Enkidoodle

The origin and development of the moral ideas

Chapter 18

Part 18

The Santals are gentle and very obliging, and sociable to a fault among their own people.[123] The Hos "are charitable to those deserving aid."[124] The Todas believe that, after death, the souls of good people will have enjoyment in heaven, whilst the souls of bad people will suffer punishment; "a good man is, in the Toda estimation, one who is given to deeds of charity, and a bad man one who is uncharitable (this in order of precedence), quarrelsome, thieving, &c."[125] Mr. Batchelor states that "a more kind, gentle, and sympathetic people than the Ainos of Japan would be very difficult to find"; anything given to them they always divide with their friends.[126] The Samoyedes are ready to share their last morsel with their companions; and it is said that nobody can surpass the poor Ostyak in benevolence and other virtues of the heart.[127] "The finest trait in the character of a Bedouin (next to good faith)," Burckhardt observes, "is his kindness, benevolence, and charity. . . . Among themselves, the Bedouins constitute a nation of brothers; often quarrelling, it must be owned, with each other, but ever ready, when at peace, to give mutual assistance."[128] Generosity is a virtue which always commands particular respect in the desert.[129] The Arabs of the Soudan have a saying that "you must always put other people's things on your head, and your own under your arm. Then, if there be danger of the things falling off your head, you must raise your arm, and let fall your own things to save those of others."[130]

[Footnote 123: Man, _Sonthalia_, p. 19 _sq._ Hunter, _Annals of Rural Bengal_, i. 215.]

[Footnote 124: Tickell, 'Memoir on the Hodésum,' in _Jour. Asiatic Soc. Bengal_, ix. (pt. ii.) 807.]

[Footnote 125: Thurston, 'Todas of the Nilgiris,' in the Madras Government Museum's _Bulletin_, i. 166 _sq._]

[Footnote 126: Batchelor, _Ainu of Japan_, p. 19. Holland, 'Ainos,' in _Jour. Anthr. Inst._ iii. 235.]

[Footnote 127: Castrén, _op. cit._ i. 238; ii. 55.]

[Footnote 128: Burckhardt, _Notes on the Bedouins and Wahábys_, p. 208.]

[Footnote 129: Wallin, _Reseanteckningar från Orienten_, iii. 244. Blunt, _Bedouin Tribes of the Euphrates_, ii. 224.]

[Footnote 130: Richardson, _Mission to Central Africa_, i. 117.]

{545} The Barea are a benevolent people, kind even to strangers.[131] The Manganja, in the neighbourhood of Lake Nyassa, "are generous in the distribution of food," and even when starving they share the last morsel with their friends.[132] Sir H. Johnston says that he has never met with "a more kindly, sensible, considerate set of beings" than the Wa-taveita.[133] The Eastern Central Africans, the Rev. D. Macdonald observes, "are not mere animals composed of greed and selfishness. They often shew great bravery and devotedness. I can point to one man who saved my life on three separate occasions at the risk of his own."[134] Among the Bechuanas a regard for the poor, for widows, and for orphans, is everywhere considered to be a sacred duty.[135] Among all the virtues the Basutos appreciate none more than kindness. They have a saying that "one link only sounds because of another"--which implies that we cannot do without the help of our fellow-creatures,--and another saying that "one does not skin one's game without showing it to one's friends"--that is, when we have been successful in our undertakings, it becomes us to be generous. If any food is brought to them while they are in each other's society, however small may be the quantity, every one must have a taste.[136] The Kafirs are a kindly race; Lichtenstein says that "whenever anyone kills an ox he must invite all his neighbours to partake of it, and they remain his guests till the whole is eaten."[137] Of the Hottentots Kolben states:--"They are certainly the most friendly, the most liberal, and the most benevolent people to one another that ever appear'd upon earth . . . . They are charmed with opportunities of obliging each other, and one of their greatest pleasures lies in interchanging gifts and good offices."[138] "A Hottentot," says Barrow, "would share his last morsel with his companions."[139] Drury wrote of the people of Madagascar:--"They certainly treat one another with more humanity than we do. Here is no one miserable, if it is in the power of his neighbours to help him. Here is love, tenderness, and generosity which might {546} shame us; and . . . . this is . . . . all over the island."[140] Ellis likewise observes that, in Madagascar, assisting in distress, and lending and borrowing property and money, are carried on much more commonly and freely than amongst neighbours or relatives in England, and that a kindness of heart in these things is always esteemed excellent.[141]

[Footnote 131: Munzinger, _Ostafrikanische Studien_, p. 534.]

[Footnote 132: Rowley, _Africa Unveiled_, p. 47.]

[Footnote 133: Johnston, _Kilima-njaro Expedition_, p. 436.]

[Footnote 134: Macdonald, _Africana_, i. 270, 266.]

[Footnote 135: Arbousset and Daumas, _Exploratory Tour to the North-East of the Colony of the Cape of Good Hope_, p. 402.]

[Footnote 136: Casalis, _Basutos_, pp. 206, 207, 301, 306, 309 _sqq._]

[Footnote 137: Leslie, _Among the Zulus and Amatongas_, p. 203. Lichtenstein, _Travels in Southern Africa_, i. 272.]

[Footnote 138: Kolben, _Present State of the Cape of Good Hope_, i. 334 _sq._ _Cf._ _ibid._ i. 167.]

[Footnote 139: Barrow, _Travels into the Interior of Southern Africa_, i. 151.]

[Footnote 140: Drury, _Adventures during Fifteen Years' Captivity on the Island of Madagascar_, p. 172 _sq._]

[Footnote 141: Ellis, _History of Madagascar_, i. 139. For other African instances, see Mungo Park, _Travels in the Interior of Africa_, p. 17 (Mandingoes); Burton, _Abeokuta_, i. 303 (Yoruba); _Idem_, _Two Trips to Gorilla Land_, i. 106 (Mpongwe); Monrad, _Guinea-Kysten og dens Indbyggere_, p. 7; Johnston, _River Congo_, p. 423 (races of the Upper Congo); Wilson and Felkin, _op. cit._ i. 225 (Waganda).]

Among many savages the old people, in particular, have a claim to support and assistance, not only from their own children or relatives, but from the younger members of the community generally.

Among the Australian natives the old men get the best and largest share of everything, and are allowed to monopolise the youngest and best-looking women, whilst a young man must consider himself fortunate if he can get an old woman for wife.[142] Among the Tonga Islanders "every aged man and woman enjoys the attentions and services of the younger branches of society."[143] In the Kingsmill Islands "generosity, hospitality, and attention to the aged and infirm are virtues highly esteemed and generally practised among all the natives."[144] Among the Kafirs, when persons advanced in years become sick and helpless, "everyone is eager to afford them assistance."[145] In the opinion of the Aleuts, "feeble old men must be respected and attended when they need aid, and the young and strong should give them a share of their booty and help them through all their troubles, endeavouring to obtain in exchange their good advice only."[146]

[Footnote 142: Eyre, _op. cit._ ii. 385 _sq._ Mathew, in _Jour. & Proceed. Roy. Soc. N.S. Wales_, xxiii. 407. Lumholtz, _Among Cannibals_, p. 163. _Cf._ Grey, _Journals of Two Expeditions of Discovery in North-West and Western Australia_, ii. 248; Brough Smyth, _op. cit._ i. 138; Spencer and Gillen, _Native Tribes of Central Australia_, p. 51.]

[Footnote 143: Mariner, _op. cit._ ii. 155.]

[Footnote 144: Hale, _U.S. Exploring Expedition. Vol. VI. Ethnography and Philology_, p. 95.]

[Footnote 145: Lichtenstein, _op. cit._ i. 265.]

[Footnote 146: Veniaminof, quoted by Petroff, _loc. cit._ p. 155.]

The sick, also, are often very carefully attended to.

Among the coast tribes of British Columbia Mr. Duncan "always found one or two nurses to an invalid, if the case was {547} at all bad; the sympathy of the nurses, too, seemed very great."[147] Beechey says of the wild Indians of Upper California:--"The very great care taken of all those who are affected with any disease ought not to be allowed to escape a remark. When any of their relations are indisposed, the greatest attention is paid to their wants."[148] Keating noticed the kind and humane treatment which the Potawatomis extended even to the idiots.[149] The Koriaks "carefully attend those who are sick."[150] The same is said of the Ainos of Japan,[151] and the Tagbanuas of the Philippine Islands.[152] In Sarawak no relative is abandoned because an injury or illness may have incapacitated him for work.[153] When a Dyak is ill at home, the women nurse the patient in turn.[154] In Samoa "the treatment of the sick was invariably humane."[155] In Tana,[156] Humphrey's Island,[157] Erromanga,[158] and Tasmania,[159] they were likewise kindly attended to; and the same is the case at least among many of the Australian tribes.[160] Concerning the aborigines of Herbert River, in Northern Queensland, Lumholtz writes:--"The natives are very kind and sympathetic towards those who are ill, and they carry them from camp to camp. This is the only noble trait I discovered in the Australian natives."[161] In various parts of Australia the blind, and especially the aged blind, are carefully tended; travellers on the northern coast of the continent have noticed that these are generally the fattest of the company, being supplied with the best of everything.[162] "No trait in the character of the Malagasy," says Ellis, "is more creditable to their humanity, and more gratifying to our benevolent feelings, than the kind, patient, and affectionate manner in which they attend upon the sick."[163] A similar praise is bestowed upon the {548} Mandingoes[164] and Kafirs.[165] Among the Zulus, says Mr. J. Tyler, "work, however important, is at once suspended that they may help their afflicted friends."[166]

[Footnote 147: Duncan, quoted by Mayne, _Four Years in British Columbia_, p. 292 _sq._]

[Footnote 148: Beechey, _op. cit._ ii. 402.]

[Footnote 149: Keating, _Expedition to the Source of St. Peter's River_, i. 100.]

[Footnote 150: Krasheninnikoff, _op. cit._ p. 233.]

[Footnote 151: von Siebold, _Die Aino auf der Insel Yesso_, p. 11.]

[Footnote 152: Worcester, _Philippine Islands_, p. 494.]

[Footnote 153: St. John, _Life in the Forests of the Far East_, ii. 323.]

[Footnote 154: Bock, _Head-Hunters of Borneo_, p. 211.]

[Footnote 155: Turner, _Samoa_, p. 141. _Cf._ Pritchard, _Polynesian Reminiscences_, p. 146.]

[Footnote 156: Turner, _Samoa_, p. 323.]

[Footnote 157: _Ibid._ p. 276.]

[Footnote 158: Robertson, _Erromanga_, p. 399.]

[Footnote 159: Ling Roth, _Aborigines of Tasmania_, p. 47. Bonwick, _Daily Life and Origin of the Tasmanians_, p. 10.]

[Footnote 160: Brough Smyth, _op. cit._ ii. 284 (West Australian natives). Schuermann, 'Aboriginal Tribes of Port Lincoln,' in Woods, _Native Tribes of South Australia_, p. 225.]

[Footnote 161: Lumholtz, _Among Cannibals_, p. 183.]

[Footnote 162: Ridley, _Kámilarói_, p. 169. Eyre, _op. cit._ ii. 382 Barrington, _History of New South Wales_, p. 23. Stirling, _op. cit._ p. 36.]

[Footnote 163: Ellis, _History of Madagascar_, i. 231 _sq._]

[Footnote 164: Caillié, _op. cit._ i. 354.]

[Footnote 165: Lichtenstein, _op. cit._ i. 266.]

[Footnote 166: Tyler, _Forty Years among the Zulus_, p. 195.]

Whilst the information which I have been able to gather on the social customs of uncivilised races seems to indicate that, in the majority of cases, mutual kindness and goodwill prevail within their communities, there are not wanting statements of a different character. But these statements are, after all, exceptional, and some of them are either ambiguous or obviously inexact. Only too often travellers represent to us the savage, not as he is in his daily life amidst his own people, but as he behaves towards his enemy, or towards a stranger who enters his country uninvited. As an experienced observer remarks, "the savage, passionate and furious with the feeling of revenge, slaughtering and devouring his enemy and drinking his blood, is no longer the same being as when cultivating his fields in peace; and it would be as unjust to estimate his general character by his actions in these moments of unrestrained passion, as to judge of Europeans by the excesses of an excited soldiery or an infuriated mob."[167] Moreover, many accounts of savages date from a period when they have already been affected by contact with a "higher culture," as we call it, a culture which almost universally has proved to exercise a deteriorating influence on the character of the lower races. Among the North American Indians, for instance, "there was more good-will, hospitality, and charity, practised towards one another" before white people came and resided among them;[168] whereas contact with civilisation has made them "false, suspicious, avaricious and hard-hearted."[169] As has been truly said, "search modern history, and in the North {549} and South and East and West the story is ever the same--we come, we civilise, and we corrupt or exterminate."[170]

[Footnote 167: Dieffenbach, _Travels in New Zealand_, ii. 130 _sq._]

[Footnote 168: Warren, in Schoolcraft, _Indian Tribes of the United States_, ii. 139.]

[Footnote 169: Domenech, _Seven Years' Residence in the Great Deserts of North America_, ii. 69.]

[Footnote 170: Boyle, _op. cit._ p. 108.]

Among the semi-civilised and civilised nations charity has universally been regarded as a duty, and has often been strenuously enjoined by their religions. When Spain and Peru first came into contact, the Americans surpassed the Spaniards in brotherly love and systematic care for the needy. They had a poor-law according to which the blind, lame, aged, and infirm, who could not till their own lands so as to clothe and feed themselves, should receive sustenance from the public stores.[171] The ancient Mexicans, according to Clavigero, seemed to give without reluctance what had cost them the utmost labour to acquire.[172] "The great virtue of the Coreans is their innate respect for and daily practice of the laws of human brotherhood. Mutual assistance and generous hospitality among themselves are distinctive national traits."[173] According to Chinese law, "all poor destitute widowers and widows, the fatherless and childless, the helpless and the infirm, shall receive sufficient maintenance and protection from the magistrates of their native city or district, whenever they have neither relations nor connections upon whom they can depend for support."[174] "Benevolence," said Confucius, "is more to man than either water or fire."[175] To assist the needy, to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, to succour the sick, to save men in danger--these and similar acts of kindness are, according to Chinese beliefs, merits which will be rewarded by the unseen powers that watch human conduct, whereas the uncharitable and parsimonious are threatened with divine punishments.[176] In a book of Buddhistic-Confucian flavour, {550} as familiar to the youth of Japan as the Sermon on the Mount is to us, it is said, "Above all things, men must practise charity; it is by almsgiving that wisdom is fed."[177] According to the Dhammapada, "the uncharitable do not go to the world of the gods; fools only do not praise liberality; a wise man rejoices in liberality, and through it becomes blessed in the other world."[178] Indeed, in the didactic poetry of Buddhism the virtue of beneficence occupies the most prominent place; without any regard to what is the measure of the real benefit thereby extended to the recipient of the gift, the legends set before us as a duty the most unbounded generosity, pushed even to the extreme of self-destruction.[179] And in its conception of charity and liberality, as in all other points of worldly morality, Buddhism does not differ from the standard recognised in India since ancient times.[180] Already in the Vedic hymns praise is bestowed on those who from their abundance willingly dispense to the needy, on those who do not turn away from the hungry, on those who are kind to the poor.[181] In the Hitopadesa it is said that the good man shows pity even to the worthless, as the moon does not withdraw its light even from a member of the lowest caste.[182] The sacred law-books of India are full of prescriptions enjoining almsgiving as a duty on all twice-born men.[183] "A householder must give as much food as he is able to spare to those who do not cook for themselves, and to all beings one must distribute food without detriment to one's own interest."[184] The student "should always without sloth give alms out of whatever he has for food."[185] The Brâhmana who has completed his studentship should without tiring "perform works of {551} charity with faith."[186] Almsgiving confers merit on the giver, it frees him from guilt, it destroys sin;[187] "for whatever purpose a man bestows any gift, for that purpose he receives in his next birth with due honour its reward."[188] On the other hand, he who cooks for himself alone eats nothing but sin.[189] Speaking of the modern Hindus, Mr. Wilkins observes:--"The charity of the Hindus is great. . . . There is no poor-law in India, no guardians of the poor, no workhouses, excepting for the Europeans in the Presidency towns. The poor of a family, the halt, the lame, the blind, the weak, the insane, are provided for by their family, if it is at all able to do it; in cases where there are few or no relatives, then the burden is taken up by others. It is a 'work of merit.'"[190]

[Footnote 171: Garcilasso de fa Vega, _First Part of the Royal Commentaries of the Yncas_, ii. 34.]

[Footnote 172: Clavigero, _History of Mexico_, i. 81.]

[Footnote 173: Griffis, _Corea_, p. 288.]

[Footnote 174: _Ta Tsing Leu Lee_, sec. lxxxix. p. 93. On the charitable institutions of the Chinese, see Staunton, _ibid._ p. 93 n. *; Smith, _Chinese Characteristics_, p. 186 _sq._]

[Footnote 175: Douglas, _Confucianism and Taouism_, p. 109.]

[Footnote 176: 'Merits and Errors Scrutinized,' in _Indo-Chinese Gleaner_, iii. 159, 161 _sqq._ _Thâi Shang_, 3. 'Divine Panorama,' in Giles, _Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio_, ii. 370, 371, 374, 379. Douglas, _Confucianism and Taouism_, pp. 259, 272 _sq._ Davis, _China_, ii. 48. Edkins, _Religion in China_, p. 89 _sq._]

[Footnote 177: Chamberlain, _Things Japanese_, p. 309.]

[Footnote 178: _Dhammapada_, 177.]

[Footnote 179: Oldenberg, _Buddha_, p. 301.]

[Footnote 180: _Cf._ Kern, _Manual of Indian Buddhism_, p. 72.]

[Footnote 181: _Rig-Veda_, x. 117. Kaegi, _Rigveda_, p. 18.]

[Footnote 182: _Hitopadesa_, Mitralâbhâ, 63.]

[Footnote 183: _Gautama_, v. 21; x. 1 _sq._ _Institutes of Vishnu_, lix. 28. _Baudhâyana_, ii. 7. 13. 5. _Laws of Manu_, ix. 333; x. 75, 79; xi. 1 _sqq._]

[Footnote 184: _Laws of Manu_, iv. 32.]

[Footnote 185: _Anugîtâ_, 31.]

[Footnote 186: _Laws of Manu_, iv. 226. _Cf._ _ibid._ iv. 227.]

[Footnote 187: _Institutes of Vishnu_, lix. 15, 30; ch. xc. _sqq._ _Gautama_, xix. 11, 16. _Vasishtha_, xx. 47; xxii. 8. _Laws of Manu_, iii. 95; iv. 229 _sqq._; xi. 228.]

[Footnote 188: _Laws of Manu_, iv. 234.]

[Footnote 189: _Institutes of Vishnu_, lxvii. 43. _Laws of Manu_, iii. 118. _Cf._ _Rig-Veda_, x. 117. 6.]

[Footnote 190: Wilkins, _Modern Hinduism_, p. 416 _sq._]

Of the ancient Persians Thucydides said that they preferred giving to receiving.[191] To be charitable towards the poor of their own faith was among them a religious duty of the first order.[192] Zoroaster thus addressed Vîshtâspa:--"Let no thought of Angra Mainyu ever infect thee, so that thou shouldst indulge in evil lusts, make derision and idolatry, and shut to the poor the door of thy house."[193] The holy Sraosha is the protector of the poor.[194] In the Shâyast it is said that the clothing of the soul in the next world is formed out of almsgiving.[195]

[Footnote 191: Thucydides, ii. 97. 4.]

[Footnote 192: See Geiger, _Civilization of the Eastern Ir[=a]nians_, i. 164 _sqq._; Mills, in _Sacred Books of the East_, xxxi. p. xxii.]

[Footnote 193: _Yasts_, xxiv. 37.]

[Footnote 194: _Ibid._ xi. 3.]

[Footnote 195: _Shâyast Lâ-Shâyast_, xii. 4. _Cf._ _Bundahis_, xxx. 28.]

It seems that among the ancient Egyptians charity was considered no less meritorious.[196] "The god," M. Maspero observes, "does not confine his favour to the prosperous and the powerful of this world; he bestows it also upon {552} the poor. His will is that they be fed and clothed, and exempted from tasks beyond their strength; that they be not oppressed, and that unnecessary tears be spared them."[197] In the memorial inscriptions, where the dead plead their good deeds, charity is often referred to. "I harmed not a child," says one Egyptian, "I injured not a widow; there was neither beggar nor needy in my time; none were hungered, widows were cared for as though their husbands were still alive."[198] In the inscription in honour of a lady who had been charitable to persons of her own sex, whether girls, wives, or widows, it is said, "The god rewarded me for this, rejoicing me with the happiness which he has granted me for walking after his way."[199]

[Footnote 196: Brugsch, _History of Egypt under the Pharaohs_, i. 29 _sq._ Tiele, _History of the Egyptian Religion_, p. 226 _sq._ Renouf, _Hibbert Lectures on the Religion of Egypt_, p. 72 _sqq._ Amélineau, _L'évolution des idées morales dans l'Égypt Ancienne_, pp. 145, 354.]

[Footnote 197: Maspero, _Dawn of Civilization_, p. 191. _Cf._ Schiapparelli, _Del sentimento religioso degli antichi egiziani_, p. 18; Amélineau, _op. cit._ p. 268.]

[Footnote 198: Wiedemann, _Religion of the Ancient Egyptians_, p. 253.]

[Footnote 199: Renouf, _op. cit._ p. 75.]

Charity was urgently insisted upon by the religious law of the Hebrews.[200] "Thou shalt open thine hand wide unto thy brother, to thy poor, and to thy needy, in thy land"; "for this thing the Lord thy God shall bless thee in all thy works, and in all that thou puttest thine hand unto."[201] Even "if thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give him water to drink: . . . the Lord shall reward thee."[202] Especially in the Old Testament Apocrypha and in Rabbinical literature almsgiving assumed an excessive prominence--so much so that the word which in the older writings means "righteousness" in general, came to be used for almsgiving in particular.[203] "Shut up alms in thy storehouses: and it shall deliver thee from all affliction."[204] "As water will quench a flaming fire, so alms maketh an atonement for sins."[205] "For alms doth deliver from death, and shall purge away all sin. Those that exercise alms and {553} righteousness shall be filled with life."[206] The charitable man is rewarded with the birth of male issue.[207] Almsgiving is equal in value to all other commandments.[208] He who averts his eyes from charity commits a sin equal to idolatry.[209] To such an extreme was almsgiving carried on by the Jews, that some Rabbis at length decreed that no man should give above a fifth part of his goods in charity.[210]

[Footnote 200: _Deuteronomy_, xiv. 29; xv. 7 _sqq._; xvi. 11, 14. _Leviticus_, xix. 9 _sq._; xxv. 35.]

[Footnote 201: _Deuteronomy_, xv. 11, 10.]

[Footnote 202: _Proverbs_, xxv. 21 _sq._]

[Footnote 203: Addis, 'Alms,' in _Encyclopædia Biblica_, i. 118. _Cf._ Montefiore, _Hibbert Lectures on the Religion of the Ancient Hebrews_, p. 484 _sq._]

[Footnote 204: _Ecclesiasticus_, xxix. 12.]

[Footnote 205: _Ibid._ iii. 30.]

[Footnote 206: _Tobit_, xii. 9. _Cf._ _ibid._ i. 3, 16; ii. 14; iv. 7 _sqq._; xii. 8.]

[Footnote 207: _Bava Bathra_, fol. 10 B, quoted by Hershon, _Treasures of the Talmud_, p. 24.]

[Footnote 208: Rab Assi, quoted by Kohler, 'Alms,' in _Jewish Encyclopedia_, i. 435.]

[Footnote 209: _Kethuboth_, fol. 68 A, quoted by Katz, _Der wahre Talmudjude_, p. 36.]

[Footnote 210: Katz, _op. cit._ p. 42.]

Almsgiving, prayer, and fasting were the three cardinal disciplines which the synagogue transmitted to both the Christian Church and the Muhammedan mosque.[211] According to Islam, the duty next in importance to prayer is that of giving alms.[212] Muhammed repeatedly announces that the path which leads to God is the helping of the orphans and the relieving of the poor.[213] "Ye cannot attain to righteousness until ye expend in alms of what ye love."[214] "Those who expend their wealth by night and day, secretly and openly, they shall have their hire with their lord."[215] It is said that "prayer carries us half-way to God, fasting brings us to the door of His palace, and alms procure us admission."[216] Certain alms, called Zakât, are prescribed by law; it is an indispensable duty for every Muhammedan of full age to bestow in charity about one-fortieth of all such property as has been a year in his possession, provided that he has sufficient for his subsistence and has an income equivalent to about £5 per annum.[217] Other charitable gifts are voluntary, and confer merit upon the giver.

[Footnote 211: _Cf._ _Tobit_, xii. 8; Kohler, in _Jewish Encyclopedia_, i. 435.]

[Footnote 212: See Sale's 'Preliminary Discourse,' in Wherry, _Commentary on the Qurán_, i. 172; Lane, _Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians_, p. 105.]

[Footnote 213: _Koran_, ii. 267, 269, 275; viii. 42; ix. 60; xc. 12, 14 _sq._; xciii. 6 _sqq._; &c.]

[Footnote 214: _Ibid._ iii. 86.]

[Footnote 215: _Ibid._ ii. 275]

[Footnote 216: Sell, _Faith of Islám_, p. 284.]

[Footnote 217: _Ibid._ p. 283. Palmer, 'Introduction' to his translation of _The Qur'án_, i. p. lxxiii. Ameer Ali, _Life and Teaching of Mohammed_, p. 268.]

By Christianity charity of the religious type which we {554} find in the East was introduced into Europe. We have certainly no reason to blame the ancient Greeks and Romans for neglecting their poor. Among them slavery in a great measure replaced pauperism; and what slavery did for the very poor, the Roman system of clientage did for those of a somewhat higher rank.[218] Moreover, the relief of the indigent was an important function of the State.[219] The Areopagus provided public works for the poor.[220] At Rome gratuitous distribution of corn was the rule for many centuries;[221] agrarian laws furnished free homesteads to the landless, on conquered or public territory;[222] since the days of Nerva a systematic support of poor children was enjoined in all the cities of Italy.[223] A few examples of private charity, also, have descended to us already from early times, such as Epaminondas collecting dowers for poor girls,[224] and Cimon feeding and clothing the poor;[225] and from the days of the Pagan Empire there are recorded several cases of individual beneficence. Charitable bequests are alluded to in the burial inscriptions; when some great catastrophe happened, relief was willingly given to the sufferers; private infirmaries were established for slaves.[226] The duty of charity was forcibly enjoined by some of the moralists. The wise man, says Seneca, "will dry the tears of others, but will not mingle his own with them; he will stretch out his hand to the shipwrecked mariner, will offer hospitality to the exile, and alms to the needy."[227] But his alms are not thrown away by chance; his purse will open easily, but never leak. He will choose out the worthiest with the utmost care, and never give without sufficient reason; for unwise gifts must be reckoned among foolish extravagances.[228] So also Cicero, {555} whilst styling beneficence and liberality "virtues that are the most agreeable to the nature of man," is anxious to warn his readers against imprudence in practising them, "lest our kindness should hurt both those whom it is meant to assist, and others."[229]

[Footnote 218: See Lecky, _History of European Morals_, ii. 73.]

[Footnote 219: Boissier, _Religion Romaine_, ii. 206.]

[Footnote 220: Farrer, _Paganism and Christianity_, p. 183.]

[Footnote 221: Naudet, 'Des secours publics chez les Romains,' in _Mémoires de l'Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres_, xiii. 43 _sq._]

[Footnote 222: _Ibid._ p. 71 _sq._]

[Footnote 223: Aurelius Victor, _Epitome_, xii. 8.]

[Footnote 224: Cornelius Nepos, _Epaminondas_, 3.]

[Footnote 225: Plutarch, _Cimon_, 10.]

[Footnote 226: Lecky, _History of European Morals_, ii. 77 _sq._ Boissier, _op. cit._ ii. 213 _sq._ Farrer, _Paganism and Christianity_, p. 182.]

[Footnote 227: Seneca, _De clementia_, ii. 6.]

[Footnote 228: _Idem_, _De vita beata_, 23 _sq._]

[Footnote 229: Cicero, _De officiis_, i. 14 _sq._]

In a very different light was charity viewed by the Christians. Unlimited open-handedness became a cardinal virtue. An ideal Christian was he who did what Jesus commanded the young man to do: who went and sold what he had and gave it to the poor.[230] Promiscuous almsgiving was enjoined as a duty:--"Give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee turn not thou away."[231] The discharge of this duty was even more profitable to the giver than to the receiver. There is perhaps no precept in the Gospel to which a promise of recompense is so frequently annexed as to that concerning charity. Eternal life is promised to those who feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, take in the stranger, clothe the naked, visit the sick.[232] Charity was regarded as an atonement. "God," says St. Augustine, "is to be propitiated through alms for sins past";[233] and countless times is the thought expressed, that almsgiving is a safe investment of money at good interest with God in heaven.[234] Cyprian, who is the father of the Romish doctrine of good works, establishes an arithmetical relation between the number of alms-offerings and the blotting out of sins.[235] "The food of the needy," says Leo the Great, "is the purchase-money of the kingdom of heaven."[236] "As long as the market lasts," says St. Chrysostom, "let us buy alms, or rather let us purchase salvation through alms."[237] The rich man is only a debtor; all that he possesses beyond {556} what is necessary, belongs to the poor, and ought to be given away.[238] The poor, no longer looked down upon, became instruments of salvation. To them was given the first place in the Church and in the Christian community. St. Chrysostom says of them, "As fountains flow near the place of prayer that the hands that are about to be raised to heaven may be washed, so were the poor placed by our fathers near to the door of the Church, that our hands might be consecrated by benevolence before they are raised to God."[239] Gregory the Great announces, and the Middle Ages re-echo, "The poor are not to be lightly esteemed and despised, but to be honoured as patrons."[240] Thus it happened that even in the darkest periods, when all other Christian virtues were nearly extinct, charity survived unimpaired.[241] Later on Protestantism, by denying the atoning effect of good deeds, deprived charity of a great deal of its religious attraction. And in modern times the enlightened opinion on the subject, recognising the demoralising influence of indiscriminate almsgiving, rather agrees with the principles laid down by Cicero and Seneca, than with the literal interpretation of the injunctions of Christ.

[Footnote 230: _Cf._ _Acts_, ii. 45.]

[Footnote 231: _St. Matthew_, v. 42. _Cf._ _St. Luke_, vi. 30.]

[Footnote 232: _St. Matthew_, xxv. 34 _sqq._]

[Footnote 233: St. Augustine, _Enchiridion_, 70 (Migne, _Patrologiæ cursus_, xl. 265).]

[Footnote 234: See Uhlhorn, _Die christliche Liebesthätigkeit_, i. 270.]

[Footnote 235: Cyprian, _De opere et eleemosynis_, 24 (Migne, _op. cit._ iv. 620). _Cf._ Harnack, _History of Dogma_, ii. 134, n. 2.]

[Footnote 236: Leo Magnus, _Sermo X., de Collectis_, 5 (Migne, _op. cit._ liv. 165 _sq._).]

[Footnote 237: St. Chrysostom, _Homilia VII., de P[oe]nitentia_ (Migne, _op. cit._ Ser. Graeca, xlix. _sq._ 333).]

[Footnote 238: Uhlhorn, _op. cit._ p. 294 _sq._]

[Footnote 239: St. Chrysostom, _De verbis Apostoli, Habentes eumdem spiritum_, iii. 11 (Migne, _op. cit._ Ser. Graeca, li. _sq._ 300).]

[Footnote 240: Quoted by Uhlhorn, _op. cit._ i. 315.]

[Footnote 241: _Cf._ Milman, _History of Latin Christianity_, ix. 33 _sq._]

In the course of progressing civilisation the obligation of assisting the needy has been extended to wider and wider circles of men. The charity and generosity which savages require as a duty or praise as a virtue have, broadly speaking, reference only to members of the same community or tribe. Kindness towards foreigners is looked upon in a very different light. "The virtues of the Negroes," Monrad observes, "are entirely restricted to their own tribe. The doing good to a stranger they would generally find ridiculous."[242] To the Greenlander a foreigner, especially if he be of another race, is "an indifferent object, whose welfare he has no interest in furthering."[243] {557} The Bedouin, says Doughty, "has two faces, this of gentle kindness at home, the other of wild misanthropy and his teeth set against the world besides."[244] At higher stages of civilisation the duty of charity embraces a wider group of people, in proportion to the largeness of the social unit or to the scope of the religion by which it is enjoined. But it is still more or less restrained by national or religious boundaries. M. Amélineau observes that the charity referred to on ancient Egyptian papyri is "la charité limitée à ceux de la même nation."[245] According to Zoroastrianism, charity should be restricted to the followers of the true religion; to succour an unbeliever would be like a strengthening of the dominion of Evil.[246] The Zakât, or legal alms of the Muhammedans, must not be given to a non-Muslim, because it is regarded as a fundamental part of worship;[247] similarly the [S.]adaqah, or offering on the feast-day known as [(]Idu'l-Fi[t.]r, is confined to true believers.[248] Nor has Christian charity always been free from religious narrowness. Fleury says that the early Christians, in the care they took of the poor, always preferred Christians before infidels, because "their principal regard was to their spiritual concerns, and to their temporal welfare only in order to their spiritual."[249] The principle of the Church was, "Omnem hominem _fidelem_ judica tuum esse fratrem."[250] In the seventeenth century the Scotch clergy taught that food or shelter must on no occasion be given to a starving man unless his opinions were orthodox.[251] On the other hand, Christianity of a higher type preaches charity towards all men; and so does advanced Judaism and Buddhism. It is said in the Talmud, with reference to the treatment of the poor, that no distinction should be made between such as are Jews and such as are not.[252] In modern times charity now and then {558} steps over the barriers of nationality even when the sufferers belong to distant nations. Whilst our indigent compatriots are generally recognised to have a greater claim on our pity than needy strangers, a great calamity in one country readily calls forth a charitable response in other nations. Mr. Pike believes that the contribution of one hundred thousand pounds sterling which England, in the year 1755, when Lisbon was laid in ruins by an earthquake, sent for the relief of the sufferers, inaugurated this new era of international charitableness. "Compassion." he observes, "was at last shown by Englishmen, not simply for Englishmen and Protestants, but for foreigners professing a different religion; pity, for once, triumphed over intolerance and national prejudice."[253] And in war, in the case of enemies rendered harmless by wounds or disease, the growth of human feeling has passed beyond the simple requirement that they shall not be killed or ill-used, and has cast upon belligerents the duty of tending them so far as is consistent with the primary duty to their own wounded.[254] However, it must not be imagined that this humane principle, which has only lately been recognised in Europe, is a unique outcome of Christian civilisation at its height. It is said in the Mahabharata that, when a quarrel arises among good men, a wounded enemy is to be cured in the conqueror's own country, or to be conveyed to his home.[255] Strangely enough, even from the savage world we hear of something like an anticipation of the Geneva Convention. Among certain tribes in New South Wales, as soon as the fight is concluded, "both parties seem perfectly reconciled, and jointly assist in tending the wounded men."[256]

[Footnote 242: Monrad, _op. cit._ p. 4.]

[Footnote 243: Nansen, _Eskimo Life_, p. 159.]

[Footnote 244: Doughty, _Arabia Deserta_, i. 368 _sq._]

[Footnote 245: Amélineau, _op. cit._ p. 354.]

[Footnote 246: Geiger, _op. cit._ i. 165.]

[Footnote 247: Sell, _op. cit._ p. 284. _Cf._ _Koran_, ix. 60.]

[Footnote 248: Sell, _op. cit._ p. 318.]

[Footnote 249: Fleury, _Manners and Behaviour of the Christians_, p. 133 _sq._]

[Footnote 250: Laurent, _Études sur l'histoire del'Humanité_, iv. 94.]

[Footnote 251: Buckle, _History of Civilization in England_, iii. 277.]

[Footnote 252: _Gitin_, fol. 61 A, quoted by Katz, _Der wahre Talmudjude_, p. 38. _Cf._ Chaikin, _Apologie des Juifs_, p. 10.]

[Footnote 253: Pike, _History of Crime in England_, ii. 346.]

[Footnote 254: 'Convention signed at Geneva, August 22, 1864, for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded in Armies in the Field,' in Lorimer, _Institutes of the Law of Nations_, ii. Appendix no. vi. Hall, _Treatise on International **Law_, p. 399. Heffter, _Das Europäische Völkerrecht der Gegenwart_, § 126, p. 267, n. 5.]

[Footnote 255: _Mahabharata_, xii. 3547, quoted by Lorimer, _op. cit._ ii. 431.]

[Footnote 256: Brough Smyth, _op. cit._ i. 160.]

{559} The gradual expansion of the duty of charity is due to the fact that this duty, in the first place, is based on the altruistic sentiment, and consequently follows the same general law of development. Many cases referred to above imply that savages are by no means strangers to affection, and that in their communities there is not only mutual assistance, but general kindness of heart. Numerous instances to the same effect might easily be added. When a Fuegian is very ill the near relatives show much grief;[257] and Darwin tells us that the Fuegian boy who was taken on board the _Beagle_ and brought to Europe, used to go to the sea-sick and say, in a plaintive voice, "Poor, poor fellow!"[258] The Veddahs are praised not only for their charitable behaviour towards each other, but for their natural tenderness of heart.[259] The aborigines of Victoria are said to "have the greatest love for their friends and relatives," and to testify the liveliest joy when a companion after a long absence returns to the camp.[260] Forster mentions an instance of affection among the natives of Tana, which, as he says, "strongly proves that the passions and innate quality of human nature are much the same in every climate."[261] Melville declares that, after passing a few weeks in the Typee valley of the Marquesas, he formed a higher estimate of human nature than he ever before entertained.[262] It can hardly be doubted that in every human society there is, normally, some degree of social affection between its members;[263] and it seems that the evolution of this sentiment in mankind has been much more in the direction of greater extensiveness than of greater intensity.

[Footnote 257: Bridges, in _A Voice for South America_, xiii. 206.]

[Footnote 258: Darwin, _Journal of Researches_, p. 207.]

[Footnote 259: Sarasin, _op. cit._ iii. 545, 550.]

[Footnote 260: Brough Smyth, _op. cit._ i. 138.]

[Footnote 261: Forster, _Voyage round the World_, ii. 325.]

[Footnote 262: Melville, _Typee_, p. 297.]

[Footnote 263: See _infra_, on the Origin and Development of the Altruistic Sentiment.]

Where the members of a group have affection for each other, mutual aid will be regarded as a duty both because it will be practised habitually, and because a {560} failure to afford it will call forth sympathetic resentment on behalf of the sufferer, But we need, here again, to look below the surface. Men may be induced to do good to their fellow-creatures not only by kindly feelings towards them, but by egoistic motives; and such motives, through having a share in making beneficence a tribal habit, at the same time influence the moral estimation in which it is held. The Basutos say that "the knife that is lent does not return alone to its master"--a kindness is never thrown away.[264] Of the Asiniboin, a Siouan tribe, Mr. Dorsey states that "nothing is given except with a view to a gift in return."[265] When the Andaman Islanders make presents of the best that they possess, they tacitly understand that an equivalent should be rendered for every gift.[266] Among the Makololo "the rich show kindness to the poor, in expectation of services."[267] In his description of the Greenlanders, Dr. Nansen observes that all the small communities depend for their existence on the law of mutual assistance, on the principle of common suffering and common enjoyment. "A hard life has taught the Eskimo that even if he is a skilful hunter and can, as a rule, manage to hold his own well enough, there may come times when, without the help of his fellows, he would have to succumb. It is better, therefore, for him to help in his turn."[268] That similar considerations largely lie at the bottom of the custom of mutual aid and charity both in uncivilised and more advanced communities, we may assume from the experience of human nature which we have acquired at home. And such motives must be particularly active in a society the members of which are so dependent on each other's services and return-services, as is generally the case with a horde of savages.

[Footnote 264: Casalis, _op. cit._ p. 310.]

[Footnote 265: Dorsey, 'Siouan Sociology,' in _Ann. Rep. Bur. Ethn._ xv. 225 _sq._]

[Footnote 266: Man, in _Jour. Anthr. Inst._ xii. 95.]

[Footnote 267: Livingstone, _Missionary Travels_, p. 511.]

[Footnote 268: Nansen, _First Crossing of Greenland_, ii. 304 _sq._ _Cf._ Cranz, _History of Greenland_, i. 173; Parry, _op. cit._ p. 525.]

Moreover, by niggardliness a person may expose himself {561} to supernatural dangers, whereas liberality may entail supernatural reward. In Morocco nobody would like to eat in the presence of other people without sharing his meal with them; otherwise they might poison his food by looking at it with an evil eye. So also, if anybody shows a great liking for a thing belonging to you, wanting, for instance, to buy your gun or your horse, it is best to let him have it, since otherwise an accident is likely to happen to the object of his desire.[269] But baneful energy, what the Moors call _l-bas_, is transferable not only by the eye, but by the voice. The poor and the needy have thus in their hands a powerful weapon and means of retaliation, the curse. The ancient Greeks believed that the beggar had his Erinys,[270] his avenging demon, which was obviously only a personification of his curse.[271] It is said in the Proverbs, "He that giveth unto the poor shall not lack: but he that hideth his eyes shall have many a curse."[272] The same idea is expressed in Ecclesiasticus:--"Turn not away thine eye from the needy, and give him none occasion to curse thee: for if he curse thee in the bitterness of his soul, his prayer shall be heard of him that made him. . . . A prayer out of a poor man's mouth reacheth to the ears of God, and his judgment cometh speedily."[273] According to the Zoroastrian Yasts, the poor man who follows the good law, when wronged and deprived of his rights, invokes Mithra for help, with hands uplifted.[274] Mr. Chapman states that, "though the Damaras are, generally speaking, great gluttons, they would not think of eating in the presence of any of their tribe without sharing their meal with all comers, for fear of being visited by a curse from their 'Omu-kuru' [or deity], and becoming impoverished."[275] There is all reason {562} to suppose that in this case the curse of the deity was originally the curse, or evil wish, of an angry man.

[Footnote 269: Similar beliefs prevail in modern Egypt (Klunzinger, _Upper Egypt_, p. 391).]

[Footnote 270: _Odyssey_, xvii. 475.]

[Footnote 271: _Supra_, p. 60.]

[Footnote 272: _Proverbs_, xxviii. 27.]

[Footnote 273: _Ecclesiasticus_, iv. 5 _sq._; xxi. 5. _Cf._ _Deuteronomy_, xv. 9. Rabbi Johanan says that almsgiving "saves man from sudden, unnatural death" (Kohler, in _Jewish Encyclopedia_, i. 435). _Cf._ _Proverbs_, x. 2.]

[Footnote 274: _Yasts_, x. 84.]

[Footnote 275: Chapman, _Travels in the Interior of South Africa_, i. 341.]

A poor man is able not only to punish the uncharitable by means of his curses, but to reward the generous giver by means of his blessings. During my residence among the Andjra tribe in the mountains of Northern Morocco, our village was visited by a band of ambulant scribes who went from house to house, receiving presents and invoking blessings in return. When a goat was given them they asked God to increase the flocks of the giver, when money was given they asked God to increase his money, and so forth. Some of the villagers told me that it was a profitable bargain, since they would be tenfold repaid for their gifts through the blessings of the scribes. A town Moor who starts for a journey to the country generally likes to give a coin to one of the beggars who are sitting near the gate, so as to receive his blessings. It is said in Ecclesiasticus:--"Stretch thine hand unto the poor, that thy blessing may be perfected. A gift hath grace in the sight of every man living."[276] Whilst he that withholdeth corn shall be cursed by the people, "blessing shall be upon the head of him that selleth it."[277] Among the early Christians those who brought gifts for the poor were specially remembered in the prayers of the Church.[278] Of the Nay[=a]dis of Malabar Mr. Iyer says that the purport and object of their prayers are, among other things, "that all the superior castes, who give them alms, may enjoy long life and prosperity."[279] In various cases the nature of the rewards promised for charitable acts suggests that they are due to the blessings of the recipient. According to Vasishtha, "through liberality man obtains all his desires, even longevity."[280] In the Yasts it is said that the children of a charitable man will thrive.[281] According to Talmudic ideas, men acquire wealth for their children by {563} distributing alms among the poor.[282] Considering how widely spread is the belief in the efficacy of curses and blessings, there can be little doubt that charity and generosity are connected with this belief in many cases where no such connection has been noticed by the European visitor.

[Footnote 276: _Ecclesiasticus_, vii. 32. _Cf._ _Proverbs_, xxii. 9.]

[Footnote 277: _Proverbs_, xi. 26.]

[Footnote 278: Uhlhorn, _op. cit._ i. 141.]

[Footnote 279: Iyer, in the Madras Government Museum's _Bulletin_, iv. 72.]

[Footnote 280: _Vasishtha_, xxix. 1 _sq._]

[Footnote 281: _Yasts_, xxiv. 36.]

[Footnote 282: Kohler, in _Jewish Encyclopedia_, i. 436. _Cf._ _Proverbs_, xxviii. 27.]

The curses and blessings of the poor partly account for the fact that charity has come to be regarded as a religious duty. Originally, it is true, they had not the character of an appeal to a god, but were believed to possess a purely magical power, independent of any superhuman will. This belief is rooted in the close association between the wish, more particularly the spoken wish, and the idea of its fulfilment. The wish is looked upon in the light of energy which may be transferred--by material contact, or by the eye, or by means of speech--to the person concerned, and then becomes a fact. This process, however, is not taken quite as a matter of course; there is always some mystery about it. Hence the words of a holy man, a magician or priest, are considered more efficacious than those of ordinary mortals. The Australian natives believe that the curse of a potent magician will kill at the distance of a hundred miles. Among the Maoris "the anathema of a priest is regarded as a thunderbolt that an enemy cannot escape."[283] Among the Gallas no man will under any circumstances slay either a priest or a wizard, from a dread of his dying curse.[284] Some of the Rabbis maintained that a curse uttered by a scholar is unfailing in its effect, even if undeserved.[285] In Muhammedan countries the curses of saints or shereefs are particularly feared. According to the Laws of Manu, a Brâhmana "may punish his foes by his own power alone," speech being his weapon.[286] But though a curse may derive particular potency from the person who utters it, {564} it is by no means ineffective even in the mouth of an ordinary man.[287] In the Old Testament children are forbidden to curse their parents,[288] subjects their rulers,[289] men their god;[290] and according to Talmudic conceptions, a curse should not be regarded lightly however ignorant be the person who utters it.[291] All that is required is that the words should possess that supernatural quality which alone can bring about the result desired, and this quality may be inherent in the curse quite independently of the person who utters it. It is inherent in certain mystic formulas or spells and in the invocations of some spirit or god. The will of the invoked being is not considered at all; his name is simply brought in to give the curse that mystic efficacy which the plain word lacks. Thus both in the Old Testament[292] and in the Talmud[293] there are traces of the ancient idea that the name of the Lord might be used with advantage in any curse however undeserved. But with the deepening of the religious sentiment this idea had to be given up. A righteous and mighty god cannot agree to be a mere tool in the hand of a wicked curser. Hence the curse comes to be looked upon in the light of a prayer, which is not fulfilled if undeserved; as it is said in the Proverbs, "the curse causeless shall not come."[294] And the same is the case with the blessing. Whilst in ancient days Jacob could take away his brother's blessing by deceit,[295] the efficacy of a blessing was later on limited by moral considerations.[296] The Psalmist declares that only the offspring of the righteous can be blessed;[297] and according to the Apostolic Constitutions, "although a widow who eateth and is filled from the wicked, pray for them, she shall not be heard."[298] {565} On the other hand, curses and blessings, when well deserved, continued to draw down calamity or prosperity upon their objects, by inducing God to put them into effect; this idea prevails both in post-exilic Judaism and in Muhammedanism,[299] and underlies the Christian oath and benediction. The final, but not the original view was that, as an uncharitable man deserves to be punished and a charitable man merits reward, the curses and blessings of the poor will naturally be heard by a righteous God. "The Lord will plead their cause."[300]

[Footnote 283: Polack, _Manners and Customs of the New Zealanders_, i. 248 _sq._]

[Footnote 284: Harris, _Highlands of Æthiopia_, iii. 50.]

[Footnote 285: _Makkoth_, fol. 11 A. _Berakhoth_, fol. 56 A.]

[Footnote 286: _Laws of Manu_, xi. 32 _sq._]

[Footnote 287: Taylor, _Te Ika a Maui_, p. 204 (Maoris). Wellhausen, _Reste arabischen Heidentums_, p. 139.]

[Footnote 288: _Exodus_, xxi. 17. _Leviticus_, xx. 9. _Proverbs_, xx. 20; xxx. 11.]

[Footnote 289: _Exodus_, xxii. 28. _Ecclesiastes_, x. 20.]

[Footnote 290: _Exodus_, xxii. 28.]

[Footnote 291: _Meghilla_, fol. 15 A.]

[Footnote 292: _Supra_, p. 564.]

[Footnote 293: _Makkoth_, fol. 11 A. _Berakhoth_, foll. 19 A, 56 A.]

[Footnote 294: _Proverbs_, xxvi. 2.]

[Footnote 295: _Genesis_, xxvii. 23 _sqq._]

[Footnote 296: _Cf._ Cheyne, 'Blessings and Curses,' in _Encyclopædia Biblica_, i. 592.]

[Footnote 297: _Psalms_, xxxvii. 26.]

[Footnote 298: _Constitutiones Apostolicæ_, iv. 6. _Cf._ _Jeremiah_, vii. 16.]

[Footnote 299: _Cf._ Cheyne, in _Encyclopædia Biblica_, i. 592; Goldziher, _Abhandlungen zur arabischen Philologie_, i. 29 _sqq._]

[Footnote 300: _Proverbs_, xxii. 23.]

The chief cause, however, of the extraordinary stress which the higher religions put on the duty of charity seems to lie in the connection between almsgiving and sacrifice. When food is offered as a tribute to a god, the god is supposed to enjoy its spiritual part only, whilst the substance of it is left behind and is eaten by the poor. And when the offering is continued in ceremonial survival in spite of the growing conviction that, after all, the deity does not need and cannot profit by it,[301] the poor become the natural heirs of the god, and the almsgiver inherits the merit of the sacrificer. The chief virtue of the act, then, lies in the self-abnegation of the donor, and its efficacy is measured by the "sacrifice" which it costs him.

[Footnote 301: For such a survival, see Tylor, _Primitive Culture_, ii. 396 _sqq._]

Many instances may be quoted of sacrificial food being left for the poor or being distributed among them. At Scillus, where Xenophon had built an altar and a temple to Artemis and a sacrifice was afterwards made every year, the goddess supplied the poor people living there in tents with "barley-meal, bread, wine, sweetmeats, and a share of the victims offered from the sacred pastures, and of those caught in hunting."[302] According to Yasna, sacrifices to Mazda were given to his poor.[303] In ancient Arabia the poor were allowed to partake of the meal-offering {566} which was laid before the god Uqaiçir.[304] In Zinder, in the Soudan, there are some trees, regarded as divine, to which annual offerings of bullocks, sheep, and so forth, are made, "though the poor of the country get the benefit of them."[305] In Morocco even animals which are killed as _[(]âr_--a sacrifice embodying a conditional curse--on departed saints or living people, with a view to compelling them to grant a request, are commonly eaten by the poor, though nobody else would dare to partake of them.

[Footnote 302: Xenophon, _Anabasis_, v. 3. 9.]

[Footnote 303: _Yasna_, xxxiv. 5.]

[Footnote 304: Wellhausen, _Reste arabischen Heidentums_, p. 64. Robertson Smith, _Religion of the Semites_, p. 223.]

[Footnote 305: Richardson, _Mission to Central Africa_, ii. 259.]

In other cases we find that almsgiving is itself regarded as a form of sacrifice, or takes the place of it. In the sacred books of India the two things are repeatedly mentioned side by side. "The householder offers sacrifices, the householder practises austerities, the householder distributes gifts."[306] Of a Brâhmana who has completed his studentship it is said, "Let him always practise, according to his ability, with a cheerful heart, the duty of liberality, both by sacrifices and by charitable works, if he finds a worthy recipient for his gifts."[307] "In the Krita age the chief virtue is declared to be the performance of austerities, in the Tretâ divine knowledge, in the Dvâpara the performance of sacrifices, in the Kali liberality alone."[308] In the Egyptian 'Book of the Dead' the soul, on approaching to the gods who are in the Tuat, pleads:--"I have done that which man prescribeth and that which pleaseth the gods. I have propitiated the god with that which he loveth. I have given bread to the hungry, water to the thirsty, clothes to the naked, a boat to the shipwrecked. I have made oblations to the gods and funeral offerings to the departed."[309] In the Zoroastrian prayer Ahuna-Vairya, to which great efficacy is ascribed, it is said, "He who relieves the poor makes Ahura king."[310] {567} In the Koran almsgiving is often mentioned in connection with prayer;[311] and the Zakât, or alms prescribed by law, is regarded by the Muhammedans as a fundamental part of their religion, hence infidels, who cannot perform acceptable worship, have nothing to do with these alms.[312] Among the Muhammedans of India it is common for men and women to vow "that when what they desire shall come to pass, they will, in the name of God, the Prophet, his companions, or some _wullee_, present offerings and oblations." One of these offerings, called "an offering unto God," consists in preparing particular victuals, and in "distributing them among friends and the poor, and giving any sort of grain, a sacrificed sheep, clothes, or ready-money in alms to the indigent."[313] When the destruction of the Temple with its altar filled the Jews with alarm as they thought of their unatoned sins, Johanan ben Zakkai comforted them by saying, "You have another means of atonement, as powerful as the altar, and that is the work of charity, for it is said: 'I desired mercy, and not sacrifice.'"[314] Many other passages show how closely the Jews associated almsgiving with sacrifice. "He that giveth alms sacrificeth praise."[315] "As sin-offering makes atonement for Israel, so alms for the Gentiles."[316] "Almsdeeds are more meritorious than all sacrifices."[317] An orphan is called an "altar to God."[318] And as a sacrificer should be a person of a godly character, so it is better to perish by famine than to receive an oblation from the ungodly.[319] Alms were systematically collected in the synagogues, and officers were appointed to make the collection.[320] So, also, among the early Christians the collection of alms for the relief of the poor was an act of the Church life itself. Almsgiving took place in public worship, nay formed itself a part of worship. {568} Gifts of natural produce, the so-called oblations, were connected with the celebration of the Lord's Supper. They were offered to God as the first-fruits of the creatures (_primitiæ creaturarum_), and a prayer was said:--"O Lord, accept also the offerings of those who to-day bring an offering, as Thou didst accept the offerings of righteous Abel, the offering of our father Abraham, the incense of Zachariah, the alms of Cornelius, and the two mites of the widow." These oblations were not only used for the Lord's Supper, but they formed the chief means for the relief of the poor. They were regarded as sacrifice in the most special sense; and, as no unclean gift might be laid upon the Lord's altar, profit made from sinful occupations was not accepted as an oblation, neither were the oblations of impenitent sinners.[321] The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews speaks of almsgiving as a sacrifice of thanksgiving which continues after the Jewish altar has been done away with.[322] Like sacrifice, almsgiving is connected with prayer, as a means of making the prayer efficacious and furnishing it with wings; the angel said to Cornelius, "Thy prayers and thine alms are come up for a memorial before God."[323] When the Christians were reproached for having no sacrifices, Justin wrote, "We have been taught that the only honour that is worthy of Him is not to consume by fire what He has brought into being for our sustenance, but to use it for ourselves and those who need."[324] So, also, Irenæus observes that sacrifices are not abolished in the New Testament, though their form is indeed altered, because they are no longer offered by slaves, but by freemen, of which just the oblations are the proof.[325] And God has enjoined on Christians this sacrifice of oblations, not because He needs them, but "in order that themselves {569} might be neither unfruitful nor ungrateful."[326] St. Augustine says, "The sacrifice of the Christians is the alms bestowed upon the poor."[327]

[Footnote 306: _Institutes of Vishnu_, lix. 28.]

[Footnote 307: _Laws of Manu_, iv. 227. _Cf._ _ibid._ iv. 226.]

[Footnote 308: _Ibid._ i. 86.]

[Footnote 309: _Book of the Dead_, 125, Renouf's translation, p. 217.]

[Footnote 310: _Vendîdâd_, xix, 2.]

[Footnote 311: _Koran_, ii. 40, 104; ix. 54.]

[Footnote 312: Sell, _op. cit._ 284.]

[Footnote 313: Jaffur Shureef, _Qanoon-e-Islam_, p. 179.]

[Footnote 314: Kohler, in _Jewish Encyclopedia_, i. 467. _Hosea_, vi. 6.]

[Footnote 315: _Ecclesiasticus_, xxxv. 2.]

[Footnote 316: Quoted by Levy, _Neuhebräisches und Chaldäisches Wörterbuch_, iv. 173.]

[Footnote 317: Quoted _ibid._ iv. 173.]

[Footnote 318: _Constitutiones Apostolicæ_, iv. 3.]

[Footnote 319: _Ibid._ iv. 8.]

[Footnote 320: Addis, in _Encyclopædia Biblica_, i. 119.]

[Footnote 321: Uhlhorn, _op. cit._ i. 135 _sqq._ Harnack, _History of Dogma_, i. 205.]

[Footnote 322: _Hebrews_, xiii. 14 _sqq._ _Cf._ Addis, in _Encyclopædia Biblica_, i. 119.]

[Footnote 323: _Act_, x. 4. Cyprian, _De opere et eleemosynis_, 4. St. Chrysostom, _Homilia VII., de P[oe]nitentia_, 6 (Migne, _Patrologiæ cursus_, Ser. Gr. xlix. _sq._ 332).]

[Footnote 324: Justin, _Apologia I. pro Christianis_, 13.]

[Footnote 325: Irenæus, _Adversus hæreses_, iv. 18. 82.]

[Footnote 326: _Ibid._ iv. 17. 5.]

[Footnote 327: St. Augustine, _Sermo XLII._ 1 (Migne, _op. cit._ xxxviii. 252).]

The objection will perhaps be raised that I have here tried to trace back the most beautiful of all religious virtues to a magical and ritualistic origin without taking into due account the benevolent feelings attributed to the Deity. But in the present connection I have not had to show why charity, like other human duties, has been sanctioned by religious beliefs, but why, in the ethics of the higher religions, it has attained the same supreme importance as is otherwise attached only to devotional exercises. And this is certainly a problem by itself, for which the belief in a benevolent god affords no adequate explanation. That the religious duty of charity is not merely an outcome of the altruistic sentiment is well illustrated by the fact that Zoroastrianism, whilst exalting almsgiving to the rank of a cardinal virtue, at the same time excludes the sick man from the community of the faithful until he has been cured and cleansed according to prescribed rites.[328]

[Footnote 328: Darmesteter, 'Introduction' to the Zend-Avesta, in _Sacred Books of the East_, iv. p. lxxx.]

CHAPTER XXIV

HOSPITALITY

WE have seen that in early society regard for the life and physical well-being of a fellow-creature is, generally speaking, restricted to members of the social unit, whereas foreigners are subject to a very different treatment. But to this rule there are remarkable exceptions. Side by side with gross indifference or positive hatred to strangers we find, among the lower races, instances of great kindness displayed even towards persons of a foreign race. The Veddahs are ready to help any stranger in distress who asks for their assistance, and Sinhalese fugitives who have sought refuge in their wilds have always been kindly received.[1] Mr. Moffat was deeply affected by the sympathy which some poor Bushmans showed to him during an illness, although he was an utter stranger to them. Speaking of the mutual affection which the Andaman Islanders display in their social relations, Mr. Man adds that, "in their dealings with strangers, the same characteristic is observable when once a good understanding has been established."[2] We have also to remember the friendly manner in which the aborigines in various parts of the savage world behaved to the earliest European visitors. Nothing could be more courteous than the reception which Cook and his party met with in New Caledonia, where the natives guided and accompanied them on their {571} excursions. Forster says of the Society Islanders, "We should indeed be ungrateful if we did not acknowledge the kindness with which they always treated us."[3] De Clerque observes with reference to the Papuans on the north coast of New Guinea:--"The inhabitants seemed always ready to help. . . . On our visit to the village all the male and female inhabitants with their children flocked around me, and offered me cocoanuts and sugar-cane; which, for the first contact with Europeans, is certainly remarkable."[4] On the arrival of white people in various parts of Australia, the natives were not only inoffensive, but disposed to meet them on terms of amity and kindness.[5] "In a short intercourse," says Eyre, "they are easily made friends. . . . On many occasions where I have met these wanderers in the wild, far removed from the abodes of civilisation, and when I have been accompanied only by a single native boy, I have been received by them in the kindest and most friendly manner, had presents made to me of fish, kangaroo, or fruit, had them accompany me for miles to point out where water was to be procured, and been assisted by them in getting at it."[6] Nor must we forget the kind reception which Australian Blacks have given to men cast upon their mercy,[7] and the tenderness with which the natives of Cooper's Creek wept for the death of Burke and Wills, and comforted King, the survivor.[8] Unfortunately, native races have often received anything but favourable impressions from their earliest interviews with Europeans; and both in Australia and elsewhere prolonged intercourse with white people has, in many instances, induced them to change {572} their friendly behaviour into unkindness or hostility. The Canadian traders, for instance, when they first appeared among the Beaver and Rocky Mountain Indians, were treated by these people with the utmost hospitality and attention; but by their subsequent conduct they taught the natives to withdraw their respect, and sometimes to treat them with indignity.[9] Harmon writes, "I have always experienced the greatest hospitality and kindness among those Indians who have had the least intercourse with white people."[10] Many facts seem to verify the statement made by a missionary who speaks from forty years' experience among the natives of New Guinea and Polynesia, that our conduct towards savages determines their conduct towards us.[11]

[Footnote 1: Sarasin, _Ergebnisse naturwissenschaftlicher Forschungen auf Ceylon_, iii. 544.]

[Footnote 2: Man, 'Aboriginal Inhabitants of the Andaman Islands,' in _Jour. Anthr. Inst._ xii. 93.]

[Footnote 3: Forster, _Voyage Round the World_, ii. 157.]

[Footnote 4: De Clerque, in _Glimpses of the Eastern Archipelago_, p. 14.]

[Footnote 5: Breton, _Excursions in New South Wales_, p. 218. Curr, _The Australian Race_, i. 64. Salvado, _Mémoires historiques sur l'Australie_, p. 340. Ridley, _Aborigines of Australia_, p. 24. Eyre, _Journals of Expeditions of Discovery into Central Australia_, ii. 212, 382.]

[Footnote 6: Eyre, _op. cit._ ii. 211.]

[Footnote 7: Mathew, 'Australian Aborigines,' in _Jour. & Proceed. Roy. Soc. N. S. Wales_, xxiii. 388. Brough Smyth, _Aborigines of Victoria_, ii. 229. Ridley, _Aborigines of Australia_, p. 22.]

[Footnote 8: Jung, 'Aus dem Seelenleben der Australier,' in _Mittheilungen des Vereins für Erdkunde zu Leipzig_, 1877, p. 11 _sq._]

[Footnote 9: Mackenzie, _Voyage to the Frozen and Pacific Ocean_, p. 149.]

[Footnote 10: Harmon, _Journal of Voyages and Travels in the Interior of North America_, p. 315.]

[Footnote 11: Murray, _Forty Years' Mission Work in Polynesia and New Guinea_, p. 499. For other instances of kindness displayed by savages towards white men, see von Kotzebue, _Voyage of Discovery into the South Sea_, iii. 174 (people of Radack); Yate, _Account of New Zealand_, p. 102 _sq._; Dieffenbach, _Travels in New Zealand_, ii. 112; Keate, _Account of the Pelew Islands_, p. 329 _sq._; Earl, _Papuans_, p. 79 (natives of Port Dory, New Guinea); Sarytschew, 'Voyage of ** Discovery to the North-East of Siberia,' in _Collection of Modern and Contemporary Voyages and Travels_, vi. 78 (Aleuts); King and Fitzroy, _Voyages of the "Adventure" and "Beagle,"_ ii. 168, 174 (Patagonians); Wilson and Felkin, _Uganda_, i. 225.]

The friendly reception which white men have met with in savage countries is closely connected with a custom which, as it seems, prevails universally among the lower races while in their native state,[12] as also among the {573} peoples of culture at the earlier stages of their civilisation[13] {574} --hospitality towards strangers. This custom presents several remarkable characteristics, which, to all appearance, ill agree with their tribal or national exclusiveness generally. The stranger is often welcomed with special marks of honour. The best seat is assigned to him; the best food at the host's disposal is set before {575} him; he takes precedence over all the members of the household; he enjoys extraordinary privileges. M. Hyades says of the Fuegians, "Quelque encombrée que soit une hutte, et si réduite que soit la quantité d'aliments dont on dispose, le nouvel arrivant est toujours assuré d'avoir une place près du foyer et une part de la nourriture."[14] The Mattoal of California, though they are sometimes heartlessly indifferent even to their parents, "will divide the last shred of dried salmon with any casual comer who has not a shadow of claim upon them, except the claim of that exaggerated and supererogatory hospitality that savages use."[15] A Creek Indian would not only receive into his house a traveller or sojourner of whatever nation or colour, but would treat him as a brother or as his own child, divide with him the last grain of corn or piece of flesh, and offer him the most valuable things in his possession.[16] Among the Arawaks, "when a stranger, and particularly an European, enters the house of an Indian, every thing is at his command."[17] Notwithstanding the Karen's suspicious nature, says Mr. Smeaton, his hospitality is unbounded. "He will entertain every stranger that comes, without asking a question. He feels himself disgraced if he does not receive all comers, and give them the very best cheer he has. The wildest Karen will receive a guest with a grace and dignity and entertain him with a lavish hospitality that would become a duke. Hundreds of their old legends inculcate the duty of receiving strangers without regard to pecuniary circumstances either of host or guest."[18] Among many uncivilised peoples it is customary for a man to offer even his wife, or one of his wives, to the stranger for the time he remains his guest.[19] The Bedouins of Nejd have a {576} saying that "the guest while in the house is its lord";[20] and in the Institutes of Vishnu we read that, as the Brâhmanas are lords over all other castes, and as a husband is lord over his wives, so the guest is the lord of his host.[21]

[Footnote 12: Azara, _Voyages dans l'Amérique méridionale_, ii. 91 (Guanas). Southey, _History of Brazil_, i. 247 (Tupis). Davis, _El Gringo_, p. 421 (Pueblos). Lafitau, _M[oe]urs des sauvages amériquains_, i. 106; ii. 88. Heriot, _Travels through the Canadas_, p. 318 _sq._ Buchanan, _North American Indians_, p. 6. Perrot, _Mémoire sur les m[oe]urs, coustumes et relligion des sauvages de l'Amérique septentrionale_, pp. 69, 202. Neighbors, in Schoolcraft, _Indian Tribes of the United States_, ii. 132 (Comanches). James, _Expedition from Pittsburgh to the Rocky Mountains_, i. 321 _sq._ (Omahas). Morgan, _League of the Iroquois_, p. 327 _sqq._; Loskiel, _History of the Mission of the United Brethren among the Indians in North America_, i. 15; Colden, in Schoolcraft, _op. cit._ iii. 190 (Iroquois). Powers, _Tribes of California_, p. 183. Sproat, _Scenes and Studies of Savage Life_, p. 56 _sqq._ (Ahts). Boas, 'Report on the Indians of British Columbia,' in the _Report read at the Meeting of the British Association_, 1889, p. 36. Keating, _Expedition to the Source of St. Peter's River_, i. 101 (Potawatomis); ii. 167 (Chippewas). Richardson, _Arctic Searching Expedition_, ii. 18 (Crees and Chippewas). _Idem_, in Franklin, _Journey to the Shores of the Polar Sea_, p. 66; Mackenzie, _Voyages to the Frozen and Pacific Oceans_, p. xcvi. (Crees). Dall, _Alaska_, p. 397; Sarytschew, _loc. cit._ vi. 78; Sauer, _Billing's Expedition to the Northern Parts of Russia_, p. 274 (Aleuts). Lyon, _Private Journal_, p. 349 _sq._; Parry, _Second Voyage for the Discovery of a North-West Passage_, p. 526 (Eskimo of Igloolik). Egede, _Description of Greenland_, p. 126; Cranz, _History of Greenland_, i. 172 _sq._; Kane, _Arctic Explorations_, ii. 122; Holm, 'Ethnologisk Skizze af Angmagsalikerne,' in _Meddelelser om Grönland_, x. 87, 175 _sq._ (Greenlanders). Beechey, _Voyage to the Pacific and Behring's Strait_, ii. 571; Richardson, _Arctic Searching Expedition_, i. 367; Seemann, _Voyage of "Herald,"_ ii. 65 (Western Eskimo). Hooper, _Ten Months among the Tents of the Tuski_, pp. 160, 193, 194, 208; Nordenskiöld, _Vegas färd kring Asien och Europa_, ii. 145 (Chukchi). Dall, _op. cit._ pp. 381 (Tuski), 517 (Kamchadales), 526 (Ainos). Sarytschew, _loc. cit._ v. 67 (Kamchadales). Dobell, _Travels in Kamtschatka and Siberia_, i. 63, 82 _sq._ (Kamchadales); ii. 42 (Jakuts). Sauer, _op. cit._ p. 124 (Jakuts). Vámbéry, _Das Türkenvolk_, pp. 159 (Jakuts), 336 (natives of Eastern Turkestan), 411 (Turkomans), 451 (Tshuvashes), 509 (Baskirs), &c. Krasheninnikoff, _History of Kamschatka_, p. 236 (Kurile Islanders). Georgi, _Russia_, i. 113 (Mordvins); iii. 111 (Tunguses), 167 (Koriaks); iv. 22 (Kalmucks). Bergmann, _Nomadische Streifereien unter den Kalmüken_, ii. 281 _sqq._ Prejevalsky, _Mongolia_, i. 71 _sq._ Castrén, _Nordiska resor och forskningar_, i. 41 (Laplanders), 319 (Ostyaks). Scott Robertson, _Káfirs of the Hindu-Kush_, p. 187 _sq._ Fraser, _Tour through the Him[=a]l[=a] Mountains_, pp. 264 (people of Kunawar), 335 (Butias). Dalton, _Descriptive Ethnology of Bengal_, pp. 46 (Kukis), 68 (Garos). Hunter, _Annals of Rural Bengal_, i. 215 (Santals). Tickell, 'Memoir on the Hodésum,' in _Jour. Asiatic Soc. Bengal_, ix. (pt. ii.) 807 _sq._ (Hos). Lewin, _Wild Races of South-Eastern India_, p. 217 (Tipperahs). Colquhoun, _Amongst the Shans_, pp. 160 _sq._ (Steins), 371 (Shans). Foreman, _Philippine Islands_, p. 187. de Crespigny, 'Milanows of Borneo,' in _Jour. Anthr. Inst._ v, 34. Low, _Sarawak_, pp. 243 (Hill Dyaks), 336 (Kayans). Boyle, _Adventures among the Dyaks of Borneo_, p. 215. Ling Roth, _Natives of Sarawak_, i. 82 (Sea Dyaks). Marsden, _History of Sumatra_, p. 208 (natives of the interior of Sumatra). Raffles, _History of Java_, i. 249; Crawfurd, _History of the Indian Archipelago_, i. 53 (Javanese). Riedel, _De sluik- en kroesharige rassen tusschen Selebes en Papua_, p. 41 (natives of Ambon and Uliase). von Kotzebue, _op. cit._ iii. 165 (natives of Radack), 215 (Pelew Islanders). Hale, _U.S. Exploring Expedition. Vol. VI.--Ethnography and Philology_, p. 95 (Kingsmill Islanders). Macdonald, _Oceania_, p. 195 (Efatese). Erskine, _Cruise among the Islands of the Western Pacific_, p. 273 _sq._; Williams and Calvert, _Fiji and the Fijians_, p. 110; Anderson, _Travel in Fiji and New Caledonia_, p. 134 _sq._ (Fijians). Ellis, _Polynesian Researches_, i. 95. _Idem_, _Tour through Hawaii_, p. 346 _sq._ Forster, _op. cit._ ii. 158 (Tahitians) 364 (natives of Tana), 394 (South Sea Islanders generally). Cook, _Voyage round the World_, p. 40 (Tahitians). Tregear, 'Niue,' in _Jour. Polynesian Soc._ ii. 13 (Savage Islanders), Turner, _Samoa_, p. 114; Pritchard, _Polynesian Reminiscences_, p. 132; Brenchley, _Jottings during the Cruise of H.M.S. Curaçoa among the South Sea Islands_, p. 76 (Samoans). Mariner, _Natives of the Tonga Islands_, ii. 154. Yate, _op. cit._ p. 100; Dieffenbach, _op. cit._ ii. 107 _sq._; Polack, _Manners and Customs of the New Zealanders_, ii. 155 _sq._; Angas, _Savage Life and Scenes in Australia and New Zealand_, ii. 22 (Maoris). Gason, 'Manners and Customs of the Dieyerie Tribe,' in Woods, _Native Tribes of South Australia_, p. 258; Brough Smyth, _op. cit._ i. 25; Salvado, _op. cit._ p. 340 (Australian aborigines). Ellis, _History of Madagascar_, i. 198; Sibree, _The Great African Island_, pp. 126, 129; Rochon, _Voyage to Madagascar_, p. 62; Little, _Madagascar_, p. 61; Shaw, 'Betsileo,' in _Antananarivo Annual and Madagascar Magazine_, ii. 82. Burchell, _Travels in the Interior of Southern Africa_, ii. 54 (Bushmans), 345 (Hottentots). Kolben, _Present State of the Cape of Good Hope_, i. 166, 337; Le Vaillant, _Travels from the Cape of Good Hope_, ii. 143 _sq._; Schinz, _Deutsch-Südwest-Afrika_, p. 81 (Hottentots). Lichtenstein, _Travels in Southern Africa_, i. 272; Leslie, _Among the Zulus and Amatongas_, p. 203 (Kafirs). Casalis, _Basutos_, pp. 209, 224. Andersson, _Lake Ngami_, 198 (Ovambo). Macdonald, _Africana_, i. 27, 263 (Eastern Central Africans). Wilson and Felkin, _op. cit._ i. 211, 225 (Waganda). Rowley, _Africa Unveiled_, p. 47 (natives of Manganja, in the neighbourhood of Lake Nyassa). New, _Life, Wanderings, and Labours in East Africa_, pp. 102 (Wanika), 361 (Taveta). Thomson, _Through Masai Land_, p. 64 (Wa-kwafi, of the Taveta). Tuckey, _Expedition to explore the River Zaire_, p. 374 (Congo natives), Bosman, _Description of the Coast of Guinea_, p. 108. Burton, _Two Trips to Gorilla Land_, i. 106 (Mpongwe). _Idem_, _Abeokuta_, i. 303 (Yoruba). Caillié, _Travels through Central Africa_, i. 165 (Bagos). Chavanne, _Die Sahara_, p. 185 (Touareg). Hanoteau and Letourneux, _La Kabylie_, ii. 45 _sqq._ Munzinger, _Ostafrikanische Studien_, p. 534 (Barea). Lobo, _Voyage to Abyssinia_, p. 82 _sq._

For the deteriorating influence which contact with a "higher culture" exercises on savage hospitality, see Nansen, _First Crossing of Greenland_, ii. 306 _sq._; Ellis, _Tour through Hawaii_, p. 346; von Kotzebue, _op. cit._ iii. 250 (Hawaiians); Meade, _Ride through the Disturbed Districts of New Zealand_, p. 164; Dieffenbach, _op. cit._ ii. 107, 108, 110.]

[Footnote 13: According to a law of the Peruvian Incas, strangers and travellers should be treated as guests, and public houses were provided for them (Garcilasso de la Vega, _First Part of the Royal Commentaries of the Yncas_, ii. 34). For Yucatan, see Landa, _Relacion de las cosas de Yucatan_, p. 134. Though hospitality, according to Mr. Wells Williams (_Middle Kingdom_, i. 835), is not a trait of the character of the modern Chinese, kindness to strangers and travellers is enjoined in their moral and religious books (Chalmers, 'Chinese Natural Theology,' in _China Review_, v. 281. Douglas, _Confucianism and Taouism_, p. 273. _Indo-Chinese Gleaner_, iii. 160). In Corea it would be a grave and shameful thing to refuse a portion of one's meal with any person, known or unknown, who presents himself at eating-time (Griffis, _Corea_, p. 288). For the Hebrews, see _Genesis_, xviii. 2 _sqq._, xxiv. 31 _sqq._; _Leviticus_, xix. 9 _sq._, xxv. 35; _Deuteronomy_, xiv. 29, xvi. 11, 14; _Judges_, xix. 17 _sqq._; _Job_, xxxiv. 32; also Bertholet, _Die Stellung der Israeliten und der Juden zu den Fremden_, p. 22 _sqq._, and Nowack, _Lehrbuch der hebräischen Archäologie_, p. 186 _sq._ For Muhammedans, see Lane, _Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians_, p. 296 _sq._; Burckhardt, _Notes on the Bedouins and Wahábys_, pp. 100-102, 192 _sqq._; Wood, _Journey to the Source of the River Oxus_, p. 148; Hamilton, _Researches in Asia Minor_, ii. 379. For ancient India, see Leist, _Alt-arisches Jus Gentium_, pp. 39, 40, 223 _sqq._ For Greece, see Schmidt, _Ethik der alten Griechen_, ii. 325 _sqq._ For Rome, see Leist, _Alt-arisches Jus Civile_, i. 355 _sqq._; von Jhering, _Geist des römischen Rechts_, i. 227 _sq._ For ancient Teutons, see Grimm, _Deutsche Rechtsalterthümer_, p. 399 _sq._; Gummere, _Germanic Origins_, p. 162 _sqq._; Keyser, _Efterladte Skrifter_, ii. pt. ii. 93; Weinhold, _Altnordisches Leben_, p. 441 _sqq._; Gudmundsson and Kålund, 'Sitte,' in Paul's _Grundriss der germanischen Philologie_, iii. 450 _sq._ For Slavonians, see Schrader, _Reallexikon der indogermanischen Altertumskunde_, i. 270; Krauss, _Die Südslaven_, p. 644 _sqq._]