Boiled  with    water   this    forms   a   thick   glutinous   mass,   with    a   rather  astringent
taste,   and     is  eaten   with    salt,   limes,  and     chilies.    Sago-bread  is  made    in  large
quantities, by  baking  it  into    cakes   in  a   small   clay    oven    containing  six or  eight
slits   side    by  side,   each    about   three-quarters  of  an  inch    wide,   and six or  eight
inches  square. The raw sago    is  broken  up, dried   in  the sun,    powdered,   and finely
sifted. The oven    is  heated  over    a   clear   fire    of  embers, and is  lightly filled  with
the sago-powder.    The openings    are then    covered with    a   flat    piece   of  sago    bark,
and in  about   five    minutes the cakes   are turned  out sufficiently    baked.  The hot
cakes   are very    nice    with    butter, and when    made    with    the addition    of  a   little  sugar
and  grated  cocoa-nut   are     quite   a   delicacy.   They    are     soft,   and     something   like
corn-flour   cakes,  but     leave   a   slight  characteristic  flavour     which   is  lost    in  the
refined sago    we  use in  this    country.    When    not wanted  for immediate   use,    they
are dried   for several days    in  the sun,    and tied    up  in  bundles of  twenty. They    will
then    keep    for years;  they    are very    hard,   and very    rough   and dry,    but the people
are used    to  them    from    infancy,    and little  children    may be  seen    gnawing at  them
as  contentedly as  ours    with    their   bread-and-butter.   If  dipped  in  water   and then
toasted,    they    become  almost  as  good    as  when    fresh   baked;  and thus    treated they
were    my  daily   substitute  for bread   with    my  coffee. Soaked  and boiled  they    make
a   very    good    pudding or  vegetable,  and served  well    to  economize   our rice,   which
is  sometimes   difficult   to  get so  far east.
It  is  truly   an  extraordinary   sight   to  witness a   whole   tree-trunk, perhaps twenty
feet    long    and four    or  five    in  circumference,  converted   into    food    with    so  little
labour  and preparation.    A   good-sized  tree    will    produce thirty  tomans  or  bundles
of   thirty  pounds  each,   and     each    toman   will    make    sixty   cakes   of  three   to  the
pound.  Two of  these   cakes   are as  much    as  a   man can eat at  one meal,   and five
are considered  a   full    day's   allowance;  so  that,   reckoning   a   tree    to  produce 1,800
cakes,  weighing    600 pounds, it  will    supply  a   man with    food    for a   whole   year.
The labour  to  produce this    is  very    moderate.   Two men will    finish  a   tree    in  five
days,   and two women   will    bake    the whole   into    cakes   in  five    days    more;   but the
raw  sago    will    keep    very    well,   and     can     be  baked   as  wanted,     so  that    we  may
estimate    that    in  ten days    a   man may produce food    for the whole   year.   This    is  on
the supposition that    he  possesses   sago    trees   of  his own,    for they    are now all
private property.   If  he  does    not,    he  has to  pay about   seven   and sixpence    for one;
and as  labour  here    is  five    pence   a   day,    the total   cost    of  a   year's  food    for one man
is   about   twelve  shillings.  The     effect  of  this    cheapness   of  food    is  decidedly
prejudicial,     for     the     inhabitants     of  the     sago    countries   are     never   so  well    off     as
those   where   rice    is  cultivated. Many    of  the people  here    have    neither vegetables
nor  fruit,  but     live    almost  entirely    on  sago    and     a   little  fish.   Having  few
