National Institute of Informatics - Digital Silk Road Project
Digital Archive of Toyo Bunko Rare Books

> > > >
Color New!IIIF Color HighRes Gray HighRes PDF   Japanese English
0144 The Book of Ser Marco Polo : vol.2
The Book of Ser Marco Polo : vol.2 / Page 144 (Color Image)

New!Citation Information

doi: 10.20676/00000269
Citation Format: Chicago | APA | Harvard | IEEE

OCR Text

 

 

io6

MARCO POLO   Book II.

" The trees ` hard by the plain,' to which the Tartars tied their horses, and in which the elephants were entangled, were in all probability in the corner below the

` rolling hills ' marked in the chart.   Very few trees remain, but in any case the
grove would long ago have been cut down by the Chinese, as everywhere on inhabited plains. A short distance up the hill, however, groves of exceptionally fine trees are passed. The army, as it seems to us, must have entered the plain from its southernmost point. The route by which we departed on our way to Burmah would be very embarrassing, though perhaps not utterly impossible, for so great a number of elephants."—H. C.]

Between 1277 and the end of the century the Chinese Annals record three campaigns or expeditions against MIEN ; viz. (1) that which Marco has related in this chapter ; (2) that which he relates in eh. liv. ; and (3) one undertaken in 1300 at the request of the son of the legitimate Burmese hing, who had been put to death by an usurper. The Burmese Annals mention only the two latest, but, concerning both the date and the main circumstances of these two, Chinese and Burmese Annals are in almost entire agreement. Surely then it can scarcely be doubted that the Chinese authority is amply trustworthy for the first campaign also, respecting which the Burmese book is silent ; even were the former not corroborated by the independent authority of Marco.

Indeed the mutual correspondence of these Annals, especially as to chronology, is very remarkable, and is an argument for greater respect to the chronological value of the Burmese Chronicle and other Indo-Chinese records of like character than we should otherwise be apt to entertain. Compare the story of the expedition of 1300 as told after the Chinese Annals by De Mailla, and after the Burmese Chronicle by Burney and Pha) re. (See De 1lfailla, IX. 476 seqq. ; and./ A. S. B. vol. vi. pp. 121122, and vol. xxxvii. Pt. I. pp. 102 and i i o. )

CHAPTER LIII.

OF THE GREAT DESCENT THAT LEADS TOWARDS THE KINGDOM

OF' MIEN.

AFTER leaving the Province of which I have been speaking

you come to a great Descent. - In fact you ride for two

days and a half continually down hill. On all this

descent there is nothing worthy of mention except only

that there is a large place there where occasionally a

great market is held ; for all the people of the country

round come thither on fixed days, three times a week,

and hold a market there. They exchange gold for silver ;

for they have gold in abundance ;. and they give one

b

weight of fine gold for five weights of fine silver ; so

this induces merchants to come from various4 uarters