IN THE BURMIIAN EMPIRE.
165
the mayhoon, to pay him my visit. He received
me in his pahoun, or large family boat: he rose
when I entered the audience-room, and shook
hands with me: we then sat down in chairs close
to each other, on the right-hand side of the room,
my chair being placed to his right. Mr. Burnett,
the rayhoon, and shabunder, were seated on car-
pets fronting us ; the interpreters and two or three
of his own people towards the fore part of the
room; the rest of his people, with my servants,
under awnings on the platform outside. I took
off my shoes before I entered the room. The
viceroy was dressed in a jacket of fine brown
cotton cloth, the manufacture of the country, silk
lungee, and muslin fillet handkerchief round his
head. His reception was frank and friendly,
totally devoid of formality; and Ave conversed and
chatted with the familiarity of old acquaintance.
He introduced two of his children to me, a
sprightly little girl seven or eight years old, and
a little boy of three. About half-an-hour after
I had been seated, the whoonghee, passing by on
his way to join his majesty, seeing me in the
boat, called along-side, and came on board (the
mayhoon had said previously, " Perhaps, the
whoonghee will call if he sees you here," and had
placed a chair for him within a railing in the
centre apartment of the boat, about four or five
yards to our left). The whoonghee entered the
165
the mayhoon, to pay him my visit. He received
me in his pahoun, or large family boat: he rose
when I entered the audience-room, and shook
hands with me: we then sat down in chairs close
to each other, on the right-hand side of the room,
my chair being placed to his right. Mr. Burnett,
the rayhoon, and shabunder, were seated on car-
pets fronting us ; the interpreters and two or three
of his own people towards the fore part of the
room; the rest of his people, with my servants,
under awnings on the platform outside. I took
off my shoes before I entered the room. The
viceroy was dressed in a jacket of fine brown
cotton cloth, the manufacture of the country, silk
lungee, and muslin fillet handkerchief round his
head. His reception was frank and friendly,
totally devoid of formality; and Ave conversed and
chatted with the familiarity of old acquaintance.
He introduced two of his children to me, a
sprightly little girl seven or eight years old, and
a little boy of three. About half-an-hour after
I had been seated, the whoonghee, passing by on
his way to join his majesty, seeing me in the
boat, called along-side, and came on board (the
mayhoon had said previously, " Perhaps, the
whoonghee will call if he sees you here," and had
placed a chair for him within a railing in the
centre apartment of the boat, about four or five
yards to our left). The whoonghee entered the