Dr. Scudder's Tales for Little Readers, About the Heathen. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 134 pages of information about Dr. Scudder's Tales for Little Readers, About the Heathen..

Dr. Scudder's Tales for Little Readers, About the Heathen. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 134 pages of information about Dr. Scudder's Tales for Little Readers, About the Heathen..

I hope, my dear children, that when you think of the wicked little girl just mentioned, you will be warned never to speak bad words.  God will be very angry with you, if you do.  Did you never read what is said in 2 Kings, 2d chapter and 23d verse, about the little children who mocked the prophet Elijah, and spoke bad words to him.  O, how sorry must they have felt for their conduct, when they saw the paws of those great bears lifted up to tear them in pieces, and which did tear them in pieces.  Besides all this, little children who speak bad words can never go to heaven.  God will cast them into the great fire.  Have you ever spoken bad words?  If so, God is angry with you, and he will not forgive you unless you are sorry that you have done so, and seek his forgiveness through the blood of his dear Son.

CHAPTER II.

THE COLOR AND ORNAMENTS OF THE HINDOOS.

My dear children—­If you will take a piece of mahogany in your hands, and view its different shades, you will have a pretty good representation of the color of a large class of this heathen people—­I say, of a large class, for there is a great variety of colors.  Some appear to be almost of a bronze color.  Some are quite black.  It is difficult to account for the different colors which we often see in the same family.  For instance, one child will be of the reddish hue to which I just referred; another will be quite dark.  When I was in Ceylon, two sisters of this description joined my church.  One was called Sevappe, or the red one; the other was called Karappe, or the black one.

This people very much resemble the English and Americans in their features.  Many of them are very beautiful.  This remark will apply particularly to children, and more especially to the children of Brahmins and others, who are delicately brought up.  But however beautiful any of this people may be, they try to make themselves appear more so, by the ornaments which they wear.  These ornaments are of very different kinds, and are made of gold, silver, brass, precious stones, or glass.  All are fond of ear-rings.  Sometimes four or five are worn in each ear, consisting of solid gold, the lower one being the largest, and the upper one the smallest.  Some men wear a gold ornament attached to the middle of the ear, in which a precious stone is inserted.  Sometimes they wear very large circular ear-rings, made of the wire of copper, around which gold is twisted so as to cover every part of it.  These are frequently ornamented with precious stones.  The females, in addition to ear-rings, have an ornament which passes through the rim of the ear, near the head, half of it being seen above the rim, and half of it below it.  An ornamental chain is sometimes attached to this, which goes some distance back, when it is lost in the hair.  They sometimes also wear a jewel in the middle of the rim of the ear, and another on that little forward point which strikes your finger when you attempt to put it into the ear.  Nose jewels also are worn.  Sometimes three are worn at the same time.  Holes are made through each side of the lower part of the nose, and through the cartilage, or that substance which divides the nostrils, through which they are suspended.  The higher and wealthier females wear a profusion of ornaments of gold and pearls around the neck.

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Dr. Scudder's Tales for Little Readers, About the Heathen. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.