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TALE OF A TOOTH.
THERE is an old nursery rhyme                    man. But this morsel of ivory derives
which says, "We never know its                   sole value from its repute of being
what great things from little things may         the tooth, the eye-tooth, of one of the
rise," and if we trace the history of some       greatest men ever deified - men who
little things and consider their influence       have sent their names ringing down to
upon the great things of the world, we           ages and ages, and influenced mankind
can easily verify the truth of the adage.        with their special theories from genera
A tooth, for instance, is an infinitesimal       tion to generation.
portion of a man; yet a' tooth has figur-        The precious ivory is now enshrined
ed in the lives of some very ancient             with much religious zeal in a temple at
kings; influenced - nay, controlled -            Kandy, the late capital of Ceylon. That
their history, and played its part in            one famous Ceylon - the Taprobane of the
of the longest dynasties on record. I            Greeks, Serendib of the Arabian Nights
speak of the tooth of Guatama Buddha,            -sleeping in the Indian Ocean, south
which is considered by some fifty mill-          east of the peninsula of Hindostan, from
ions of people to be the most sacred             which it is only separated by the Straits
and heavenly object left upon the terres-        of Manaar, sometimes called "Adam's
trial globe. His tooth is certainly the          Bridge," as he is reputed to have passed
oldest in the annals of time, for it dates       over to the Island of Ceylon dry-shod,
its existence from six centuries before          upon rocks, when driven from Paradise
Christ, having passed ninety years of            its by the flaming sword, and settled upon
infancy in a man 5 mouth.                        the great mountain which bears his
The tale of this tooth is a romance of           name.
history as marvelous as the story of the         The sun was just setting over Kandy,
great Kohinoor diamond, or the Marie             as we reached it. We had come from
Antoinette necklace, yet far surpassing          Point de Galle, the stopping - place of
these in antiquity, episodes, and influ-         most China-bound steamers. Visitors
ence, for the latter had their intrinsic val-    to the far East are usually contented
ue to aid them, being always convertible         with a drive on shore at Galle, and ex
into hardcash-animmense advantage to             cept officials and planters few Europe
romance now-a-days, for, as the modern           ans travel in the interior of Ceylon.
world wags, "~. s. d." is the great talis-       The sun was setting as only a tropical
					         
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 sun would dare to set, in splashes of           display of form and color which trans
 purple, green, amber, and crimson, which        fuse oriental scenery. A long, narrow,
 described on paper may seem to denote           picturesque Chinese street forms the bus
 very bad taste on the part of the sun,          iness portion of the town, and all around
 but in reality was a gorgeous spectacle.        upon the green hills are the planters'
 The flowery hills around Kandy blushed          bungalows, climbing higher and higher
 a pale rose - tint, as though they were         up the mountains, peeping out from a
 not quite satisfied to reflect any of the       perfect sea of coffee - trees, whose white
 deeper colors; but the mountains, rear-         blossoms exhale a perfume which hangs
 ing their heads eight thousand feet,            as a canopy over the whole country, and
 plunged their purple peaks into the             whose scarlet berries, when the coffee is
 azure sky.                                      ripe, gladden the dark green of the land 
 Few people would venture to dispute             scape.
 the beauty of Kandy at any time; but,           To return to the temple, now the
 glowing with the brilliant sunset lights,       resting-place of the ivory trifle whose
 it must win all hearts not utterly callous      history I am attempting to write. It is
 to beauty. At present, it may be de-            the core or nucleus of a vast establish
 scribed as a congregation of handsome           ment of Buddhist priests, who lift their
 objects rather than as a city. In the           voices in praise, morning, noon, and
 centre is a large artificial lake-one of        night, with an accompaniment of drums,
 the famous tanks or reservoirs con-             tom-toms, and big gongs. There is also
 structed at various parts of the island,        a large stable of elephants and horses,
 about two thousand years ago, to irri-          and serving-men, to officiate upon grand
 gate the land, forming the glory of king        occasions, when the tooth goes abroad
 and kingdom. Reflected in its waters            and is exhibited to the faithful. This,
 stands the Buddhist temple, with num-           however, it ve~y rarely does, for its
 berless colonnades and towers, under            guardians understand thoroughly that
 which reposes the great Dalada, the             too much familiarity breeds contempt,
 Tooth of Buddha; enshrined in tem-              and fifty years sometimes elapse be
 ples, and altars, arid reliquaires, of mar-           tween its appearances in public.
 ble, ivory, ebony, silver, and gold; set        King Kriti Sri had been the last mon
 with precious stones-sapphires, pearls,         arch to worship it in company with his
 rubies, topazes-for which the island is         subjects, so that very few persons in the
 renowned. Around the reservoir is a             island had actually seen it, though they
 raised wall and promenade, shadowed             earnestly believed in the potency of the
 by tamarind- trees, and the male cotton         relic, and that the sight alone would con
 with its cherry - lipped flowers, which         fer prosperity upon the beholder. Great
 falling carpet the earth in a zone of           preparations were, therefore, made in the
 pinky leaflets. Below is a carriage-            city of Kandy; triumphal arches erect
 drive around the lake, four miles in cir-       ed, and whole trees transplanted to form
 cumference. On the opposite side is             bowers, altars, and avenues for the pro
 the modern hotel, with its wide veran-          cession to halt in or pass through. Ev
 dah covered with creepers of every hue,         ery creature - man, woman, or child -
 and tempting long chairs. A little far-         that could use its own feet, came from all
 ther on is an old Dutch church, which in        parts of the island to witness the expo
 its ugly simplicity is a good foil to the       sition and partake in the consequent ben
 graceful and elaborate pagoda opposite; efits,  even as Italian peasantry assemble
 it seems to be sneering in a quiet and          at Easter in the vast amphitheatre of St.
 phlegmatic way at all the vainglorious          Peter's, to catch the small slips of paper

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 which the Pope trusts to the wind as his        to receive him, while the nobles, priests,
 messenger to convey pardon for sins and         and populace bend their bodies at a right
 immunity from punishment. But the               angle, lifting their arms above their heads,
 Cingalese consider that one divine ben-         and joining their fingers. They raise a
 efit is enough for one life, therefore this     shout of triumph appalling in its power
 festival is not often repeated.                 and vehemence, which is caught up by
 Formerly the high priest and the king           the multitude, and far and wide from
 were il~e officials at the ceremony; but        every throat and voice it spreads over
 since the island and the tooth have fall-       the whole city-one mighty, solemn peal
 en into British hands, of course the Gov-       of adoration. "Horrible idblatry!"
 exernor stands in lieu of the Queen. He         claims a prudish Protestant. So it may
 and the high priest, with attendant priests,    appear. But what, then, is the "Fe~e
 private secretaries, and other assistants,      Bieit in France, the " Holy Cross in
 etc., enter the sancf~rn sanctorarn where       Rome? What is our own impassioned
 the singularly long tooth dwells in cost-       embrace of a faded photograph, not seen
 ly obscurity. With the aid of a host of         for years, which rouses the yearning
 attendants, the various tabernacles, pa-        tear? We do not all of us understand
 godas, and altars are removed, when the         our own emotions-can we fathom those
 sumptuous caskets of gold and jewels            of the Cingalese?
 are loosed. The tooth then goes into            The elephant, bearing the sacred Dai
 its out-door garment, a pavilion of solid       ada, and followed by the whole retinue
 silver with silver ornamented pillars,          -civilized, savage, sacred and profane,
 which covers the bawsewzge, a small             priest and parson (no doubt the British
 octagonal cupola composed of burnish-           chaplain would have to be present, po
 ed gold, rows of blue sapphires, and ru-        litically, of course), richly-robed Cinga
 bies. The Ba/ada re~ses in another              lese nobles, unclad Malabars, Tamuls,
 gold casket, on a velvet cushion fringed        and Madras men-proceeds through the
 with precious pearls, such as would make        leafy avenues made for him, trampling
 the fortune of a royal princess. This           with dignified tread the world of flowers
 paraphernalia is placed on the back of a        spread for the feet which bear the sa
 most majestic elephant, richly caparison-       cred load, until it reaches the altar or
 ed in crimson velvet with gold embroid-         re~osoir, into which it is lifted by the
 ery. This gentleman, like many high             ancient Adikar. Then the British gov
 officials, has a complete sinecure, for his     ernor, holding back the velvet curtain,
 exclusive duty is to carry the Ba/ada           displays the relic to the ravished multi
 twice or thrice in his life, for which per-     tude, whose hosannas reach the echoes
 formance he lives in clover all the rest        of the purple mountains, and swim along
 of his existence, which is longer than          the valley, waking the nightingales that
 that of a man. Upon the occasion of             pipe their exultant song to the heart of
 his public appearance he is attended by         every dell.
 his mahouts and scores of lackeys, any-         All that can be effected by means of
 one of whom would hypothecate his head          evergreens and flowers in our own coun
 for a situation equal to that of the beast.     try falls far short in comparison with
 All the high officials, clerical, civil, and    what is done in the East. The grace
 military-the two latter British-join in         ful palm-leaves, and waving bananas -
 the procession.                                 the luscious magnolias, gorgeous sun 
 When the elephant carrying the Ba?-             flowers and shoe-blossoms, and the won
 ada appears at the gate of the temple, a        derful decorative taste possessed in such
 long double line of elephants kneel down        an extraordinary degree by savage over

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 civilized people-the glowing light, and         sued orders to his generals and his
 soothing perfume - the yellow - robed           armies to invade that country and stop
 monks, and the rich dresses of the no-          the idolatry-in the name of the true
 bles - the grand background of purple           God to kill and slay, and give no quar
 mountains, and the inner amphifl~eatre          ter, but to bring back the heretic king
 of hills covered with green coffee-the          and the wretched bit of human bone he
 quaint old temple, and the mirror - like        was adoring day and night. The great
 lake-produce a combination of scenic            general marched forth, fought and con
 effect unparalleled under our duller sky.       quered, captured the Dalada and the
 The Dalada, or Sacred Tooth, is a               devotee, and reported them to his mas
 piece of discolored ivory, over an inch               ter. And now commenced the tnals of
 in length, andbroa d in proportion. The         the tooth. The sovereign was resolved
 owner must have measured at least from          to go to extremities, and decided to burn
 seven to eight feet in height, to have          up the piece of bone, and have an end
 grown such a tooth; and it was declared         of it. He, therefore, had prepared in
 by the Portu~uese, when they conquer-           the yard of his palace a pit filled with
 ed the country, to be an ape's tooth.           glowing embers, into which the Dalada
 The history of this wonder-working in-          was cast. In the usual course of chem
 cisor, after it quitted its native jaw-bone,    ical action, it would have been speedily
 is as follows: The body of Guatama              reduced to powder; but the legend of
 Buddha was burned, according to the             this relic, like the tales concerning oth
 Indian custom, but before its entire de-        er miraculous objects, proceeds quite
 struction on the funeral pyre a priest          differently. The tooth rose from the
 rushed fnrward and rescued the eye-             flames unscathed, emitting from itself a
 tooth fro~ the flames. It was at once           radiance which ascended to the heavens
 venerated as miraculous, being the act-         and illumined the universe, or at least
 ual part of a body once a man, now a            as much of it as the writer of that pe
 deity-in fine, as a tangible piece of the       riod was acquainted with. Having thus
 body of God. This took place five cent-         displayed itself fire-proof and non-com
 uries before our Lord's Last Supper,            bustible, the king, being disgusted at
 where he gave his flesh to eat and to           the open defiance of his power, forth
 remain on earth. As in all religions,           with ordered the tooth to be buried deep
 schisms soon arose, and kings and na-           in the earth and trodden down by ele
 tions quarreled and went to war over a          phants; but, spurning the clay above
 bit of bone as over a bit of bread or wa-       it, it sprang up like the grain sowed by
 fer-one side declaring it was infamy to         the planter on a lotus - leaf, the emblem
 worship an inanimate bit of rubbishy,           of the spouse of the mother of Buddha,
 discolored ivory; the other protesting          who is reported to have conceived as a
 that it was the actual substance of God         virgin. Still the king was not satisfied.
 the Omnipotent, and a sacrilege to pro-         He naturally imagined some fraud had
 fane it.                                        been practiced, and ordered the tooth to
 The tooth had been kept in great state          be placed on an anvil. The ponderous
 in a city called Dantapoora (from dan Ia,       hammer was raised to crush it, but the
 tooth, and ~oora, city), and the King           tooth (it must surely have been a wisdom
 Kalinga, neglecting Vishnu and Siva,            tooth) sagely imbedded itself in il~e iron,
 worshiped only the tooth; for which he          and the hammer fell harmlessly upon it.
 was called to account by another king,          The priestly enemies then declared that
 Pandoowaf, the chief sovereign of all In-       the fraud consisted not in the relic itself,
 dia, who sent forth a mandate, and is-          which, no doubt, was part of the god

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 Vishnu, but in the assertion that it was        of the fair Ranawale, the King's daugh
 Guatama's. To prove this, the king              ter, whom he married. But scarcely
 ordered them to petition that worthy to         had they outlived that one blissful pe
 release his own tooth from the iron             riod of human existence, the "honey
 shackles into which he had put it. The          moon," when the wicked nephews of
 priests commenced a series of incanta-          Pandoowaf (why are nephews always
 tions and supplications, enough to move         wicked?) waged war against the tooth,
 any god; but the obstinate tooth, like so       and came down upon the city of Danta
 many of its successors (as dentists will        poora to sack and otherwise destroy it.
 vouch for), refused to be extracted. The        Now, the happy pair were still stanch
 king, who appears to have been a prac-          adherents of the tooth, and, fearful that
 tical,logical man, said, "Now you priests       even ivory could not resist such an ar
 have failed, let the Buddhists try"-            my, they disguised themselves in the
 whereupon great offerings were made to          garb of the despised and inimical priest
 the Da7ada, and all the saintly deeds           hood, and carried the treasure away to
 and holy acts of Buddha recounted.              the sea - coast, where il~ey~ buried it in
 These exertions were rewarded by the            the sand. But as the war waged fiercer,
 tooth getting up and showing itself again.      Ranawale, with true woman 5 wit, wove
 The king, delighted, placed it in a gold        it into her long, luxuriant tresses, and,
 goblet, when it was graciously pleased          drawing near to the ships, awaited the
 to float on the water. These miracles           result of the battle then raging around
 confirmed the wavering, and converted           the doomed city of Dantapoora. A red
 the king, though not the priests. Pan-          flag was to be the signal of defeat and
 doowaf, however, discarded the heretics,        despair, when the fair guardian of the
 and loaded the wihares (temples) with           relic was to embark and proceed to Cey
 treasure. He abdicated from the throne,         lon, which island had been foretold as
 and retired to a Buddhist monastery,            the future home of the Dalada. Thus,
 where he died in what we should de-             when the setting sun cast his last lurid
 nominate the odor of sanctity. He en-           beams upon the bloody signal, and the
 treated Buddha's forgiveness for his            whole eastern heaven blushed in shame,
 doubts; not failing judiciously to point        the devout heroine entered the ship and
 out that his sins had, after all, a bene-       passed with her sacred burden to the
 ficial result, as proving the authenticity      friendly shores of Ceylon, where she
 of the relic-that all is well that ends         was received by the king with royal
 well-and hinted at a dogma, since term-         honors. Every mark of distinction was
 ed Jesuitical, that evil might be commit-       heaped upon her head, and especially
 ted that good may result. Here he               upon her hair, which had performed
 equivocated a little with Buddha, sug-          such a wonderfiil service.
 gesting that if he had not believed in          History does not say so, but I have a
 the happy result, he (King Pandoowaf)           shrewd idea that the king married her;
 would never have permitted the indigni-         her spouse (Qodaini) having been killed
 ty. Thus there have been more Davids            in the battle. Not that this fact was
 than one.                                       material, for a Cingalese woman has
 The tooth, after this triumph, went             from time immemorial been allowed to
 back to Dantapoora, to the keeping of           take two or more husbands. The king
 Goohasina. In a short time, King Qoda-          also dedicated the island to the Dalada,
 ini came to worship at the shrine of the        and built for it the richest of sj0rines.
 Dalada, and made rich offerings. He             Since that time, A. D. 309, it has shared
 also adored at another shrine - that            the fate of the Cingalese, and under

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 gone the vicissitudes of that country;          was held as a sort of insignia of royalty,
 sometimes in triumphing over a million          like the crown jewels or regalia. In the
 of heads bowed in worship or reverence          rebellion in 1817, the first act of the
 -for I do not believe Buddhists wor-            Cingalese was to steal the tooth. A
 ship the thing they clasp their hands           priest, one of the guardians of the sanc
 and kneel to, any more than the Catho-          tuary, surreptitiously conveyed it and
 lics worship every wayside cross they           himself away to the mountains, where
 bend the knee before-sometimes wan-             he wandered unsuspected. The people,
 dering from place to place for safer            aware of this, considered their triumph
 keeping and to escape the ferocious on-         over their new lords and masters as a
 slaught of the Malabar invasion; but            foregone conclusion. But this becom
 wherever its sacred presence beamed,            ing known, a strict search was made,
 it influenced the destinies of the country,     and the priest was eventually taken with
 and its history forms a large portion of        the tooth upon him-his bald pate af
 Cingalese chronicles. The people place          fording no concealment like the locks of
 infinite confidence in its power to pro-        the fair Ranawale. The sacred ivory
 cure peace and prosperity for the na-           was restored to its former shrine and
 tion with whom it dwells. The Portu-            temple in Kandy. This being made
 guese knowing il~is, sought and obtain-         public, the effect was magical on the
 ed possession of it by force, and assert        people, who became convinced that the
 that they ground it up in a mortar and          guardians and possessors of the tooth
 publicly burnt it as an idol and false          must triumph, and that it was the will of
 god; that the Adikar Buddhist priests           Buddha that the British should rule
 offered for its redemption three hundred        over Ceylon. When peace and tran
 thousand ducats, which were refused by          quillity was restored, the guardianship
 Constantine de Braganza, the Portu-             of the tooth was divided between the
 guese leader. Nevertheless, another             governor of the island and the high
 tooth is said to have been manufactured         priest, and the reliquaire was so con
 so closely resembling the Dalada, that          structed that it required two keys to
 the priests were deceived and accepted          open it.
 it.The Cingalese, however, declare              In 1828 the Dalada was publicly exhib
 that the real Buddha dental was care-           ited for the benefit and adoration of the
 fully hidden away, and that Constantine         faithful; and the Queen of England, sit
 de Braganza was deceived by an ape's            ting high upon her Protestant throne in
 tooth, palmed off upon him, which he            the far- advanced nineteenth century, is
 burned. The latter story is much more           virtually the showman to a deluded mul
 probable than the former. This was in           titude, of a very large-sized tooth-much
 the sixteenth century.                          too monstrous for any human mouth,
 In i8i5, when the British became                unless that of a giant-and which they
 rulers of the island, they also became          reverence as the actual person of the
 guardians of the sacred Dalada, which           Deity!