6
ROMANCE OF HAIR.
BICILIAN GIRL'S FORTUNE.
"One hair of a woman can draw more than a hundred pair of oxen." Bo wrote Howell some three centuries ago, and his opinion would seem to bold good at the present day. It is, of course, common knowledge that beautiful human hair is very valuable, but for a small fortune to be vested in one head is quite excup tional.
To a young Sicilian girl Nature has been almost prodigal in her liberality. She was possessed of a head of hair that was the envy of every woman in the island. Not only was it remarkable for a generous abundance, but the perfect black colour and graceful waviness were commented on by all who saw her. Many gentlemen of position and wealth offered to escurt her to the theatre for the sake of being seen in the company of one who was so gracefully adurued; but Sicilian etiquette in such matters is somewhat severe, and so the signorina remained under the watchful guidance of her parents in a little village outside Palermo. There she revelled in the sunshine, amidst groves of oranges and lemons, helping at times to gather the crop, and even occasionally using an old-fashioned press to make olive oil.
Quite unexpectedly there appeared one day a well-dressed stranger whose accent at once disclosed to be a Neapolitan What could be his mission? At first he spoke of Inmons, oranges, prickly pears, and so forth, it being the custom in those parts never to get to the point without a certain amount of irrelevant preamble
£4,000 FOR A HEAD OF HAIR.
THE HONGKONG DAILY FRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18TH, 1912,
HISTORIC MEMORIALS IN INDIA.
INTIMATIONS
Lord Curzon of Kedleston writes to the Times of October 20th:-At the present time, when there is an awakened sense of public duty about the preservation of the memorials of the past, when the houses that have been made famous by grest men are bought by public bodies and care- fully preserved for future generations. WE have Specially Selected en Assortment of Liquors for Ime as follows: and when a Farliamentary Committee is inquiring by what methods we may best prevent the destruction or alienation of our ancient monuments in this country, that some of us will have read the follow- it is with a pang of no ordinary regret ing passage in a recent number of the Calcutta Statesman :—
SPECIALITIES FOR XMAS.
Hastings House, the Government of India's guest-house at Alipore, will in a few days be denuded of all its furniture, and then the house itself is to be put up for sale, so that in a very short time an- other of the public institutions of Cal- cutta will hare disappeared. The sale of the furniture and offects of the house "on account of his Majesty's Indian Govern- began ment and under instructions from the Re- gistrar, Foreign Department," yesterday, and there was a very large at tendance of both Europeans and Indians. Lord Curzon bought Hastings House for the accommodation of guests of the Supreme Government, and it continued to be used as such during Lord Minto's Vice. royalty.
Most of the ruling princes of India have stayed there, and other guests have included the Ameer of Afghanistan and the Dalai Lama, who was the last official guest.
1
2
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1 bottle of Port, Talvern.
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$20 PER CASE.
1 bottle of Fall Rich Port
Amontillado Sherry, 1 Gio,
$25 PER CASE.
1 bottle of V. 0. T. Port
Maduro Sherry. Gin
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At length he ventured. Would by Warren Hastings shortly before his like to sell me your hair?'' The reply was quickly forthcoming, with a laugh, "Yes, if you will give me 100,000 francs.' It was a high price, nearly £4,000, but the dealer from Naples was prepared to pay even that figure for the unique head of hair, and eventually expressed his willingness to put down the mocy an take out his scissors.
All that the Statesman says is true: but it did not add--what is known to every- body in Calcutta though it may not be equally familiar here, and what con- stitutes the real poignancy of the tale- that this Hastings House, which I bought for Government in 1901 when it was about to be offered for sale and the grounds about it cut up for building purposes, s the very "garden house" which was built
which he constantly described as the marriage, in about the year 1,776, and "New House." There he lived in hap- piness with his second wife for six and half years, the most adoring of lovers with the most devoted of women; there he entertained at week-ends the elite of Calcutta society and the young members of the Civil Service fresh from the In terior; and from there were written some of his most passionate love-letters to "his Marian" after she had sailed for Eng-had; land in January, 1784. It was because of these personal associations that I rescued and acquired the place.
There was much discussion before the girl consented. Her parents hesitated a little; numerous relations and friends, including the parish priest, were consult ed, and eventually 100,000 francs were paid over, and the Sicilian beauty was tearfully bereft of her crowning glory With a keen commercial instinct she wished her head would produce a crop twice or thrice a year like her father's lemon trees; but it is doubtful if ever the hair will grow again to its original length.
а
Calcutta is not an old city, and it con- tains few buildings with a history of over 150 years. But that this house, which is by far its most interesting possession, and which was both the creation and the resi- dence of the greatest man whom England ever sent out to govern India, should, after ebing recovered and restored, and surrounded with a garden of great beauty, fall again under the auctioneer's hammer, by the action of Government itself, and have to take its chance in the future, as an item in the price which Cal-
Considerable business is done in Sicily in the purchase and export of hair Many of the poor peasantry are blessed with beautiful tresses, which they turn into money. As a rule a woman is con- tant to be shorn for about £ or £u;cutta must pay for her own dethronement, anything above that figure being con- is indeed sad. 1 impute vo blame, because the circumstances that render the sale sidered out of the ordinary; the case
But 1 unknown to me. under notice constituting
necessary are record. Nevertheless, the episode is unquestion write this letter because I know no other ably genuine, and is attested by several means of appealing to the public con- reliable witnesses, including a gentleman science in Ladia or in England, by which -of-high-repute at Palermo who holds a alone such misfortunes can be prevented. consular position. What became of his particular let has been kept a profound secret. It is highly improbable that any one purchaser could wear so large a quantity of hair that was not, to use a simple phrase, "home-grown.'
AMERICA'S DEMAND.
Mr. G. W. Forrest, C.I.E., writes to. the Times of October 30th: Sir-Some seventeen years ago I wrote as follows:-
Not far from the spot where the fam. ous duel between Warren Hastings and Francis took place stands Hastings House. It is fast crumbling into ruin, but it should be purchased by Govern Dealers and their agents parade thement, repaired, and converted into a public institution. It was the favourite streets and market places of Sicily offer residence of the man whose far sight first ing money for hair of good saleable saw, and whose brave and confident pati- quality. Combings are sometimes bought ence realised, the romantic idea of his at five francs a kilo, and one frequently country founding an empire in the East. bears the cry "two to three francs a When he returned to England he always rotolo. A rotolo in the equivalent of 800 remembered with fond affection the house grammes. Ladies who wish to estimate at Alipore, the paddocks in which he bred the value of their combings, and have a his Arab horses, and the grounds which fundness for arithmetic, many base their he planted with rare trees from all parts ealculations on the fact that the gramme of Asia. On the bank of the Thames he represents 15.132 grains, 437.5 grains erected a house after the model of his being the equal of one ounce avoirdupois. home at Alipore, and when he retired to The competition to secure good Sicilian Daylesford he laid out the grounds after hair is very keen. Most of it is shipped the fashion of his Indian country seat.
"Alipore was dear to him because there to America after having been carefully he spent the best years of his life, with selected and graded according to
the woman for whom he had an unbound- recognised standards of length, colour, and waviness. It is neatly packed in ed love and admiration. There was not As long such another being in the world.. tresses and sealed in Lin-lined cases, which as she was by his side. nothing could come in turn are stowed on board ship beneath amiss to him; the cares and fatigues of reary cargo to minimise the possibility of the day made no impression on his spirits. theft,
When the state of her health had laid him under the stern necessity of sending her to England he wrote:"1 miss you in every instant and incident of my life, and everything seems to wear a dead stillness around me. I come home as to solitude.' After she had gone he cared not to dwell at Alipore and he deter- mined to sell the property."
THE SLEEP OF THE YOUNG.
B
Sir James Crichton-Browne read paper on. Brain Rest at an educa- tional conference at Tunbridge Wells, He said that the belief was current that
When Lord Curzon entered on his a buy wearied with mental work, would find recuperation in cricket or a cycle exalted office, he at once with the zeal of run, but that was bad physiology. good patriot and the imagnation of a Gymnastics were not restoratives where statesman, overcome many grave obstacles and purchased Hastings House as a State there was mental fatigue. Some 30 years ago he published a table showing the aver-guest-house for the chiefs and Princes of age amount of sleep required by children India. The removal of the seat of Im- at different ages, and, looking over that perial Government to Delhi may do with table in the light of farther experience, the necessity of a State guest-house, but he would amend it in only one particular. it would hardly justify such an act of Instead of allowing 12 hours sleer to vandalism as the demolition of the house six years of age, he conceded 13. To his and the destruction of the beautiful The city of Calcutta is a other estimates he would adhere, giving grounds.
minimum 11 hours sleep to children splendid monument of the patience, cour from seven to nine, 10 hours to children age, and genius of the Anglo-Saxon_race. from nine to 14, 10 hours to children from The history of British dominion in Ind a 14 to 17, 9 hours to youths or maidens the most marvellous romance of our country-niay be traced in its buildings, from 17 to 21, nire hours to young men and women from 21 to 27, and eight hours statues, and inscriptions. Those memo rials of the brave and wise men who have to al at later stages.
He had seen painful instances of the in- bequeathed to England an empire are mediate effects of insufficiency of sleep in sacred trusts, and they must be carafuil highly strung, sensitive boys at public preserved by the State. No greater re schools, and it was not only in public spect could be shown to Warren Hastings, schools that the evils of deficient brain the founder of the empire, than preserv rest were encountered. The rest cures of ing the mansion he built and loved. which they now heard so often had, he lley, Oxon, October 28th.
13
fancied, in many cases to be undertaken merely to make up the arrears of sleep in early years. The sleep of the rising gen-
fered with, and the consequences must be
-LATEST-STEAMER MOVEMENTS.
eration was being detrimentally inter- The AL. str. Africa left Shanghai for a rich crop of neurasthenia and mental this port on the 16th December, and will.
arrive here on the 19th December, am:
enfeeblement in the future. Enormous The I.G.M. str. Kleist, which left here numbers of young children lived under conditions which made a sufficiency of on the 13th December, arrived at Shang- brain rest of the right sort impossible, bai on the 16th December, at 4 p.m. They got but snatches of adulterated sleep with no brain nourishment in it, and
The 1.G.M. str. Prinz Ludwig, carrying
the German mails with dates from Berlin
went to school in the morning unrested, of the 27th November, left Colombo on the despair of the teacher and a reproach to cur civilisation.
the 15th December, p... and may be ex pected here on the 26th December, p.m.
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