to the body. A great deal of
jealousy is shown by the Gipsies, when a son marries a strange woman. A
greater ado is not made by some Catholics, to bring up their children
Catholics, under such circumstances, than is exhibited by Gipsies for their
children knowing their secret—that is, the "wonderful story;" which has the
effect of leading them, in their turn, to marry with Gipsies. The race is
very jealous of "the blood" being lost; or that their "wonderful story"
should become known to those who are not Gipsies.
There are people who cannot imagine how a man can be a
Gipsy and have fair hair. They think that, from his having fair hair, he
cannot have the same feelings of what they imagine to be a true Gipsy, that
is, a black-haired one. One naturally asks, what effect can the matter of
colour of hair have upon the mind of a member of any community
or clan, whether the hair be black, brown, red, fair, or white, or the
person have no hair at all? Let us imagine a Gipsy with fair hair. How long
is it since the white blood was introduced among his ancestors? Perhaps
three hundred and fifty years. The race of which he comes has been, more or
less, mixing and crossing ever since, but always retaining the issue within
its own community. Is he fair-haired? Then he may be half a Gipsy; he may be
three-fourths Gipsy, and perhaps even more. At the present day, the "points"
of such a Gipsy are altogether arbitrary ; some profess to know their
points, but it is a thing altogether uncertain. All that they know and
adhere to is, that they are Gipsies, and nothing else. In this manner are
the British Gipsies, (with the exception of some English families, about
whom there is no certainty,) members of the Gipsy community, or nation, as
such—each having some of the blood ; and not Gipsies of an ideal purity of
race. What they know is, that their parents and relatives are Gipsies ; that
Gipsies separate them from the eternity that is past; and, consequently,
that they are Gipsies. They, indeed, accept their descent, blood, and
nationality as instinctively as they accept the very sex which God has given
them. Which of the two knows most of Gipsydom—the fair-haired or black?
Almost invariably the fair. [Among the English Gipsies, fair-haired ones are
looked upon by the purer sort, or even by those taking after the Gipsy, as
"small potatoes." The consequence is, they have to make up for their want of
blood, by smartness, knowledge of the language, or something that will go to
balance the deficiency of blood. They generally lay claim to the intellect,
while they yield the blood to the others. A full or nearly full-blood young
English Gipsy looks upon herself with all the pride of a little duchess,
while in the company of young male mixed Gipsies. A mixed Gipsy may
reasonably be assumed to be more intelligent than one of the old stock, were
it only for this reason, that the mixture softens down the natural conceit
and bigotry of the Gipsy; while, as regards his personal appearance, it puts
him in a more improvable position. Still, a full-blood Gipsy looks up to a
mixed Gipsy, if he is anything of a superior man, and freely acknowledges
the blood. Indeed, the two kinds will readily marry, if circumstances bring
them together. To a couple of such Gipsies I said: "What difference does it
make, if the person has the blood, and has his heart in the right place I" "Thats
the idea; that's exactly the idea," they both replied.]
We naturally ask, what effect
has this difference in appearance upon two such members of one family—the
one with European, the other with Gipsy, features and colour? and the answer
is this: The first will hide the fact of his being a Gipsy from strangers;
indeed, he is ashamed to let it be known that he is a Gipsy ; and he is
afraid that people, not knowing how it came about, would laugh at him.
"What?" they would ask, "you a Gipsy? The idea is absurd." Besides, it
facilitates his getting on in the world, to prevent it being known that he
is a Gipsy. The other member cannot deny that he is a Gipsy, because any one
can see it. Such are the Gipsies who are more apt to cling to the tent, or
the more original ways of the old stock. They are very proud of their
appearance ; but it is a pride accompanied with disadvantages, and even
pain. For, after all, the beauty and pleasure in being a Gipsy is to have
the other cast of features and colour ; he has as much of the blood and
language as the other, while he can go into any kind of company—a sort of
Jack-the-Giant-Killer in his invisible coat. The nearer the Gipsy comes to
the original colour of his race, the less chance is there of improving him.
He knows what he is like; and well does he know the feeling that people
entertain for him. In fact, he feels that there is no use in being anything
but what people call a Gipsy. But it is different with those of European
countenance and colour, or when these have been modified or diluted by a
mixture of white blood. They can, then, enter upon any sphere of employment
to which they have a mind, and their personal advantages and outward
circumstances will admit of. [To thoroughly understand how a Gipsy, with
fair hair and blue eyes, can be as much a Gipsy as one with black, may be
termed "passing the pous asinorum of the Gipsy question." Once over the
bridge, and there are no difficulties to be encountered on the journey,
unless it be to understand that a Gipsy can be a Gipsy without living in a
tent or being a rogue.]
Let us now consider the
destiny of such European-like Gipsies. Suppose a female of this description
marries a native in settled life, which both of them follow. She brings the
children up as Gipsies, in the way described. The children are apt to become
ultra Gipsies. If they, in their turn, marry natives, they do the same with
their children; so that, if the same system were always followed, they would
continue Gipsies forever. For all that is necessary to perpetuate the tribe,
is simply for the Gipsies to know who they are, and the prejudice that
exists toward the race of which they are a part; to say nothing of the
innate associations connected with their origin and descent. Such a
phenomenon may be fitly compared to the action of an auger ; with this
difference, that the auger may lose its edge, but the Gipsy will drill his
way through generations of the ordinary natives, and, at the end, come out
as sharp as ever ; all the circumstances attending the two races being
exactly the same at the end as at the beginning. In this way, let their
blood be mixed as it may, let even their blood-relationship outside of their
body be what it may, the Gipsies still remain, in their private
associations, a distinct people, into whatever sphere of human action they
may enter ; although, in point of blood, appearance, occupation, character,
and religion, they may have drifted the breadth of a hemisphere from the
stakes and tent of the original Gipsy.
There can surely be no great difficulty in comprehending
so simple an idea as this. Here we have a foreign race introduced amongst
us, which has been proscribed, legally as well as socially. To escape the
effects of this double proscription, the people have hidden the fact of
their belonging to the race, although they have clung to it with an ardour
worthy of universal admiration. The proscription is toward the name and race
as such, that is, the blood; and is not general, but absolute ; none having
ever been received into society as Gipsies. For this reason, every Gipsy,
every one who has Gipsy blood in his veins, applies the proscription to
himself. On the other hand, he has his own descent— the Gipsy descent; and,
as I have already said, he has naturally as little desire to wish a
different descent, as he has to have a different sex. As Finns do not wish
to have been born Englishmen, or Englishmen Finns, so Gipsies are perfectly
satisfied with their descent, nay, extremely proud of it. They would not
change it, if they could, for any consideration. When Gipsies, therefore,
marry natives, they do not only willingly bring up their children as
Gipsies, but by every moral influence they are forced to do it, and cling to
each other. In this way has the race been absolutely cut off from that of
the ordinary natives; all intercourse between the two, unless on the part of
the bush Gipsy, in the way of dealings, having been of a clandestine
nature, on the side of the Gipsy, or, in other words, incog. How
melancholy it is to think that such a state of things exists in the British
Islands I
The Gipsy, born of a Gipsy mother and a native father,
does, therefore, most naturally, and, I may say, invariably, follow the
Gipsy connexion; the simplest impulse of manhood compels him to do it. Being
born, or becoming a member of settled society, he joins in the ordinary
amusements or occupations of his fellow-creatures of both races; which he
does the more readily when he feels conscious of the incognito which he
bears. But he has been brought up from his mother's knee a Gipsy; he knows
nothing else; his associations with his relatives have been Gipsy; and he
has in his veins that which the white damns, and, he doubts
not, would damn in him, were he to know of it. He has, moreover, the words
and signs of the Gipsy race ; he is brought in contact with the Gipsy race;
he perceives that his feelings are reciprocated by them, and that both have
the same reserve and timidity for ''outsiders." He does not reason
abstractly what he is not, but instinctively holds that he is "one of
them ;" that he has in his mind, his heart, and his blood, that which the
common native has not, and which makes him a chabo, that is, a Gipsy.
The mother, in the case mentioned, is certainly not a
full-blood Gipsy, nor anything like it; she does not know her real "points;"
all that she knows is, that she is a "Gipsy:" so that, if the youth's father
is an ordinary native, the youth holds himself to be a half-and-half,
nominally, though he does not know what he really is, as regards blood.
Imagine, then, that he takes such a half-and-half Gipsy for a wife, and that
both tell their children that they are *'Gipsies:" the children,
perhaps, knowing nothing of the real origin of their parents, take up the "
wonderful story," and hand it down to their children, initiating them, in
their turn, in the "mysteries." These children never doubt that they
are "Gipsies," although tlieir Gipsyism may, as I have already said,
have "drifted the breadth of a hemisphere from the stakes and tent of the
original Gipsy." In this manner is Gipsydom kept alive, by its turning round
and round in a perpetual circle. And in this manner does it happen, that a
native finds his own children Gipsies, from having, in seeking for a wife,
stumbled upon an Egyptian woman. Gipsydom is, therefore, the aggregate of
Gipsies, wherever, or under whatever circumstances, they are to be found. It
is in two respects an absolute question ; absolute as to blood, and absolute
as to those teachings, feelings, and associations that, by a moral
necessity, accompany the possession of the blood.
This brings me to an issue with Mr. Borrow. Speaking of
the destination of the Spanish Gipsies, he says: "If the Gitanos are
abandoned to themselves, by which we mean, no arbitrary laws are again
enacted for their extinction, the sect will eventually cease to be, and its
members become confounded with the residue of the population." I can well
understand that such procedure, on the part of the Spanish
Government, was calculated to soften the ferocious disposition of the
Gipsies; but did it bring them a point nearer to an amalgamation with the
people than before? Mr. Borrow continues: "The position which they occupy is
the lowest.....The outcast of the prison and the presidio, who calls himself
Spaniard, would feel insulted by being termed Gitano, and would thank God
that he is not." He continues: "It is, of course, by intermarriage, alone,
that the two races will ever commingle; and before that event is brought
about, much modification must take place amongst the Gitanos, in their
manners, in their habits, in their affections and their dislikes, and
perhaps even in their physical peculiarities, (yet ' no washing,' as Mr.
Borrow approvingly quotes, ' will turn the Gipsy white;') much must be
forgotten on both sides, and everything is forgotten in course of time." So
great, indeed, was the prejudice against the Gipsies, that the law of
Charles III, in 1783, forbade the people calling them Gitanos, under the
penalty of being punished for slander ! because, his majesty said: "I
declare that those who go by the name of Gitanos are not so by origin or
nature; nor do they proceed from any infected root (1)" What regard would
the native Spaniards pay to the injunction, that they would be punished for
"slander," for calling the Gipsies Gitanos, in place of Spaniards? We may
well believe that such a law would be a dead letter in Spain; where,
according to Mr. Borrow, "justice has invariably been a mockery; a thing to
be bought and sold, terrible only to the feeble and innocent, and an
instrument of cruelty and avarice."
Mr. Borrow leaves the
question where he found it. Even remove the prejudice that exists against
the Gipsies, as regards their colour, habits, and history; what then? Would
they, as a people, cease to be? Would they amalgamate with the natives, so
as to he lost? Assuredly not. They may mix their blood, but they preserve
their mental identity in the world; even although, in point of physical
appearance, habits, manners, occupation, character, and creed, they might
"become confounded with the residue of the population." In that respect,
they are the most exclusive people of almost any to be found in the world.
We have only to consider what Freemasonry is, and we can form an idea of
what Gipsyism is, in one of its aspects. It rests upon the broadest of all
bases—flesh and blood, a common and mysterious origin, a common language, a
common history, a common persecution, and a common odium, in every part of
the world. Remove the prejudice against the Gipsies, make it as respectable
to be Gipsies, as the world, with its ignorance of many of the race, deem it
disreputable; what then? Some of them might come out with their "tents and
encampments," and banners and mottoes: the "cuddy and the creel, the hammer
and tongs, the tent and the tin kettle" forever. People need not sneer at
the "cuddy and the creel." The idea conveys a world of poetry to the mind of
a Gipsy. Mrs. Fall, of Dunbar, thought it so poetical, that she had it, as
we have seen, worked in tapestry; and it is doubtless carefully preserved,
as an heir-loom, among her descendants.
[There is a considerable
resemblance between Gipsyism, in its harmless aspect, and Freemasonry; with
this difference, that the former is a general, while the latter is a
special, society; that is to say, the Gipsies have the language, or some of
the words, and the signs, peculiar to the whole race, which each individual
or class will use for different purposes. The race does not necessarily, and
does not in fact, have intercourse with every other member of it; in that
respect, they resemble any ordinary community of men. Masonry, as my reader
may be aware, is a society of what may be termed "a mixed multitude of good
fellows, who arc all pledged to befriend and help each other." The radical
elements of Masonry may be termed a " rope of sand," which the vows of the
Order work into the most closely and strongly formed coil of any to be found
in the world. But it is altogether of an artificial nature; while Gipsyism
is natural—something that, when separated from objectionable habits, one
might almost call divine; for it ia founded upon a question of race—a
question of blood. The cement of a creed is weak, in comparison with that
which binds the Gipsies together; for a people, like an individual, may have
one creed to-day, and another to morrow; it may be continually travelling
round the circle of every form of faith but blood, under certain
circumstances, is absolute and immutable.
There are many Gipsies
Freemasons ; indeed, they are the very people to push their way into a
Masonic Lodge; for they have secrets of their own, and are naturally anxious
to pry into those of others, by which they may he benefited. I was told of a
Gipsy who died lately, the Master of a Masons' Lodge. A friend, a Mason,
told me, the other day, of his having entered a house in Yetholm, where were
five Gipsies, all of whom responded to his Masonic signs. Masons should
therefore interest themselves in, and befriend, the Gipsies.]
Mr. Borrow speaks of the
Gipsies "declining" in Spain. Ask a Scotchman about the Scottish Gipsies,
and he will answer: "The Scotch Gipsies have pretty much died out." "Died
out?" I ask; "that is impossible; for who are more prolific than Gipsies?"
"Oh, then, they have become settled, and civilized." "And ceased to be
Gipsies?" I continue. "Exactly so," he replies. What idea can be more
ridiculous than that of saying, that if a Gipsy leaves the tent, settles in
a town, and attends church, he ceases to be a Gipsy ; and that, if he takes
to the tent again, he becomes a Gipsy again? What has a man's occupation,
habits, or character to do with his elan, tribe, or nationality? Docs
education, does religion, remove from his mind a knowledge of who he is, or
change his blood ? Are not our own Borderers and Highlanders as much
Borderers and Highlanders as ever they were ? Are not Spanish Gipsies still
Spanish Gipsies, although a change may have come over the characters and
circumstances of some of them? It would be absurd to deny it.
[The principle, or rather
fact, here involved, simple as it is in itself, is evidently very difficult
of comprehension by the native Scottish mind. Any person understands
perfectly well how a Highlander, at the present day, is still a Highlander,
notwithstanding the great change that has come over the character of his
race. But our Scottish literati seem to have been altogether at sea, in
comprehending the same principle as applicable to the Gipsies. They might
naturally have asked themselves, whether Gipsies could have procreated Jews
; and, if not Jews, how they could have procreated gorgios, (as English
Gipsies term natives.) A writer in Blackwood's Magazine says, in reference
to Billy Marshall, a Gipsy chief, to whom allusion has already been made: "
Who were his descendants I cannot tell; I am snre he could not do it
himself, if he were living. It is known that they were prodigiously
numerous; I dare say numberless." And yet this writer gravely says that "the
race is in some risk of becoming extinct (I)" Another writer in Blackwood
says: "Their numbers may perhaps have since been diminished, in particular
States, by tlie progress of civilization (/)" We would naturally pronounce
any person crazy who would maintain that there were no Highlanders in
Scotland, owing to their having " changed their habits." We conk], with as
much reason, say the same of those who will maintain this opinion in regard
to the Gipsies. There has been a great deal of what is called genius
expended upon the Gipsies, but wonderfully little common sense.
As the Jews, during their
pilgrimage in the Wilderness, were protected from their enemies by a cloud,
so have the Gipsies, in their increase and development, been shielded from
theirs, by a mist of ignorance, which, it would seem, requires no little
trouble to dispel. that these Egyptians came from " some of the Northern
Islands;" that they spoke a language among themselves, but could talk French
and Spanish too; that they were black, but not very black, and as good
citizens as any, and passed for white folk. The planter believed they
married mostly with mulattoes, and that a good many of the mulattoes had
Egyptian blood in them too. He believed these Egyptians had disappeared
since the State became part of the Union. Mr. Olmstead remarks: "the
Egyptians were probably Spanish Gipsies, though I have never heard of any of
them being in America in any other way."]
Mr. Borrow has not
sufficiently examined into Spanish Gipsyism to pass a reliable opinion upon
it. He says: "One thing is certain, in the history of the Gitanos; that the
sect flourished and increased, so long as the law recommended and enjoined
measures the most harsh and severe for its suppression.....The caste of the
Gitanos still exists, but is neither so extensive, nor so formidable, as a
century ago, when the law, in denouncing Gitanismo, proposed to the Gitanos
the alternatives of death for persisting in their profession, or slavery for
abandoning it." These are very singular alternatives. The latter is
certainly not to be found in any of the Spanish laws quoted by Mr. Borrow. I
am at a loss to perceive the point of his reasoning. There can be no
difficulty in believing that Gipsies would rather increase in a state
of peace, than if they were hunted from place to place, like wild beasts;
and consequently, having renounced their former mode of life, they would, in
Mr. Borrow's own words, " cease to play a distinct part in the history of
Spain, and the law would no longer speak of them as a distinct
people." And the same might, to a certain extent, be said of the Spanish
people. Mr. Borrow again says: "That the Gitanos are not so numerous as
in former times, witness those barrios, in various towns, still
denominated Gitanerias, but from whence the Gitanos have disappeared,
even like the Moors from the Morerias." But Mr. Borrow himself, in
the same work, gives a good reason for the disappearance of the Gipsies from
these Gitanerias; for he says: "The Gitanerias were soon
considered as public nuisances, on which account the Gitanos were forbidden
to live together in particular parts of the town, to hold meetings, and even
to intermarry with each other." If the disappearance of the Gipsies from
Spain was like that of the Moors, it would appear that they had left, or
been expelled from, the country; a theory which Mr. Borrow does not advance.
The Gipsies, to a certain extent, may have left these barriers, or been
expelled from them, and settled, as tradesmen, mechanics, and what not, in
other parts of the same or other towns ; so as to be in a position the more
able to get on in the world. Still, many of them are in the colonies. In
Cuba there are many, as soldiers and musicians, dealers in mules and red
pepper, which businesses they almost monopolize, and jobbers and dealers in
various wares ; and doubtless there are some of them innkeepers, and others
following other occupations. In Mexico there are not a few. I know of a
Gitano who has a fine wholesale and retail cigar store in Virginia. [In
Olmatead's " ourney in the Seaboard Slave States" it is stated, that in
Alexandria, Louisiana, when under the Spanish rule, there were "French and
Spanish, Egyptians and Indians, Mulattoes and Negroes." This author
reports a conversation which he had with a planter, by which it appears Mr.
Borrow concludes, in regard to the Spanish Gipsies, thus : " We have already
expressed our belief that the caste has diminished of latter years ; whether
this diminution was the result of one or many causes combined; of a
partial cliange of habits, of pestilence or sickness, of war or famiue,
or of a freer intercourse with the Spanish population, we have no
means of determining, and shall abstain from offering conjectures on the
subject." In this way does he leave'the question just where he found it. Is
there any reason to doubt that Gipsydom is essentially the same in Spain as
in Great Britain ; or that its future will be guided by any other principles
than those which regulate that of the British Gipsies? Indeed, I am
astonished that Mr. Borrow should advance the idea that Gipsies should
decrease by "changing their habits;" they might not increase so fast,
in a settled life, as when more exposed to the air, and not molested by
the Spanish Government. I am no less astonished that he should think they
would decrease by " a freer intercourse with the Spanish population ;" when,
in fact, such mixtures are well known to go with the Gipsies ; the mixture
being, in the estimation of the British Gipsies, calculated to strengthen
and invigorate the race itself. Had Mr. Borrow kept in mind the case of the
half-blood Gipsy captain, he could have had no difficulty in learning what
became of mixed Gipsies.
[Mr. Borrow surely cannot
mean that a Gipsy ceases to be a Gipsy, when he settles down, and "turns
over a new leaf;" and that this "change of habits" changes his descent,
blood, appearance, language and nationality I What, then, does he mean, when
he says, that the Spanish Gipsies have decreased by "a partial change of
habits?"
And does an infusion of Spanish Wood, implied in a "freer
intercourse with the Spanish population," lead to the Gipsy element heing
wiped out; or does it lead to the Spanish feeling being lost in Gipsydom?
Which is the element to be operated upon—the Spanish or the Gipsy? Which is
the leaven? The Spanish element is the passive, the Gipsy the
active. As a question of philosophy, the most simple of
comprehension, and, above all, as a matter of fact, the foreign element
introduced, in detail, into the body of Gipsydom, goes with
that body, and, in feeling, becomes incorporated with it, although, in
physical appearance, it changes the Gipsy nice, so that it becomes
"confounded with the residue of the population," but remains Gipsy, as
before. A Spanish Gipsy is a Spaniard as he stands, and it would be hard to
say wha< we should ask him to do, to become more a Spaniard than he is
already.]
It doubtless holds in Spain, as in Great Britain, that as
the Gipsy enters into settled life, and engages in a respectable calling, he
hides his descent, and even mixes his blood with that of the country, and
becomes ashamed of the name before the public ; but is as much, at heart, a
Gipsy, as any others of his race. And this theory is borne out by Mr. Borrow
himself, when he speaks of "the unwillingness of the Spanish Gipsies to
utter, when speaking of themselves, the detested expression Gitano; a word
which seldom escapes their mouths." We might therefore conclude, that the
Spanish Gipsies, with the exception of the more original and bigoted stock,
would hide their nationality from the common Spaniards, and so escape
their notice. It is not at all likely that the half-pay Gipsy captain would
mention to the public that he was a Gipsy, although he admitted it to Mr.
Borrow, under the peculiar circumstances in which he met him. My Spanish
acquaintance informs me that the Gitanos, generally, hide their nationality
from the rest of the world.
Such a case is evidently told by Mr. Borrow, in the
vagabond Gipsy, Antonio, at Badajoz, who termed a rich Gipsy, living in the
same town, a hog, because he probably would not countenance him. Antonio may
possibly have been kicked out of his house, in attempting to enter it. He
accused him of having married a Spaniard, and of fain attempting to pass
himself for a Spaniard. As regards the wife, she might have been a Gipsy
with very little of "the blood" in her veins ; or a Spaniard, reared by
Gipsies ; or an ordinary Spanish maiden, to whom the Gipsy would teach his
language, as sometimes happens among the English Gipsies. His wishing to
pass for a Spaniard had nothing to do with his being, but not wishing to be
known as, a Gipsy. The same is done by almost all our Scottish Gipsies. In
England, those who do not follow the tent—I mean the more mixed and better
class—are even afraid of each other. "Afraid of what?" said I, to such an
English Gipsy; "ashamed of being Gipsies?" "No, sir," (with great emphasis;)
"not ashamed of being Gipsies, but of being known
to other
people as Gipsies." "A world of difference," I replied. What does the world
hold to be a Gipsy, and what does it hold to be the feelings of a man? If we
consider these two questions, we can hare little difficulty in understanding
the wish of such Gipsies to disguise themselves. It is in this way, and in
the mixing of the blood, that this so-called "dying out of the Gipsies" is
to be accounted for. [Mr. Borrow mentions, in
the twenty-second chapter of the "Bible in Spain," having met several
cavalry soldiers from Granada, Gipsies incog, who were surprised at being
discovered to be Gipsies. They had been impressed, but carried on a trade in
horses, in league with the captain of their company. They said: "We have
been to the wara, but not to fight; we left that to the Busne. We have kept
together, and like true Calore", have stood back to back. We have made money
in the wara."]
It is singular that Mr.
Borrow should attribute the change which has come over the Spanish Gipsies,
so much to the law passed by Charles III. in 1783 ; and that he should
characterize it as an enlightened, wise, and liberal law; distinguished by
justice and clemency; and as being calculated to exert considerable
influence over the destiny of the race; nay, as being the principal, if not
the only, cause for the "decline" of it in Spain. It was headed: "Rules for
repressing and chastising the vagrant mode of life, and other excesses, of
those who are called Gitanos." Article II.
forbids, under penalties, the Gipsies "using their language, dress, or
vagrant kind of life, which they had hitherto followed." Article
XI. prohibits them from " wandering about the
roads and uninhabited places, even with the pretext of visiting markets and
fairs." Article IX. reads thus: "Those who have
abandoned the dress, name, language or jargon, associations and manners of
Gitanos, and shall have, moreover, chosen and established a domicile, but
shall not have devoted themselves to any office or employment, though it be
only that of day-labourer, shall be proceeded against as common vagrants."
Articles XVI. and XVII.
enact, that "the children, and young people of both sexes, who are not above
sixteen years of age, shall be separated from their parents, who wander
about and have no employment, [which was forbidden by the law itself,] and
shall be destined to learn something, or shall be placed out in hospices or
houses of instruction." Article XX. dooms to
death, without remission, Gipsies who, for the second time, relapse into
their old habits.
I cannot agree with Mr. Borrow, when he says, that this
law "differs in character" from any which had hitherto been enacted,
in connection with the body in Spain, if I take those preceding it, as given
by himself. The only difference between it and some of the previous laws is,
that it allowed the Gipsy to be admitted to whatever office or employment
to which he might apply himself, and likewise to any guilds or
communities; but it prohibited him from settling in the capital, or any of
the royal residences ; and forbade him, on pain of death, to publicly
profess what he was—that is, a Gipsy. With the trifling exceptions
mentioned, the law of Charles III. was as foolish a one as ever was passed
against the Gipsies. These very exceptions show what the letter, whatever
the execution, of previous laws must have been. Nor can we form any opinion
as to the effects the law in question had upon the Gipsies, unless we know
how it was carried out. The law of the Empress Maria Theresa produced no
effect upon the Gipsies in Hungary. "In Hungary," says Mr. Borrow, "two
classes are free to do what they please—the nobility and the Gipsies—the one
above the law, the other below it." And what did Mr. Borrow find the Gipsies
in Hungary? In England, the last instances of condemnation, under the old
sanguinary laws, happened a few years before the Restoration, although these
were not repealed till 23d Geo. III., c. 54. The Gipsies in England can
follow any employment, common to the ordinary natives, they please: and how
has Mr. Borrow described them there? In Scotland, the tribe have beeif
allowed to do nothing, not even acknowledge their existence, as Gipsies: and
this work describes what they are in that country.
Instead of the law of Charles III. exercising any great
beneficial influence over the character of the Spanish Gipsies, I would
attribute the change in question to what Mr. Borrow himself says: "It must
be remembered that during the last seventy years, a revolution has been
progressing in Spain, slowly it is true; and such a revolution may have
affected the Gritanos." The Spanish Gipsy proverb,"Money is to be found in
the town, not in the country," has had its influence on bringing the race to
settle in towns. And by residing in towns, and not being persecuted, they
have, in Mr. Borrow's own words," insensibly become more
civilized than their ancestors, and their habits and manners less
ferocious." The only good which the law of Charles III. seems to have done
to the Spanish Gipsies was, as already said, to permit them to follow any
occupation, and be admitted to any guilds, or communities, (barring the
capital, and royal residences,) they pleased; but only on the condition, and
that on the pain of death, that they renounced every imaginable
thing connected with their tribe; which, we may reasonably assume, no
Gipsy submitted to, however much in appearance he might have done so.
But it is doubtful if the law of Charles III. was
anything but the one which it was customary for every Spanish monarch to
issue against the tribe. Mr. Borrow says: "Perhaps there is no country in
which more laws have been framed, having in view the suppression and
extinction of the Gipsy name, race, and manner of life, than Spain. Every
monarch, during a period of three hundred years, appears, at his accession
to the throne, to have considered that one of his first and most imperative
duties consisted in checking and suppressing the robberies, frauds, and
other enormities of the Gitanos, with which the whole country seems to have
resounded since the time of their first appearance." The fact of so many
laws being passed against the Gipsies, is, to my mind, ample proof, as I
shall afterwards explain, that few, if any, of them were put, to any extent,
in force; and that the act in question, viewed in itself, as distinct from
the laws previously in existence, was little more than a form. It contains a
flourish of liberality, implied in the Gitanos being allowed to enter, if
they pleased, any guilds, (which they were not likely to do,) or
communities, (where they were doubtless already ;) but it debars, (that is,
expels,) them from the king's presence, at the capital or any of the royal
residences. Moreover, it allowed the Gitano to be "admitted to whatever
office or employment to which he might apply himself," (against which, there
probably was, or should have been, no law in existence.) His majesty must
also impose his pragmatical conceit upon his loyal subjects, by telling
them, that "Gitanos are not Gitanos"—that they "do not proceed
from any infected root;" and threaten them, that if they maintain the
contrary, and call them Gitanos, he will have them punished for slander!
The Gipsies, after a residence of 350 years in the
country, would have comparatively little notice taken of them, under this
law, except when they made themselves really obnoxious, or gave an official
an occasion to display his authority, or his zeal for the public service. [It
would seem that the law in Spain, in regard to the Gipsies, stands pretty
much where it did—that is, the people are, in a sense, tolerated, but that
the use of their language is prohibited, as may be gathered from an incident
mentioned in the ninth chapter of the "Bible in Spain," by Mr. Borrrw.]
Whatever may have been the treatment which the Gipsies experienced at the
hands of the civil authorities, the church does not seem to
have disturbed, and far less distressed, them. Mr. Borrow represents a
priest of Cordova, formerly an Inquisitor, saying to him: "lam not aware of
one ease of a Gitano having been tried or punished by the Inquisition. The
Inquisition always looked upon them with too much contempt, to give itself
the slightest trouble concerning them; for, as no danger, either to the
State or to the Church of Rome, could proceed from the Gitanos, it was a
matter of perfeet indifference to the holy office whether they lived without
religion or not. The holy office has always reserved its anger for people
very different; the Gitano having, at all times, been Gente harrata y
despreciable."
Should the Spanish Gipsies not now assist each other, to
the extent they did when banditti, under the special proscription of the
Government, it would be absurd to say that they were therefore not as much
Gipsies as ever they were. The change in this respect arose, to some extent,
from the toleration extended to them, as a people and as individuals,
whether by the law, or society in general. Such Gipsies as Mr. Borrow seems
to have associated with, in Spain, were not likely to be very reliable
authority on the questions at issue ; for he has described them as "being
endowed with a kind of instinct, (in lieu of reason,) which assists them to
a very limited extent, and no further."
Might it not be in Spain as in Great Britain? Even in
England, those that pass for Gipsies are few in number, compared to the
mixed Gipsies, following various occupations; for a large part of the Gipsy
blood in England has, as it were, been spread over a large surface of the
white. In Scotland it is almost altogether so. There seems considerable
reason for believing that Gipsydom is, perhaps, as much mixed in Spain as in
Great Britain, although Mr. Borrow has taken no notice of it. We have
seen, (page 92.) how severe an enactment was passed by Queen Elizabeth,
against "any person, whether natural born or stranger, to be seen in
the fellowship of the Gipsies, or disguised like them." In the law of
Ferdinand and Isabella, the first passed against the Gipsies, in Spain, a
class of people is mentioned, in conjunction with them, but distinguished
from them, by the name of "foreign tinkers." Philip III., at Belan, in
Portugal, in 1619, commands all Gipsies to quit the kingdom Avithin six
months. "Those who should wish to remain are to establish themselves in
cities, and are not to be allowed to use the dress, name, and language, in
order, that forasmuch as they are not such by nation, (!) this name, and
manner of life, may be for evermore confounded and forgotten(!)" Philip
IV., on the 8th May, 1633, declares "that they are
not Gipsies by origin or nature, but have adopted this form of life (!)"
This idea of "Gitanos not being Gitanos, and not proceeding
from any infected root," was not original with Charles III., in 1783; his
proclamation having been in formal keeping with previous ones, whether of
his own country, or, as in Scotland, in 1603, " recommended by the example
of some other realm," (page 111.) There had evidently been a great curiosity
to know who some of the "not Gipsies by origin and nature," (evidently
judging from their appearance,) could be; for Philip IV.
enacts, "that they shall, within two months, leave the quarters where
now they live loiih the denomination of Gitanos, and that they shall
separate from each other, and mingle with tlve other inhabitants:
that the ministers of justice are to observe, with particular
diligence, whether they hold communication with each other, or
marry among themselves."
The "foreign tinkers" mentioned in the Act of Ferdinand
and Isabella, and the individuals distinguished from the Gipsies in that of
Queen Elizabeth, were doubtless mixed Gipsies ; whose relationship
with the Gipsies proper, and ť isolation from the common natives, are very
distinctly pointed out in the above extract from the law of Philip
IV. Mr. Borrow expresses a great difficulty to
understand who these people could be, if not Gipsies. How easy it is
to get rid of the difficulty, by concluding that they were Gipsies whose
blood, perhaps for the most part, was native ; and who had been brought into
the body in the manner explained in the Preface to this work, and more fully
illustrated in this Disquisition. If Mr. Borrow found in Spain a half-pay
captain, in the service of Donna Isabel, with flaxen hair, a
thorough Gipsy, who spoke Gipsy and Latin, with great fluency, and his
cousin, Jara, in all probability another Gipsy, what difficulty can there be
in believing that the "foreign tinkers," or tinkers of any kind, now to be
met with in Spain, are, like the same class in Great Britain and Ireland,
Gipsies of mixed blood ? Indeed, the young Spaniard, to whom I have alluded,
informs me that the Gipsies in Spain are very much mixed. Mr. Borrow himself
admits that the Gipsy blood in Spain has been mixed; for, in speaking of the
old Gipsy counts, he says: "It was the counts who determined what
individuals were to be admitted into the fellowship and privileges of the
Gitanos.....They (the Gipsies) were not to teach the language to any but
those who, by birth or inauguration, belonged to that sect." And he
gives a case in point, in the bookseller of Logrono, who was married to the
only daughter of a Gitano count; upon whose death, the daughter and
son-in-law succeeded to the authority which he had exercised in the tribe;
If the Gipsies in Spain were not mixed in point of blood, why should they
have taken Mr. Borrow for a Gipsy, as he said they did ? The persecutions to
which the race in Spain were subjected were calculated to lead to a mixture
of the blood, as in Scotland, for the reasons given in the Preface; but,
perhaps, not to the same extent; as the Spanish Acts seem to have given the
tribe an opportunity of escape, under the condition of settling, &c, &c,
which would probably be complied with, nominally, for the time being; while
the face of part of the country would afford a refuge till the storm had
blown over. (See pages 71 and 114.).
It is very likely that the following people, described by
Paget, in his travels in Central Europe, are mixed Gipsies. He says: "In
almost every part of the Austrian dominions are to be found a kind of
wandering tinkers, wire-workers, and menders of crockery, whose language
appears to be that of the Sclaves, who travel about, and, at certain
seasons, return to their own settlements, where the women and children
remain during their absence." The wandering Rothwelsh, perhaps the same
mentioned by Paget, may be mixed Gipsies. In the Encyclopaedia Britannica
they are spoken of as "a vagabond people, in the south of Germany, who have
sometimes been confounded with the Gipsies." The appearance of such
persons has nothing to do with their being, or not being, members of
Gipsydom. [Paget says these tinkers leave their
women and children at home when on their travels. That is not customary with
the tribe, although it may be their habit in the Austrian dominions.]
I will now consider the present condition of the Scottish
Gipsies. But, to commence with, what is the native capacity of a Gipsy? It
is good. Take a common tinkering Gipsy, without a particle of education, and
compare him with a common native, without a particle of education, and the
tinker, in point of smartness, is worth, perhaps, a dozen of the other. If
not a learned, he is at least a travelled, Athenian, considerably rubbed up
by his intercourse with the world. This is the proper way by which to judge
of the capacity of a Gipsy. It will differ somewhat according to the
countries and circumstances in which he is found. Grellmann, about the year
1780, says, of evidently the more original kind of Hungarian Gipsies:
"Imagine a people of childish thoughts, whose minds are filled with raw,
undigested conceptions, guided more by sense than reason, and using
understanding and reflection only so far as they promote the gratification
of any particular appetite; and you have a perfect sketch of the general
character of the Gipsies." "They are lively, uncommonly loquacious, fickle
to an extreme; consequently, inconstant in their pursuits." Bischoff, in
speaking of the German Gipsies, in 1827, says: "They have a good
understanding, an excellent memory, are quick of comprehension, lively and
talkative." Mr. Borrow, in evident allusion to the very lowest, and most
ignorant, class of the Spanish Gipsies, says: "They seem to hunt for their
bread, as if they were not of the human, but rather of the animal, species,
and, in lieu of reason, were endowed with a kind of instinct, which assists
them to a very limited extent, and no further." I admit that this class of
Gipsies may have as little intellect as there is in an ant-catcher's
nose, but the remark can apply to them exclusively.
Without taking into account any opinion expressed by
other writers on the Gipsies, Mr. Borrow says: "Should it be urged that
certain individuals have found them very different from what they are
represented in these volumes, ('The Gipsies in Spain,') he would frankly say
that he yields no credit to the presumed fact." And he refers his readers to
his Spanish-Gipsy vocabulary for the words hoax and hocus, as
a reason for such an opinion! He himself gives descriptions of quite a
different caste. For example, he speaks of a rich Gipsy appearing in a fair,
at Leon, in Spain, with a twenty thousand dollar credit in his pocket. And
of another Gipsy, a native of Constantinople, who had visited the most
remote and remarkable portions of the world, "passing over it like a cloud;"
and who spoke several dialects of the Malay, and understood the original
language of Java. This Gipsy, he says, dealt in precious stones and poisons
; and that there is scarcely a bey or satrap in Persia, or Turkey, whom he
has not supplied with both. In Moscow, he says, "There are not a few who
inhabit stately houses, go abroad in elegant equipages, and are behind the
higher orders of the Russians, neither in appearance nor mental
acquirements." From these specimens, one might naturally conclude that there
was some room for discrimination among different classes of Gipsies, instead
of rating them as having the intellect of ant-catchers.
When the Gipsies appeared in Scotland, the natives
themselves, as I have already said, were nearly wholly uneducated. Many of
the Gipsies, then, and long afterwards, being smart, presumptuous,
overbearing, audacious fellows, seem to have assumed great importance, and
been looked upon as no small people by the authorities and the inhabitants
of the country. In every country in which they have settled, they seem to
have instinctively and very readily appreciated the ways and spirit of the
people, while, at the same time, they preserved what belonged particularly
to themselves—their Gipsyism. Gipsydom being, in its very essence, a
"working in among other people," "a people within a people," it followed,
that marriages between adopted Gipsies, and even Gipsies themselves, and the
ordinary natives, would be encouraged, were it only to contribute to their
existence in the country. The issue of such marriages, go where they might,
would become centres of little Gipsy circles, which, in their turn, would
throw off members that would become the centres of other little Gipsy
circles; the leaven of Gipsydom leavening into a lump everything that
proceeded out of itself. To such an extent has this been followed, that, at
the present day, the Scottish Gipsies—at least the generality of them—have
every outward characteristic of Scotchmen. But the secret of being Gipsies,
which they carry in their bosoms, makes them appear a little queer to
others; they have a something about them that makes them look somewhat odd
to the other Scotchman, who is not "one of them," although he does not know
the cause of it.
Upon, or shortly after, their arrival, they seem to have
divided the country among themselves ; each tribe exercising its rights over
its own territory, to the exclusion of others, just as a native lord would
have done against other natives; with a system of passes, regulated by
councils of local or provincial chieftains, and a king over all. The
Scottish Gipsies, from the very first, seem to have been thoroughly versed
in their vocation, from having had about a hundred years' experience, in
some other part of Europe, before they settled in Scotland; although
stragglers of their race evidently had made their appearance in the country
many years before. What might have been the number of Gipsies then in
Scotland, it is impossible to conjecture ; it must have been considerable,
if we judge from what is said in Wraxall's History of France, vol. 2, page
32, when, in reference to the Act of Queen Elizabeth, in 1563, he states,
that, in her reign, the Gipsies throughout England were supposed to exceed
ten thousand. The employments of the original Gipsies, within their
respective districts, seem to have been what is described under the head of
Tweed-dale and Clydesdale Gipsies; that is, tinkering, making spoons and
other wares, petty trading, telling fortunes, living as much as possible at
free-quarters, dealing in horses, and visiting fairs. It is extremely likely
that those who travelled Tweed-dale, for example, always averaged about the
same number, down to the time of the American Revolution, (except in times
of civil commotion, when they would have the country pretty much to
themselves,) and were confined to such of the families of the respective
tribes, or the members of these families, in whom the right was hereditary.
The consequence seems to have been, that perhaps the younger members of the
family had to betake themselves to towns and villages, and engage in
whatever they could possibly turn their hands to. Some would, of course,
take to the highway, and kindred fields of industry. Admitting that the
circumstances attending the Gipsies in Scotland, at that time, and
subsequently, were the same, as regards the manner of making a living, which
attend those in England, at the present day, (with this difference, that
they could more easily roam at large then than now,) and we can have no
difficulty in coming to a conclusion how the surplus of the tented Gipsy
population was disposed of. Among the English Gipsies of to-day, taking year
with year, and tent with tent, there is, yearly, a continual moving out of
the tent; a kind of Gipsy crop is annually gathered from tented Gipsydom;
and some of these gradually find themselves drawn into almost every kind of
mechanical or manual labour, even to working in coal-mines and iron-works;
others become peddlers, itinerant auctioneers, and tramps of almost
every imaginable kind; not to speak of those who visit fairs, in various
capacities, or engage in various settled traffic.
Put a Gipsy to any occupation you like, and he shows a
capability and handiness that is astonishing, if he can only muster up
steadiness in his new vocation. But it is difficult to break him off the
tent; he will return, and lounge, for weeks together, about that of his
father, or some other relative. But get him fairly out of the tent, married,
and, in a degree, settled to some occupation, in a town where there are not
too many of his own race in close proximity to him, but where he gets mixed
up, in his daily avocation, with the common natives, and he sooner or later
falls into the ranks. Still, his intimate associations are always with
Gipsies; for his ardent attachment to his people, and a corresponding
resentment of the prejudice that exists against it, keep him aloof from any
intimate intercourse with the ordinary inhabitants; his associations with
them hardly ever extending beyond the commons or the public-house. If he
experiences an attack from his old habits, he will take to the tramp, from
town to town, working at his mechanical occupation; leaving his wife and
children at home. But it is not long before he returns. His children, having
been born and reared in a town, become habituated to a settled life, like
other people.
There is a vast amount of ambition about every Gipsy,
which is displayed, among the humble classes, in all kinds of athletic
exercises. ["I was one of these verminous ones,
one of these great sin-breeders; I infected all the youth of the town where
I was born with all manner of youthful vanities. The neighbours counted mc
so; my practice proved me so: wherefore Christ Jesus took me first, and
taking me first, the contagion was much allayed all the town over."—Banyan.]
The same peculiarity is discernible among the educated Scottish Gipsies.
Carrying about with them the secret of being Gipsies, which they assume
would be a terrible imputation cast upon them by the ordinary natives, if
they knew of it, they, as it were, fly up, like gamecocks, and show a
disposition to surpass the others in one way or other; particularly as they
consider themselves better than the common inhabitants. They must always be
"cock of the company," master of ceremonies, or stand at the top of the
tree, if possible. The reader may ask, how do they consider themselves
better than the ordinary natives? And I answer, that, from having been so
long in Scotland, they are Scotchmen, (as indeed they are, for the most
part, in point of blood,) and consider themselves as good as the others—nay,
smarter than others in the same sphere, which, generally speaking, they are;
and, in addition to that, being Gipsies, a great deal better. They pique
themselves on their descent, and on being in possession of secrets which are
peculiarly and exclusively theirs, and which they imagine no other knows, or
will ever know. They feel that they are part and parcel of those mysterious
beings who are an enigma to others, no less than to themselves. Besides this
vanity, which is peculiar to the Gipsy everywhere, the Scottish Gipsies have
chimed in with all the native Scotch ideas of danism, kith, kin, and
consequence, as regards family, descent, and so forth; and applied them so
peculiarly to themselves, as to render their opinion of their body as
something of no small importance. Some of them, whose descent leads them
more directly back to the tented stock, speak of their families having
possessed this district or the other district of the country, as much,
almost, as we would expect to hear from some native Scottish chieftain.
As regards the various phases of history through which
many of the Scottish Gipsies have passed, we can only form an estimate from
what has been observed in recent times. The further back, however, we go,
the greater were their facilities to rise to a position in society; for this
reason, that a very little education, joined to good natural talents, were
all that was necessary, in a mixed Gipsy, to raise himself in the world, at
the time to which I allude. He could leave the district in which, when a
youth, he had travelled, with his parents; settle in a town where lie was
not personally known; commence some traffic, and, by his industry, gradually
raise himself up, and acquire wealth. He would not lack a proper degree of
innate manners, or personal dignity, to deport himself with propriety in any
ordinary company into which ho might enter. Even at the present day, in
Scotland, a poor Gipsy will commence life with a wheelbarrow, then get a
donkey-cart, and, in a few years, have a very respectable crockery-shop. I
am intimate with an English mixed Gipsy family, the father of which
commenced life as a basket-maker, was afterwards a constable, and now
occasionally travels with the tent. His son is an M. D., for I have seen his
diploma; and is a smart, intelligent fellow, and quite an adept at
chemistry. To illustrate the change that has taken place among some of the
Scottish Gipsies, within the last fifty years, I may mention that the
grand-children of a prominent Gipsy, mentioned in chapter
V., follow, at the present day, the medical, the legal, and the
mercantile professions. Such occurrences have been frequent in Scotland.
There are the cases mentioned by our author; such as one of the Faas rising
to such eminence in the mercantile world, at Dunbar; and another who rose to
the rank of lieutenant in the East India Company's service; and the Baillie
family, which furnished a captain and a quarter-master to the army, and a
country surgeon. These are but instances of many others, if they were but
known. Some may object, that these were not full-blood Gipsies. That, I
readily admit. But the objection is more nominal than real. If a white were
to proceed to the interior of the American continent, and cast his lot with
a tribe of Indians, his children would, of course, be expected to be
superior, in some respects, to the children of the native blood exclusively,
owing to what the father might be supposed to teach them. But it is
different in the case of a white marrying a Scottish Gipsy woman, born and
reared in the same community with himself; for the white, in general cases,
brings only his blood, which enables the children, if they take after
himself, in appearance, to enter such places as the black Gipsies would not
enter, or might not be allowed to enter. The white father, in such a case,
might not even be so intelligent as the Gipsy mother. Be that as it may, the
individuals to whom I have alluded were nothing but Gipsies; possibly they
did not know when, or through whom, the white blood was introduced among
them; they knew, at least, that they were Gipsies, and that the links which
connected them with the past were substantially Gipsy links. Besides the
Scottish Gipsies rising to respectable positions in life, by their own
exertions, I can well believe that Gipsydom has been well brought up through
the female line; especially at a time when females, and particularly country
females, were rude and all but uneducated. Who more capable of doing that
than the lady Baillies, of Tweed-dale, and the lady Wilsons, of
Stirlingshire? Such Gipsy girls could "turn natives round their little
fingers," and act, in a way, the lady at once; "turn over a new leaf," and
"pin it down;" and conduct themselves with great propriety.
Upon a superior Scottish Gipsy settling in a town, and
especially a small town, and wishing to appear respectable, he would
naturally take a pew in the church, and attend public worship, were it only,
as our author asserts, to hide the fact of his being a Gipsy. Because, among
the Scotch, there is that prying inquisitiveness into their neighbours'
affairs, that compels a person to be very circumspect, in all his actions,
movements, and expressions, if he wishes to be thought anything of, at all.
The habit of attending church would then become as regular, in the Gipsy's
family, as in the families of the ordinary natives, and, in a great measure,
proceed from as legitimate a motive. The family would be very polite,
indeed, extra polite, to their neighbours. After they had lulled to sleep
every suspicion of what they were, or, by their really good conduct, had,
according to the popular idea, "ceased to be Gipsies," they would naturally
encourage a formal acquaintance with respectable (and nothing but
respectable,) people in the place. The Gipsy himself, a really good fellow
at heart, honourable in his dealings, but fond of a bargain, when he could
drive a bargain, and, moreover, a jovial fellow, would naturally make plenty
of business and out-door friends, at least. Rising in circumstances and the
public esteem, he makes up his mind that his children ought to be something
better than himself, at all events: in short, that they ought not to be
behind those of his respectable neighbours. Some of them he, therefore,
educates for a liberal profession. The Gipsy himself becomes more and more
ambitious : besides attending church, he must become an elder of the church;
or it may be that the grace of God takes hold of him, and brings him into
the fold. He and his wife conduct themselves with much propriety ; but some
of the boys are rather wild ; the girls, however, behave well. Altogether,
the whole family is very much thought of. Such is a Scottish Gipsy family,
(the parents of which are now dead,) that I have in my mind at the present
moment. No suspicion existed in regard to the father, but there was a breath
of suspicion in regard to the mother. But what difference did that make?
What knowledge had the public of the nature of Gipsydom? Consider, then,
that the process which I have attempted to describe has been going on, more
or less, for at least the last three hundred and fifty years; and I may well
ask, where might we not expect to meet with Gipsies, in Scotland, at
the present day? And I reply, that we will meet with them in every sphere of
Scottish life, not excepting, perhaps, the very highest. There are Gipsies
among the very best Edinburgh families. I am well acquainted with Scotchmen,
youths and men of middle age, of education and character, and who follow
very respectable occupations, that are Gipsies, and who admit that they are
Gipsies. But, apart from my own knowledge, I ask, is it not a fact, that, a
few years ago, a pillar of the Scottish church, at Edinburgh, upon the
occasion of founding a society for the reformation of the poor class of
Scottish Gipsies, and frequently thereafter, said that he himself was a
Gipsy? I ask, again, is not that a fact ? It is a fact. And such a man! Such
prayers 1 Such deep-toned, sonorous piety 1 Such candour! Such judgment I
Such amiability of manners! How much respected? How worthy of respect? The
good, the godly, the saintly doctor! When will we meet his like again?
["Grand was the repose of his lofty brow, dark eye, and aspect of soft and
melancholy meaning. It was a face from which every evil and earthly passion
seemed purged. A deep gravity lay upon his countenance, which had the
solemnity, without the sternness, of one of our old reformers. You could
almost fancy a halo completing its apostolic character."]
This leads me to speak of a high-class Scottish Gipsy
family—the Falls, who settled at Dunbar, as merchants, alluded to tinder the
chapter on Border Gipsies.
[Burns alludes to this
family, thus: "Passed through the moat glorious corn country I ever saw,
till I reached Dunbar, a neat little town. Dine witb Provost Fall, an
eminent merchant, and moat respectable character, but indescribable, as he
exhibits no marked traits. Mrs. Fall, a genius in painting; fully more
clever in the fine arts and sciences than my friend Lady Wauchope, without
her consummate assurance of her own abilities."— Life of Burns, by Robert
Chambers.
The crest of the Falla, of Dunbar, was three
boars' heads, couped; that of Baillie, of Laraington, is one boar's
head, couped. In the Statistical Account of Scotland, (1835,) appears the
following notice of this family: "A family, of the name of Fall, established
themselves at Dunbar, and became, during the last century, the most
extensive merchants in Scotland. They were long the chief magistrates of the
burgh, and preferred the public good to their own profit. They have left no
one to bear tbeir name, not even a stone to tell where they lit; but
they will long be remembered for their enterprise and public spirit." There
is apparently a reason for "not even a Btone being left to tell where they
lie;" for in Hoyland's "Survey of the Gipsies" appeared the account of
Baillie Smith, in which it is said: "The descendants of Faa now take the
name of Fall, from the Messrs. Fall, of Dunbar, who, they pride themselves
in aaying, are of the same stock and lineage!" which seems to have
frightened their connexions at being known to be Gipsies.
Let all that has been said of the Falls be considered as
their monument and epitaph; so that their memories may be preserved as long
as this work exists.
ft would be interesting to know who the Captain Fall was,
who visited Dunbar, with an American ship-of-war, during the time of Paul
Jones. He might have been a descendant of a Gipsy, sent to the plantations,
in the olden times. There are, as I have said before, a great many scions of
Gipsy Faas, under one name or other, scattered over the world.]
Who can doubt that they were Gipsies to the last? How
could they avoid being Gipsies? The Gipsies were their people; their blood
was Gipsy blood. How could they get rid of their blood and descent? Could
they throw either off, as they would an old coat? Could medical science rid
them of either? Assuredly not. They admitted their descent, over their
cups. But being descendants of Gipsies, and yet not Gipsies,
is a contradiction in terms. The principles which regulate the descent
of other Gipsy families applied equally to theirs. The fact that Mrs. Fall
had the history of her people, in the act of leaving Yetholm, represented in
tapestry, may be taken as but a straw that indicated how the wind blew. Was
not old Will Faa, the Gipsy king, down to his death, at the end of the first
American war, admitted to their hospitality as a relative? And do not the
Scottish Gipsies, at the present day, claim them to have been Gipsies? Why
might not the Falls glory in being Egyptians among themselves, but not to
others? Were not their ancestors kingsl "Wee kings," no doubt, but
still kings; one of them being the "loved John Faw," of James
V., whom all the tribe consider as a great man,
(which, doubtless, he was, in that barbarous age,) and the principal of the
thirteen patriarchs of Scottish Gipsydom. Was not a Gipsy king, (themselves
being Gipsies,) an ancestor of far more respect, in their eyes, than the
founder of a native family, in their neighbourhood; who, in the reign of
Charles II., was a common country snip, and
most likely commenced life with "whipping the cat" around the country, for
fivepence a day, and victuals and clippings? [Whipping
the cat: Tailoring from house to house. The cat is whipped
by females, as well as males, in America, in some parts of which the
expression is current.]
The truth of the matter is, these Falls must have
considered themselves a world better than other people, merely on account of
their being Gipsies, as all Gipsies do, arising, in part, from that
antagonistic spirit of opposition which the prejudice of their
fellow-creatures is so much calculated to stir up in their minds. Saying,
over their cups, that they were descended from the Faws, the historical
Gipsy name in Scotland, did not divulge very much to the public. For what
idea had the public of the working of Gipsydom— what idea of the
Gipsy language? Did the public know of the existence of a Gipsy language in
Scotland? In all probability, it generally did not. If the public heard a
Tinkler use a strange word, all that it would think of it would be, that it
was cant, confined to vagabonds strolling the country. Would it ever
dream that what the vagabonds used was carefully preserved and spoken among
the great Falls, of Dunbar, within the sanctity of their own dwellings, as
it assuredly must have been? Would the public believe in such a thing, if
even its own ears were made the witnesses to it? Was the love which the
Falls had for their Yetholm connexion confined to a mere group of their
ancestors worked in tapestry? Where was the Gipsy language, during all this
time? Assuredly it was well preserved in their family. If it showed the
least symptoms of falling off, how easily could the mothers bring into the
family, as servants, other Gipsies, who would teach it to the children! For,
besides the dazzling hold which the Gipsy language takes of the mind of a
Gipsy, as the language of those black, mysterious heroes from whom he is
descended, the keeping of it up forms the foundation of that self-respect
which a Gipsy has for himself, amidst the prejudice of the world; from
which, at the bottom of his heart, whatever his position in life, or
character, or associations, may be, he considers himself separated. I am
decidedly of opinion that all the domestics about this Fall family were
Gipsies of one caste, colour, condition, or what not.
Then, we are told that Miss Fall, who married Sir John
Anstruther, of Elie, baronet, was looked down upon by her husband's friends,
and received no other name than Jenny Faa; and that she was indirectly
twitted with being a Gipsy, by the rabble, while attending an election in
which Sir John was a candidate. What real satisfaction could Jenny, or any
other Gipsy, have for ordinary natives of the country, when she was
conscious of being what she was, and how she was spoken of by her husband's
relatives and the public generally ? She would take comfort in telling her
"wonderful story" to her children, (for I presume she would have children,)
who would sympathize with her; and in conversing with such of her own race
as were near her, were it only her trusty domestics. It is the Gipsy woman
who feels the prejudice that exists towards her race the most acutely; for
she has the rearing of the children, and broods more over the history of her
people. As the needle turns to the pole, so does the mind of the Gipsy woman
to Gipsydom.
We are likewise told that this eminent Gipsy family were
connected, by marriage, with the Footies, of Balgonie; the Coutts,
afterwards bankers; Collector Whyte, of Kirkaldy, and Collector Melville, of
Dunbar. We may assume, as a mathematical certainty, that Gipsydom, in a
refined form, is in existence in the descendants of these families,
particularly in such of them as were connected with this Gipsy family by the
female side [Of the Gipsies at Moscow, the following is the substance of
what Mr. Borrow says: "Those who have been accustomed to consider the Gipsy
as a wandering outcast......will be surprised to learn that, amongst the
Gipsies of Moscow, there are not a few who inhabit stately houses, go abroad
in elegant equipages, and are behind the higher order of.] other Gipsies,
who would teach it to the children! For, besides the dazzling hold which the
Gipsy language takes of the mind of a Gipsy, as the language of those black,
mysterious heroes from whom he is descended, the keeping of it up forms the
foundation of that self-respect which a Gipsy has for himself, amidst the
prejudice of the world; from which, at the bottom of his heart, whatever his
position in life, or character, or associations, may be, he considers
himself separated. I am decidedly of opinion that all the domestics about
this Fall family were Gipsies of one caste, colour, condition, or what not.
Then, we are told that Miss Fall, who married Sir John
Anstruther, of Elie, baronet, was looked down upon by her husband's friends,
and received no other name than Jenny Faa; and that she was indirectly
twitted with being a Gipsy, by the rabble, while attending an election in
which Sir John was a candidate. What real satisfaction could Jenny, or any
other Gipsy, have for ordinary natives of the country, when she was
conscious of being what she was, and how she was spoken of by her husband's
relatives and the public generally ? She would take comfort in telling her
"wonderful story" to her children, (for I presume she would have children,)
who would sympathize with her; and in conversing with such of her own race
as were near her, were it only her trusty domestics. It is the Gipsy woman
who feels the prejudice that exists towards her race the most acutely; for
she has the rearing of the children, and broods more over the history of her
people. As the needle turns to the pole, so does the mind of the Gipsy woman
to Gipsydom.
We are likewise told that this eminent Gipsy family were
connected, by marriage, with the Footies, of Balgonie ; the Coutts,
afterwards bankers; Collector Whyte, of Kirkaldy, and Collector Melville, of
Dunbar. We may assume, as a mathematical certainty, that Gipsydom, in a
refined form, is in existence in the descendants of these families,
particularly in such of them as were connected with this Gipsy family by the
female side. [Of the Gipsies at Moscow, the following is the substance of
what Mr. Borrow says: "Those who have been accustomed to consider the Gipsy
as a wandering outcast......will be surprised to learn that, amongst the
Gipsies of Moscow, there are not a few who inhabit stately houses, go abroad
in elegant equipages, and are behind the higher order of
Russians neither in appearance nor mental
acquirements.....The sums obtained by the Gipsy females, by the exercise of
their art (singing in the choirs of Moscow,) enable them to support their
relatives in affluence and luxury. Some are married to Russians; and no one
who has visited Russia can but be aware that a lovely and accomplished
countess, of the noble and numerous family of Tolstoy is, by birth, a Zigana,
and was originally one of the principal attractions of a Romany choir at
Moscow."
This short notice appears unsatisfactory, considering, as
Mr. Borrow says, that one of his principal motives for visiting Moscow was
to hold communication with the Gipsies. It might have occurred to him to
enquire what relation the children of such marriages would bear to Gipsydom
generally; that is, would they be initiated in the mysteries, and taught the
language, and hold themselves to be Gipsies? It is evident, however, that
the Gipsy-drilling process is going on among the Russian nobility.]
A person who has never considered this subject, or any
other cognate to it, may imagine that a Gipsy reproaches himself with his
own blood. Pshaw! ' Where will you find a man, or a tribe of men, under the
heavens, that will do that? It is not in human nature to do it. All men
venerate their ancestors, whoever they have been. A Gipsy is, to an
extraordinary degree, proud of his blood. "I have very little of the blood,
myself," said one of them, "but just come and see my wife!" But people may
say that the ancestors of the Falls were thieves. And were not all the
Borderers, in their way, the worst kind of thieves? They might not have
stolen from their nearest relatives ; but, with that exception, did they not
steal from each other? Now, Gipsies never, or hardly ever, steal from each
other. Were not all the Elliots and Armstrongs thieves of the first water?
Were not the Scotts and the Kers thieves, long after the Gipsies entered
Scotland? When the servants of Scott of Harden drove out his last cow, and
said, "There goes Harden's cow," did not the old cow-stealer say, "It will
soon be Harden's Tcye"—meaning, that he would set out on a
cow-stealing expedition? In fact, he lived upon spoil. Was it not his lady's
custom, on the last bullock being killed, to place on the table a dish,
which, on being uncovered, was found to contain a pair of clean spurs—a
hint, to her husband and his followers, that they must shift for their next
meal? The descendants of these Scotts, and the Scottish public generally,
look, with the utmost complacency and pride, upon the history of such
families; yet would be very apt to make a great ado, if the ancestress of a
Gipsy should, in such a predicament, have hung out a cock's tail at the
mouth of her tent, as a hint to her "laddies" to look after poultry. Common
sense tells us, that, for one excuse to be offered for such conduct, on the
part of the landed-gentry of the country, a hundred can be found for
the ancestor of a Gipsy—an unfortunate wanderer on the face of the earth,
who was hunted about, like a wolf of the forest.
[On his return with his
gallant prey, he passed a very large hay-stack. It occurred to the provident
laird that this would be extremely convenient to fodder his new stock of
cattle; but, as no means of transporting it were obvious, he was fain to
take leave of it, with the apostrophe, now become proverhial, "By my saul,
had ye but four feet, ye should not stand lang there." In short, as
Froissart says of a similar class of feudal robbers, "Nothing came amiss to
them that was not too heavy or too hot." Sir Walter Scott
speaks, in the most jocular manner, of an ancestress who had a curiova
hand at pickling the beef which her husband stole; and that there was
not a stain upon his'escutcheon, barring Border theft and high treason.—Lockhart's
Life of Sir Walter Scott.
We should never forget that a "hawk's a hawk," whether it
is a falcon or a mosquito hawk, which is the smallest of all hawks.]
And what shall we say of our Highland thieves?
Highlanders may be more touchy on this point, for their ancestors were the
last of the British race to give up that kind of life. Talk of the laws
passed against the Gipsies! Various of our Scottish monarchs issued decrees
against "the wicked thieves and limmers of the clans and surnames,
inhabiting the Highlands and Isles," accusing "the chieftains principal of
the branches worthy to be esteemed the very authors, fosterers, and
maintainers, of the wicked deeds of the vagabonds of their clans and
surnames." Indeed, the doweries of the chiefs' daughters were made up by a
share of the booty collected on their expeditions. The Highlands were, at
one time, little better than a nest of thieves; thieving from each other,
and more particularly from their southern neighbours. It is notorious that
robbery, in the Highlands, was "held to be a calling not merely innocent,
but honourable;" and that a high-born Highland warrior was "much more
becomingly employed, in plundering the lands of others, than in tilling his
own." At stated times of the year, such as at Candlemas, regular bands of
Highlanders, the sons of gentlemen and what not, proceeded south in quest of
booty, as part of their winter's provisions. The Highlanders might even have
been compared, at one time, to as many tribes of Afghans. Mr. Skene, the
historian of the Highlands, and himself a Highlander, says that the
Highlanders "believed that they had a right to plunder the people of
the low country, whenever it was in their power." We naturally ask,
how did the Highlanders acquire this right of plunder? Were they ever
proscribed? Were any of them hung, merely for being Highlanders? No. What
plea, then, did the Highlanders set up, in justification of this wholesale
robbery?—"They believed, from tradition, that the Lowlands, in old
times, were the possessions of their ancestors." (SIcene.) But
that was no excuse for their plundering each other.
[Sir "Walter Scott makes Fitz-James, in the "Lady of the
Lake," Bay to Roderick Dhu:
"But then, thy chieftain's robber life!—
Winning mean prey by causeless strife,
Wrenching from ruined Lowland swain
His herds and harvests reared in vain—
Methinks a soul like thine should scorn
The spoils from such foul foray borne."
The Gael beheld him, grim the while,
And answered with disdainful smile,—
Where live the mountain chiefs, who hold
That plundering Lowland field and fold
Is aught but retribution true?
Seek other cause 'gainst Roderick Dhu!'"]
The Gipsy's ordinary pilfering was confined to such petty
things as "hens and peats at pleasure," "cutting a bit lamb's throat," and
"a mouthfu' o' grass and a pickle corn, for the cuddy"—"things that a farmer
body ne'er could miss." But your Highlanders did not content themselves with
such "needles and pins;" they must have "horned cattle." If the coast was
clear, they would table their drawn dirks, and commence their spulzie,
by making their victims furnish them with what was necessary to fill
their bellies; upon the strength of which, they would "lift" whatever they
could carry and drive, or take its equivalent in black-mail.
What an effort is made by our McGregors, at the present
day, to scrape up kin with this or the other bandit McGregor; and yet how
apt the McGregor is to turn up his nose—.just as Punch, only, could
make him turn it up—if a Gipsy were to step out, and say, that he was a
descendant, and could speak the language, of Will Baillie, mentioned under
the head of Tweed-dale and Clydesdale Gipsies: a Gipsy, described by my
ancestor, (and he could judge,) to have been "the handsomest, the best
dressed, the best looking, and the best bred, man he ever saw; and the best
swordsman in Scotland, for, with his weapon in his hand, and his back at a
wall, he could set almost everything, saving fire-arms, at defiance; a man
who could act the gentleman, the robber, the sorner, and the tinker,
whenever it answered his purpose." And yet, some of this man's descendants
will doubtless be found among our medical doctors, and even the clergy. I
recollect our author pointing out a clergyman of the Scottish Church, who,
he was pretty sure, was "one of them." What name could have stood lower, at
one time, than McGregor? Both by legal and social proscription, it was
looked upon as vagabond; and doubtless the clan brought it, primarily and
principally, upon themselves; but as for the rapine they practised upon
their neighbours, and the helpless southerners, they were, at first, no
worse, in that respect, than others of their nation. Are the McGregors sure
that there are no Gipsies among them? There are plenty of Gipsies of, at
least, the name of McGregor, known to both the Scottish and English Gipsies.
What more likely than some of the McGregors, when "out," and leading their
vagabond lives, getting mixed up with the better kind of mixed Gipsies? They
were both leading a wild life, and it is not unlikely that some of the
McGregors, of even no small consequence, might have been led captive by such
Gipsy girls as the lady Baillies, of Tweed-dale. Let a Gipsy once be grafted
upon a native family, and she rises with it; leavens the little circle of
which she is the centre, and leaves it, and its descendants, for all time
coming, Gipsies.
I now come to ask, what constitutes a Gipsy, at the
present day? And common sense replies: the simple fact of knowing from whom
he is descended, that is, who he is, in connection with having the Gipsy
words and signs, although these are not absolutely necessary. It requires no
argument to show that there is no tribe or nation but finds something that
leads it to cling to its origin and descent, and not despise the blood that
runs in its own veins, although it may despise the condition or conduct of
some of its members. Where shall we find an exception to this rule? The
Gipsy race is no exception to it. Civilize a Gipsy, and you make him a
civilized Gipsy; educate him, and you make him an educated Gipsy; bring him
up to any profession you like, Christianize him as much as
you may, and he still remains a Gipsy; because he is of the Gipsy race, and
all the influences of nature and revelation do not affect the questions of
blood, tribe, and nationality. Take all the Gipsies that ever came out of
the tent, or their descendants, including those brought into the body
through the male and female line ; and what are they now? Still
Gipsies. They even pass into the other world Gipsies. "But they will forget
that they are Gipsies," say, perhaps, some of my readers. Forget that they
are Gipsies! Will we hear, some of these days, that Scotch people,
themselves, will get up of a morning, toss about their night-caps, and
forget that they are Scotch ? "We may then see the same happen with the
Gipsies. What I have said, of the Gipsy always being a Gipsy, is
self-evident; but it has a wide difference of meaning from that contained in
the quotation given by Mr. Borrow, in which it is said: "For that which is
unclean by nature thou canst entertain no hope; no washing will turn the
Gipsy white."*
[In expatiating on the subject of the Gipsy race always
being the Gipsv race, I have had it remarked to me: "Suppose Gipsies should
not mention to their children the (act of their being Gipsies." In that
case, I replied, the children, especially if, for the most part, of white
blood, would simply not be Gipsies; they would, of course, have some of "the
blood," but they would not be Gipsies if they had no knowledge of the fact.
But to suppose that Gipsies should not learn that they are Gipsies, on
account of, their parents not telling them of it, is to presume that they
had no other relatives. Their being Gipsies is constantly talked of among
themselves; so that, if Gipsy children should not hear their "wonderful
story" from their parents, they would readily enough hear it from their
other relatives. This is assuming, however, that the Gipsy mind can act
otherwise than the Gipsy mind; which it cannot.
It sometimes happens, as the Gipsies separate into
classes, like all other races or communities of men, that a great deal of
jealousy is stirred up in the minds of the poorer members of the tribe, on
account of their being shunned by the wealthier kind. They are then apt to
say that the exclusive members have left the tribe; which, with them,
is an undefined and confused idea, at the best, principally on account of
their limited powers of reflection, and the subject never being alluded to
by the others. This jealousy sometimes leads them to dog these straggling
sheep, so that, as far as lies in their power, they will not allow them to
leave, as they imagine, the Gipsy fold.]
But, taking the world all over, there will
doubtless be Gipsies, in larger or smaller numbers, who will always be found
following the original ways of their race. What were the Hungarians, at one
time, and what are they now? Pritchard says of them: "The Hungarians laid
aside the habits of rude and savage hunters, far below the condition of the
nomadic hordes, for the manners of civilized life. In the course of a
thousand years, they have become a handsome people, of fine stature, regular
European features, and have the complexion prevalent in that tract of Europe
where they dwell." Now the Gipsies have been in Scotland at least three
hundred and fifty years; and what with the mixture of native blood, (which,
at least, helped to remove the prejudice against the man's appearance, and,
consequently, gave him a larger and freer scope of action ;) the hard laws
of necessity, and the being tossed about by society, like pebbles on the
seashore; the influences of civilization, education, and the grace of God
itself; by such means as these, some of the Scottish Gipsies have risen to a
respectable, even eminent, position in life. But some people may say: "These
are not Gipsies; they have little of the blood in them." That is nothing.
Ask themselves what they are, and, if they are at all candid, they will
reply that they are Gipsies. "No doubt," they say, "we have fair, or
red, or black, hair, (as the case may be;) we know nothing about that; but
we know that we are Gipsies; that is all. There is as much difference
between such a high-class Gipsy and a poor Gipsian, as there is between a
Scottish judge and the judge's fourth cousin, who makes his living by
clipping dogs' ears. The principle of progression, the passing through one
phase of history into another, while the race maintains its identity, holds
good with the Gipsies, as well as with any other people.
Take a Gipsy in his original state, and we can find
nothing really vulgar about him. What is popularly understood to be
Gipsy life may be considered low life, by people who do not overmuch
discriminate in such matters; but view it after its kind, and it is not
really low; for a Gipsy is naturally polite and well mannered. He does not
consider himself as belonging to the same race as the native, and would
rather be judged by a different standard. The life which he leads is not
that of the lowest class of the country in which he dwells, but the
primitive, original state of a people of great antiquity, proscribed by law
and society; himself an enemy of, and an enemy to, all around him; with the
population so prejudiced against him, that attempts to change his condition,
consistently with his feelings as a man, are frequently rendered in vain :
so that, on the ground of strict morals, or even administrative justice, the
man can be said to be only half responsible. The subjeet, however, assumes
quite a different aspect, when we consider a Gipsy of education and
refinement, like the worthy clergyman mentioned, between whose condition and
that of his tented ancestor an interval of, perhaps, two or three centuries
has elapsed. We should then put him on the footing of any other race having
a barbarous origin, and entertain no prejudice against him on account of the
race to which he belongs. He is then to be judged as we judge Highland and
Border Scots, for the whole three were at one time robbers; and all the
three having welled up to respectable life together, they ought to be judged
on their merits, individually, as men, and treated accordingly. And the
Gipsy ought to be the most leniently dealt with, on the principle that the
actions of his ancestors were far more excusable, and even less heinous,
than those of the others. And as regards antiquity of descent, the Gipsy's
infinitely surpasses the others, being probably no less than the shepherd
kings, part of whose blood left Egypt, in the train of the Jews. I would
place such a Gipsy on the footing of the Hungarian race; with this
difference, that the Hungarians entered Europe in the ninth century, and
became a people, occupying a territory; while the Gipsies appeared in the
fifteenth century, and are now to be found, civilized and uncivilized, in
almost every corner of the known world.
The admission of the good man alluded to easts a flood of
light upon the history of the Scottish Gipsy race, shrouded as it is from
the eye of the general population ; but the information given by him was apt
to fall flat upon the ear of the ordinary native, unless it was accompanied
by some such exposition of the subject as is given in this work. Still, we
can gather from it, where Gipsies are to be found, what a Scottish
Gipsy is, and what the race is capable of; and what might be expected of it,
if the prejudice of their fellow-creatures was withdrawn from the race, as
distinguished from the various classes into which it may be divided, or, I
should rather say, the personal conduct of each Gipsy individually. View the
subject any way I may, I cannot resist coming to the conclusion that, under
more favourable circumstances, it is difficult to say what the Gipsies might
not attain to. But that would depend greatly upon the country in which they
are to be found. Scotland has been peculiarly favourable for them, in some
respects.
As regards the Scottish Gipsy population, at the present
day, I can only adopt the language of the immortal Dominie Sampson, and say,
that it must be "prodigious." If we consider the number that appear to have
settled in Scotland, the length of time they have been in Scotland, the
great amount of white blood that has, by one means or other, been brought
into, and mixed up with, the body, and its great natural increase; the
feelings that attach them to their descent—feelings that originate, more
properly, within themselves, and feelings that press upon them from
without—the various occupations and positions in life in which they are to
be found; we cannot set any limit to their number. Gipsies are just like
other people; they have their own sets or circles of associates, out of
which, as a thing that is almost invariable, they will hide, if not deny,
themselves to others of their race, for reasons which have already been
given. So almost invariable is this, at the present day, amongst Gipsies
that are not tented Gipsies, that, should an English Gipsy come across a
settlement of them in America —German Gipsies, for example—and cast his
sign, and address them in their own speech, they will pretend not to know
what he means, although he sees the Gipsy in their faces and about their
dwellings. But should he meet with them away from their homes, and where
they are not known, \ they would answer, and be cheek-by-jowl with
him, in a moment. I have found, by personal experience, that the same holds
with the French and other continental Gipsies in America. [I
very abruptly addressed a French Gipsy, in the streets of New York, thus: "Vous
etes uu Romany chid." "Oui, monsieur," was the reply which he, as
abruptly, gave me. But, ever afterwards, he got cross, when I alluded to the
subject. On one occasion, I gave him the sign, which he repeated, while he
asked, with much tartness of manner, "What is that— what does it mean?"
This was a roguish Gipsy, who was afterwards lodged in jail.
On one occasion, I met with a German cutler, in a place
of business, in New York. I felt sure he was a Gipsy, although the world
would not have taken him for one. Catching his eye, I commenced to look
around the room, from those present to himself, as if there was to be
something confidential between ns, and then whispered to him, "Callo
cliabo" (Gipsy, or black fellow ;) and the effect was instantaneous. I
afterwards visited his family, on a Sabbath evening, and took tea with them.
They were from Wurtemberg, and appeared very decent people. The mother, a
tall, swarthy, fine-looking intelligent joung woman, said grace, which was
repeated by the children, whom I found learning their Sabbath-school
lessons. Tho family regularly attend church. A fair-haired German called,
and went to church with the Gipsy himself. What with the appearance of
everything about the house, and the fine, clean, and neatly-dressed family
of children, I felt very much pleased with my visit. French and German
Gipsies are very shy, owing to the severity of the laws against their race.]
It is particularly so with the Scottish Gipsies.
For these reasons, it seems to be beyond question
that the number at which our author estimates them in Scotland, viz., 5,000,
must be vastly below the real number. If I were to say 100,000, I do not
think I would over-estimate them. The opinion of the Gipsies whom our author
questioned was a guess, so far as it referred to the class to which they
belonged, or with which they were acquainted ; so that, if we take all kinds
of Gipsies into account, it would be a very moderate estimate to set the
Scottish Gipsies down at 100,000; and those in all the British Isles at
300,000. The number might be double what I have stated. The intelligent
English Gipsies say that, in England, they are not only "dreadfully mixed,"
but extremely numerous. There is not a race of men on the face of the earth
more prolific than tented Gipsies; in a word, tented Gipsydom, if I may
hazard such an expression, is, comparatively speaking, like a rabbit warren.
The rough and uncouth kind of settled Gipsies are likewise very prolific ;
but the higher classes, as a rule, are by no means so much so. To set down
any specific number of Gipsies to be found in the British Isles, would be a
thing too arbitrary to serve any purpose; I think sufficient data have been
given to enable the intelligent reader to form an opinion for himself.
[Fletcher, of faltoun, speaks of there being constantly a hundred thousand
people in Scotland, leading the life (as Sir Walter Scott describes it,) of
" Gipsies, Jockies, or Cairds." Between the time alluded to and the date of
Jobn Faw^ league with James V., a period of 140
years had elapsed ; and 174 years from the date of arrival of the race in
the country: so that, from the natural increase of the body, and the large
amount of white blood introduced into it, the greater part, if not the
whole, of the people mentioned, were doobtless Gipsies. But these Gipsies,
according to Sir Walter's opinion, "died out by a change of habits." How
strange it is that the very first class Scottish minds should have so little
understood the philosophy of origin, blood, and descent, and especially as
they applied to the Gipsies! For Sir Walter says: "The progress of time, and
increase both of the means of life and the power of the laws, gradually
reduced this dreadful evil within more narrow bounds.....Their numbers are
so greatly diminished, that, instead of one hundred thousand, as calculated
by Fletcher, it would now, perhaps, be impossible to collect above five
hundred throughout all Scotland (!)" It is perfectly evident that Sir Walter
Scott, in common with many others, never realized the idea, in all its
bearings, of what a Gipsy was; or he never could have imagined that those,
only, were of the Gipsy race, who followed the tent.
It is very doubtful if Anthonius Gawino, and his tribe,
departed with their letter of introduction from James IV.
to his uncls, the king of Denmark, in 1606. Having secured the favour
of the king of Scots, by this recommendatory notice, he was more apt, by
delaying his departure, to secure his position in the country. The
circumstances attending the league with his successor, John Faw, show that
the tribe had been long in the country; doubtless from as far back as 1506.
From 1506 till 1579, with the exception of about one year, during the reign
of James V., the tribe, as I have already said,
(page 109,) must have increased prodigiously. The persecutions against the
body extended over the reign of James VI., and
part of that of Charles I.; for, according to Baron Hume, such was the
terror which the executions inspired in the tribe, that, " for the space of
more than 50 years from that time, (1624,) there is no trial of an
Egyptian;" although our author shows that an execution of a band of them
took place in 1636. But "towards the end of that century," continues Baron
Hume, "the nuisance seems to have again become troublesome;" in other words,
that from the reign of Charles I. to the accession of William and Mary, the
time to which Fletcher's remark applies, the attention of all being taken up
with the troubles of the times, the Gipsies had things pretty much their own
way; but when peace was restored, they would be called to strict account.
For all these reasons, it may be said that the 100,000
people spoken of were doubtless Gipsies of various mixtures of blood; so
that, at the present day, there ought to be a very large number of the tribe
in Scotland. I admit that many of the Scottish Gipsies have
been hanged, and many banished to the Plantations; but these would be in a
small ratio to their number, and a still smaller to the natural increase of
the body. Suppose that such and such Gipsies were either hanged or banished;
so young did they all marry, that, when they were hanged or banished, they
might leave behind them families ranging from five to ten children. We may
say, of the Scottish Gipsies generally, in days that arc past, what a writer
in Blackwood's Magazine, already alluded to, said of Billy Marshall: "Their
descendants were prodigiously numerous; I dare say, numberless." Many of the
Scottish Gipsies have migrated to England, as well as elsewhere. In
Liverpool, there are many of them, following various mechanical occupations.]
That many Gipsies were banished to America, in colonial
times, from England, "Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, sometimes for merely
being "by habit and repute Gipsies," is beyond dispute. "Your Welsh and
Irish," said an English Gipsy, in the United States, "were so mean, when
they banished a Gipsy to the Plantations, as to make him find his own
passage; but the English always paid the Gipsy's passage for him." The
Scotch seem also to have made the Gipsy find his own passage, and failing
that, to have hanged him. It greatly interests the English Gipsies arriving
in America, to know about the native American Gipsies. I have been
frequently in the company of an English Gipsy, in America, whose
great-grandfather was so banished; but he did not relish the subject being
spoken of. Gipsies may be said to have been in America almost from the time
of its settlement. "We have already seen how many of them found their way
there, during the Revolution, by being impressed as soldiers, and taken as
volunteers, for the benefit of the bounty and passage; and how they deserted
on landing. Tented Gipsies have been seen about Baltimore for the last
seventy years. In New England, a colony is known which has existed for about
a hundred years, and has always been looked upon with a singular feeling of
distrust and mystery by the inhabitants, who are the descendants of the
early emigrants, and who did not suspect their origin till lately. These
Gipsies have never associated, in the common sense of the word, with the
other settlers, and, judging from their exterior, seem poor and miserable,
whatever their circumstances may be. They follow pretty much the employment
and modes of life of the same class in Europe; the most striking feature
being, that the bulk of them leave the homestead for a length of time,
scatter in different directions, and reunite, periodically, at their
quarters, which are left in charge of some of the feeble members of the
band.
It is not likely that many of the colonial Gipsies would
take to the tent; for, arriving, for the most part, as individuals,
separated from family relations, they were more apt to follow settled,
semi-settled, or general itinerant occupations; and the more so, as the face
of the country, and the thin and scattered settlements, would hardly admit
of it. They were apt to squat on wild or unoccupied lands, in the
neighbourhood of towns and settlements, like their brethren in Europe, when
they took up their quarters on the borders of well-settled districts, with a
wild country to fall back on, in times of danger or prosecution by the
lawful authorities. Besides disposing of themselves, to some little extent,
in this way, many of the Gipsies, banished, or going to the colonies of
their own accord, would betake themselves to the various occupations common
to the ordinary emigrants; the more especially as, when they arrived, they
would find a field in which they were not known to be Gipsies; which would
give them greater scope and confidence, and enable them to go anywhere, or
enter upon any employment, where, not being known to be Gipsies, they would
meet with no prejudice to contend with. Indeed, a new country, in which the
people had, more or less, to be, in a sense, tinkers, that is,
jacks-of-all-trades, and masters of none, was just the sphere of a handy
Gipsy, who could "do a' most of things." They would turn to the tinkering,
peddling, horse-dealing, tavern-keeping, and almost all the ordinary
mechanical trades, and, among others, broom-making. Perhaps the foundation
of the American broom manufacture was laid by the British Gipsies, by whom
it may be partly carried on at the present day; a business they pretty much
monopolize, in a rough way, in Great Britain. We will doubtless find, among
the fraternity, some of those whittling, meddling Sam Slick peddlers, so
often described : I have seen some of those itinerant venders of
knife-sharpeners, and such " Yankee notions," with dark, glistening eyes,
that would " pass for the article." Some of them would live by less
legitimate business. I entertain no doubt, what from the general fitness of
things, and the appearance of some of the men, that we will find some of the
descendants of the old British mixed Gipsies members of the various
establishments of Messrs. Peter Funks and Company of the city of New York,
as well as elsewhere. And I entertain as little doubt that many of those
American women who tell fortunes, and engage in those many curious bits of
business that so often come up at trials, are descendants of the British
plantation stock of Gipsies. But there are doubtless many of these Gipsies
in respectable spheres of life. It would be extremely unreasonable to say
that the descendants of the colonial Gipsies do not still exist as Gipsies,
like their brethren in Great Britain, and other parts of the Old World. The
English Gipsies in America entertain no doubt of it; the more especially as
they have encountered such Gipsies, of at least two descents. I have myself
met with such a Gipsy, following a decidedly respectable calling, whom I
found as much one of the tribe, barring the original habits, as perhaps any
one in Europe,
There are many Hungarian and German Gipsies in America;
some of them long settled in Pennsylvania and Maryland, where they own
farms. Some of them leave their farms in charge of hired hands, during the
summer, and proceed South with their tents. In the State of Pennsylvania,
there is a settlement of them, on the J------river a little way above
H------, where they have saw-mills. About the Alleghany Mountains, there are
many of the tribe, following somewhat the original ways of the race. In the
United States generally, there are many Gipsy peddlers, British as well as
continental. There are a good many Gipsies in New York—English, Irish, and
continental—some of whom keep tin, crockery, and basket stores ; but these
are all mixed Gipsies, and many of them of fair complexion. The tin-ware
which they make is generally of a plain, coarse kind ; so much so, that a
Gipsy tin store is easily known. They frequently exhibit their tin-ware and
baskets on the streets, and carry them about the city. Almost all, if not
all, of those itinerant cutlers and tinkers, to be met with in New York, and
other American cities, are Gipsies, principally German, Hungarian, and
French. There are a good many Gipsy musicians in America. "What!" said I, to
an English Gipsy, "those organ-grinders?" "Nothing so low as that. Gipsies
don't grind their music, sir; they make it." But I found in
his house, when occupied by other Gipsies, a hurdy-gurdy and
tambourine ; so that Gipsies sometimes grind music, as well as
make it. I know of a Hungarian Gipsy who is leader of a Negro musical
band, in the city of New York ; his brother drives one of the Avenue
cars-There are a number of Gipsy musicians in Baltimore, who play at
parties, and on other occasions. Some of the fortune-telling Gipsy women
about New York will make as much as forty dollars a week in that line of
business. They generally live a little way out of the city, into which they
ride, in the morning, to their places of business. I know of one, who
resides in New Jersey, opposite New York, and who has a place in the city,
to which ladies, that is, females of the highest classes, address their
cards, for her to call upon them. When she gets a chance of a young fellow
with his female friend, she "puts the screws on;" for she knows well that he
dare not "back out;" so she frequently manages to squeeze five dollars out
of him.
Many hundred, perhaps several thousand, of English
tented, and partly tented Gipsies, have arrived in America within the last
ten years. They, for the most part, travel, and have travelled every State
in the Union, east of the Rocky Mountains, as well as the British Provinces,
as horse-dealers, peddlers, doctors, exhibitors, fortune-tellers, and
tramps generally. Such English Gipsies, above all men in America, may,
with the greatest propriety, say,
"No pent-up Utica contracts our powers,
But the whole boundless continent is ours."
The fortune-tellers, every time they set out on their
peregrinations, choose a new route ; for they say it is more difficult to go
over the same ground in America, than it is in England. The horse-dealers
say that Jonathan is a good judge of a horse; that sometimes they get the
advantage of him, and sometimes he of them ; but that his demand for a
warranty sometimes bothers them a deal. "What then?" I asked. "Well, we give
him a warranty; and should the beast happen to turn out wrong, let
him catch us if he can!" It is really astonishing how sensibly these English
Gipsies talk of American affairs generally; they are very discriminating in
their remarks, and wonderfully observant of places and localities. They do
not like the Negroes. In their society they drop the name of king, and adopt
that of president. "Cunning fellows," said I, "to eschew the name of king,
and look down upon Negroes. That will do, in America!"
I have found the above kind of Gipsies, in America, to be
generally pretty well off; they all seem to flourish, and have plenty of
money about them. The fortune-telling, horse-dealing, and peddling branches
of them have a fine field for following their respective businesses.
America, indeed, is a "great country" for the Gipsies; for it contains "no
end" of chickens, to say nothing of ducks, geese, and turkeys, many of which
are carried off by varmint, anyhow. There, they will find, for some
time, many opportunities of gathering rich harvests, among what has been
termed the shrewdest, but, in some things, the most gullible, of mortals, as
an instance may illustrate. A Gipsy woman, known as such, drags, into the
meshes of her necromancy, 'cute Jonathan; who, with an infinite reliance on
his own smartness, to "try the skill of the critter," by her directions,
ties up, in gold and paper, something like a thousand dollars, and, after
she has passed her hands over it, and muttered a few cabalistic words,
deposits it in his strong box. She sets a day, on which she calls, handles
the "dimes," while muttering some more expressions, rather accidentally
drops them, then returns them to the box, and sets another day when she will
call, and add much to his wealth. She does not appear, however, on the day
mentioned. Our simpleton gets first anxious, then excited, then suspicious,
then examines his " pile," and finds it transformed into a lot of copper and
old paper I For, in dropping the parcel, Meg does it adroitly about the
folds of her dress, quickly substitutes another, exactly alike, and makes
off with the fruits of her labour. Then come the hue and cry, telegraphing,
and dispatching of warrants everywhere. But why need he trouble himself? So,
after a harder day's work than, perhaps, he ever underwent in his life, he
returns home: but knowing the sympathy he will find there, he puts on his
best face, and, to have the first word of it, (for he is not to be laughed
at,) wipes his forehead, twitches his mouth, winks his eyes, and remarks:
"Waal, I reckon I've been most darnedly sold, anyhow!" Such occurrences are
very common among almost all classes of rural Americans. Sometimes it is to
discover treasure on the individual's lands, or in the neighbourhood ;
sometimes a mine, and sometimes an Indian, a trapper, a pirate, or a
revolutionary deposit. "When the Gipsy escapes with her spoil, she
frequently makes for her home, but where that is, no one knows. On being
molested, while there, she produces friends, in fair standing, who prove
an alibi; and, with the further assistance of a well-feed lawyer, defies
all the requisitions, made by the governors of neighbouring States, for her
delivery. At other times, she will divide with the inferior
authorities, or surrender the whole of the plunder; for, to go to jail she
will not, if she can help it. [If the real characters of those "lady fortune
tellers," who flourish so much in the large cities, and publicly profess to
reveal all matters in "love and law, health and wealth, losses and crosses,"
were to be ascertained, many of them would, in all probability, be found to
belong to a superior class of Gipsies. And this may much more be said of the
more humble ones, who trust to the gossipping of a class—and that a
respectable class of females, for the advertising of their calling. For a
certainty, those are Gipsies who stroll about, telling fortunes for dimes,
clothes, or old bottles. The advertising members form a very small part of
the fraternity. The extent to which such
business is patronized, by Americana, of both sexes, and of almost all
positions in society is such, that it is doubtful if the English reader
would credit it, if it were put on record.]
In Virginia, the more original kind of Gipsies are very
frequently to be met with. It is in the Slave States they are more apt to
flourish in the olden form. The planters need not trouble themselves about
their tampering with the Negroes, for they have no sympathy with them. Were
it otherwise, they would soon be mum, on finding what the results
would be to them. I have given some of them some useful hints on that score.
The general disposition of the people, the want of learning among so
many of them, the distances between dwellings, the small villages, the handy
mechanical services of the Gipsies, the uncultivated tracts of land, the
game of various kinds, and the climate, seem to point out some of the Slave
States as an elysium for the Gipsies; unless the wealthier part of the
inhabitants should uee the poorer class as tools to drive them out of the
country.
[When travelling on the
stage, towards Lake Huron, in Canada, I was surprised at finding a Gipsy
tent on the road-side, with a man sitting in front of it, engaged in the
mysteries of the tinker. I met a camp of Gipsies on a vacant space, beside a
clump of trees, in Hamilton, at the head of Lake Ontario, but I deferred
visiting them till the following morning. When I returned to the spot, I
found that the birds had flown. Feeling disappointed, I began to question a
man who kept a toll-bar, immediately opposite to where their tents had been,
as to their peculiarities generally; when he said: "They seemed droll kind
o' folk—quite like ourselves—no way foreign; yet I could not understand a
word they were saying among themselves." Shortly after this, a company of
them entered a shop, in the same town, to buy tin, when I happened to be in
it. I accosted one of the mothers of the company, in an abrupt but bland
tone. "You're a' Naw-kens (Gipsiea) I see."—"Ou ay, we're Nawkens," was her
immediate reply, accompanied by a smile on her weather-beaten countenance.
"You'll aye speak the language?" I continued. "We'll ne'er forget that," she
again replied. This seemed to be a company of Gipsies from the Scottish
Border; for the woman spoke about the broadest Scotch I ever heard. They
dressed wall, and bore n good reputation in the neighbourhood.]
There are a good many very respectable Scottish Gipsies
in the United States; but I do not wish to be too minute in describing them.
In Canada, I know of a doctor, a lawyer, and an editor, Scottish Gipsies.
The fact of the matter is, that, owing to the mixture of the blood, the
improvement, and perpetuation, and secrecy, of the race, there may be many,
very many, Gipsies, in almost every place in the world, and other people not
know of it: and it is not likely that, at the present time, they will say
that they are Gipsies. Indeed, the intelligent English travelling Gipsies
say that there are an immense number of Gipsies, of all countries, colours,
and occupations, in America.
There is even some resemblance between the formation of
Gipsydom and that of the United States. The children of emigrants, it is
well known, frequently prove the most ultra Americans. Instead of the
original colonists, at the Declaration of Independence, imagine the
commencement of Gipsydom as proceeding from the original stock of Gipsies.
The addition to their number, from without, differs from that which takes
place among Americans, in this way : that all such additions to Gipsydom are
made in such a manner, that the new blood gets innoculated, as it were, with
the old, or part of the old ; so that it may be said of the whole body,
One drop of blood makes all Gipsydom akin.
The simple fact of a person having Gipsy blood in his
veins, in addition to the rearing of a Gipsy parent, acts upon him like a
shock of electricity ; it makes him spring to his feet, and—"snap his teeth
at other dogs!" A very important circumstance contributing to this state of
things is the antipathy which mankind have for the very name of Gipsy,
which, as I have already said, they all take to themselves ; insomuch that
the better class will not face it. They imagine that, socially speaking,
they are among the damned, and they naturally cast their lot with the
damned. Still, the antagonistic spirit which would naturally arise towards
society, in the minds of such Gipsies, remains, in a measure, latent; for
they feel confident in their incognito, while moving among their
fellow-creatures; which circumstance robs it of its sting.