Wanderings Among South Sea Savages And In Borneo And The Philippines By H. Wilfrid Walker
























































































































 -  This company is
very wealthy and owns the only steamship line, plying between Singapore
and Kuching. It has several gold - Page 166
Wanderings Among South Sea Savages And In Borneo And The Philippines By H. Wilfrid Walker - Page 166 of 217 - First - Home

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This Company Is Very Wealthy And Owns The Only Steamship Line, Plying Between Singapore And Kuching.

It has several gold mines and a great quantity of land planted to pepper, gambier, gutta percha and rubber.

The Rajah will not allow any other company or private individual to buy lands or open up an estate, neither will he allow any traders in the country.

It would be difficult to imagine a more picturesque town than Kuching. It chiefly consists of substantial Chinese dwellings of brick and plaster, with beautiful tile-work of quaint figures, while temples glittering with gold peep out of thick, luxuriant, tropical growth. Two miles out of the city you can lose yourself in a dense tropical forest of the greatest beauty, and in the background is a chain of mountains, some of them of extraordinary shape. The reigning monarch or Rajah is an Englishman, Sir Charles Brooke, a nephew of Sir James Brooke, the first Rajah, who was an officer in the British Navy and who, after conquering Malay pirates, was made Rajah of the country by the grateful Dayaks.

Though Sarawak is supposed to be under British protection, and though all his officials are Britishers, Rajah Brooke considers his country independent and will not allow the Union Jack to be flown in his dominions. He possesses his own flag, a mixture of red, black and yellow, and his own national anthem; moreover his officials refer to him as the King, and to his son, the heir to the throne, as the "young King" (or "Rajah Muda").

Two days after my arrival, the Rajah left on his steam yacht for England, but the day before he left, he held a great reception at his "palace" (or "astana," as it is called in Malay). It was attended by all his officials, by high Malay chiefs and the chief Chinese merchants.

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