When Mr. and Mrs. Judson left Rangoon to establish
their home in Ava, the outlook was encouraging. They had left behind them a small but
vigorous church of eighteen converted Burmans, under the care of Mr. and Mrs. Hough
and Mr. and Mrs. Wade. They had been invited by the king to live in the capital city,
and had received from him a plot of ground on which to build a mission house. They
felt sure of royal protection and favor. Many persons of high rank seemed kindly
disposed to the new religion; while Dr. Price had won golden opinions by his medical
skill. They immediately commenced the building of a little dwelling-house, and Mrs.
Judson soon had a school of three native girls. Mr. Judson preached in Burmese every
Sunday at Dr. Price's house, and held worship every evening.
A dark cloud, however, was gathering on the horizon. War was impending between Burma
and the English government in India. For two years the Christians of America were kept
in a state of terrible suspense, unbroken by any tidings from their missionaries in Ava,
which was only assuaged by fervent and universal prayer on their behalf.
The occasion of the war was Chittagong, that particular strip of low land lying
along the sea and flanking Burma on the west, to which Mr. Colman had gone to prepare
an asylum for the Judsons, in case they should be driven out of Rangoon. This district
was under British rule, and refugees from the cruel despotism of Burma had taken
shelter there. The Burman monarch insisted that his victims should be arrested by the
English authorities and handed over to him. Besides, he felt that Chittagong belonged
naturally to Burma. And such was his pride and his contempt for British prowess, that
he deemed it quite possible for him not only to recover this territory, but even to
conquer the whole of Bengal.
When war actually broke out, suspicion fell at once on all the white foreigners
residing in Ava. They were thought to be spies secretly acting in collusion with the
English government. They were immediately arrested, fettered, and thrown into the death
prison.
"I was seized," Dr. Judson writes, "on the 8th of June, 1824, in consequence of the
war with Bengal, and in company with Dr. Price, three Englishmen, one American, and one
Greek, was thrown into the death prison at Ava, where we lay eleven months -- nine months
in three pairs, and two months in five pairs of fetters. The scenes we witnessed and
the sufferings we underwent during that period I would fain consign to oblivion. From
the death prison at Ava we were removed to a country prison at Oung-pen-la, ten miles
distant, under circumstances of such severe treatment, that one of our number, the
Greek, expired on the road; and some of the rest, among whom was myself, were scarcely
able to move for several days. It was the intention of the government in removing us
from Ava, to have us sacrificed in order to insure victory over the foreigners; but
the sudden disgrace and death of the adviser of that measure prevented its execution.
I remained in the Oung-pen-la prison six months in one pair of fetters; at the
expiration of which period I was taken out of irons, and sent under a strict guard to
the Burmese headquarters at Mah-looan, to act as interpreter and translator. Two
months more elapsed, when on my return to Ava, I was released at the instance of
Moung Shwa-loo, the north governor of the palace, and put under his charge. During
the six weeks that I resided with him the affairs of the government became desperate,
the British troops making steady advances on the capital; and after Dr. Price had been
twice dispatched to negotiate for peace (a business which I declined as long as
possible), I was taken by force and associated with him. We found the British above
Pah-gan; and on returning to Ava with their final terms, I had the happiness of
procuring the release of the very last of my fellow-prisoners; and on the 21st instant,
obtained the reluctant consent of the government to my final departure from Ava with
Mrs. Judson."
In these few modest words Mr. Judson passes over all the prolonged horrors which he
endured in the confinement of an Oriental jail. Let us glance at his experience more
in detail. His imprisonment was remarkable for its duration. For nine months he was
confined in three pairs of fetters, two months in five, six months in one; for two
months he was a prisoner at large; and for nearly two months, although released from
prison, he was yet restrained in Ava under the charge of the north governor of the
palace, so that his confinement reached nearly to the end of twenty-one long months.
Again, for most of the time of his confinement he was shut up in a loathsome,
wretched place. It derived its remarkable, well-selected name, Let-ma-yoon -- literally
interpreted, Hand, shrink not -- from the revolting scenes of cruelty practised
within its walls. To those acquainted with the Burmese language the name conveys a
peculiar impression of terror. It contemplates the extreme of human suffering, and
when this has reached a point at which our nature recoils -- when it is supposed that
any one bearing the human form might well refuse to be the instrument to add to it, the
hand of the executioner is apostrophized and encouraged not to follow the dictates of
the heart: "Thine eye shall not pity and thine hand not spare."
The Let-ma-yoon was a building about forty feet long and thirty feet wide. It was
five or six feet high along the sides, but as the roof sloped, the center of it was
perhaps double that height. There was no ventilation except through the chinks between
the boards and through the door, which was generally closed. On the thin roof poured
the burning rays of a tropical sun. In this room were confined nearly one hundred
prisoners of both sexes and all nationalities. Dr. Price thus describes the impressions
he received on entering the prison:
"A little bamboo door opened, and I rose to go toward it. But oh! who can describe my
sensations? shackled like a common felon in the care of hangmen the offscouring of the
country, turned like a dog into his kennel, my wife, my dear family, left to suffer
alone all the rudeness such wretches are capable of. The worst, however, was yet to
come; for making the best of my way up the high steps, I was ushered into the grand
apartment. Horror of horrors, what a sight! never to my dying day shall I forget the
scene: a dim lamp in the midst, just making darkness visible, and discovering to my
horrified gaze sixty or seventy wretched objects, some in long rows made fast in the
stocks, some strung on long poles, some simply fettered; but all sensible of a new
acquisition of misery in the approach of a new prisoner. Stupefied, I stopped to gaze,
till goaded on, I proceeded toward the farther end, when I again halted. A new and
unexpected sight met my eyes. Till now I had been kept in ignorance of the fate of
my companions. A long row of white objects, stretched on the floor in a most crowded
situation, revealed to me however but too well their sad state, and I was again urged
forward. Poor old Rodgers, wishing to retain the end of the bamboo, made way for me
to be placed alongside of Mr. Judson.
"'We all hoped you would have escaped, you were so long coming,' was the first
friendly salutation I had yet received; but alas, it was made by friends whose sympathy
was now unavailing."
The following description of the interior of this jail is given by an English
fellow-prisoner of Mr. Judson:
"The only articles of furniture the place contained were these: First, and most
prominent, was a gigantic row of stocks, similar in its construction to that formerly
used in England, but now nearly extinct, though dilapidated specimens may still be
seen in some of the marketplaces of our own country towns. It was capable of
accommodating more than a dozen occupants, and like a huge alligator opened and shut
its jaws with a loud snap upon its prey. Several smaller reptiles, interesting
varieties of the same species, lay basking around this monster, each holding by the
leg a pair of hapless victims consigned to its custody. There were heavy logs of
timber, bored with holes to admit the feet, and fitted with wooden pins to hold them
fast. In the center of the apartment was placed a tripod, holding a large earthen cup
filled with earth-oil, to be used as a lamp during the night-watches; and lastly, a
simple but suspicious looking piece of machinery whose painful uses it was my fate to
test before many hours had elapsed. It was merely a long bamboo suspended from the
roof by a rope at each end, and worked by blocks or pulleys, to raise or depress it
at pleasure.
"Before me, stretched on the floor, lay forty or fifty hapless wretches, whose
crimes or misfortunes had brought them into this place of torment. They were all nearly
naked, and the half-famished features and skeleton frames of many of them too plainly
told the story of their protracted sufferings. Very few were without chains, and
some had one or both feet in the stocks besides. A sight of such squalid wretchedness
can hardly be imagined. Silence seemed to be the order of the day; perhaps the poor
creatures were so engrossed with their own misery that they hardly cared to make any
remarks on the intrusion of so unusual an inmate as myself.
"The prison had never been washed, nor even swept, since it was built. So I was told,
and have no doubt it was true, for, besides the ocular proof from its present condition,
it is certain no attempt was made to cleanse it during my subsequent tenancy of eleven
months. This gave a kind of fixedness or permanency to the fetid odors, until the very
floors and walls were saturated with them, and joined in emitting the pest. As might
have been expected from such a state of things, the place was teeming with creeping
vermin to such an extent that very soon reconciled me to the plunder of the greater
portion of my dress."
Surely it was enough for Mr. Judson to be shut up in the hot, stifling stench of
a place like this without having his ankles and legs weighted with five pairs of
irons, the scars from which he wore to his dying day. He could say with the Apostle
Paul, "I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus." In each pair of fetters the
two iron rings were connected by a chain so short that the heel of one foot could
hardly be advanced to the toe of the other; and this task could be accomplished
only by "shuffling a few inches at a time." The five pairs of irons weighed about
fourteen pounds, and when they were removed after being long worn, there was a strained
sensation, the equilibrium of the body seemingly being destroyed, so that the head was
too heavy for the feet. Then at nightfall, lest the prisoners should escape, they were
"strung" on a bamboo pole.
"When night came on," writes one of Mr. Judson's fellow-prisoners, "the 'Father' of
the establishment, entering, stalked toward our corner. The meaning of the bamboo now
became apparent. It was passed between the legs of each individual, and when it had
threaded our number, seven in all, a man at each end hoisted it up by the blocks to
a height which allowed our shoulders to rest on the ground, while our feet depended
from the iron rings of the fetters. The adjustment of the height was left to the
judgment of our kind-hearted parent, who stood by to see that it was not high enough
to endanger life, nor low enough to exempt from pain. ... In the morning, our
considerate parent made his appearance, and with his customary
grin, lowered the bamboo to within a foot of the floor, to the great relief of our
benumbed limbs, in which the blood slowly began again to circulate."
When Mr. Judson was subjected to these indignities and tortures, he was in the very
prime of life -- thirty-six years old. He had come to that age when a good physical
constitution is thoroughly seasoned and well qualified to endure hardship. He had always
taken the best care of his health. Even before leaving America, he had adopted the
following rules: First, frequently to inhale large quantities of air, so as to expand
the lungs to the uttermost; secondly, daily to sponge the whole body in cold water;
and thirdly, and above all, to take systematic exercise in walking.
Again, he had that tough, wiry physique which endures unexpectedly even during
prolonged crises. All this was in his favor. But, on the other hand, he was a student,
unused to suffering hardship. His naturally vigorous constitution had been somewhat
enfeebled by ten years of close application to study in a tropical climate, and of
late years it had been completely shattered by repeated attacks of fever and ague. He
was reared in the cold, bracing air of New England, and during the tedious hours of
imprisonment, how often must his memory have projected the sufferings of the Oriental
jail against the background of the cool, green hillsides of his childhood!
He was possessed moreover of an active, methodical nature, to which the enforced
idleness of twenty-one months must have brought the keenest torture. There was his
Burman Bible unfinished, and ten years of work in Rangoon going to pieces in his
absence. He longed to be preaching the gospel. Now that he had at last completely
mastered the native tongue, he was filled with Jeremiah's consuming zeal: "His word
was in mine heart, and a burning fire shut up in my bones."
Endowed with a nervous temperament, his nature was exceedingly sensitive to
discomfort. One of his fellow-prisoners says: "His painful sensitiveness to anything
gross or uncleanly, amounting almost to folly, was an unfortunate virtue to possess,
and made him live a life of constant martyrdom."
A nature amply endowed with these fine sensibilities must have instinctively shrunk
from the filth of the dungeon and the squalor of the prisoners; while the constrained
and crowded position, night and day, and the galling fetters were almost unendurable.
There was also much to shock his moral nature. He found himself thrown into close
association with the basest criminals of the Burman capital. His pure look rested
upon their repulsive features, his reluctant ears were filled with their vulgar
and blasphemous jests. Besides this, again and again he saw the wretched prisoner
tortured with the cord and mallet, and was forced to hear the writhing victim's
shriek of anguish.
He was likewise a man of the strongest and tenderest affections. What keen mental
anguish must he have experienced at the thought of his beloved wife threading alone
the hot, crowded streets, hourly exposed to the insults of rude Burman officials;
day by day bringing or sending food to the jail; assuaging the wretchedness of the
prisoners by bribing their keepers; pleading for the release of her husband with
one Burman officer after another, and with such pathetic eloquence that on one
occasion she melted to tears even the old governor of the prison; carrying her
little Maria all the way in her arms to that place never to be forgotten, Oung-pen-la,
her only conveyance a rough cart, the violent motion of which, together with the
dreadful heat and dust, made her almost distracted; nursing her infant and the
little native girls under her care through a course of small-pox: and at last, breaking
down herself and brought to death's door by the same loathsome disease, succeeded by
the dread spotted fever!
Add to these horrors of Mr. Judson's imprisonment the daily and even hourly
anticipation of torture and death, and it will be difficult to conceive of a denser
cloud of miseries than that which settled down on his devoted head. The prisoners
knew that they were arrested as spies. The Burman king and his generals were
exasperated by the rapid and unexpected successes of the English army, and
Mr. Judson and his fellow-prisoners had every reason to suppose that this pent-up
fury would be poured upon their heads. It was customary to question the
prisoner with instruments of torture -- the cord and the iron mallet. Rumors of a
frightful doom were constantly sounding in their ears. Now they heard their
keepers during the night sharpening the knives to decapitate the prisoners the
next morning; now the roar of their mysterious fellow-prisoner, a huge, starving
lioness, convinced them that they were to be executed by being thrown into her
cage; now it was reported that they were to be burned up together with their prison
as a sacrifice; now that they were to be buried alive at the head of the Burman army
in order to insure its victory over the English. The following description by Mr. Gouger
of the solemn hour of three, shows the exquisite mental torture to which the prisoners
were subjected:
"Within the walls nothing worthy of notice occurred until the hour of three in the
afternoon. As this hour approached, we noticed that the talking and jesting of the
community gradually died away; all seemed to be under the influence of some powerful
restraint, until that fatal hour was announced by the deep tones of a powerful gong
suspended in the palace-yard, and a death-like silence prevailed. If a word was
spoken it was in a whisper. It seemed as though even breathing was suspended under
the control of a panic terror, too deep for expression, which pervaded every bosom. We
did not long remain in ignorance of the cause. If any of the prisoners were to suffer
death that day, the hour of three was that at which they were taken out for execution.
The very manner of it was the acme of cold-blooded cruelty. The hour was scarcely
tolled by the gong when the wicket opened, and the hideous figure of a spotted man
appeared, who without uttering a word walked straight to his victim, now for the
first time probably made acquainted with his doom. As many of these unfortunate
people knew no more than ourselves the fate that awaited them, this mystery was
terrible and agonizing; each one fearing up to the last moment, that the stride of
the spotted terror might be directed his way. When the culprit disappeared with his
conductor, and the prison door closed behind them, those who remained began again to
breathe more freely; for another day, at least, their lives were safe.
"I have described this process just as I saw it practised. On this first day, two
men were thus led away in total silence; not a useless question was asked by the
one party, nor explanation given by the other; all was too well understood. After
this inhuman custom was made known to us, we could not but participate with the
rest in their diurnal misgivings, and shudder at the sound of the gong and the
apparition of the pahquet. It was a solemn daily lesson of an impressive
character, 'Be ye also ready.'"
It is no wonder that Mr. Judson, in the midst of these horrors, took refuge in the
quietism of Madame Guyon, and used often to murmur her beautiful lines:
No place I seek, but to fulfill
In life and death thy lovely will;
No succor in my woes I want,
Except what thou art pleased to grant.
Our days are numbered -- let us spare
Our anxious hearts a needless care;
Tis thine to number out our days,
And ours to give them to thy praise.

[Table of Contents] |