This interesting and amusing description
by Sir William Russell of a 36 hour
visit to Aden in January 1858 was
republished in the Suffolk Gazette, the
journal of the 2nd Battalion The Suffolk
Regiment, in May 1907. Sir William was a
war correspondent in the Crimean War and
during the Indian Mutiny and at the time
of writing this diary was editor of the
Army and Navy Gazette
11th January 1858.
Early this morning and in the distance a
line of crags like shark’s teeth rising
out of the water, These resolved
themselves into sharp saw-backed ridges
of rock, cliffs and peaked mountains, of
rich rufous and vandyck brown, streaked
with reds and blacks as we approached.
Surely here are Vulcan’s workshops! Here
Brontes Steropes, and Pyrcamon have
cleared out their cinders since the days
of Saturn; here are the dust and
ash-heaps of the Cyclopean forges. Not
one little tree! Not one blade of grass!
Not one patch of verdure the size of a
man’s hand!
The eye seeks the
summits of those tumuli in expectation
of the smoke of the subterranean fires
in which those rocks were melted and
cast out in beds of scoria and ashes.
The blue sea seems to actually fizz at
the base of those tremendous hills of
slag and to boil and splutter as it
heaves against them. High in the air of
the loftiest peak a flag is flying from
a lofty staff. The old Union Jack is
flaunting a welcome to us; a house which
looks like a child’s Noah’s ark can be
detected near the staff by the curious.
Round by bluff and sloping ashes we
glide swiftly; here and there white
straight lines run across the ravines
which seem to topple over us, these
resolve themselves into walls of solid
masonry, tunnels and archways are seen
high up amid the crags. A round building
of stonework with black specks on the
flat roof looks very like a fort; and
see! As we round the point and run into
the shallow bay before us, there is
another house from which the dull black
eyes of the cannon are staring right at
you.
The bay holds some
half-dozen merchantmen, most of which
show French colours, a flotilla of Arab
dhows, an odd-looking steam sloop, and a
small armed schooner. The cinders seem
to have been shovelled away to form this
bay. Before us there is a row of three
or four white houses one storey high
thatched with reeds rising out of ashes
and backed by mountains of cinders. Here
and there the cinders rise into cones
above the bay and on the top of those
cones are perched some two-dozen
isolated houses, one or two huts on the
beach complete the public and private
buildings of the port, but the military
station is perched in an extinct crater
about three miles away where it is
nearly as hot as if the volcano was in
full activity.
Travellers have
sought in vain to convey to their
readers their impressions of the extreme
aridity and desolation of Aden, in vain,
because there are no words which can
give an idea of a settlement of human
beings fixed among a series of extinct
volcanoes. I thought as I looked at it
that I felt very much like a thirsty fly
who had suddenly dropped down on the
cooking establishment of some great
railway company would feel, with
difference that I could not fly away.
The prophetic and hypothetical
resemblance to the Inferno with its
fires extinguished, which is generally
suggested to you by one of the ship’s
officers or an old Indian, is falsified
by the blue sky overhead, though the
hideous Somalis and demonic shrieks of
the creatures who dance and whirl around
would give fair grounds for believing
that if it were indeed a deserted
compartment of the Eastern Orcus some of
the spirits had been forgotten and were
rejoicing in their liberty.
The natives are
pulling off! “Now then, who’s for
shore?”
 |
In frailest
canoes and lumbering boats,
castaways of merchantmen of all
nations swarm the predacious
Charons and cling to the ship’s
sides like apes. Here are lank,
lean, knock-kneed, hollow-thighed,
calfless, larkheeled,
flatfooted, undersized, bullet
headed narrow-chested Somali, -
genuine children of the African
littoral. These savages paint
their faces and wear huge wigs
of hair dyed a dull scarlet
which contrasting with their
black physiognomy renders their
aspect more frightful than
pantomime masks. There is one
feature inside their faces if
teeth can be called so, of
exceeding beauty - close-set,
snow white glistening dentistry,
which must be quite lost on bad
food and accidental cooking. |
Some of the boats are
pulled away by tawny Arabs - a race of
men as superior to the Somali as the
thoroughbred horse is superior to the
donkey. Nervous, sinewy, quick-eyed, mad
with passion and lust of gain, the thin
nostrils swelling at every gesture and
with every utterance of the mouth,
broad-chested, narrow-flanked, full-thighed,
well-limbed these Arabs whom one sees in
a degenerate state at Aden, Suez and all
Eastern seaports this side of China are
like the horses of their own deserts;
with something of the gentility of blood
about them and an air ineffable which
speaks of the times when there were
distinct races and tribes of men as of
animals ere commerce had bundled them
together in her universal cosmopolitan
operations.

A brisk little naval
engagement alongside terminated in the
capture of myself and two or three
companions who were at once carried off
to shore in a canoe paddled by
red-wigged savages. Who would not go on
shore to escape from a steamer coaling
with the thermometer at 92 degrees in
the shade, even though the shore was
only that of Aden? Besides a sea had
come in at the open port and I wanted to
dry them. And where could one dry
clothes better than at Aden?
A paddle of ten minutes brought us to a
rude pier which led to a bank of rough
shingle and hot sand whereon at some
distance was placed the rows of three or
four houses, which looked so white and
nice from the sea. The centre one bore
over the door the legend “Prince of
Wales Hotel” (His Royal Highness will
never be able to appreciate the rare
comforts of this establishment, for it
is now - but I am anticipating). [Russell
doesn’t refer back to this, but he may
have been going to say that the hotel
was closed in July 1858. It was to
eventually reopen as the the Hotel de
l’Europe.] The walk, short as it
was, made us dreadfully hot, for we were
out in the open sun. And more, we were
surrounded and baited by a yellow,
dancing, maddening pack of young
savages, Africans and Islanders, with
naked figures, painted hair, huge wigs,
who presented us with muffs and boas,
and wigs of ostrich feathers, porcupine
quills, sea shells, and leopard skins,
and whirled around us in a feverish
dance.

The former
Prince of Wales Hotel rebuilt as the
Hotel De L'Europe c.1900
We reached the
Hotel at last. Ah!
Parsee
Cowasjee, where did you get that
soda-water? Anyone who remembers those
early days when his nurse would put the
soapsuds into his mouth, will know what
we who drank of that Aden soda-water
experienced. But who can describe the
horrors of the brandy, except the man
who can do justice to the strange
qualities of the bottled ale? I asked
for a glass of water. A thievish looking
half-naked Mussulman waiter took up a
long necked pitcher of water, and handed
me a glass, into which he poured a
whitish fluid. In the midst of the
stream as it flowed something black
wriggled, and after a plunge to the
bottom came up to the top of the tumbler
and looked at me. It was a dreadful
thing, about four inches long and the
size of a full bodied earthworm, with
two sharp black eyes, and a large mouth,
and palpitating sides, which were
perforated with a row of additional
mouth or gills, that worked incessantly,
while with an easy motion the
interesting thing swam about in my
tumbler. The waiter admitted that the
creature was on the whole objectionable
as an ingredient of a drink, but he
said, “there will be some more water by
and by”. I can merely add, that the
hideous larva, or whatever it was, on
being poured out onto the sand, wriggled
about for some time and was lively when
I last saw him.
Our only resource,
as it was too hot to visit the station
till sunset, was to inspect the stock in
Cowasjee’s
shop next door and to look at a very
poor match of billiards between a
bleary-eyed little midshipman of the
Indian Navy and a nautical gentleman who
was suffering from delirium tremens.
Cowasjee’s
shop consists of the whole house minus
the roof, and it contains everything
that a man does not want. I suppose that
passengers going out to India anticipate
here their Indian purchases, as
passengers bound for Europe here invest
their money in Paris gloves made at
Malta, or in Windsor soap. There are
some people to whom a shop is an
abstract necessity for disbursement.
Here, then, in Cowasjee’s you see men
and boys buying Chinese slippers they
will never wear, and all sorts of
garments and articles they don’t want,
and
Cowasjee, a Parsee, with large olive
coloured, oval, smooth face, quickeyed,
and intelligent, place his hands on his
portly person, and smiles placidly
whilst his Parsee assistants glide round
the curious shelves, and recommend
things they never tried - Yarmouth
bloaters, pate de diable, pith hats,
pocket handkerchiefs, eau de cologne,
Whitechapel cigars, Piver’s perfumery,
(a wonderful man, Piver? I got one of
his bottles in a case-mate of the Redan,
and yet it was so bad.) When we had gone
through those amusements, our party, now
largely increased by fugitives from the
coaling went into the verandahs, and
thereupon gazed out upon the sea, the
cliffs, the beach, and on the wild crowd
of Somali boys and Arabs who waved their
wares before us, or descanted on the
merits of donkeys, mules, and camels,
all caparisoned, and ready to start for
the station. A few of the old “Die-Hards”,
His Majesty’s 57th Regiment, came down
from their bungalows to look at us, and
from them we learned that the remarkable
steam-sloop, which rejoiced in the name
of Adjadah or something approximate, was
supposed to have a tendency to bathos,
which would not render it desirable to
send our detachment of sappers on board
her, (poor Lambert! I had really
forgotten to mention that gallant,
fine-hearted soldier, who as I heard to
my infinite regret shared by everyone
who knew his kindly, honest genial
nature, fell a victim to the maliferous
climate of China.)
We had an odd kind
of dinner at the Prince of Wales, which
was chiefly remarkable for its extreme
unfitness to support life and good
humour of those who tried to eat it.
Then we organized races among the
Somalis, who ran the strand, and among
the camels and mules, which displayed
remarkable speed over the shingle whilst
the winners and the riders never stopped
shouting, “I say, saar, you give me five
shillin! I say, you promised me one
pound.” Amid these sports the noble art
of self-defence was not forgotten. The
Somalis aware of the Briton’s love for
athletic sports, paired off, and in a
style which would have delighted the
shades of Cribb and Belcher, hit each
other on the face and chest and got each
other “into chancery”, although they had
no particular suits to speak of; and
knocking their curly heads together with
an astounding clatter, looking
deceitfully in earnest, and claiming the
reward of victory at every round. “You
give me one pound saar, me beat big
fellow.” The sun began to set at last,
we paid 6 shillings a head for dinner,
and 6 shillings a head for wine, and set
off to the station, up a steep road
which led us by cliffs overhanging the
sea, to the wonderful basin in the
mountain top, where the English troops
are stationed. I can say nothing of it
now, for as I write remembrances full of
melancholy steal over me. One of my
companions in that pleasant excursion
rests far away from friends and country,
in a lonely grave.
January
12th as coaling was still going on when
we returned to Lower Aden, the
passengers who could get beds slept at
the hotel, which offered to them a
certain number of monk’s cells, opening
to a wide passage, which was screened by
coconut matting from the outside yards.
Stewart, of the 7th Hussars who slept
next to me in the corridor, would insist
on having two boys to fan him all night.
It is not to be wondered that, then,
that the two rings which I had placed on
the table beside my bed were gone in the
morning. One was a souvenir from the
Crimea, bought from a wounded Zouave,
who had taken it from the finger of a
Russian officer and had taken the finger
off to get the ring. I had found out the
family of the officer by an
extraordinary accident long afterwards,
and the ring, which they begged me to
retain, had a special value in my eyes.
I wrote to all the authorities in the
ill regulated little dependency and to
my comfort I heard that robberies were
common at the hotel and recovery quite
unheard of. The police - for there are
police at Aden - made a charge on a
group of boys and led one into
captivity; but I shall never see my
rings again, the hotel people look
guilty, - but the Nubia’s gun fires.
At three o’clock we
are steaming out of the harbour of Aden,
leaving fattened mosquitoes and enriched
Parsees. Memo for travellers - never
touch one of the Somalis; one of our
passengers provoked by the persecutions
of a crowd of urchins, gave one of them
a tap on the head with his cane, down
fell the young rascal as if dead, and in
an instant a stream of blood was flowing
from his head upon the sand. He had
taken up a sharp shell and cut open his
scalp with it. The passenger was
horrified, the crowd raised a dismal
lamentation, the police came up, and the
result was that the Somali received two
pounds as hush money and marched off
rejoicing.