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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Black-bearded Barbarian, by Marian Keith
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Black-Bearded Barbarian (George Leslie
+Mackay), by Mary Esther Miller MacGregor, AKA Marion Keith
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Black-Bearded Barbarian (George Leslie Mackay)
+
+Author: Mary Esther Miller MacGregor, AKA Marion Keith
+
+Release Date: September 21, 2008 [EBook #1759]
+Last Updated: February 4, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BLACK-BEARDED BARBARIAN ***
+
+
+Produced by An Anonymous Volunteer, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE BLACK-BEARDED BARBARIAN
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by Mary Esther Miller MacGregor<br /> (AKA Marion Keith)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <h4>
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> THE BLACK BEARDED BARBARIAN </a>
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ SPLITTING ROOKS
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ RECONNOITERING THE TERRITORY
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ BEGINNING THE SIEGE
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ SOLDIERS TWO
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE GREAT KAI BOK-SU
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ BESIEGING HEAD-HUNTERS
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ CITIES CAPTURED AND FORTS BUILT
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ OTHER CONQUESTS.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ REENFORCEMENTS
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ UNEXPECTED BOMBARDMENT
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ TRIUMPHAL MARCH
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;</a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ THE LAND OCCUPIED
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"></a> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ THE BLACK BEARDED BARBARIAN
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The name by which George Leslie Mackay was
+ known among the Chinese of north Formosa.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. SPLITTING ROCKS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Up in the stony pasture-field behind the barn the boys had been working
+ all the long afternoon. Nearly all, that is, for, being boys, they had
+ managed to mix a good deal of fun with their labor. But now they were
+ tired of both work and play, and wondered audibly, many times over, why
+ they were not yet called home to supper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work really belonged to the Mackay boys, but, like Tom Sawyer, they
+ had made it so attractive that several volunteers had come to their aid.
+ Their father was putting up a new stone house, near the old one down there
+ behind the orchard, and the two youngest of the family had been put at the
+ task of breaking the largest stones in the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It meant only to drag some underbrush and wood from the forest skirting
+ the farm, pile them on the stones, set fire to them, and let the heat do
+ the rest. It had been grand sport at first, they all voted, better than
+ playing shinny, and almost as good as going fishing. In fact it was a kind
+ of free picnic, where one could play at Indians all day long. But as the
+ day wore on, the picnic idea had languished, and the stone-breaking grew
+ more and more to resemble hard work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The warm spring sunset had begun to color the western sky; the
+ meadow-larks had gone to bed, and the stone-breakers were tired and
+ ravenously hungry&mdash;as hungry as only wolves or country boys can be.
+ The visitors suggested that they ought to be going home. "Hold on, Danny,
+ just till this one breaks," said the older Mackay boy, as he set a burning
+ stick to a new pile of brush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This'll be a dandy, and it's the last, too. They're sure to call us to
+ supper before we've time to do another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new fire, roaring and snapping, sending up showers of sparks and
+ filling the air with the sweet odor of burning cedar, proved too alluring
+ to be left. The company squatted on the ground before it, hugging their
+ knees and watching the blue column of smoke go straight up into the
+ colored sky. It suggested a camp-fire in war times, and each boy began to
+ tell what great and daring deeds he intended to perform when he became a
+ man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jimmy, one of the visitors, who had been most enthusiastic over the picnic
+ side of the day's work, announced that he was going to be a sailor. He
+ would command a fleet on the high seas, so he would, and capture pirates,
+ and grow fabulously wealthy on prize-money. Danny, who was also a guest,
+ declared his purpose one day to lead a band of rough riders to the Western
+ plains, where he would kill Indians, and escape fearful deaths by the
+ narrowest hairbreadth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mebbe I'm goin'to be Premier of Canada, some day," said one youngster,
+ poking his bare toes as near as he dared to the flames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were hoots of derision. This was entirely too tame to be even
+ considered as a career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what are you going to be, G. L.?" inquired the biggest boy of the
+ smallest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The others looked at the little fellow and laughed. George Mackay was the
+ youngest of the group, and was a small wiry youngster with a pair of
+ flashing eyes lighting up his thin little face. He seemed far too small
+ and insignificant to even think about a career. But for all the difference
+ in their size and age the bigger boys treated little George with a good
+ deal of respect. For, somehow, he never failed to do what he set out to
+ do. He always won at races, he was never anywhere but at the head of his
+ class, he was never known to be afraid of anything in field or forest or
+ school ground, he was the hardest worker at home or at school, and by
+ sheer pluck he managed to do everything that boys bigger and older and
+ stronger could do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So when Danny asked, "And what are you going to be, G. L.?" though the
+ boys laughed at the small thin little body, they respected the daring
+ spirit it held, and listened for his answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's goin' to be a giant, and go off with a show," cried one, and they
+ all laughed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little G. L. laughed too, but he did not say what he intended to do when
+ he grew big. Down in his heart he held a far greater ambition than the
+ others dreamed of. It was too great to be told&mdash;so great he scarcely
+ knew what it was himself. So he only shook his small head and closed his
+ lips tightly, and the rest forgot him and chattered on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away beyond the dark woods, the sunset shone red and gold between the
+ black tree trunks. The little boy gazed at it wonderingly. The sight of
+ those morning and evening glories always stirred his child's soul, and
+ made him long to go away&mdash;away, he knew not where&mdash;to do great
+ and glorious deeds. The Mackay boys' grandfather had fought at Waterloo,
+ and little George Leslie, the youngest of six, had heard many, many tales
+ of that gallant struggle, and every time they had been told him he had
+ silently resolved that, some day, he too would do just such brave deeds as
+ his grandfather had done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the boys talked on, and the little fellow gazed at the sunset and
+ dreamed, the big stone cracked in two, the fire died down, and still there
+ came no welcome call to supper from any of the farmhouses in sight. The
+ Mackay boys had been trained in a fine old-fashioned Canadian home, and
+ did not dream of quitting work until they were summoned. But the visitors
+ were merely visitors, and could go home when they liked. The future
+ admiral of the pirate-killing fleet declared he must go and get supper, or
+ he'd eat the grass, he was so hungry. The coming Premier of Canada and the
+ Indian-slayer agreed with him, and they all jumped the fence, and went
+ whooping away over the soft brown fields toward home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was just one big stone left. It was a huge boulder, four feet
+ across.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We'll never get enough wood to crack that, G. L.," declared his brother.
+ "It just can't be done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But little George answered just as any one who knew his determination
+ would have expected. In school he astonished his teacher by learning
+ everything at a tremendous rate, but there was one small word he refused
+ to learn&mdash;the little word "can't." His bright eyes flashed, now, at
+ the sound of it. He jumped upon the big stone, and clenched his fist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's GOT to be broken!" he cried. "I WON'T let it beat me." He leaped
+ down, and away he ran toward the woods. His brother caught his spirit, and
+ ran too. They forgot they were both tired and hungry. They seized a big
+ limb of a fallen tree and dragged it across the field. They chopped it
+ into pieces, and piled it high with plenty of brush, upon the big stone.
+ In a few minutes it was all in a splendid blaze, leaping and crackling,
+ and sending the boys' long shadows far across the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fire grew fiercer and hotter, and suddenly the big boulder cracked in
+ four pieces, as neatly as though it had been slashed by a giant's sword.
+ Little G. L. danced around it, and laughed triumphantly. The next moment
+ there came the welcome "hoo-hoo" from the house behind the orchard, and
+ away the two scampered down the hill toward home and supper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the day's work of the farmhouse had been finished, the Mackay family
+ gathered about the fire, for the spring evening was chilly. George Leslie
+ sat near his mother, his face full of deep thought. It was the hour for
+ family worship, and always at this time he felt most keenly that longing
+ to do something great and glorious. Tonight his father read of a Man who
+ was sending out his army to conquer the world. It was only a little army,
+ just twelve men, but they knew their Leader had more power than all the
+ soldiers of the world. And they were not afraid, though he said, "Behold,
+ I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves." For he added, "Fear ye
+ not," for he would march before them, and they would be sure of victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little boy listened with all his might. He did everything that way.
+ Surely this was a story of great and glorious deeds, even better than
+ Waterloo, he felt. And there came to his heart a great longing to go out
+ and fight wrong and put down evil as these men had done. He did not know
+ that the longing was the voice of the great King calling his young knight
+ to go out and "Live pure, speak true, right wrong, follow the King."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there came a day when he did understand, and on that day he was ready
+ to obey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When bedtime came the boys were asked if they had finished their work, and
+ the story of the last big stone was told. "G. L. would not leave it," the
+ brother explained. The father looked smilingly at little G. L. who still
+ sat, dangling his short legs from his chair, and studying the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke to his wife in Gaelic. "Perhaps the lad will be called to break a
+ great rock some day. The Lord grant he may do it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy looked up wonderingly. He understood Gaelic as well as English,
+ but he did not comprehend his father's words. He had no idea they were
+ prophetic, and that away on the other side of the world, in a land his
+ geography lessons had not yet touched, there stood a great rock, ugly and
+ hard and grim, which he was one day to be called upon to break.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. A VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The steamship America, bound for Hongkong, was leaving the dock at San
+ Francisco. All was bustle and noise and stir. Friends called a last
+ farewell from the deck, handkerchiefs waved, many of them wet with tears.
+ The long boom of a gun roared out over the harbor, a bell rang, and the
+ signal was given. Up came the anchor, and slowly and with dignity the
+ great vessel moved out through the Golden Gate into the wide Pacific.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crowds stood on the deck to get a last glimpse of home and loved ones, and
+ to wave to friends as long as they could be distinguished. There was one
+ young man who stood apart from the crowd, and who did not wave farewell to
+ any one. He had come on board with a couple of men, but they had gone back
+ to the dock, and were lost in the crowd. He seemed entirely alone. He
+ leaned against the deck-railing and gazed intently over the widening strip
+ of tumbling waters to the city on the shore. But he did not see it.
+ Instead, he saw a Canadian farmhouse, a garden and orchard, and gently
+ sloping meadows hedged in by forest. And up behind the barn he saw a stony
+ field, where long ago he and his brother and the neighbor boys had broken
+ the stones for the new house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His quick movements, his slim, straight figure, and his bright, piercing
+ eyes showed he was the same boy who had broken the big rock in the
+ pasture-field long before. Just the same boy, only bigger, and more man
+ than boy now, for he wore an air of command and his thin keen face bore a
+ beard, a deep black, like his hair. And now he was going away, as he had
+ longed to go, when he was a boy, and ahead of him lay the big frowning
+ rock, which he must either break or be broken upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had learned many things since those days when he had scampered barefoot
+ over the fields, or down the road to school. He had been to college in
+ Toronto, in Princeton, and away over in Edinburgh, in the old homeland
+ where his father and mother were born. And all through his life that call
+ to go and do great deeds for the King had come again and again. He had
+ determined to obey it when he was but a little lad at school. He had
+ encountered many big stones in his way, which he had to break, before he
+ could go on. But the biggest stone of all lay across his path when college
+ was over, and he was ready and anxious to go away as a missionary. The
+ Presbyterian Church of Canada had never yet sent out a missionary to a
+ foreign land, and some of the good old men bade George Mackay stay at home
+ and preach the gospel there. But as usual he conquered. Every one saw he
+ would be a great missionary if he were only given a chance. At last the
+ General Assembly gave its consent, and now, in spite of all stones in the
+ way, here he was, bound for China, and ready to do anything the King
+ commanded. Land was beginning to fade away into a gray mist, the November
+ wind was damp and chill, he turned and went down to his stateroom. He sat
+ down on his little steamer trunk, and for the first time the utter
+ loneliness and the uncertainty of this voyage came over him. He took up
+ his Bible and turned to the fly-leaf. There he read the inscription:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presented to REV. G. L. MACKAY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First missionary of the Canadian Presbyterian Church to China, by the
+ Foreign Mission Committee, as a parting token of their esteem, when about
+ to leave his native land for the sphere of his future labors among the
+ heathen. WILLIAM MACLAREN, Convener.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ottawa, 9th October, 1871. Matthew xxviii: 18-20. Psalm cxxi
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a moment of severe trial to the young soldier. But he turned to the
+ Psalm marked on the fly-leaf of his Bible, and he read it again and again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My help cometh from the Lord which made heaven and earth"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Lord is thy keeper: the Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The sun shall not smite thee by day, nor the moon by night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beautiful words gave him comfort. Homesickness, loneliness, and fears
+ for the future all vanished. He was going out to an unknown land where
+ dangers and perhaps death awaited him, but the Lord would be his keeper
+ and nothing could harm him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-six days on the Pacific! And a stormy voyage it was, for the
+ Pacific does not always live up to her beautiful name, and she tossed the
+ America about in a shocking manner. But the voyage did not seem long to
+ George Mackay. There were other missionaries on board with whom he had
+ become acquainted, and he had long delightful talks with them and they
+ taught him many things about his new work. He was the same busy G. L. he
+ had been when a boy; always working, working, and he did not waste a
+ moment on the voyage. There was a fine library on the ship and he studied
+ the books on China until he knew more about the religion of that country
+ than did many of the Chinese themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, as he was poring over a Chinese history, some one called him
+ hastily to come on deck. He threw down his book and ran up-stairs. The
+ whole ship was in a joyous commotion. His friend pointed toward the
+ horizon, and away off there against the sky stood the top of a snow-capped
+ peak&mdash;Fujiyama!&mdash;the majestic, sacred mountain of Japan!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a welcome sight, after the long ocean voyage, and the hours they
+ lay in Yokahama harbor were full of enjoyment. Every sight was thrilling
+ and strange to young Mackay's Western eyes. The harbor fairly swarmed with
+ noisy, shouting, chattering Japanese boatmen. He wondered why they seemed
+ so familiar, until it suddenly dawned on him that their queer ricestraw
+ coats made them look like a swarm of Robinson Crusoes who had just been
+ rescued from their islands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he landed he found things still funnier. The streets were noisier
+ than the harbor. Through them rolled large heavy wooden carts, pulled and
+ pushed by men, with much grunting and groaning. Past him whirled what
+ looked like overgrown baby carriages, also pulled by men, and each
+ containing a big grown-up human baby. It was all so pretty too, and so
+ enchanting that the young missionary would fain have remained there. But
+ China was still farther on, so when the America again set sail, he was on
+ board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away they sailed farther and farther east, or was it west? He often asked
+ himself that question in some amusement as they approached the coast of
+ China. They entered a long winding channel and steamed this way and that
+ until one day they sailed into a fine broad harbor with a magnificent city
+ rising far up the steep sides of a hill. It was an Oriental city, and
+ therefore strange to the young traveler. But for all that there seemed
+ something familiar in the fine European buildings that lined the streets,
+ and something still more homelike in that which floated high above them&mdash;something
+ that brought a thrill to the heart of the young Canadian&mdash;the
+ red-crossed banner of Britain!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Hongkong, the great British port of the East, and here he decided
+ to land. No sooner had the travelers touched the dock, than they were
+ surrounded by a yelling, jostling crowd of Chinese coolies, all shouting
+ in an outlandish gibberish for the privilege of carrying the Barbarians'
+ baggage. A group gathered round Mackay, and in their eagerness began
+ hammering each other with bamboo poles. He was well-nigh bewildered, when
+ above the din sounded the welcome music of an English voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you Mackay from Canada?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He whirled round joyfully. It was Dr. E. J. Eitel, a missionary from
+ England. He had been told that the young Canadian would arrive on the
+ America and was there to welcome him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the Canadian Presbyterian Church had as yet sent out no
+ missionaries to a foreign land, the Presbyterian Church of England had
+ many scattered over China. They were all hoping that the new recruit would
+ join them, and invited him to visit different mission stations, and see
+ where he would like to settle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he remained that night in Hongkong, as Dr. Eitel's guest, and the next
+ morning he took a steamer for Canton. Here he was met on the pier by an
+ old fellow student of Princeton University, and the two old college
+ friends had a grand reunion. He returned to Hongkong shortly, and next
+ visited Swatow. As they sailed into the harbor, he noticed two Englishmen
+ rowing out toward them in a sampan. (*) No sooner had the ship's ladder
+ been lowered, than the two sprang out of their boat and clambered quickly
+ on deck. To Mackay's amazement, one of them called out, "Is Mackay of
+ Canada on board?"
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A Chinese boat from twelve to fifteen feet long, covered
+ with a house.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Mackay of Canada," sprang forward delighted, and found his two new
+ friends to be Mr. Hobson of the Chinese imperial customs, and Dr. Thompson
+ of the English Presbyterian mission in Swatow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionaries here gave the stranger a warm welcome. At every place he
+ had visited there had awaited him a cordial invitation to stay and work.
+ And now at Swatow he was urged to settle down and help them. There was
+ plenty to be done, and they would be delighted to have his help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for some reason, Mackay scarcely knew why himself, he wanted to see
+ another place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away off the southeastern coast of China lies a large island called
+ Formosa. It is separated from the mainland by a body of water called the
+ Formosa Channel. This is in some places eighty miles wide, in others
+ almost two hundred. Mackay had often heard of Formosa even before coming
+ to China, and knew it was famed for its beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even its name shows this. Long, long years before, some navigators from
+ Portugal sailed to this beautiful island. They had stood on the deck of
+ their ship as they approached it, and were amazed at its loveliness. They
+ saw lofty green mountains piercing the clouds. They saw silvery cascades
+ tumbling down their sides, flashing in the sunlight, and, below, terraced
+ plains sloping down to the sea, covered with waving bamboo or with little
+ water-covered rice-fields. It was all so delightful that no wonder they
+ cried,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Illha Formosa! Illha Formosa!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Beautiful Isle! Beautiful Isle." Since that day the "Beautiful Isle,"
+ perhaps the most charming in all the world, has been called Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, somehow, Mackay longed to see this "Beautiful Isle" before he decided
+ where he was going to preach the gospel. And so when the kind friends at
+ Swatow said, "Stay and work with us," he always answered, "I must first
+ see Formosa."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, one day, he sailed away from the mainland toward the Beautiful Isle.
+ He landed at Takow in the south of the island, just about Christmas-time.
+ But Formosa was green, the weather was hot, and he could scarcely believe
+ that, at home in Oxford county, Ontario, they were flying over the snow to
+ the music of sleigh-bells. On New Year's day he met a missionary of this
+ south Formosa field, named Dr. Ritchie. He belonged to the Presbyterian
+ Church of England, which had a fine mission there. For nearly a month
+ Mackay visited with him and studied the language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And while he visited and worked there the missionaries told him of the
+ northern part of the island. No person was there to tell all those crowded
+ cities of Jesus Christ and His love. It would be lonely for him there, it
+ would be terribly hard work, but it would be a grand Thing to lay the
+ foundations, to be the first to tell those people the "good news," the
+ young missionary thought. And, one day, he looked up from the Chinese book
+ he was studying and said to Dr. Ritchie:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have decided to settle in north Formosa."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Dr. Ritchie's quick answer was:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God bless you, Mackay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the decision was made, another missionary, Dr. Dickson, who was
+ with Mr. Ritchie, decided to go to north Formosa with the young man, and
+ show him over the ground. So, early in the month of March in the year
+ 1872, the three men set off by steamship to sail for Tamsui, a port in
+ north Formosa. They were two days making the voyage, and a tropical storm
+ pitched the small vessel hither and thither, so that they were very much
+ relieved when they sailed up to the mouth of the Tamsui river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was low tide and a bare sand-bar stretched across the mouth of the
+ harbor, so the anchor was dropped, and they waited until the tide should
+ cover the bar, and allow them to sail in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This wait gave the travelers a fine opportunity to see the country. The
+ view from this harbor of the "Beautiful Island" was an enchanting one.
+ Before them, toward the east, rose tier upon tier of magnificent
+ mountains, stretching north and south. Down their sloping sides tumbled
+ sparkling cascades and here and there patches of bright green showed where
+ there were tea plantations. Farther down were stretches of grass and
+ groves of lovely feathery bamboo. And between these groves stretched what
+ seemed to be little silvery lakes, with the reflection of the great
+ mountains in them. They were really the famous rice-fields of Formosa, at
+ this time of the year all under water. There were no fences round their
+ little lake-fields. They were of all shapes and sizes, and were divided
+ from each other by little green fringed dykes or walls. Each row of fields
+ was lower than the last until they came right down to the sea-level, and
+ all lay blue and smiling in the blazing sunlight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the young missionary stood spellbound, gazing over the lovely,
+ fairylike scene, Mr. Ritchie touched his arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is your parish, Mackay," he whispered smilingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then for the first time since he had started on his long, long
+ journey, the young missionary felt his spirit at peace. The restlessness
+ that had driven him on from one Chinese port to another was gone. This was
+ indeed his parish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly out swung a signal; the tide had risen. Up came the anchor, and
+ away they glided over the now submerged sand-bar into the harbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A nearer view showed greater charms in the Beautiful Isle. On the south,
+ at their right, lay the great Quan Yin mountain, towering seventeen
+ hundred feet above them, clothed in tall grass and groves of bamboo,
+ banyan, and fir trees of every conceivable shade of green. Nestling at its
+ feet were little villages almost buried in trees. Slowly the ship drifted
+ along, passing, here a queer fishing village close to the sandy shore,
+ yonder a light-house, there a battered Chinese fort rising from the top of
+ a hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now Tamsui came in sight&mdash;the new home of the young missionary.
+ It seemed to him that it was the prettiest and the dirtiest place he had
+ ever seen. The town lay along the bank of the river at the foot of a hill.
+ This bluff rose abruptly behind it to a height of two hundred feet. On its
+ face stood a queer-looking building. It was red in color, solid and
+ weather worn, and above it floated the grand old flag of Britain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's an old Dutch fort," explained Mr. Ritchie, "left there since they
+ were in the island. It is the British consulate now. There, next to it, is
+ the consul's residence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a handsome house, just below the fort, and surrounded by lovely
+ gardens. But down beneath it, on the shore, was the most interesting place
+ to the newcomer, the town of Tamsui proper, or Ho Be, as the Chinese
+ called it. The foreigners landed and made their way up the street. To the
+ two from south Formosa, Tamsui was like every other small Chinese town,
+ but Mackay had not yet become accustomed to the strange sights and sounds
+ and stranger smells, and his bright eyes were keen with interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main thoroughfare wound this way and that, only seven or eight feet
+ wide at its best. It was filled with noisy crowds of men who acted as if
+ they were on the verge of a terrible fight. But the older missionaries
+ knew that they were merely acting as Chinese crowds always do. On each
+ side were shops,&mdash;tea shops, rice shops, tobacco shops, and many
+ other kinds. And most numerous of all were the shops where opium, one of
+ the greatest curses of Chinese life, was sold. The front wall of each was
+ removed, and the customers stood in the street and dickered with the
+ shopkeeper, while at the top of his harsh voice the latter swore by all
+ the gods in China that he was giving the article away at a terrific loss.
+ Through the crowd pushed hawkers, carrying their wares balanced on poles
+ across their shoulders. Boys with trays of Chinese candies and sugar-cane
+ yelled their wares above the din. The visitors stumbled along over the
+ rough stones of the pavement until they came to the market-place.
+ Foreigners were not such a curiosity in Tamsui as in the inland towns, and
+ not a great deal of notice was taken of them, but occasionally Mackay
+ could hear the now familiar words of contempt &mdash;"Ugly barbarian"&mdash;"Foreign
+ devil" from the men that passed them. And one man, pointing to Mackay,
+ shouted "Ho! the black-bearded barbarian!" It was a name the young
+ missionary was destined to hear very frequently. Past opium-dens, barber
+ shops, and drug stores they went and through the noise and bustle and din
+ of the market-place. They knew that the inns, judging by the outside,
+ would be filthy, so Mr. Ritchie suggested, as evening was approaching,
+ that they find some comfortable place to spend the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a British merchant in Tamsui named Mr. Dodd, whom the
+ missionaries knew. So to him they went, and were given fine quarters in
+ his warehouse. They ate their supper here, from the provisions they had
+ bought in the market, and stretching themselves out on their grass mats
+ they slept soundly. The next day was Sunday, but the three travelers spent
+ it quietly in the warehouse by the river, studying their Bibles and
+ discussing their proposed trip. They concluded it was best not to provoke
+ the anger of the people against the new missionary by preaching, so they
+ did not go out. To-morrow they would start southward and take Mackay to
+ the bounds of their mission field, and show him the land that was to be
+ "his parish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. RECONNOITERING THE TERRITORY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Early Monday morning Mackay peeped out of the big warehouse door at the
+ great calm mountain shrouded in the pale mists of early dawn. The other
+ two travelers were soon astir, and were surprised to find their young
+ companion all ready. They were not yet well enough acquainted with him to
+ know that he could do with less sleep at night than an owl. He was in high
+ spirits and as eager to be off as he had ever been to start for a day's
+ fishing in the old times back in Ontario. And indeed this was just a great
+ fishing expedition he was commencing. For had not One said to him, long
+ long ago when he was but a little boy, "Come follow me, and I will make
+ you to become a fisher of men"? and he had obeyed. The first task was to
+ go out and buy food for the journey, and to hire a couple of coolies to
+ carry it and what baggage they must take.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Dickson went off on this errand, and being well acquainted with
+ Formosan customs and language, soon returned with two Chinese carriers and
+ plenty of food. This last consisted of canned meats, biscuits, coffee, and
+ condensed milk, bought at a store where ships' supplies were kept for
+ sale. There was also some salted water-buffalo meat, a Chinese dish with
+ which the young missionary was destined to become very familiar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They started out three abreast, Mr. Ritchie's blue serge figure capped by
+ a white helmet on the right, Dr. Dickson on the left in his Scotch tweed,
+ and between them the alert, slim figure of the newcomer, in his suit of
+ Canadian gray. The coolies, with baskets hung to a pole across their
+ shoulders, came ambling along behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three travelers were in the gayest mood. Perhaps it was the clear
+ spring morning air, or the breath of the salt ocean, perhaps it was the
+ intoxicating beauty of mountain and plain and river that surrounded them
+ or it may have been because they had given their lives in perfect service
+ to the One who is the source of all happiness, but whatever was the cause,
+ they were all like schoolboys off for a holiday. The coolies who trotted
+ in the rear were very much amazed and not a little amused at the actions
+ of these foolish foreign devils, who laughed and joked and seemed in such
+ high spirits for no reason at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They swung along the bank of the river until they came to the ferry that
+ was to take them to the other side. They sprang into the boat and were
+ shoved off. Before they reached the other side, at Dr. Dickson's
+ suggestion, they took off their shoes and socks, and stowed them away in
+ the carriers' baskets. When they came to the opposite bank they rolled up
+ their trousers to their knees and sprang out into the shallow water. For a
+ short distance they had the joy of tramping barefoot along the hard
+ gleaming sand of the harbor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But shoes and stockings had to be resumed, for soon they turned inland, on
+ a path that wound up to the high plain above the river. "Do you ever use a
+ horse on your travels?" asked young Mackay as they climbed upward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Ritchie laughed. "You couldn't get one in north Formosa for love or
+ money. And if you could, he wouldn't be any use."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Unless he was a second Pegasus, and could soar above the Formosan roads,"
+ added Dr. Dickson. "Wait a bit and you'll understand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young missionary waited, and kept his eyes open for the answer. The
+ pathway crossed a grassy plain where groups of queer-looking,
+ mouse-colored animals, half ox, half buffalo, with great spreading horns,
+ strayed about, herded by boys, or lay wallowing in deep pools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Water-buffaloes," he said, remembering them as he had seen them in the
+ south.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The most useful animal on the island," remarked Mr. Ritchie, adding with
+ a laugh, "except perhaps the pig. You'll have a taste of Mr. Buffalo for
+ your dinner, Mackay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now they were up on the heights, and the lovely country lay spread out
+ before them. Mackay mentally compared this walk to many he had taken along
+ the country roads of his native land. It was early in March, but as there
+ had been no winter, so there was no spring. It was summer, warm, radiant
+ summer, like a lovely day in June at home. Dandelions, violets, and many
+ gay flowers that he did not recognize spangled the grassy plain. The
+ skylark high overhead was pouring out its glorious song, just as he had
+ heard it in his student days in Scotland. Here and there were clumps of
+ fir trees that reminded him of Canada, but on the whole the scene was new
+ and wonderful to his Western eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were now on the first level of the rice-fields. The farms were tiny
+ things, none larger than eight or ten acres. They were divided into
+ queer-shaped little irrigated fields, separated not by fences, but by
+ little low walls of mud. Every farm was under water now, and here and
+ there, wading through his little flooded fields, went the farmer with his
+ plough, drawn by a useful water-buffalo,&mdash;the latter apparently quite
+ happy at being allowed to splash about in the mud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These rice-farms soon became a familiar sight to the newcomer. He liked to
+ see them at all times&mdash;when each field was a pretty blue or green
+ lake, later when the water was choked with the fresh green growth, or in
+ harvest days, when the farmers stripped the fields of their grain. Just
+ now they were at their prettiest. Row above row, they went up the
+ mountainside, like a great glass stairs, each row reflecting the green
+ hills and the bamboo groves above. And from each terrace to the one below,
+ the water tumbled in pretty little cascades that sparkled in the sunlight
+ and filled the air with music. For travelers there were only narrow paths
+ between farms, and often only the ridge of the dykes between field and
+ field. As they made their way between the tiny fields, walking along the
+ narrow dykes, and listening to the splashing sound of the water, Mackay
+ understood what Dr. Dickson meant, when he remarked that only a flying
+ horse could be of use on such Formosan cross-country journeys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon the pathway changed once more to the broader public highway. Here
+ there was much traffic, and many travelers carried in sedan-chairs passed
+ them. And many times by the roadside Mackay saw something that reminded
+ him forcibly of why he had come to Formosa&mdash;a heathen shrine. The
+ whole countryside seemed dotted with them. And as he watched the
+ worshipers coming and going, and heard the disdainful words from the
+ priests cast at the hated foreigners, he realized that he was face to face
+ with an awful opposing force. It was the great stone of heathenism he had
+ come to break, and the question was, would he be as successful as he had
+ been long ago in the Canadian pasture-field?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The travelers ate their dinner by the roadside under the shade of some fir
+ trees that made Mackay feel at home. They were soon up and off again, and,
+ tired with their long tramp, they arrived at a town called Tionglek, and
+ decided to spend the night there. The place was about the size of Tamsui,
+ with between four and five thousand inhabitants, and was quite as dirty
+ and almost as noisy. They walked down the main street with its uneven
+ stone pavement, its open shops, its noisy bargains, and above all its
+ horrible smells. With the exception of an occasional visit from an
+ official, foreigners scarcely ever came to Tiong-lek, and on every side
+ were revilings and threatenings. One yellow-faced youngster picked up a
+ handful of mud and threw it at the hated foreigners; and "Black-bearded
+ barbarian," mingled with their shouts. Mackay's bright eyes took in
+ everything, and he realized more and more the difficulties of the task
+ before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stopped in front of a low one-story building made of sun-dried
+ bricks. This was the Tiong-lek hotel where they were to spend the night.
+ Like most Chinese houses it was composed of a number of buildings arranged
+ in the form of a square with a courtyard in the center. Dr. Dickson asked
+ for lodgings from the slant-eyed proprietor. He looked askance at the
+ foreigners, but concluded that their money was as good as any one else's,
+ and he led them through the deep doorway into the courtyard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the center of this yard stood an earthen range, with a fire in it.
+ Several travelers stood about it cooking their rice. It was evidently the
+ hotel dining-room; a diningroom that was open to all too, for chickens
+ clucked and cackled and pigs grunted about the range and made themselves
+ quite at home. The men about the gateway scowled and muttered "Foreign
+ devil," as the three strangers passed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They crossed the courtyard and entered their room, or rather stumbled into
+ it, in semi-darkness. Mackay peered about him curiously. He discovered
+ three beds, made of planks and set on brick pillars for legs. Each was
+ covered with a dirty mat woven from grass and reeking with the odor of
+ opium smoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A servant came in with something evidently intended for a lamp&mdash;a
+ burning pith wick set in a saucer of peanut oil. It gave out only a faint
+ glimmer of light, but enough to enable the young missionary to see
+ something else in the room,&mdash;some THINGS rather, that ran and skipped
+ and swarmed all over the damp earthen floor and the dirty walls. There
+ were thousands of these brisk little creatures, all leaping about in
+ pleasant anticipation of the good time they would have when the barbarians
+ went to bed. There was no window, and only the one door that opened into
+ the courtyard. An old pig, evidently more friendly to the foreigners than
+ her masters, came waddling toward them followed by her squealing little
+ brood, and flopping down into the mud in the doorway lay there uttering
+ grunts of content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evil smells of the room, the stench from the pigs, and the still more
+ dreadful odors wafted from the queer food cooking on the range, made the
+ young traveler's unaccustomed senses revolt. He had a half notion that the
+ two older men were putting up a joke on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose you thought it wise to give me a strong dose of all this at the
+ start?" he inquired humorously, holding his nose and glancing from the
+ pigs at the door to the crawlers on the wall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A strong dose!" laughed Mr. Ritchie. "Not a bit of it, young man. Wait
+ till you've had some experience of the luxuries of Formosan inns. You'll
+ be calling this the Queen's Hotel, before you've been here long!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so indeed it proved later, for George Mackay had yet much to learn of
+ the true character of Chinese inns. Needless to say he spent a wakeful
+ night, on his hard plank bed, and was up early in the morning. The
+ travelers ate their breakfast in a room where the ducks and hens clattered
+ about under the table and between their legs. Fortunately the food was
+ taken from their own stores, and in spite of the surroundings was quite
+ appetizing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They started off early, drawing in great breaths of the pure morning air,
+ relieved to be away from the odors of the "Queen's Hotel." Three hundred
+ feet above them, high against the deep blue of the morning sky, stood
+ Table Hill, and they started on a brisk climb up its side. The sun had not
+ risen, but already the farmers were out in their little water-fields, or
+ working in their tea plantations. The mountain with its groves of bamboo
+ lay reflected in the little mirrors of the rice-fields. A steady climb
+ brought them to the summit, and after a long descent on the other side and
+ a tramp through tea plantations they arrived in the evening at a large
+ city with a high wall around it, the city of Tek-chham. That night in the
+ city inn was so much worse than the one at Tionglek that the Canadian was
+ convinced his friends must have reserved the "strong dose" for the second
+ night. There were the same smells, the same sorts of pigs and ducks and
+ hens, the same breeds of lively nightly companions, and each seemed to
+ have gained a fresh force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a relief to be out in the fields again after the foul odors of the
+ night, and the travelers were off before dawn. The country looked more
+ familiar to Mackay this morning, for they passed through wheat and barley
+ fields. It seemed so strange to wander over a man's farm by a footpath,
+ but it was a Chinese custom to which he soon became accustomed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was blazing hot, and it was a great relief when they entered the
+ cool shade of a forest. It was a delightful place and George Mackay
+ reveled in its beauty. Ever since he had been able to run about his own
+ home farm in Ontario his eyes had always been wide open to observe
+ anything new. He had studied as much out of doors, all his life, as he had
+ done in college, and now he found this forest a perfect library of new
+ Things. Nearly every tree and flower was strange to his Canadian eyes.
+ Here and there, in sheltered valleys, grew the tree-fern, the most
+ beautiful object in the forest, towering away up sometimes to a height of
+ sixty feet, and spreading its stately fronds out to a width of fifteen
+ feet. There was a lovely big plant with purple stem and purple leaves, and
+ when Dr. Dickson told him it was the castor-oil plant, he smiled at the
+ remembrance of the trials that plant had caused him in younger days. One
+ elegant tree, straight as a pine, rose fifty feet in height, with leaves
+ away up at the top only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the betel-nut tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The nuts of that tree," said Mr. Ritchie, standing and pointing away up
+ to where the sunlight filtered through the far-off leaves, "are the
+ chewing tobacco of Formosa and all the islands about here. The Chinese do
+ not chew it, but the Malayans do. You will meet some of these natives
+ soon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On every side grew the rattan, half tree, half vine. It started off as a
+ tree and grew straight up often to twenty feet in height, and then spread
+ itself out over the tops of other trees and plants in vine-like fashion;
+ some of its branches measured almost five hundred feet in length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The travelers paused to admire one high in the branches of the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Many a Chinaman loses his head hunting that plant," remarked Mr. Ritchie.
+ "These islanders export a great deal of rattan, and the head-hunters up
+ there in the mountains watch for the Chinese when they are working in the
+ forest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay listened eagerly to his friends' tales of the head-hunting savages,
+ living in the mountains. They were always on the lookout for the farmers
+ near their forest lairs. They watched for any unwary man who went too near
+ the woods, pounced upon him, and went off in triumph with his head in a
+ bag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young traveler's eyes brightened, "I'll visit them some day!" he
+ cried, looking off toward the mountainside. Mr. Ritchie glanced quickly at
+ the flashing eyes and the quick, alert figure of the young man as he
+ strode along, and some hint came to him of the dauntless young heart which
+ beat beneath that coat of Canadian gray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days more over hill and dale, through rice and tea and tobacco-fields,
+ and then, in the middle of a hot afternoon, Mr. Ritchie began to shiver
+ and shake as though half frozen. Dr. Dickson understood, and at the next
+ stopping-place he ordered a sedan-chair and four coolies to carry it. It
+ was the old dreaded disease that hangs like a black cloud over lovely
+ Formosa, the malarial fever. Mr. Ritchie had been a missionary only four
+ years in the island, but already the scourge had come upon him, and his
+ system was weakened. For, once seized by malaria in Formosa, one seldom
+ makes his escape. They put the sick man into the chair, now in a raging
+ fever, and he was carried by the four coolies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were nearing the end of their journey and were now among a people not
+ Chinese. They belonged to the original Malayan race of the island. They
+ had been conquered by the Chinese, who in the early days came over from
+ China under a pirate named Koxinga. As the Chinese name every one but
+ themselves "barbarians," they gave this name to all the natives of the
+ island. They had conquered all but the dreaded head-hunters, who, free in
+ their mountain fastnesses, took a terrible toll of heads from their
+ would-be conquerors, or even from their own half-civilized brethren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The native Malayans who had been subdued by the Chinese were given
+ different names. Those who lived on the great level rice-plain over which
+ the missionaries were traveling, were called Pe-po-hoan, "Barbarians of
+ the plain." Mackay could see little difference between them and the
+ Chinese, except in the cast of their features, and their long-shaped
+ heads. They wore Chinese dress, even to the cue, worshiped the Chinese
+ gods, and spoke with a peculiar Malayan twang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The travelers were journeying rather wearily over a low muddy stretch of
+ ground, picking their way along the narrow paths between the rice-fields,
+ when they saw a group of men come hurrying down the path to meet them.
+ They kept calling out, but the words they used were not the familiar
+ "foreign devil" or "ugly barbarian." Instead the people were shouting
+ words of joyful welcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Dickson hailed them with delight, and soon he and Mr. Ritchie's
+ sedan-chair were surrounded by a clamorous group of friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had journeyed so far south that they had arrived at the borders of
+ the English Presbyterian mission, and the people crowding about them were
+ native Christians. It was all so different from their treatment by the
+ heathen that Mackay's heart was warmed. When the great stone of heathenism
+ was broken, what love and kindness were revealed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visitors were led in triumph to the village. There was a chapel here,
+ and they stayed nearly a week, preaching and teaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest did Mr. Ritchie much good, and at the end of their visit he was
+ once more able to start off on foot. They moved on from village to village
+ and everywhere the Pe-po-hoan Christians received them with the greatest
+ hospitality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at last the three friends found the time had come for them to part.
+ The two Englishmen had to go on through their fields to their south
+ Formosan home and the young Canadian must go back to fight the battle
+ alone in the north of the island. He had endeared himself to the two older
+ men, and when the farewells came they were filled with regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They bade him a lingering good-by, with many blessings upon his young
+ head, and many prayers for success in the hard fight upon which he was
+ entering. They walked a short way with him, and stood watching the
+ straight, lithe young figure, SO full of courage and hope until it
+ disappeared down the valley. They knew only too well the dangers and
+ trials ahead of him, but they knew also that he was not going into the
+ fight alone. For the Captain was going with his young soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a suspicion of moisture in the eyes of the older missionaries as
+ they turned back to prepare for their own journey southward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God bless the boy!" said Dr. Dickson fervently. "We'll hear of that young
+ fellow yet, Ritchie. He's on fire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. BEGINNING THE SIEGE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The news was soon noised about Tamsui that one of the three barbarians who
+ had so lately visited the town had returned to make the place his home.
+ This was most unwelcome tidings to the heathen, and the air was filled
+ with mutterings and threatenings, and every one was determined to drive
+ the foreign devil out if at all possible. So Mackay found himself meeting
+ every kind of opposition. He was too independent to ask assistance from
+ the British consul in the old Dutch fort on the bluff, or of any other
+ European settlers in Tamsui. He was bound to make his own way. But it was
+ not easy to do so in view of the forces which opposed him. He had now been
+ in Formosa about two months and had studied the Chinese language every
+ waking hour, but it was very difficult, and he found his usually ready
+ tongue wofully handicapped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His first concern was to get a dwelling-place, and he went from house to
+ house inquiring for some place to rent. Everywhere he went he was turned
+ away with rough abuse, and occasionally the dogs were set upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at last he was successful. Up on the bank of the river, a little way
+ from the edge of the town, he found a place which the owner condescended
+ to rent. It was a miserable little hut, half house, half cellar, built
+ into the side of the hill facing the river. A military officer had
+ intended it for his horse-stable, and yet Mackay paid for this hovel the
+ sum of fifteen dollars a month. It had three rooms, one without a floor.
+ The road ran past the door, and a few feet beyond was the river. By
+ spending money rather liberally he managed to hire the coolie who had
+ accompanied him to south Formosa. With his servant's help Mackay had his
+ new establishment thoroughly cleaned and whitewashed, and then he moved in
+ his furniture. He laughed as he called it furniture, for it consisted of
+ but two packing boxes full of books and clothing. But more came later. The
+ British consul, Mr. Frater, lent him a chair and a bed. There was one old
+ Chinese, who kept a shop near by, and who seemed inclined to be friendly
+ to the queer barbarian with the black beard. He presented him with an old
+ pewter lamp, and the house was furnished complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay sat down at his one table, the first night after he was settled.
+ The damp air was hot and heavy, and swarms of tormenting mosquitoes filled
+ the room. Through the open door came the murmur of the river, and from far
+ down in the village the sounds of harsh, clamorous voices. He was alone,
+ many, many miles from home and friends. Around him on every side were
+ bitter enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One might have supposed he would be overcome at the thought of the
+ stupendous task before him, but whoever supposed that did not know George
+ Mackay. He lighted his pewter lamp, opened his diary, and these are the
+ words he wrote:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here I am in this house, having been led all the way from the old
+ homestead in Zorra by Jesus, as direct as though my boxes were labeled,
+ `Tamsui, Formosa, China.' Oh, the glorious privilege to lay the foundation
+ of Christ's Church in unbroken heathenism! God help me to do this with the
+ open Bible! Again I swear allegiance to thee, O King Jesus, my Captain. So
+ help me God!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now his first duty was to learn the Chinese language. He could already
+ speak a little, but it would be a long time, he knew, before he could
+ preach. And yet, how was he to learn? he asked himself. He was a scholar
+ without a teacher or school. But there was his servant, and nothing
+ daunted by the difficulties to be overcome, he set to work to make him his
+ teacher also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George Mackay always went at any task with all his might and main, and he
+ attacked the Chinese language in the same manner. He found it a hard stone
+ to break, however. "Of all earthly things I know of," he remarked once,
+ "it is the most intricate and difficult to master."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His unwilling teacher was just about as hard to manage as his task, for
+ the coolie did not take kindly to giving lessons. He certainly had a
+ rather hard time. Day and night his master deluged him with questions. He
+ made him repeat phrases again and again until his pupil could say them
+ correctly. He asked him the name of everything inside the house and out,
+ until the easy-going Oriental was overcome with dismay. This wild
+ barbarian, with the fiery eyes and the black beard, was a terrible
+ creature who gave one no rest night nor day. Sometimes after Mackay had
+ spent hours with him, imitating sounds and repeating the names of things
+ over and over, his harassed teacher would back out of the room stealthily,
+ keeping an anxious eye on his master, and showing plainly he had grave
+ fears that the foreigner had gone quite mad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay realized that the pace was too hard for his servant, and that the
+ poor fellow was in a fair way to lose what little wits he had, if not left
+ alone occasionally. So one day he wandered out along the riverbank, in
+ search of some one who would talk with him. He turned into a path that led
+ up the hill behind the town. He was in hopes he might meet a farmer who
+ would be friendly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he reached the top of the bluff he found a grassy common stretching
+ back toward the rice-fields. Here and there over these downs strayed the
+ queer-looking water-buffaloes. Some of them were plunged deep in pools of
+ water, and lay there like pigs with only their noses out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He heard a merry laugh and shout from another part of the common, and
+ there sat a crowd of frolicsome Chinese boys, in large sun hats, and short
+ loose trousers. There were about a dozen of them, and they were supposed
+ to be herding the water-buffaloes to keep them out of the unfenced fields.
+ But, boylike, they were flying kites, and letting their huge-horned
+ charges herd themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay walked over toward them. It was not so long since he had been a boy
+ himself, and these jolly lads appealed to him. But the moment one caught
+ sight of the stranger, he gave a shout of alarm. The rest jumped up, and
+ with yells of terror and cries of "Here's the foreign devil!" "Run, or the
+ foreign devil will get you!" away they went helter-skelter, their big hats
+ waving, their loose clothes flapping wildly. They all disappeared like
+ magic behind a big boulder, and the cause of their terror had to walk
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the next day, when his servant once more showed signs of mental
+ exhaustion, he strolled out again upon the downs. The boys were there and
+ saw him coming. Though they did not actually run away this time, they
+ retired to a safe distance, and stood ready to fly at any sign of the
+ barbarian's approach. They watched him wonderingly. They noticed his
+ strange white face, his black beard, his hair cut off quite short, his
+ amazing hat, and his ridiculous clothes. And when at last he walked away,
+ and all danger was over, they burst into shouts of laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, as they scampered about the common, here again came the
+ absurd-looking stranger, walking slowly, as though careful not to frighten
+ them. The boys did not run away this time, and to their utter astonishment
+ he spoke to them. Mackay had practised carefully the words he was to say
+ to them, and the well-spoken Chinese astounded the lads as much as if one
+ of the monkeys that gamboled about the trees of their forests should come
+ down and say, "How do you do, boys?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, he speaks our words!" they all cried at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they stood staring, Mackay took out his watch and held it up for them
+ to see. It glittered in the sun, and at the sight of it and the kind
+ smiling face above, they lost their fears and crowded around him. They
+ examined the watch in great wonder. They handled his clothes, exclaimed
+ over the buttons on his coat, and inquired what they were for. They felt
+ his hands and his fingers, and finally decided that, in spite of his queer
+ looks, he was after all a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that day the young missionary and the herd-boys were great friends.
+ Every day he joined them in the buffalo pasture, and would spend from four
+ to five hours with them. And as they were very willing to talk, he not
+ only learned their language rapidly, but also learned much about their
+ homes, their schools, their customs, and their religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, after a lengthy lesson from his servant, the latter decided that
+ the barbarian was unbearable, and bundling up his clothes he marched off,
+ without so much as "by your leave." So Mackay fell back entirely upon his
+ little teachers on the common. With their assistance in the daytime and
+ his Chinese-English dictionary at night, he made wonderful progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was left alone now, to get his own meals and keep the swarms of flies
+ and the damp mold out of his hut by the riverside. He soon learned to eat
+ rice and water-buffalo meat, but he missed the milk and butter and cheese
+ of his old Canadian home. For he discovered that cows were never milked in
+ Formosa. There was variety of food, however, as almost every kind of
+ vegetable that he had ever tasted and many new kinds that he found
+ delicious were for sale in the open-fronted shops in the village. Then the
+ fruits! They were fresh at all seasons&mdash;oranges the whole year,
+ bananas fresh from the fields&mdash;and such pineapples! He realized that
+ he had never really tasted pineapples before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, he was becoming acquainted. All the families of the herd-boys
+ learned to like him, and when others came to know him they treated him
+ with respect. He was a teacher, they learned, and in China a teacher is
+ always looked upon with something like reverence. And, besides, he had a
+ beard. This appendage was considered very honorable among Chinese, so the
+ black-bearded barbarian was respected because of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was one class that treated him with the greatest scorn. These
+ were the Chinese scholars. They were the literati, and were like princes
+ in the land. They despised every one who was not a graduate of their
+ schools, and most of all they despised this barbarian who dared to set
+ himself up as a teacher. Mackay had now learned Chinese well enough to
+ preach, and his sermons aroused the indignation of these proud graduates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes when one was passing the little hut by the river, he would drop
+ in, and glance around just to see what sort of place the barbarian kept.
+ He would pick up the Bible and other books, throw them on the floor, and
+ with words of contempt strut proudly out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay endured this treatment patiently, but he set himself to study their
+ books, for he felt sure that the day was not far distant when he must meet
+ these conceited literati in argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went about a good deal now. The Tamsui people became accustomed to him,
+ and he was not troubled much. His bright eyes were always wide open and he
+ learned much of the lives of the people he had come to teach. Among the
+ poor he found a poverty of which he had never dreamed. They could live
+ upon what a so-called poor family in Canada would throw away. Nothing was
+ wasted in China. He often saw the meat and fruit tins he threw away when
+ they were emptied, reappearing in the market-place. He learned that these
+ poorer people suffered cruel wrongs at the hands of their magistrates. He
+ visited a yamen, or court-house, and saw the mandarin "dispense justice,"
+ but his judgment was said to be always given in favor of the one who paid
+ him the highest bribe. He saw the widow robbed, and the innocent suffering
+ frightful tortures, and sometimes he strode home to his little hut by the
+ river, his blood tingling with righteous indignation. And then he would
+ pray with all his soul:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O God, give me power to teach these people of thy love through Jesus
+ Christ!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of all the horrors of heathenism, and there were many, he found the
+ religion the most dreadful. He had read about it when on board ship, but
+ he found it was infinitely worse when written in men's lives than when set
+ down in print. He never realized what a blessing was the religion of Jesus
+ Christ to a nation until he lived among a people who did not know Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found almost as much difficulty in learning the Chinese religion as the
+ Chinese language. After he had spent days trying to understand it, it
+ would seem to him like some horrible nightmare filled with wicked devils
+ and no less wicked gods and evil spirits and ugly idols. And to make
+ matters worse there was not one religion, but a bewildering mixture of
+ three. First of all there was the ancient Chinese religion, called
+ Confucianism. Confucius, a wise man of China, who lived ages before, had
+ laid down some rules of conduct, and had been worshiped ever since. Very
+ good rules they were as far as they went, and if the Chinese had followed
+ this wise man they would not have drifted so far from the truth. But
+ Confucianism meant ancestor-worship. In every home was a little tablet
+ with the names of the family's ancestors upon it, and every one in the
+ house worshiped the spirits of those departed. With this was another
+ religion called Taoism. This taught belief in wicked demons who lurked
+ about people ready to do them some ill. Then, years and years before, some
+ people from India had brought over their religion, Buddhism, which had
+ become a system of idol-worship. These three religions were so mixed up
+ that the people themselves were not able to distinguish between them. The
+ names of their idols would cover pages, and an account of their religion
+ would fill volumes. The more Mackay learned of it, the more he yearned to
+ tell the people of the one God who was Lord and Father of them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he had learned to write clearly, he bought a large sheet of
+ paper, and printed on it the ten commandments in Chinese characters. Then
+ he hung it on the outside of his door. People who passed read it and made
+ comments of various kinds. Several threw mud at it, and at last a proud
+ graduate, who came striding past his silk robes rustling grandly, caught
+ the paper and tore it down. Mackay promptly put up another. It shared the
+ fate of the first. Then he put up a third, and the people let it alone.
+ Even these heathen Chinese were beginning to get an impression of the
+ dauntless determination of the man with whom they were to get much better
+ acquainted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all this time, while he was studying and working and arguing with the
+ heathen and preaching to them, the young missionary was working just as
+ hard at something else; something into which he was putting as much energy
+ and force as he did into learning the Chinese language. With all his might
+ and main, day and night, he was praying&mdash;praying for one special
+ object. He had been praying for this long before he saw Formosa. He was
+ pleading with God to give him, as his first convert, a young man of
+ education. And so he was always on the lookout for such, as he preached
+ and taught, and never once did he cease praying that he might find him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One forenoon he was sitting at his books, near the open door, when a
+ visitor stopped before him. It was a fine-looking young man, well dressed
+ and with all the unmistakable signs of the scholar. He had none of the
+ graduate's proud insolence, however, for when Mackay arose, he spoke in
+ the most gentlemanly manner. At the missionary's invitation he entered,
+ and sat down, and the two chatted pleasantly. The visitor seemed
+ interested in the foreigner, and asked him many questions that showed a
+ bright, intelligent mind. When he arose to go, Mackay invited him to come
+ again, and he promised he would. He left his card, a strip of pink paper
+ about three inches by six; the name on it read Giam Cheng Hoa. Mackay was
+ very much interested in him, he was so bright, so affable, and such
+ pleasant company. He waited anxiously to see if he would return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the appointed hour the visitor was at the door, and the missionary
+ welcomed him warmly. The second visit was even more pleasant than the
+ first. And Mackay told his guest why he had come to Formosa, and of Jesus
+ Christ who was both God and man and who had come to the earth to save
+ mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man's bright eyes were fixed steadily upon the missionary as he
+ talked, and when he went away his face was very thoughtful. Mackay sat
+ thinking about him long after he had left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had met many graduates, but none had impressed him as had this youth,
+ with his frank face and his kind, genial manner. There was something too
+ about the young fellow, he felt, that marked him as superior to his
+ companions. And then a sudden divine inspiration flashed into the lonely
+ young missionary's heart. THIS WAS HIS MAN! This was the man for whom he
+ had been praying. The stranger had as yet shown no sign of conversion, but
+ Mackay could not get away from that inspired thought. And that night he
+ could not sleep for joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a day or two the young man returned. With him was a noted graduate, who
+ asked many questions about the new religion. The next day he came again
+ with six graduates, who argued and discussed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they were gone Mackay paced up and down the room and faced the
+ serious situation which he realized he was in. He saw plainly that the
+ educated men of the town were banded together to beat him in argument. And
+ with all his energy and desperate determination he set to work to be ready
+ for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His first task was to gain a thorough knowledge of the Chinese religions.
+ He had already learned much about them, both from books on shipboard and
+ since he had come to the island. But now he spent long hours of the night,
+ poring over the books of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism, by the light
+ of his smoky little pewter lamp. And before the next visit of his enemies
+ he knew almost more of their jumble of religions than they did themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was well he was prepared, for his opponents came down upon him in full
+ force. Every day a band of college graduates, always headed by Giam Cheng
+ Hoa, came up from the town to the missionary's little hut by the river,
+ and for hours they would sit arguing and talking. They were always the
+ most noted scholars the place could produce, but in spite of all their
+ cleverness the barbarian teacher silenced them every time. He fairly took
+ the wind out of their sails by showing he knew quite as much about Chinese
+ religions as they did. If they quoted Confucius to contradict the Bible,
+ he would quote Confucius to contradict them. He confounded them by proving
+ that they were not really followers of Confucius, for they did not keep
+ his sayings. And with unanswerable arguments he went on to show that the
+ religion taught by Jesus Christ was the one and only religion to make man
+ good and noble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each day the group of visitors grew larger, and at last one morning, as
+ Mackay looked out of his door, he saw quite a crowd approaching. They were
+ led, as usual, by the friendly young scholar. By his side walked, or
+ rather, swaggered a man of whom the missionary had often heard. He was a
+ scholar of high degree and was famed all over Formosa for his great
+ learning. Behind him came about twenty men, and Mackay could see by their
+ dress and appearance that they were all literary graduates. They were
+ coming in great force this time, to crush the barbarian with their
+ combined knowledge. He met them at the door with his usual politeness and
+ hospitality. He was always courteous to these proud literati, but he
+ always treated them as equals, and showed none of the deference they felt
+ he owed them. The crowd seated itself on improvised benches and the
+ argument opened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time Mackay led the attack. He carried the war right into the enemy's
+ camp. Instead of letting them put questions to him, he asked them question
+ after question concerning Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism. They were
+ questions that sometimes they could not answer, and to their chagrin they
+ had to hear "the barbarian" answer for them. There were other questions,
+ still more humiliating, which, when they answered, only served to show
+ their religion as false and degrading. Their spokesman, the great learned
+ man, became at last so entangled that there was nothing for him but
+ flight. He arose and stalked angrily away, and in a little while they all
+ left. Mackay looked wistfully at young Giam as he went out, wondering what
+ effect these words had upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not left long in doubt. Not half an hour after a shadow fell across
+ the open Bible the missionary was studying. He glanced up. There he stood!
+ His bright face was very serious. He looked gravely at the other young
+ man, and his eyes shone as he spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I brought all those graduates and teachers here," he confessed, "to
+ silence you or be silenced. And now I am convinced that the doctrines you
+ teach are true. I am determined to become a Christian, even though I
+ suffer death for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay rose from his seat, his face alight with an overwhelming joy. The
+ man he had prayed for! He took the young fellow's hand&mdash;speechless.
+ And together the only missionary of north Formosa and his first convert
+ fell upon their knees before the true God and poured out their hearts in
+ joy and thanksgiving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. SOLDIERS TWO
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And now a new day dawned for the lonely young missionary. He had not a
+ convert but a helper and a delightful companion. His new friend was of a
+ bright, joyous nature, the sort that everybody loves. Giam was his
+ surname, but almost every one called him by his given name, Hoa, and those
+ who knew him best called him A Hoa. Mackay used this more familiar boyish
+ name, for Giam was the younger by a few years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To A Hoa his new friend was always Pastor Mackay, or as the Chinese put
+ it, Mackay Pastor, Kai Bok-su was the real Chinese of it, and Kai Bok-su
+ soon became a name known all over the island of Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Hoa needed all his kind new friend's help in the first days after his
+ conversion. For family, relatives, and friends turned upon him with the
+ bitterest hatred for taking up the barbarian's religion. So, driven from
+ his friends, he came to live in the little hut by the river with Mackay.
+ While at home these two read, sang, and studied together all the day long.
+ It would have been hard for an observer to guess who was teacher and who
+ pupil. For at one time A Hoa was receiving Bible instruction and the next
+ time Mackay was being drilled in the Chinese of the educated classes. Each
+ teacher was as eager to instruct as each pupil was eager to learn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bible was, of course, the chief textbook, but they studied other
+ things, astronomy, geology, history, and similar subjects. One day the
+ Canadian took out a map of the world, and the Chinese gazed with amazement
+ at the sight of the many large countries outside China. A Hoa had been
+ private secretary to a mandarin, and had traveled much in China, and once
+ spent six months in Peking. His idea had been that China was everything,
+ that all countries outside it were but insignificant barbarian places. His
+ geography lessons were like revelations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His progress was simply astonishing, as was also Mackay's. The two seemed
+ possessed with the spirit of hard work. But a superstitious old man who
+ lived near believed they were possessed with a demon. He often listened to
+ the two singing, drilling, and repeating words as they marched up and
+ down, either in the house or in front of it, and he became alarmed. He was
+ a kindly old fellow, and, though a heathen, felt well disposed toward the
+ missionary and A Hoa. So one day, very much afraid, he slipped over to the
+ little house with two small cups of strong tea. He came to the door and
+ proffered them with a polite bow. He hoped they might prove soothing to
+ the disturbed nerves of the patients, he said. He suggested, also, that a
+ visit to the nearest temple might help them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two affected ones received his advice politely, but the humor of it
+ struck them both, and when their visitor was gone they laughed so hard the
+ tea nearly choked them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionary was soon able to speak so fluently that he preached almost
+ every day, either in the little house by the river, or on the street in
+ some open square. There were other things he did, too. On every side he
+ saw great suffering from disease. The chief malady was the terrible
+ malaria, and the native doctors with their ridiculous remedies only made
+ the poor sufferers worse. Mackay had studied medicine for a short time
+ while in college, and now found his knowledge very useful. He gave some
+ simple remedies to several victims of malaria which proved effective. The
+ news of the cures spread far and wide. The barbarian was kind, he had a
+ good heart, the people declared. Many more came to him for medicine, and
+ day by day the circle of his friends grew. And wherever he went, curing
+ disease, teaching, or preaching, A Hoa went with him, and shared with him
+ the taunts of their heathen enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the gospel was gradually making its way. Not long after A Hoa's
+ conversion a second man confessed Christ. He had previously disturbed the
+ meetings by throwing stones into the doorway whenever he passed. But his
+ sister was cured of malaria by the missionary's medicine, and soon both
+ sister and mother became Christians, and finally the stone-thrower
+ himself. And so, gradually, the lines of the enemy were falling back, and
+ at every sign of retreat the little army of two advanced. A little army?
+ No! For was there not the whole host of heaven moving with them? And
+ Mackay was learning that his boyish dreams of glory were truly to be
+ fulfilled. He had wanted always to be a soldier like his grandfather, and
+ fight a great Waterloo, and here he was right in the midst of the battle
+ with the victory and the glory sure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two missionaries often went on short trips here and there into the
+ country around Tamsui, and Mackay determined that when the intense summer
+ heat had lessened they would make a long tour to some of the large cities.
+ The heat of August was almost overpowering to the Canadian. Flies and
+ mosquitoes and insect pests of all kinds made his life miserable, too, and
+ prevented his studying as hard as he wished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One oppressive day he and A Hoa returned from a preaching tour in the
+ country to find their home in a state of siege. Right across the threshold
+ lay a monster serpent, eight feet in length. A Hoa shouted a warning, and
+ seized a long pole, and the two managed to kill it. But their troubles
+ were not yet over. The next morning, Mackay stepped outside the door and
+ sprang back just in time to escape another, the mate of the one killed.
+ This one was even larger than the first, and was very fierce. But they
+ finished it with sticks and stones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When September came the days grew clearer, and the many pests of summer
+ were not so numerous. The mosquitoes and flies that had been such torments
+ disappeared, and there was some relief from the damp oppressive heat. But
+ he had only begun to enjoy the refreshing breaths of cool air, and had
+ remarked to A Hoa that the days reminded him of Canadian summers, when the
+ weather gave him to understand that every Formosan season has its
+ drawbacks. September brought tropical storms and typhoons that were
+ terrible, and he saw from his little house on the hillside big trees torn
+ up by the root, buildings swept away like chaff, and out in the harbor
+ great ships lifted from their anchorage and whirled away to destruction.
+ And then he was sometimes thankful that his little hut was built into the
+ hillside, solid and secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the fierce storms cleared away the heavy dampness that had made the
+ heat of the summer so unbearable, and October and November brought
+ delightful days. The weather was still warm of course, but the nights were
+ cool and pleasant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So early one October morning, Mackay and A Hoa started off on a tour to
+ the cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall go to Kelung first," said the missionary. Kelung was a seaport
+ city on the northern coast, straight east across the island from Tamsui. A
+ coolie to carry food and clothing was hired, and early in the morning,
+ while the stars were still shining, they passed through the sleeping town
+ and out on the little paths between the rice-fields. Though it was yet
+ scarcely daylight, the farmers were already in their fields. It was
+ harvest-time&mdash;the second harvest of the year&mdash;and the little
+ rice-fields were no longer like mirrors, but were filled with high
+ rustling grain ready for the sickle. The water had been drained off and
+ the reaper and thrasher were going through the fields before dawn. There
+ was no machinery like that used at home. The reaper was a short sickle,
+ the thrashing-machine a kind of portable tub, and Mackay looked at them
+ with some amusement, and described to A Hoa how they took off the great
+ wheat crops in western Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two were in high spirits, ready for any sort of adventure and they met
+ some. Toward evening they reached a place called Sek-khau, and went to the
+ little brick inn to get a sleeping-place. The landlord came to the door
+ and was about to bid A Hoa enter, when the light fell upon Mackay's face.
+ With a shout, "Black-bearded barbarian!" he slammed the door in their
+ faces. They turned away, but already a crowd had begun to gather. "The
+ black-bearded barbarian is here! The foreign devil from Tamsui has come!"
+ was the cry. The mob followed the two down the streets, shouting curses.
+ Some one threw a broken piece of brick, another a stone. Mackay turned and
+ faced them, and for a few moments they seemed cowed. But the crowd was
+ increasing, and he deemed it wise to move on. So the two marched out of
+ the town followed by stones and curses. And, as they went, Mackay reminded
+ A Hoa of what they had been reading the night before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," said A Hoa brightly. "The Lord was driven out of his own town in
+ Galilee."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, and Paul&mdash;you remember how he was stoned. Our Master counts us
+ worthy to suffer for him." But where to go was the question. Before they
+ could decide, night came down upon them, and it came in that sudden
+ tropical way to which Mackay, all his life accustomed to the long mellow
+ twilights of his northern home, could never grow accustomed. They each
+ took a torch out of the carrier's bag, lighted it, and marched bravely on.
+ The path led along the Kelung river, through tall grass. They were not
+ sure where it led to, but thought it wise to follow the river; they would
+ surely come to Kelung some time. Mackay was ahead, A Hoa right at his
+ heels, and behind them the basketbearer. At a sudden turn in the path A
+ Hoa gave a shout of warning, and the next instant, a band of robbers
+ leaped from the long reeds and grass, and brandished their spears in the
+ travelers' faces. The torchlight shone on their fierce evil eyes and their
+ long knives, making a horrible picture. The young Canadian Scot did not
+ flinch for a second. He looked the wild leader straight in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have no money, so you cannot rob us," he said steadily, "and you must
+ let us pass at once. I am a teacher and&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A TEACHER!" he was interrupted by a dismayed exclamation from several of
+ the wild band. "A teacher!" As if with one accord they turned and fled
+ into the darkness. For even a highwayman in China respects a man of
+ learning. The travelers went on again, with something of relief and
+ something of the exultation that youth feels in having faced danger. But a
+ second trouble was upon them. One of those terrible storms that still
+ raged occasionally had been brewing all evening, and now it opened its
+ artillery. Great howling gusts came down from the mountain, carrying
+ sheets of driving rain. Their torches went out like matches, and they were
+ left to stagger along in the black darkness. What were they to do? They
+ could not go back. They could not stay there. They scarcely dared go on.
+ For they did not know the way, and any moment a fresh blast of wind or a
+ misstep might hurl them into the river. But they decided that they must go
+ on, and on they went, stumbling, slipping, sprawling, and falling
+ outright. Now there would be an exclamation from Mackay as he sank to the
+ knees in the mud of a rice-field, now a groan from A Hoa as he fell over a
+ boulder and bruised and scratched himself, and oftenest a yell from the
+ poor coolie, as he slipped, baskets and all, into some rocky crevice, and
+ was sure he was tumbling into the river; but they staggered on, Mackay
+ secure in his faith in God. His Father knew and his Father would keep him
+ safely. And behind him came brave young A Hoa, buoyed up by his new
+ growing faith, and learning the lesson that sometimes the Captain asks his
+ soldier to march into hard encounters, but that the soldier must never
+ flinch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "everlasting arms" were around them, for by midnight they reached
+ Kelung. They were drenched, breathless, and worn out, and they spent the
+ night in a damp hovel, glad of any shelter from the wind and rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the next morning, young soldier A Hoa had a fiercer battle to fight
+ than any with robbers or storms. As soon as the city was astir, Mackay and
+ he went out to find a good place to preach. They passed down the main
+ thoroughfare, and everywhere they attracted attention. Cries of "Ugly
+ barbarian!" and oftenest "Black-bearded barbarian" were heard on all
+ sides. A Hoa was known in Kelung and contempt and ridicule was heaped upon
+ him by his old college acquaintances. He was consorting with the
+ barbarian! He was a friend of this foreigner! They poured more insults
+ upon him than they did upon the barbarian himself. Some took the stranger
+ as a joke, and laughed and made funny remarks upon his appearance. Here
+ and there an old woman, peeping through the doorway, would utter a loud
+ cackling laugh, and pointing a wizened finger at the missionary would cry:
+ "Eh, eh, look at him! Tee hee! He's got a wash basin on for a hat!" A Hoa
+ was distressed at these remarks, but Mackay was highly amused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We're drawing a crowd, anyway," he remarked cheerfully, "and that's what
+ we want."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon they came to an open square in front of a heathen temple. The
+ building had several large stone steps leading up to the door. Mackay
+ mounted them and stood facing the buzzing crowd, with A Hoa at his side.
+ They started a hymn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All people that on earth do dwell Sing to the Lord with cheerful voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The open square in front of them began to fill rapidly. The people jostled
+ each other in their endeavors to get a view of the barbarian. Every one
+ was curious, but every one was angry and indignant, so sometimes the sound
+ of the singing was lost in the shouts of derision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the hymn was finished, Mackay had a sudden inspiration. "They will
+ surely listen to one of their own people," he said to himself, and turned
+ to A Hoa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Speak to them," he said. "Tell them about the true God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was a hard moment for the young convert. He had been a Christian only
+ a few months and had never yet spoken in public for Christ. He looked
+ desperately over the sea of mocking faces beneath him. He opened his
+ mouth, as though to speak, and hesitated. Just then came a rough and
+ bitter taunt from one of his old companions. It was too much. A Hoa turned
+ away and hung his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young missionary said nothing. But he did the very wisest thing he
+ could have done. He had some time before taught A Hoa a grand old Scottish
+ paraphrase, and they had often sung it together:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'm not ashamed to own my Lord Or to defend his cause, Maintain the glory
+ of his cross And honor all his laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay's voice, loud and clear, burst into this fine old hymn. A Hoa
+ raised his head. He joined in the hymn and sang it to the end. It put
+ mettle into him. It was the battle-song that brought back the young
+ recruit's courage. Almost before the last note sounded he began to speak.
+ His voice rang out bold and unafraid over the crowd of angry heathen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am a Christian!" he said distinctly. "I worship the true God. I cannot
+ worship idols," with a gesture toward the temple door, "that rats can
+ destroy. I am not afraid. I love Jesus. He is my Savior and Friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, A Hoa was not "ashamed" any more. His testing time had come, and he
+ had not failed after all. And his brave, true words sent a thrill of joy
+ through the more seasoned soldier at his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was not the only difficult situation he met on that journey. The two
+ soldiers of the cross had many trials, but the thrill of that victory
+ before the Kelung temple never left them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they returned to Tamsui they held daily services in their house, and
+ A Hoa often spoke to the people who gathered there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One Sunday they noticed an old woman present, who had come down the river
+ in a boat. Women as a rule did not come out to the meetings, but this old
+ lady continued to come every Sunday. She showed great interest in the
+ missionary's words, and, at the close of one meeting, he spoke to her. She
+ told him she was a poor widow, that her name was Thah-so, and that she had
+ come down the river from Go-ko-khi to hear him preach. Then she added, "I
+ have passed through many trials in this world, and my idols never gave me
+ any comfort." Then her eyes shone, "But I like your teaching very much,"
+ she went on. "I believe the God you tell about will give me peace.. I will
+ come again, and bring others."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next Sunday she was there with several other women. And after that she
+ came every Sunday, bringing more each time, until at last a whole
+ boat-load would come down to the service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These people were so interested that they asked the missionary if he would
+ not visit them. So one day he and A Hoa boarded one of the queer-looking
+ flat-bottomed river-boats and were pulled up the rapids to Go ko-khi.
+ Every village in Formosa had its headman, who is virtually the ruler of
+ the place. When the boat landed, many of the villagers were at the shore
+ to meet their visitors and took them at once to their mayor's house, the
+ best building in the village. Tan Paugh, a fine, big, powerfully-built
+ man, received them cordially. He frankly declared that he was tired and
+ sick of idols and wanted to hear more of this new religion. An empty
+ granary was obtained for both church and home, and the missionary and his
+ assistant took up their quarters there, and for several months they
+ remained, preaching and teaching the Bible either in Go-ho-khi, or in the
+ lovely surrounding valleys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. THE GREAT KAI BOK-SU
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The missionary was now becoming a familiar figure both in Tamsui and in
+ the surrounding country. By many he was loved, by all he was respected,
+ but by a large number he was bitterly hated. The scholars continued his
+ worst enemies. They could never forgive him for beating them so completely
+ in argument, in the days when A Hoa was striving for the light, and their
+ hatred increased as they saw other scholars becoming Christians under his
+ teaching. There was something about him, however, that compelled their
+ respect and even their admiration. Wherever they met him&mdash;on the
+ street, by their temples, or on the country roads&mdash;he bore himself in
+ such a way as to make them confess that he was their superior both in
+ ability and knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These Chinese literati had a custom which Mackay found very interesting.
+ One proud scholar marching down the street and scarcely noticing the
+ obsequious bows of his inferiors, would meet another equally proud
+ scholar. Each would salute the other in an exceedingly grand manner, and
+ then one would spin off a quotation from the writings of Confucius or some
+ other Chinese sage and say, "Now tell me where that is found." And scholar
+ number two had to ransack his brains to remember where the saying was
+ found, or else confess himself beaten. Mackay thought it might be a good
+ habit for the graduates of his own alma mater across the wide sea to
+ adopt. He wondered what some of his old college chums would think, if,
+ when he got back to Canada, he should buttonhole one on the street some
+ day, recite a quotation from Shakespeare or Macaulay, and demand from his
+ friend where it could be found. He had a suspicion that the old friend
+ would be afraid that the Oriental sun had touched George Mackay's brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless he thought the custom one he could turn to good account, and
+ before long he was trying it himself. He had such a wonderful memory that
+ he never forgot anything he had once read. So the scholars of north
+ Formosa soon discovered, again to their humiliation, that this Kai Bok-su
+ of Tamsui could beat them at their own game. They did not care how much he
+ might profess to know of writers and lands beyond China. Such were only
+ barbarians anyway. But when, right before a crowd, he would display a
+ surer knowledge of the Chinese classics than they themselves, they began
+ not only to respect but to fear him. It was no use trying to humiliate him
+ with a quotation. With his bright eyes flashing, he would tell, without a
+ moment's hesitation, where it was found and come back at the questioner
+ swiftly with another, most probably one long forgotten, and reel it off as
+ though he had studied Chinese all his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a wonderful man certainly, they all agreed, and one whom it was not
+ safe to oppose. The common people liked him better every day. He was so
+ tactful, so kind, and always so careful not to arouse the prejudice of the
+ heathen. He was extremely wise in dealing with their superstitions. No
+ matter how absurd or childish They might be, he never ridiculed them, but
+ only strove to show the people how much happier they might be if they
+ believed in God as their Father and in Jesus Christ as their Savior. He
+ never made light of anything sacred to the Chinese mind, but always tried
+ to take whatever germ of good he could find in their religion, and lead on
+ from it to the greater good found in Christianity. He discovered that the
+ ancestral worship made the younger people kind and respectful to older
+ folk, and he saw that Chinese children reverenced their parents and elders
+ in a way that he felt many of his young friends across the sea would do
+ well to copy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day when he and A Hoa were out on a preaching tour, the wise Kai
+ Bok-su made use of this respect for parents in quieting a mob. He and his
+ comrade were standing side by side on the steps of a heathen temple as
+ they had done at Kelung. The angry crowd was scowling and muttering, ready
+ to throw stones as soon as the preacher uttered a word. Mackay knew this,
+ and when they had sung a hymn and the people waited, ready for a riot, his
+ voice rang out clear and steady, repeating the fifth commandment "Honor
+ thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which
+ the Lord thy God giveth thee." A silence fell over the muttering crowd,
+ and an old heathen whose cue was white and whose aged hands trembled on
+ the top of his staff, nodded his head and said, "That is heavenly
+ doctrine." The people were surprised and disarmed. If the black-bearded
+ barbarian taught such truths as this, he surely was not so very wicked
+ after all. And so they listened attentively as he went on to show that
+ they had all one great Father, even God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sometimes found it rather a task to treat with respect that which the
+ Chinese held sacred. Especially was this so when he discovered to his
+ amusement and to some carefully concealed disgust, that in the Chinese
+ family the pig was looked upon with affection, and as a young naval
+ officer, who visited Mackay remarked, "was treated like a gentleman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every Chinese house of any size was made up of three buildings joined
+ together so as to make three sides of an enclosure. This space was called
+ a court, and a door led from it to another next the street. In this outer
+ yard pigs and fowl were always to be found. Whenever the missionary
+ dropped in at a home, mother pig and all the little pigs often followed
+ him inside the house, quite like members of the family. Every one was
+ always glad to see Kai Bok-su, pigs and all, and as soon as he appeared
+ the order was given&mdash;"Infuse tea." And when the little handleless
+ cups of clear brown liquid were passed around and they all drank and
+ chatted, Mrs. Pig and her children strolled about as welcome as the guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese would allow no one to hurt their pigs, either. One day as
+ Mackay sat in his rooms facing the river, battling with some new Chinese
+ characters, he heard a great hubbub coming up the street. The threatening
+ mobs that used to surround his house had long ago ceased to trouble him.
+ He arose in some surprise and went to the door to see what was the matter.
+ A very unusual sight for Tamsui met his gaze. Coming up the street at a
+ wild run were some half-dozen English sailors, their loose blue blouses
+ and trousers flapping madly. They were evidently from a ship which Mackay
+ had seen lying in the harbor that morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give us a gun!" roared the foremost as soon as he saw the missionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay did not possess a gun, and would not have given the enraged
+ bluejacket one had he owned a dozen. But the Chinese mob, roaring with
+ fury, were coming up the street after the men and he swiftly pointed out a
+ narrow alley that led down to the river. "Run down there!" he shouted to
+ the sailors. "You can get to your boats before they find you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were gone in an instant, and the next moment the crowd of pursuers
+ were storming about the door demanding whither the enemy had disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is all this disturbance about?" demanded Kai Bok-su calmly, glad of
+ an opportunity to gain time for the fleeing sailors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aggrieved Chinese gathered about him, each telling the story as loud
+ as his voice would permit. Those barbarians of the sea had come swaggering
+ along the streets waving their big sticks. And they had dared&mdash;yes
+ actually DARED&mdash;to hit the pet pigs belonging to every house as they
+ passed. The poor pigs who lay sunning themselves at the door!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was indeed a serious offense. Mackay could picture the rollicking
+ sailor-lads gaily whacking the lazy porkers with their canes as they
+ passed, happily unconscious of the trouble they were raising. But there
+ was no amusement in Kai Bok-su's grave face. He spoke kindly, and
+ soothingly, and promised that if the offenders misbehaved again he would
+ complain to the authorities. That made it all right. Heathen though they
+ were, they knew Kai Bok-su's promise would not be broken, and away they
+ went quite satisfied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day he learned, quite by accident, a new and very useful way of
+ helping his people. He and A Hoa and several other young men who had
+ become Christians, went on a missionary tour to Tek-chham, a large city
+ which he had visited once before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the day they left the place, Kai Boksu's preaching had drawn such
+ crowds that the authorities of the city became afraid of him. And when the
+ little party left, a dozen soldiers were sent to follow the dangerous
+ barbarian and his students and see that they did not bewitch the people on
+ the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldiers tramped along after the missionary party, and with his usual
+ ability to make use of any situation, Mackay stepped back and chatted with
+ his spies. He found one poor fellow in agony with the toothache. This
+ malady was very common in north Formosa, partly owing to the habit of
+ chewing the betel-nut. He examined the aching tooth and found it badly
+ decayed. "There is a worm in it," the soldier said, for the Formosan
+ doctors had taught the people this was the cause of toothache.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay had no forceps, but he knew how to pull a tooth, and he was not the
+ sort to be daunted by the lack of tools. He got a piece of hard wood,
+ whittled it into shape and with it pried out the tooth. The relief from
+ pain was so great that the soldier almost wept for joy and overwhelmed the
+ tooth-puller with gratitude. And for the remainder of the journey the
+ guards sent to spy on the missionary's doings were his warmest friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this, dentistry became a part of this many-sided missionary's work.
+ He went to a native blacksmith and had a pair of forceps hammered out of
+ iron. It was a rather clumsy instrument, but it proved of great value, and
+ later he sent for a complete set of the best instruments made in New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So with forceps in one hand and the Bible in the other, Mackay found
+ himself doubly equipped. Every second person seemed to be suffering from
+ toothache, and when the pain was relieved by the missionary, the patient
+ was in a state of mind to receive his teaching kindly. The cruel methods
+ by which the native doctors extracted teeth often caused more suffering
+ than the toothache, and sometimes even resulted in death through
+ blood-poisoning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Hoa and some of the other young converts learned from their teacher how
+ to pull a tooth, and they, too, became experts in the art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever they visited a town or city after this, they had a program which
+ they always followed. First they would place themselves in front of an
+ idol temple or in an open square. Here they would sing a hymn which always
+ attracted a crowd. Next, any one who wanted a tooth pulled was invited to
+ come forward. Many accepted the invitation gladly and sometimes a long
+ line of twenty or thirty would be waiting, each his turn. The Chinese had
+ considerable nerve, the Canadian discovered, and stood the pain bravely.
+ They literally "stood" it, too, for there was no dentist's chair and every
+ man stood up for his operation, very much pleased and very grateful when
+ it was over. Then there were quinine and other simple remedies for malaria
+ handed round, for in a Formosan crowd there were often many shaking in the
+ grip of this terrible disease. And now, having opened the people's hearts
+ by his kindness, Kai Bok-su brought forth his cure for souls. He would
+ mount the steps of the temple or stand on a box or stone, and tell the
+ wonderful old story of the man Jesus who was also God, and who said to all
+ sick and weary and troubled ones, "Come unto me,... and I will give you
+ rest." And often, when he had finished, the disease of sin in many a heart
+ was cured by the remedy of the gospel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the autumn passed away happily and busily, and Mackay entered his
+ first Formosan winter. And such a winter! The young man who had felt the
+ clear, bright cold of a Canadian January needed all his fine courage to
+ bear up under its dreariness. It started about Christmas time. Just when
+ his own people far away in Canada were gathering about the blazing fire or
+ jingling over the crisp snow in sleighs and cutters, the great winter
+ rains commenced. Christmas day&mdash;his first Christmas in a land that
+ did not know its beautiful meaning&mdash;was one long dreary downpour. It
+ rained steadily all Christmas week. It poured on Newyear's day and for a
+ week after. It came down in torrents all January. February set in and
+ still it rained and rained, with only a short interval each afternoon. Day
+ and night, week in, week out, it poured, until Mackay forgot what sunlight
+ looked like, his house grew damp, his clothes moldy. A stream broke out up
+ in the hill behind and one morning he awoke to find a cascade tumbling
+ into his kitchen, and rushing across the floor out into the river beyond.
+ And still it poured and the wind blew and everything was damp and cold and
+ dreary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He caught an occasional glimpse of snow, only a very far-off view, for it
+ lay away up on the top of a mountain, but it made his heart long for just
+ one breath of good dry Canadian air, just one whiff of the keen, cutting
+ frost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Kai Bok-su was not the sort to spend these dismal days repining.
+ Indeed he had no time, even had he been so inclined. His work filled up
+ every minute of every rainy day and hours of the drenched night. If there
+ was no sunshine outside there was plenty in his brave heart, and A Hoa's
+ whole nature radiated brightness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there were many reasons for being happy after all. On the second
+ Sabbath of February, 1873, just one year after his arrival in Tamsui, the
+ missionary announced, at the close of one of his Sabbath services, that he
+ would receive a number into the Christian church. There was instantly a
+ commotion among the heathen who were in the house, and yells and jeers
+ from those crowding about the door outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We'll stop him," they shouted. "Let us beat the converts," was another
+ cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mackay went quietly on with the beautiful ceremony in spite of the
+ disturbance. Five young men, with A Hoa at their head, came and were
+ baptized into the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the next Sabbath came these five with their missionary sat down for
+ the first time to partake of the Lord's Supper. It was a very impressive
+ ceremony. One young fellow broke down, declaring he was not worthy. Mackay
+ took him alone into his little room and they prayed together, and the
+ young man came out to the Lord's Supper comforted, knowing that all might
+ be worthy in Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spring came at last, bright and clear, and Mackay announced to A Hoa that
+ they must go up the river and visit their friends at Goko-khi. The two did
+ not go alone this time. Three other young men who wanted to be
+ missionaries were now spending their days with their teacher, learning
+ with A Hoa how to preach the gospel. So it was quite a little band of
+ disciples that walked along the river bank up to Go-ko-khi. Mackay
+ preached at all the villages along the route, and visited the homes of
+ Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, as they passed a yamen or Chinese court-house where a mandarin
+ was trying some cases, they stepped in to see what was going on. At one
+ end of the room sat the mandarin who was judge. He was dressed in
+ magnificent silks and looked down very haughtily upon the lesser people
+ and the retinue of servants who were gathered about him. On either side of
+ the room stood a row of constables and near them the executioners. The
+ rest of the room was filled with friends of the people on trial and by the
+ rabble from the street. The missionaries mixed with the former and stood
+ watching proceedings. There were no lawyers, no jury. The mandarin's
+ decision was law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first case was one of theft. Whether the man had really committed the
+ crime or not was a question freely discussed among the onlookers around
+ Mackay. But there seemed no doubt as to his punishment being swift and
+ heavy. "He has not paid the mandarin," a friend explained to the
+ missionary. "He will be punished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The mandarin eats cash," remarked another with a shrug. It was a saying
+ to which Mackay had become accustomed. For it was one of the shameless
+ proverbs of poor, oppressed Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case was soon finished. Nothing was definitely proven against the man.
+ But the mandarin pronounced the sentence of death. The victim was hurried
+ out, shrieking his innocence, and praying for mercy. Case followed case,
+ each one becoming more revolting than the last to the eyes of the young
+ man accustomed to British justice. Imprisonment and torture were meted out
+ to prisoners, and even witnesses were laid hold of and beaten on the face
+ by the executioners if their tale did not suit the mandarin. Men who were
+ plainly guilty but who had given their judge a liberal bribe were let off,
+ while innocent men were made to pay heavy fines or were thrown into
+ prison. The young missionary went out and on his way sickened by the
+ sights he had witnessed. And as he went, he raised his eyes to heaven and
+ prayed fervently that he might be a faithful preacher of the gospel, and
+ that one day Formosa would be a Christian land and injustice and
+ oppression be done away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next scene was a happier one. There was an earnest little band of
+ Christians in Go-ko-khi, and two of the young people were about to be
+ married. It was the first Christian marriage in the place and Kai Bok-su
+ was called upon to officiate. There was a great deal of opposition raised
+ among the heathen, but after seeing the ceremony, they all voted a
+ Christian wedding everything that was beautiful and good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. BESIEGING HEAD-HUNTERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When they returned from their trip, Mackay and A Hoa with the assistance
+ of some of their Christian friends set about looking for a new house in a
+ more wholesome district. It was much easier for the missionary to rent a
+ place now, and he managed to secure a comfortable home upon the bluff
+ above the town. It was a dryer situation and much more healthful. Here one
+ room was used as a study and every morning when not away on a tour a party
+ of young men gathered in it for lessons. Sometimes, what with traveling,
+ preaching, training his students, visiting the sick, and pulling teeth,
+ Mackay had scarcely time to eat, and very little to sleep. But always as
+ he came and went on his travels, his eyes would wander to the mountains
+ where the savages lived, and with all his heart he would wish that he
+ might visit them also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Chinese friends held up their hands in dismay when he broached the
+ subject. To the mountains where the Chhi-hoan lived! Did Kai Bok-su not
+ know that every man of them was a practised head-hunter, and that behind
+ every rock and tree and in the darkness of the forests they lay in wait
+ for any one who went beyond the settled districts? Yes, Kai Bok-su knew
+ all that, but he could not quite explain that it was just that which made
+ the thought of a visit to them seem so alluring, just that which made him
+ so anxious to tell them of Jesus Christ, who wished all men to live as
+ brothers. A Hoa and a few others who had caught the spirit of the true
+ soldier of the cross understood. For they had learned that one who follows
+ Jesus must be ready to dare anything, death included, to carry the news of
+ his salvation to the dark corners of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the days were so filled with preaching, teaching, and touring, that
+ for some time Mackay had no opportunity for a trip into the head-hunters'
+ territory. And then one day, quite unexpectedly, his chance came. There
+ sailed into Tamsui harbor, one hot afternoon, a British man-of-war, named
+ The Dwarf. Captain Bax from this vessel visited Tamsui, and expressed a
+ desire to see something of the life of the savages in the mountains. This
+ was Mackay's opportunity, and in spite of protests from his friends he
+ offered to accompany the captain. So together they started off, the
+ sailor-soldier of England and the soldier of the cross, each with the same
+ place in view but each with a very different object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took three days journey from Tamsui across rice-fields and up hillsides
+ to reach even the foot of the mountains. Here there lived a village of
+ natives, closely related to the savages. But they were not given to
+ head-hunting and were quite friendly with the people about them. Mackay
+ had met some of these people on a former trip inland, and now he and
+ Captain Bax hired their chief and a party of his men to guide them up into
+ savage territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The travelers slept that night in the village, and before dawn were up and
+ ready to start on their dangerous undertaking. Before them in the gray
+ dawn rose hill upon hill, each loftier than the last, till they melted
+ into the mountains, the territory of the dreaded head-hunters. They
+ started off on a steady tramp, up hills, down valleys, and across streams,
+ until at last they came to the foot of the first mountain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before them rose its sheer side, towering thirty-five hundred feet above
+ their heads. It was literally covered with rank growth of all kinds,
+ through which it was impossible to move. So a plan of march had to be
+ decided upon. In front went a line of men with long sharp knives. With
+ these they cut away the creepers and tangled scrub or undergrowth. Next
+ came the coolies with the baggage, and last the two travelers. It was slow
+ work, and sometimes the climb was so steep they held their breath, as they
+ crept over a sheer ledge and saw the depth below to which they might
+ easily be hurled. The chief of the guides himself collapsed in one
+ terrible climb, and his men tied rattan ropes about him and hauled him up
+ over the steepest places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this wearisome ascent the most untiring one was the missionary; and
+ the sailor often looked at him in amazement. His lithe, wiry frame never
+ seemed to grow weary. He was often in the advance line, cutting his way
+ through the tangle, and here on that first afternoon he met with an
+ unpleasant adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natives had warned the two strangers to be on the lookout for
+ poisonous snakes, and Mackay's year in Formosa had taught him to be wary.
+ But he had forgotten all danger in the toilsome climb. He was soon
+ reminded of it. They were passing up a slope covered with long dense grass
+ when a rustling at his side made the young missionary pause. The next
+ moment a huge cobra sprang out from a clump of grass and struck at him.
+ Mackay sprang aside just in time to escape its deadly fangs. The guides
+ rushed up with their spears only to see its horrible scaly length
+ disappear in the long grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was not the only escape of the young adventurer, for there were wild
+ animals as well as poisonous snakes along the line of march, and the man
+ in the front was always in danger. But at the front Mackay must be in
+ spite of all warning. Nobody moved fast enough for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last they reached the summit of the range. They were now on the
+ dividing line between Chinese ground and savage territory, and the men who
+ dared go a step farther went at terrible risk. The head-hunters would very
+ likely see that they did not return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mackay was all for pushing forward, and Captain Bax was no less eager.
+ So they spent a night in the forest and the next day marched on up another
+ and higher range. As they journeyed, the travelers could not but burst
+ into exclamations of delight at the loveliness about them. Behind those
+ great trees and in those tangles of vines might lurk the head-hunters, but
+ for all that the beauty of the place made them forget the dangers. The
+ great banyan trees whose branches came down and took root in the earth,
+ making a wonderful round leafy tent, grew on every side. Camphor trees
+ towered far above them and then spread out great branches sixty or seventy
+ feet from the ground. Then there was the rattan creeping out over the tops
+ of the other trees and making a thick canopy through which the hot
+ tropical sun-rays could not penetrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the flowers! Sometimes Mackay and Bax would stand amazed at their
+ beauty. They came one afternoon to an open glade in the cool green dimness
+ of the forest. On all sides the stately tree-ferns rose up thirty or forty
+ feet above them, and underneath grew a tangle of lovely green undergrowth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And upon this green carpet it seemed to their dazzled eyes that thousands
+ of butterflies of the loveliest form and color had just alighted. And not
+ only butterflies, but birds and huge insects and all sorts of winged
+ creatures, pink and gold and green and scarlet and blue, and all
+ variegated hues. But the lovely things sat motionless, sending out such a
+ delightful perfume that there could be no doubt that they were flowers,&mdash;the
+ wonderful orchids of Formosa! Mackay was a keen scientist, always highly
+ interested in botany, and he was charmed with this sight. There were many
+ such in the forest, and often he would stop spellbound before a blaze of
+ flowers hanging from tree or vine or shrub. Then he would look up at the
+ tangled growths of the bamboo, the palm, and the elegant tree-fern,
+ standing there all silent and beautiful, and he would be struck by the
+ harmony between God's work and Word. "I can't keep from studying the flora
+ of Formosa," he said to Captain Bax. "What missionary would not be a
+ better man, the bearer of a richer gospel, what convert would not be a
+ more enduring Christian from becoming acquainted with such wonderful works
+ of the Creator?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last they stood on the summit of the second range and saw before them
+ still more mountains, clothed from summit to base with trees. They were
+ now right in savage territory and their guide clambered out upon a spur of
+ rock and announced that there was a party of head-hunters in the valley
+ below. He gave a long halloo. From away down in the valley came an
+ answering call, ringing through the forest. Then far down through the
+ thicket Mackay's sharp eyes descried the party coming up to meet them.
+ Just then their own guide gave the signal to move on, and the missionary
+ and Captain Bax walked down the hill&mdash;the first white men who had
+ ever come out to meet those savages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half-way down the slope the two parties came face to face. The
+ head-hunters were a wild, uncouth-looking company, armed to the teeth.
+ They all carried guns, spears, and knives and some had also bows and
+ arrows slung over their backs. Their faces were hideously tattooed in a
+ regular pattern, while they wore no more clothes than were necessary. A
+ sort of sack of coarse linen with holes in the sides for their arms,
+ served as the chief garment, and generally the only one. Every one wore a
+ broad belt of woven rattan in which was stuck his crooked pointed knife.
+ Some of the younger men had their coats ornamented with bright red and
+ blue threads woven into the texture. They had brass rings on their arms
+ and legs too, and even sported big earrings. These were ugly looking
+ things made of bamboo sticks. The head-hunters were all barefooted, but
+ most of them wore caps&mdash;queer-looking things, made of rattan. From
+ many of them hung bits of skin of the boar or other wild animals they had
+ killed. They stood staring suspiciously at the two strangers. Never before
+ had they seen a white man, and the appearance of the naval officer and the
+ missionary, so different from themselves, and yet so different from their
+ hated enemies, the Chinese, filled them with amazement and a good deal of
+ suspicion. After a little talk with the guides, however, the visitors were
+ allowed to pass on. As soon as they began to move, the savages fell into
+ line behind them and followed closely. The two white men, walking calmly
+ onward, could not help thinking how easy it would be for one of those
+ fierce-looking tattooed braves to win applause by springing upon both of
+ them and carrying their heads in triumph to the next village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they came down farther into the valley, they passed the place where the
+ savages had their camp. Here naked children and tattooed women crept out
+ of the dense woods to stare at the queer-looking Chinamen who had white
+ faces and wore no cue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The march through this valley, even without the head-hunters at their
+ heels, would not have been easy. The visitors clambered over huge trunks
+ blown across the path, and tore their clothes and hands scrambling through
+ the thorny bushes. The sun was still shining on the mountain-peaks far
+ above them, but away down here in the valley it was rapidly growing dark
+ and very cold. They had almost decided to stop and wait for morning when a
+ light ahead encouraged them to go on. They soon came upon a big camp-fire
+ and round it were squatted several hundred savages. The firelight gleaming
+ upon the dark, fierce faces of the head-hunters and on their spears and
+ knives, made a startling picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were round the visitors immediately, staring at the two white men in
+ amazement. The party of savages who had escorted them seemed to be making
+ some explanation of their appearance, for they all subsided at last and
+ once more sat round their fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The newcomers started a fire of their own, and their servants cooked their
+ food. The white men were in momentary danger of their lives. But they sat
+ on the ground before the fire and quietly ate their supper while hundreds
+ of savage eyes were fixed upon them in suspicious, watchful silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The meal over the servants prepared a place for the travelers to sleep,
+ and while they were so doing, the young missionary was not idle. He longed
+ to speak to these poor, darkened heathen, but they could not understand
+ Chinese. However, he found several poor fellows lying prostrate on the
+ ground, overcome with malaria, and he got his guide to ask if he might not
+ give the sick ones medicine. Being allowed to do so, he gave each one a
+ dose of quinine. The poor creatures tried to look their gratitude when the
+ terrible chills left them, and soon they were able to sink into sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he retired to his own bed of boughs, the young missionary sang that
+ grand old anthem which these lonely woods and their savage inhabitants had
+ never yet heard:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ All people that on earth do dwell,
+ Sing to the Lord with cheerful voice.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But these poor people could not "sing to the Lord," for they had never yet
+ so much as heard his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All night the missionary lay on the ground, finding the chill mountain air
+ too cold for sleep, and whenever he looked out from his shelter of boughs
+ he saw hundreds of savage eyes, gleaming in the firelight, still wide open
+ and fixed upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day broke late in the valley, but the travelers were astir in the morning
+ twilight. The mountain-tops were touched with rosy light even while it was
+ dark down in these forest depths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chilled white men were glad to get up and exercise their stiffened
+ limbs. There were several of their party who could speak both Chinese and
+ the dialect of these mountaineers, and through them Mackay persuaded the
+ chief of the tribe to take them to visit his village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He seemed reluctant at first and there was much discussion with his
+ braves. Evidently they were more anxious to go on a head-hunt than to act
+ the part of hosts. However, after a great deal of chatter, they consented,
+ and the chief and his son with thirty men separated themselves from the
+ rest of the band and led the way out of the valley up the mountainside.
+ The travelers had to stop often, for, besides the natural difficulties of
+ the way, the chief proved a new obstacle. Every mile or so he would
+ apparently repent of his hospitality. He would stop, gather his tattooed
+ braves about him and confer with them, while his would-be visitors sat on
+ the ground or a fallen tree-trunk to await his pleasure. Finally he would
+ start off again, the travelers following, but no sooner were they under
+ way than again their uncertain guide would stop. Once he and his men stood
+ motionless, listening. Away up in the boughs of a camphor tree a little
+ tailor-bird was twittering. The savages listened as though to the voice of
+ an oracle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are they doing?" Mackay asked of one of his men, when the
+ head-hunters stopped a second time and stared earnestly at the boughs
+ above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bird-listening," explained the guide. A few more questions drew from him
+ the fact that the savages believed the little birds would tell them
+ whether or not they should bring these strangers home. They always
+ consulted the birds when starting out on a head-hunt, he further
+ explained. If the birds gave a certain kind of chirp and flew in a certain
+ direction, then all was well, and the hunters would go happily forward.
+ But if the birds acted in the opposite way, nothing in the world could
+ persuade the chief to go on. Evidently the birds gave their permission to
+ bring the travelers home, for in spite of many halts, the savages still
+ moved forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had been struggling for some miles through underbrush and prickly
+ rattan and the white men's clothes were torn and their hands scratched.
+ Now, however, they came upon a well-beaten path, winding up the
+ mountainside, and it proved a great relief to the weary travelers. But
+ here occurred another delay. The savages all stopped, and the chief
+ approached Mackay and spoke to him through the interpreter. Would the
+ white man join him in a head-hunting expedition, was his modest request.
+ There were some Chinese not so far below them, cutting out rattan, and he
+ was sure they could secure one or more heads. He shook the big net
+ head-bag that hung over his shoulder and grinned savagely as he made his
+ proposal. If the white men and their party would come at the enemy from
+ one side, he and his men would attack them from the other, he said, and
+ they would be sure to get them all. The incongruity of a Christian
+ missionary being invited on a head-hunt struck Captain Bax as rather funny
+ in spite of its gruesomeness. This was a delicate situation to handle, but
+ Mackay put a bold front on it. He answered indignantly that he and his
+ friend had come in peace to visit the chief, and that he was neither kind
+ nor honorable in trying to get his visitors to fight his battles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interpreter translated and for a moment several pairs of savage eyes
+ gleamed angrily at the bold white man. But second thoughts proved calmer.
+ After another council the savages moved on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were now at the top of a range, and every one was ordered to halt and
+ remain silent. Mackay thought that advice was again to be asked of some
+ troublesome little birds, but instead the savages raised a peculiar
+ long-drawn shout. It was answered at once from the opposite mountain-top,
+ and immediately the whole party moved on down the slope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was the same lovely tangle of vines and ferns and beautiful flowers.
+ Monkeys sported in the trees and chattered and scolded the intruders. Down
+ one range and up another they scrambled and at last they came upon the
+ village of the head-hunters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It lay in a valley in an open space where the forest trees had been
+ cleared away. It consisted of some half-dozen houses or huts made of
+ bamboo or wickerwork, and the place seemed literally swarming with women
+ and children and noisy yelping dogs. But even these could not account for
+ the terrible din that seemed to fill the valley. Such unearthly yells and
+ screeches the white men had never heard before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is it?" asked Captain Bax. "Has the whole village gone mad?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay turned to one of his guides, and the man explained that the noise
+ came from a village a little farther down the valley. A young hunter had
+ returned with a Chinaman's head, and his friends were rejoicing over it.
+ The merrymaking sounded to the visitors more like the howling of a pack of
+ fiends, for it bore no resemblance to any human sounds they had ever
+ heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately they were invited to stop at the nearer village and were not
+ compelled to take part in the horrible celebration. They were taken at
+ once to the chief's house. It was the best in the village, and boasted of
+ a floor, made of rattan ropes half an inch thick. All along the outside
+ wall, under the eaves, hung a row of gruesome ornaments, heads of the boar
+ and deer and other wild animals killed in the chase, and here and there
+ mingled with them the skulls of Chinamen. The house held one large room,
+ and, as it was a cold evening, a fire burned at either end of it. At one
+ end the men stood chatting, at the other the women squatted. The visitors
+ were invited to sit by the men's fire. There were several beds along the
+ wall, two of which were offered to the strangers. But they were not
+ prepared to remain for the night, and had decided to start back before the
+ shadows fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole village came to the chief's house and crowded round the
+ newcomers, men first, women and children on the outskirts, and dogs still
+ farther back. Several men came forward and claimed Mackay as a friend.
+ They touched their own breasts and then his, in salutation, grinning in a
+ most friendly manner. The young missionary was at first puzzled, then
+ smiled delightedly. They were some of the poor fellows to whom he had
+ given quinine the evening before in the valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This greeting seemed to encourage the others. They became more friendly
+ and suddenly one man who had been circling round the visitors touched the
+ back of Mackay's head and exclaimed, "They do not wear the cue! They are
+ our kinsmen." From that moment they were treated with far greater
+ kindness, and on several other visits that Mackay made to the
+ head-hunters, they always spoke with interest of him as kinsman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all danger was not over. The savages were still suspicious, and at any
+ moment the newcomers might excite them. So they decided to start back at
+ once, while every one was in a friendly mood. They made presents to the
+ chief and some of his leading men; and left with expressions of good-will
+ on both sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By evening they had reached the valley where they had first met the
+ savages and here they prepared to spend the night. They had no sooner
+ kindled their fires than from the darkness on every side shadowy forms
+ silently emerged,&mdash;the savages come to visit them! They glided out of
+ the black forest into the ring of firelight and squatted upon the ground
+ until fully five hundred dusky faces looked out at the travelers from the
+ gloom. It was rather an unpleasant situation, there in the depths of the
+ forest, but Mackay turned it to good account. First he and Captain Bax
+ made presents to the headmen and they were as pleased as children to
+ receive the gay ornaments and bright cloth the travelers gave them. And
+ then Mackay called their interpreter to his side and they stood up
+ together, facing the crowd. Speaking through his interpreter, the
+ missionary said he wished to tell them a story. These mountain savages
+ were veritable children in their love for a story, as they were in so many
+ other ways, and their eyes gleamed with delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a wonderful story he told them, the like of which they had never
+ heard before. It was about the great God, who had made the earth and the
+ people on it, and was the Father of them all. He told how God loved
+ everybody, because they were his children. Chinese, white men beyond the
+ sea like himself and Captain Bax, the people of the mountains,&mdash;all
+ were God's children. And so all men were brothers, and should love God
+ their Father and each other. And because God loved his children so, he
+ sent his Son, Jesus Christ, to live among men and to die for them. He told
+ the story simply and beautifully, just as he would to little children, and
+ these children of the forest listened and their savage eyes grew less
+ fierce as they heard for the first time of the story of the Savior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, after a toilsome journey, the travelers reached the plain
+ below. They had made their dangerous trip and had escaped the
+ head-hunters, but as fierce an enemy was lying in wait for both, an enemy
+ that in Formosa devours native and foreigner alike. Captain Bax was the
+ first to be attacked. All day, as they descended the mountain, the rain
+ came down in torrents, a real Formosan rain that is like the floodgates
+ opening. The travelers were drenched and chilly, and just as they emerged
+ from the forest Captain Bax succumbed to the enemy. Malaria had smitten
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shaking with chills and then burning with fever, he was placed in a
+ sedan-chair and carried the remainder of the way, three days' journey, to
+ the coast, where the medical attendants on board his ship cured him.
+ Mackay was feeling desperately ill all the way across the plain, but with
+ his usual determination he refused to give in until he almost staggered
+ across the threshold of his home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The house had been closed in his absence. It was now damp and chilly and
+ everything was covered with mold. He lay down in his bed, alternately
+ shivering with cold and burning with fever. In the next room A Hoa, who
+ had gone to bed also, heard his teeth chattering and came to him at once.
+ It was a terrible thing to the young fellow to see his dauntless Kai
+ Bok-su overcome by any kind of force. It seemed impossible that he who had
+ cured so many should become a victim himself. A Hoa proved a kind nurse.
+ He stayed by the bedside all night, doing everything in his power to allay
+ the fever. His efforts proved successful, and in a few days the patient
+ was well. But never again was he quite free from the dreaded disease, and
+ all the rest of his life he was subject to the most violent attacks of
+ malaria, a terrible memento by which he was always to remember his first
+ visit to the headhunters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. CITIES CAPTURED AND FORTS BUILT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Up the river to Go-ko-khi! That was always a joy, and whenever Mackay
+ could take a day from his many duties, with A Hoa and one or more other
+ students, he would go up and visit old Thah-so and the kindly people of
+ this little village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, after they had preached in the empty granary and the rain had
+ come in, Mr. Tan, the headman, walked up the village street with them, and
+ he made them an offer. They might have the plot of ground opposite his
+ house for a chapel-site. This was grand news. A chapel in north Formosa!
+ Mackay could hardly believe it, but it seemed that there really was to be
+ one. There were many Christians in Go-ko-khi now, and each one was ready
+ for work. Some collected stones, others prepared sun-dried bricks, others
+ dug the foundation, and the first church in north Formosa was commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Go-ko-khi was, unfortunately, near the great city of Bang-kah. This
+ was the most hostile and wicked place in all that country, and A Hoa and
+ Mackay had been stoned out of it on their visit there. The people in
+ Bang-kah learned of the new church building, and one day, when the brick
+ walls were about three feet high, there arose a tramp of feet, beating of
+ drums, and loud shouts, and up marched a detachment of soldiers sent with
+ orders from the prefect of Bang-kah to stop the building of the chapel.
+ Their officers went straight to the house of the headman with his
+ commands. Mr. Tan was six feet two and he rose to his full height and
+ towered above his visitor majestically. The "mayor" of Go-ko-khi was a
+ Christian now, and on the wall of his house was pasted a large sheet of
+ paper with the ten commandments printed on it. He pointed to this and
+ said: "I am determined to abide by these." The officer was taken aback. He
+ was scarcely prepared to defy the headman, and he went away to stir up the
+ villagers. But everywhere the soldiers met with opposition. There seemed
+ no one who would take their part. The officer knew he and his men were
+ scarcely within their rights in what they were doing; so, fearing trouble,
+ he marched back to the city, reporting there that the black-bearded
+ barbarian had bewitched the villagers with some magic art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prefect of Bang-kah next sent a message to the British consul. The
+ missionary was building a fort at Go-ko-khi, he declared in great alarm,
+ and would probably bring guns up the river at night. He was a very bad man
+ indeed, and if the British consul desired peace he should stop this wicked
+ Kai Bok-su at once. And the British consul down in his old Dutch fort at
+ Tamsui laughed heartily over the letter, knowing all about Kai Bok-su and
+ the sort of fort he was building.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, in spite of all opposition, the little church rose steadily up and up
+ until it was crowned with a tiled roof and was ready for the worshipers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was a great day for north Formosa and its young missionary, the day
+ the first church was opened. The place was packed to the doors, and many
+ stood outside listening at the windows. And of that crowd one hundred and
+ fifty arose and declared that from henceforth they would cast away their
+ idols and worship only the one and true God. Standing up there in his
+ first pulpit and looking down upon the crowd of upturned faces, and seeing
+ the new light in them which the blessed good news of Jesus and his love
+ had brought, Kai Bok-su's heart swelled with joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stayed with them some time after this, for, though so many people had
+ become Christians, they were like little children and needed much careful
+ teaching. Especially they must learn how to live as Jesus Christ would
+ have his followers live. Many heathen as well as the Christians came to
+ his meetings and listened eagerly. At first the people found it almost
+ impossible to sit quiet and still during a service. They had never been
+ accustomed to such a task, and some of the missionary's experiences were
+ very funny. When they had sung a hymn and had settled down to listen to
+ the address, the preacher would no sooner start than out would come one
+ long pipe after another, pieces of flint would strike on steel, and in a
+ few minutes the smoke would begin to ascend. Mackay would pause and gently
+ tell them that as this was a Christian service they must not do anything
+ that might disturb it. They were anxious to do just as he bade, so the
+ pipes would disappear, and nodding their heads politely they would say,
+ "Oh, yes, we must be quiet; oh, yes, indeed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day when the congregation was very still and their young pastor was
+ speaking earnest words to them, one man less attentive than the others
+ happened to glance out of the window. Instantly he sprang to his feet
+ shouting, "Buffaloes in the rice-fields! Buffaloes in the rice-fields!"
+ and away he went with a good fraction of the congregation helter-skelter
+ at his heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionary spoke again upon the necessity of quiet, and his hearers
+ nodded agreeably and murmured, "Yes, yes, we must be quiet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were very good for the next few minutes and the minister had reached
+ a very important point in his address, when there was a great disturbance
+ at the door. An old woman came hobbling up on her small feet and poking
+ her head in at the church door screamed, "My pig has gone! Pig has gone!"
+ and away went another portion of the congregation to help find the truant
+ porker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, in spite of many interruptions, the congregation at Go-ko-khi learned
+ much of the beautiful truth of their new religion. Their indulgent pastor
+ never blamed his restless hearers, but before the church was two months
+ old he had trained them so well that there was not a more orderly and
+ attentive congregation even in his own Christian Canada than that which
+ gathered in the first chapel in north Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the day came at last when he had to leave them, and the question was
+ who should be left over them. The answer seemed very plain,&mdash;A Hoa.
+ The first convert placed as pastor over the first church! It was very
+ fitting. Some months before, down in Tamsui, when A Hoa had been baptized
+ and had taken his first communion, he had vowed to give his life more
+ fully to his Master's service. So here was his field of labor, and here he
+ began his work. He was so utterly sincere and lovable, so bright and
+ jovial, so firm of purpose and yet so kindly, that he was soon beloved by
+ all the Christians and respected by the heathen. And one of his greatest
+ helpers was widow Thah-so, who had been instrumental in bringing the
+ missionary with his glad tidings to her village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay missed A Hoa sorely at first, but he had his other students about
+ him, and often when bent upon a long journey would send for his first
+ convert, and together they would travel here and there over the island,
+ making new recruits everywhere for the army of their great Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little church at Go-ko-khi was but the first of many. Like the
+ hepaticas that used to peep forth in the missionary's home woods, telling
+ that spring had arrived, here and there they came up, showing that the
+ long cruel winter of heathenism in north Formosa was drawing to an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away up the Tamsui river, nestled at the foot of the mountains, stood a
+ busy town called Sin-tiam. A young man from this place sailed down to
+ Tamsui on business one day and there heard the great Kai Bok-su preach of
+ the new Jehovah-God, he went home full of the wonderful news, and so much
+ did he talk about it that a large number of people in Sin-tiam were very
+ anxious to hear the barbarian themselves. So one day a delegation came
+ down the river to the house on the bluff above Tamsui. They made this
+ request known to the missionary as he sat teaching his students in the
+ study. Would he not come and tell the people of Sin-tiam the story about
+ this Jesus-God who loved all men? Would he go? Kai Bok-su was on the road
+ almost before the slow-going Orientals had finished delivering the
+ message.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the season of a feast to their idols in Sin-tiam when the
+ missionary and his party arrived. Great crowds thronged the streets, and
+ the barbarian with his white face and his black beard and his queer
+ clothes attracted unusual attention. The familiar cry, "Foreign devil,"
+ was mingled with "Kill the barbarian," "Down with the foreigner." The
+ crowd began to surge closer around the missionary party, and affairs
+ looked very serious. Suddenly a little boy right in Mackay's path was
+ struck on the head by a brick intended for the missionary. He was picked
+ up, and Mackay, pressing through the crowd to where the little fellow lay,
+ took out his surgical instruments and dressed the wound. All about him the
+ cries of "Kill the foreign devil" changed to cries of "Good heart! Good
+ heart!" The crowd became friendly at once, and Mackay passed on, having
+ had once more a narrow escape from death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work of preaching to these people was carried on vigorously, and
+ before many months had passed the Christians met together and declared
+ they must build a chapel for the worship of the true God. So, close by the
+ riverside, in a most picturesque spot, the walls of the second chapel of
+ north Formosa began to rise. It was not without opposition of course. One
+ rabid idol-worshiper stopped before the half-finished building with its
+ busy workmen, and, picking up a large stone, declared that he would smash
+ the head of the black-bearded barbarian if the work was not stopped that
+ moment. Needless to say, the missionary, standing within a good stone's
+ throw of his enemy, ordered the workers to continue. George Mackay was not
+ to be stopped by all the stones in north Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This stone was never thrown, however, and at last the chapel was finished.
+ Once more a preacher was ready to be its pastor. Tan He, a young man who
+ had been studying earnestly under his leader for some time, was placed
+ over this second congregation, and once more there blossomed out a sure
+ sign that the spring had indeed come to north Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tek-chham, a walled city of over forty thousand inhabitants, was the next
+ place to be attacked by this little army of the King's soldiers. The first
+ visit of the missionary caused a riot, but before long Tek-chham had a
+ chapel with some of the rioters for its best members, and a once proud
+ graduate and worshiper of Confucius installed in it as its pastor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten miles from Tek-chham stood a little village called Geh-bai. The
+ missionary-soldiers visited it, and to their delight found a church
+ building ready for them. It was quite a wonderful place, capable of
+ holding fully a thousand people without much crowding. Its roof was the
+ boughs of the great banyan tree; its one pillar the trunk, and its walls
+ the branches that bent down to enter the ground and take root. It made a
+ delightful shelter from the broiling sun. And here Kai Bok-su preached.
+ But a banyan does not give perfect shelter in all kinds of weather, so
+ when a number of people had declared themselves followers of the Lord
+ Jesus, a large house was rented and fitted up as a chapel, with another
+ native pastor over it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away over at Kelung a church was founded through a man who had carried the
+ gospel home from one of the missionary's sermons. Here and there the
+ hepaticas were springing up. From all sides came invitations to preach the
+ great news of the true God, and the young missionary gave himself scarcely
+ time to eat or sleep. He worked like a giant himself, and he inspired the
+ same spirit in the students that accompanied him. He was like a Napoleon
+ among his soldiers. Wherever he went they would go, even though it would
+ surely mean abuse and might mean death. And, wherever they went, they
+ brought such a wonderful, glad change to people's hearts that they were
+ like slave-liberators setting captives free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most lawless and dangerous region in all north Formosa was that
+ surrounding the small town of Sa-kak-eng. In the mountains near by lived a
+ band of robbers who kept the people in a constant state of dread by their
+ terrible deeds of plunder and murder. Sometimes the frightened townspeople
+ would help the highwaymen just to gain their good-will, and such treatment
+ only made them bolder. Bands of them would even come down into the town
+ and march through the streets, frightening every one into flight. They
+ would shout and sing, and their favorite song was one that showed how
+ little they cared for the laws of the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You trust the mandarins, We trust the mountains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the song went, and when the missionary heard it first he could not help
+ confessing that after all it was a sorry job trusting the mandarins for
+ protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first time he visited the place with A Hoa they were stoned and driven
+ out. But the missionaries came back, and at last were allowed to preach.
+ And then converts came and a church was established. The robber bands
+ received no more assistance from the people, and were soon scattered by
+ the officers of the law. And Sa-kak-eng was in peace because the
+ missionary had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was one place Mackay had so far scarcely dared to enter. Even
+ the robber-infested Sa-kak-eng would yield, but Bang-kah defied all
+ efforts. To the missionary it was the Gibraltar of heathen Formosa, and he
+ longed to storm it. North, south, east, and west of this great wicked city
+ churches had been planted, some only within a few miles of its walls. But
+ Bang-kah still stood frowning and unyielding. It had always been very
+ bitter against outsiders of all kinds. No foreign merchant was allowed to
+ do business in Bang-kah, so no wonder the foreign missionary was driven
+ out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay had dared to enter the place, being of the sort that would dare
+ anything. It was soon after he had settled in Formosa and A Hoa had
+ accompanied him. The result had been a riot. The streets had immediately
+ filled with a yelling, cursing mob that pelted the two missionaries with
+ stones and rotten eggs and filth, and drove them from the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But "Mackay never knew when he was beaten," as a fellow worker of his once
+ said, and though he was taking desperate chances, he went once more inside
+ the walls of Bangkah. This time he barely escaped with his life, and the
+ city authorities forbade every one, on pain of death, to lease or sell
+ property to him or in any way accommodate the barbarian missionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But meanwhile Kai Bok-su was keeping his eye on Bang-kah, and when the
+ territory around had been possessed, he went up to Go-ko&mdash;khi and
+ made the daring proposition to A Hoa. Should they go up again and storm
+ the citadel of heathenism? And A Hoa answered promptly and bravely, "Let
+ us go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So one day early in December, when the winter rains had commenced to pour
+ down, these two marched across the plain and into Bang-kah. By keeping
+ quiet and avoiding the main thoroughfare, they managed to rent a house. It
+ was a low, mean hovel in a dirty, narrow street, but it was inside the
+ forbidden city, and that was something. The two daring young men then
+ procured a large sheet of paper, printed on it in Chinese characters
+ "Jesus' Temple," and pasted it on the door. This announced what they had
+ come for, and they awaited results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently there came the heavy tramp, tramp of feet on the stone pavement.
+ Mackay and A Hoa looked out. A party of soldiers, armed with spears and
+ swords, were returning from camp. They stopped before the hut and read the
+ inscription. They shouted loud threats and tramped away to report the
+ affair to headquarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a short time, with a great noise and tramping, once more soldiers were
+ at the door. Mackay waked out and faced them quietly. The general had
+ given orders that the barbarian must leave this house immediately, the
+ soldier declared in a loud voice. The place belonged to the military
+ authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Show me your proof," said Mackay calmly. His bold behavior demanded
+ respectful treatment, so the soldier produced the deed for the property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I respect your law," said Mackay after he examined it, "and my companion
+ and I will vacate. But I have paid rent for this place, therefore I am
+ entitled to remain for the night. I will not go out until morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His firm words and fearless manner had their effect both on the soldiers
+ and the noisy mob waiting for him outside, and the men, muttering angrily,
+ turned away. That night Mackay and A Hoa lay on a dirty grass mat on the
+ mud floor. The place was damp and filthy, but even had it been comfortable
+ they would have had little sleep. For, far into the night, angry soldiers
+ paraded the street. Often their voices rose to a clamor and they would
+ make a rush for the frail door of the little hut. Many times the two young
+ fellows arose, believing their last hour had come. But the long night
+ passed and they found that they were still left untouched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rose early and started out. Already a great mob filled the space in
+ front of the house. Even the low roofs of the surrounding houses were
+ covered with people all out early to see the barbarian and his despised
+ companion driven from Bang-kah, and perhaps have the added pleasure of
+ witnessing their death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two walked bravely down the street. Curses were showered upon them
+ from all sides; broken tiles, stones, and filth were thrown at them, but
+ they moved on steadily. The mob hampered them so that they were hours
+ walking the short distance to the river. Here they entered a boat and went
+ down a few miles to a point where a chapel stood, and where some of
+ Mackay's students awaited them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the man who "did not know when he was beaten" had not turned his back
+ on the enemy. He gathered the group of students around him in the little
+ room attached to the chapel. Here they all knelt and the young missionary
+ laid their trouble before the great Captain who had said, "All power is
+ given unto me." "Give us an entrance to Bang-kah," was the burden of the
+ missionary 's prayer. They arose from their knees, and he turned to A Hoa
+ with that quick challenging movement his students had learned to know so
+ well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come," he said, "we are going back to Bang-kah."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And A Hoa, whose habit it was to walk into all danger with a smile,
+ answered with all his heart:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is well, Kai Bok-su; we go back to Bang-kah."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And straight back to this Gibraltar the little army of two marched. It was
+ quite dark by the time they entered. A Formosan city is not the blaze of
+ electricity to which Westerners are accustomed, and only here and there in
+ the narrow streets shone a dim light. The travelers stumbled along,
+ scarcely knowing whither they were going. As they turned a dark corner and
+ plunged into another black street they met an old man hobbling with the
+ aid of a staff over the uneven stones of the pavement. Mackay spoke to him
+ politely and asked if he could tell him of any one who would rent a house.
+ "We want to do mission work," he added, feeling that he must not get
+ anything under false pretenses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man nodded. "Yes, I can rent you my place," he answered readily.
+ "Come with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Full of amazement and gratitude the two adventurers groped their way after
+ him, stumbling over stones and heaps of rubbish. They could not help
+ realizing, as they got farther into the city, that should the old man
+ prove false and give an alarm the whole murderous populace of that
+ district would be around them instantly like a swarm of hornets. But
+ whether he was leading them into a trap or not their only course was to
+ follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last he paused at a low door opening into the back part of a house. The
+ old man lighted a lamp, a pith wick in a saucer of peanut oil, and the
+ visitors looked around. The room was damp and dirty and infested with the
+ crawling creatures that fairly swarm in the Chinese houses of the lower
+ order. Rain dripped from the low ceiling on the mud floor, and the meager
+ furniture was dirty and sticky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the two young men who had found it were delighted. They felt like the
+ advance guard of an army that has taken the enemy's first outpost. They
+ were established in Bang-kah! They set to work at once to draw out a
+ rental paper. A Hoa sat at the table and wrote it out so that they might
+ be within the law which said that no foreigner must hold property in
+ Bang-kah. When the paper was signed and the money paid, the old man crept
+ stealthily away. He had his money, but he was too wary to let his fellow
+ citizens find how he had earned it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as morning came the little army in the midst of the hostile camp
+ hoisted its banner. When the citizens of Bang-kah awoke, they found on the
+ door of the hut the hated sign, in large Chinese characters, "Jesus'
+ Temple."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In less than an hour the street in front of it was thronged with a
+ shouting crowd. Before the day was past the news spread, and the whole
+ city was in an uproar. By the next afternoon the excitement had reached
+ white heat, and a wild crowd of men came roaring down the street. They
+ hurled themselves at the little house where the missionaries were waiting
+ and literally tore it to splinters. The screams of rage and triumph were
+ so horrible that they reminded Mackay of the savage yells of the
+ head-hunters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the mob leaped upon the roof and tore it off, the two hunted men
+ slipped out through a side door, and across the street into an inn. The
+ crowd instantly attacked it, smashing doors, ripping the tiles off the
+ roof, and uttering such bloodthirsty howls that they resembled wild beasts
+ far more than human beings. The landlord ordered the missionaries out to
+ where the mob was waiting to tear them limb from limb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an awful moment. To go out was instant death, to remain merely put
+ off the end a few moments. Mackay, knowing his source of help, sent up a
+ desperate prayer to his Father in heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly there was a strange lull in the street outside. The yells ceased,
+ the crashing of tiles stopped. The door opened, and there in his
+ sedan-chair of state surrounded by his bodyguard, appeared the Chinese
+ mandarin. And just behind him&mdash;blessed sight to the eyes of Kai
+ Bok-su&mdash;Mr. Scott, the British consul of Tamsui!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without a word the two British-born clasped hands. It was not an occasion
+ for words. There was immediately a council of war. The mandarin urged the
+ British consul to send the missionary out of the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no authority to give such an order," retorted Mr. Scott quickly.
+ "On the other hand you must protect him while he is here. He is a British
+ subject."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay's heart swelled with pride. And he thanked God that his Empire had
+ such a worthy representative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having again impressed upon the mandarin that the missionary must be
+ protected or there would be trouble, Mr. Scott set off for his home.
+ Mackay accompanied him to the city gate. Then he turned and walked back
+ through the muttering crowds straight to the inn he had left. He stopped
+ occasionally to pull a tooth or give medicine for malaria, for even in
+ Bang-kah he had a few friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mandarin was now as much afraid of the missionary as if he had been
+ the plague. He knew he dared not allow him to be touched, and he also knew
+ he had very little power over a mob. He was responsible, too, to men in
+ higher office, for the control of the people, and would be severely
+ punished if there was a riot, he was indeed in a very bad way when he
+ heard that the troublesome missionary had come back, and he followed him
+ to the inn to try to induce him to leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found Mackay with A Hoa, quietly seated in their room. First he
+ commanded, then he tried to bribe, and then he even descended to beg the
+ "foreign devil" to leave the city. But Mackay was immovable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot leave," he said, touched by the man's distress. "I cannot quit
+ this city until I have preached the gospel here." He held up his forceps
+ and his Bible. "See! I use these to relieve pain of the body, and this
+ gives relief from sin,&mdash;the disease of the soul. I cannot go until I
+ have given your people the benefit of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mandarin went away enraged and baffled. He could not persuade the man
+ to go; he dared not drive him out. He left a squad of soldiers to guard
+ the place, however, remembering the British consul's warning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few days the excitement subsided. People became accustomed to seeing
+ the barbarian teacher and his companion go about the streets. Many were
+ relieved of much pain by him too, and a large number listened with some
+ interest to the new doctrine he taught concerning one God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been there a week when some prominent citizens came to him with a
+ polite offer. They would give him free a piece of ground outside the city
+ on which to build a church. Kai Bok-su's flashing black eyes at once saw
+ the bribe. They wanted to coax him out when they could not drive him. He
+ refused politely but firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I own that property," he declared, pointing to the heap of ruins into
+ which his house had been turned, "and there I will build a church."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They did everything in their power to prevent him, but one day, many
+ months after, right on the site where they had literally torn the roof
+ from above him, arose a pretty little stone church, and that was the
+ beginning of great things in Bang-kah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so Gibraltar was taken,&mdash;taken by an army of two,&mdash;a
+ Canadian missionary and a Chinese soldier of the King, for behind them
+ stood all the army of the Lord of hosts, and he led them to victory!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. OTHER CONQUESTS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Away over on the east of the island ran a range of beautiful mountains.
+ And between these mountains and the sea stretched a low rice plain. Here
+ lived many Pe-po-hoan,&mdash;"Barbarians of the plain." Mackay had never
+ visited this place, for the Kap-tsu-lan plain, as it was called, was very
+ hard to reach on account of the mountains; but this only made the
+ dauntless missionary all the more anxious to visit it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So one day he suggested to his students, as they studied in his house on
+ the bluff, that they make a journey to tell the people of Kap-tsu-lan the
+ story of Jesus. Of course, the young fellows were delighted. To go off
+ with Kai Bok-su was merely transferring their school from his house to the
+ big beautiful outdoors. For he always taught them by the way, and besides
+ they were all eager to go with him and help spread the good news that had
+ made such a difference in their lives. So when Kai Bok-su piled his books
+ upon a shelf and said, "Let us go to Kaptsu-lan," the young fellows ran
+ and made their preparations joyfully. A Hoa was in Tamsui at the time, and
+ Mackay suggested that he come too, for a trip without A Hoa was robbed of
+ half its enjoyment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay had just recovered from one of those violent attacks of malaria
+ from which he suffered so often now, and he was still looking pale and
+ weak. So Sun-a, a bright young student-lad, came to the study door with
+ the suggestion, "Let us take Lu-a for Kai Bok-su to ride."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a laugh from the other students and an indulgent smile from Kai
+ Bok-su himself. Lu-a was a small, rather stubborn-looking donkey with meek
+ eyes and a little rat tail. He was a present to the missionary from the
+ English commissioner of customs at Tamsui, when that gentleman was leaving
+ the island. Donkeys were commonly used on the mainland of China, and
+ though an animal was scarcely ever ridden in Formosa, horses being almost
+ unknown, the commissioner did not see why his Canadian friend, who was an
+ introducer of so many new things, should not introduce donkey-riding. So
+ he sent him Lu-a as a farewell present and leaving this token of his
+ good-will departed for home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time Lu-a had served only as a pet and a joke among the
+ students, and high times they had with him in the grassy field behind the
+ missionary's house when lessons were over. In great glee they brought him
+ round to the door now, "all saddled and bridled" and ready for the trip.
+ The missionary mounted, and Lu-a trotted meekly along the road that wound
+ down the bluff toward Kelung. The students followed in high spirits. The
+ sight of their teacher astride the donkey was such a novel one to them,
+ and Lu-a was such a joke at any time, that they were filled with
+ merriment. All went well until they left the road and turned into a path
+ that led across the buffalo common. At the end of it they came to a ravine
+ about fifteen feet deep. Over this stretched a plank bridge not more than
+ three feet wide. Here Lu-a came to a sudden stop. He had no mind to risk
+ his small but precious body on that shaky structure. His rider bade him
+ "go on," but the command only made Lu-a put back his ears, plant his fore
+ feet well forward and stand stock still. In fact he looked much more
+ settled and immovable than the bridge over which he was being urged. The
+ students gathered round him and petted and coaxed. They called him "Good
+ Lu-a" and "Honorable Lu-a" and every other flattering title calculated to
+ move his donkeyship, but Lu-a flattened his ears back so he could not hear
+ and would not move. So Mackay dismounted and tried the plan of pulling him
+ forward by the bridle while some of the boys pushed him from behind. Lu-a
+ resented this treatment, especially that from the rear, and up went his
+ heels, scattering students in every direction; and to discomfit the enemy
+ in front he opened his mouth and gave forth such loud resonant brays that
+ the ravine fairly rang with his music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A balking donkey is rather amusing to boys of any country, but to these
+ Formosan lads who had had no experience with one the sound of Lu-a's harsh
+ voice and the sight of his flying heels brought convulsions of merriment.
+ "He's pounding rice! He's pounding rice!" shouted the wag of the party,
+ and his companions flung themselves upon the grass and rolled about
+ laughing themselves sick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With his followers rendered helpless and his steed continuing stubborn,
+ Mackay saw the struggle was useless. He could not compete alone with
+ Lu-a's firmness, so he gave orders that the obstinate little obstructer of
+ their journey be trotted back to his pasture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And to think that any one of us might have carried the little rascal
+ over!" he cried as he watched the donkey meekly depart. His students
+ looked at the little beast with something like respect. Lu-a had beaten
+ the dauntless Kai Bok-su who had never before been beaten by anything. He
+ was indeed a marvelous donkey!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the journey to the Kap-tsu-lan plain was made on foot. It was a very
+ wearisome one and often dangerous. The mountain paths were steep and
+ difficult and the travelers knew that often the head-hunters lurked near.
+ But the way was wonderfully beautiful nevertheless. Standing on a mountain
+ height one morning and looking away down over wooded hills and valleys and
+ the lake-like terraces of the rice-fields, Mackay repeated to his students
+ a line of the old hymn:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every prospect pleases and only man is vile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Around them the stately tree-fern lifted its lovely fronds and the orchids
+ dotted the green earth like a flock of gorgeous butterflies just settled.
+ Tropical birds of brilliant plumage flashed among the trees. Beside them a
+ great tree raised itself, fairly covered with morning-glories, and over at
+ their right a mountainside gleamed like snow in the sunlight, clothed from
+ top to bottom with white lilies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the way had its dangers as well as its beauties. They were passing the
+ mouth of a ravine when they were stopped by yells and screams of terror
+ coming from farther up the mountainside. In a few minutes a Chinaman
+ darted out of the woods toward them. His face was distorted with terror
+ and he could scarcely get breath to tell his horrible story. He and his
+ four companions had been chipping the camphor trees up in the woods;
+ suddenly the armed savages had leaped out upon them and he alone of the
+ five had escaped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last they left the dangerous mountain and came down into the
+ Kap-tsu-lan plain. On every side was rice-field after rice-field, with the
+ water pouring from one terrace to another. The plain was low and damp and
+ the paths and roads lay deep in mud. They had a long toilsome walk between
+ the ricefields until they came to the first village of these barbarians of
+ the plain. It was very much like a Chinese village,&mdash;dirty, noisy,
+ and swarming with wild-looking children and wolfish dogs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visitors were received with the utmost disdain. The Chinese students
+ were of course well known, for these aborigines had long ago adopted their
+ customs and language. But the Chinese visitors were in company with the
+ foreigners, and all foreigners were outcaste in this eastern plain. The
+ men shouted the familiar "foreign devil" and walked contemptuously away.
+ The dirty women and children fled into their grass huts and set the dogs
+ upon the strangers. They tried by all sorts of kindnesses to gain a
+ hearing, but all to no effect. So they gave it up, and plodded through the
+ mud and water a mile farther on to the next village. But village number
+ two received them in exactly the same way. Only rough words and the barks
+ of cruel dogs met them. The next village was no better, the fourth a
+ little worse. And so on they went up and down the Kap-tsu-lan plain,
+ sleeping at night in some poor empty hut or in the shadow of a rice
+ strawstack, eating their meals of cold rice and buffalo-meat by the
+ wayside, and being driven from village to village, and receiving never a
+ word of welcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all through those wearisome days the young men looked at their leader
+ in vain for any smallest sign of discouragement or inclination to retreat.
+ There was no slightest look of dismay on the face of Kai Bok-su, for how
+ was it possible for a man who did not know when he was beaten to feel
+ discouraged? So still undaunted in the face of defeat, he led them here
+ and there over the plain, hoping that some one would surely relent and
+ give them a hearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One night, footsore and worn out, they slept on the damp mud floor of a
+ miserable hut where the rain dripped in upon their faces. In the morning
+ prospects looked rather discouraging to the younger members of the party.
+ They were wet and cold and weary, and there seemed no use in going again
+ and again to a village only to be turned away. But Kai Bok-su's mouth was
+ as firm as ever, and his dark eyes flashed resolutely, as once more he
+ gave the order to march. It was a lovely morning, the sun was rising
+ gloriously out of the sea and the heavy mists were melting from above the
+ little rice-fields. Here and there fairy lakes gleamed out from the rosy
+ haze that rolled back toward the mountains. They walked along the shore in
+ the pink dawn-light and marched up toward a fishing village. They had
+ visited it before and had been driven away, but Kai Bok-su was determined
+ to try again. They were surprised as they came nearer to see three men
+ come out to meet them with a friendly expression on their faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The foremost was an old man who had been nicknamed "Black-face," because
+ of his dark skin. The second was a middleaged man, and the third was a
+ young fellow about the age of the students. They saluted the travelers
+ pleasantly, and the old man addressed the missionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have been going through and through our plain and no one has received
+ you," he said politely. "Come to our village, and we will now be ready to
+ listen to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door of Kap-tsu-lan had opened at last! The missionary's eyes gleamed
+ with joy and gratitude as he accepted the invitation. The delegation led
+ the visitors straight to the house of the headman. For the Pepo-hoan
+ governed their communities in the Chinese style and had a headman for each
+ village. The missionary party sat down in front of the hut on some large
+ flat stones and talked over the matter with the chief and other important
+ men. And while they talked "Black-face" slipped away. He returned in a few
+ moments with a breakfast of rice and fish for the visitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result of the conference was that the villagers decided to give the
+ barbarian a chance. All he wanted it seemed was to tell of this new
+ Jehovah-religion which he believed, and surely there could be no great
+ harm in listening to him talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening the headman with the help of some friends set to work to
+ construct a meeting-house. A tent was erected, made from boat sails.
+ Several flat stones laid at one end and a plank placed upon them made a
+ pulpit. And that was the first church on the Kap-tsu-lan plain! There was
+ a "church bell" too, to call the people to worship. In the village were
+ some huge marine shells with the ends broken off. In the old days these
+ were used by the chiefs as trumpets by which they called their men
+ together whenever they were starting out on the war-path. But now the
+ trumpet-shell was used to call the people to follow the King. Just at dark
+ a man took one, and walking up and down the straggling village street blew
+ loudly&mdash;the first "church bell" in east Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loud roar brought the villagers flocking down to the tent-church by
+ the shore. For the most part they brought their pews with them. They came
+ hurrying out of their huts carrying benches, and arranging them in rows
+ they seated themselves to listen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay and the students sang and the people listened eagerly. The
+ Pe-po-hoan by nature were more musical than the Chinese, and the singing
+ delighted them. Then the missionary arose and addressed them. He told
+ clearly and simply why he had come and preached to them of the true God.
+ Afterward the congregation was allowed to ask questions, and they learned
+ much of this God and of his love in his Son Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wonder of the great news shone in the eyes upturned to the preacher.
+ In the gloom of the half-lighted tent their dark faces took on a new
+ expression of half-wondering hope. Could it be possible that this was
+ true? Their poor, benighted minds had always been held in terror of their
+ gods and of the evil spirits that forever haunted their footsteps. Could
+ it be possible that God was a great Father who loved his children? They
+ asked so many eager questions, and the story of Jesus Christ had to be
+ told over and over so many times, that before this first church service
+ ended a gray gleam of dawn was spreading out over the Pacific.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only the next day that these newly-awakened people decided that
+ they must have a church building. And they went to work to get one in a
+ way that might have shamed a congregation of people in a Christian land.
+ This new wonderful hope that had been raised in their hearts by the
+ knowledge that God loved them set them to work with glad energy. Kai
+ Bok-su and his men still preached and prayed and sang and taught in the
+ crazy old wind-flapped tent by the seashore, and the people listened
+ eagerly, and then, when services were over, every one,&mdash;preacher,
+ assistants, and congregation,&mdash;set bravely to work to build a church.
+ Brave they certainly had to be, for at the very beginning they had to risk
+ their lives for their chapel. A party sailed down the coast and entered
+ savage territory for the poles to construct the building. They were
+ attacked and one or two were badly wounded, though they managed to escape.
+ But they were quite ready to go back and fight again had it been
+ necessary. Then they made the bricks for the walls. Rice chaff mixed with
+ clay were the materials, and the Kap-tsu-lan plain had an abundance of
+ both. The roof was made of grass, the floor of hard dried earth, and a
+ platform of the same at one end served as a pulpit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the little chapel was finished, every evening the big shell rang out
+ its summons through the village; and out from every house came the people
+ and swarmed into the chapel to hear Kai Bok-su explain more of the wonders
+ of God and his Son Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mackay's home during this period was a musty little room in a damp
+ mud-walled hut; and here every day he received donations of idols,
+ ancestral tablets, and all sorts of things belonging to idol-worship. He
+ was requested to burn them, and often in the mornings he dried his damp
+ clothes and moldy boots at a fire made from heathen idols.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For eight weeks the missionary party remained in this place, preaching,
+ teaching, and working among the people. It was a mystery to the students
+ how their teacher found time for the great amount of Bible study and
+ prayer which he managed to get. He surely worked as never man worked
+ before. Late at night, long after every one else was in bed, he would be
+ bending over his Bible, beside his peanut-oil lamp, and early in the
+ morning before the stars had disappeared he was up and at work again. Four
+ hours' sleep was all his restless, active mind could endure, and with that
+ he could do work that would have killed any ordinary man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening some new faces looked up at him from his congregation in the
+ little brick church. When the last hymn was sung the missionary stepped
+ down from his pulpit and spoke to the strangers. They explained that they
+ were from the next village. They had heard rumors of this new doctrine,
+ and had been sent to find out more about it. They had been charmed with
+ the singing, for that evening over two hundred voices had joined in a
+ ringing praise to the new Jehovah-God. They wanted to hear more, they
+ said, and they wanted to know what it was all about. Would Kai Bok-su and
+ his students deign to visit their village too?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would he? Why that was just what he was longing to do. He had been driven
+ out of that village by dogs only a few weeks before, but a little thing
+ like that did not matter to a man like Mackay. This village lay but a
+ short distance away, being connected with their own by a path winding here
+ and there between the rice-fields. Early the next evening Mackay formed a
+ procession. He placed himself at its head, with A Hoa at his side. The
+ students came next, and then the converts in a double row. And thus they
+ marched slowly along the pathway singing as they went. It was a stirring
+ sight. On either side the waving fields of rice, behind them the gleam of
+ the blue ocean, before them the great towering mountains clothed in green.
+ Above them shone the clear dazzling sky of a tropical evening. And on
+ wound the long procession of Christians in a heathen land, and from them
+ arose the glorious words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O thou, my soul, bless God the Lord, And all that in me is Be stirred up
+ his holy name To magnify and bless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the heathen in the rice-fields stopped to gaze at the strange sight,
+ and the mountains gave back the echo of that Name which is above every
+ name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, marching to their song, the procession came to the village.
+ Everybody in the place had come out to meet them at the first sound of the
+ singing. And now they stood staring, the men in a group by themselves, the
+ women and children in the background, the dogs snarling on the outskirts
+ of the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The congregation was there ready, and without waiting to find a place of
+ meeting, right out under the clear evening skies, the young missionary
+ told once more the great story of God and his love as shown through Jesus
+ Christ. The message took the village by storm. It was like water to
+ thirsty souls. The next day five hundred of them brought their idols to
+ the missionary to be burned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now Mackay went up and down the Kap-tsu-lan plain from village to
+ village as he had done before, but this time it was a triumphal march. And
+ everywhere he went throngs threw away their idols and declared themselves
+ followers of the true God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was overcome with joy. It was so glorious he wished he could stay there
+ the rest of his life and lead these willing people to a higher life. But
+ Tamsui was waiting; Sin-tiam, Bang-kah, Kelung, Go-ko-khi, they must all
+ be visited; and finally he tore himself away, leaving some of his students
+ to care for these people of Kap-tsu-lan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he came back many times, until at last nineteen chapels dotted the
+ plain, and in them nineteen native preachers told the story of Jesus and
+ his love. Sometimes, in later years, when Mackay was with them, tears
+ would roll down the people's faces as they recalled how badly they had
+ used him on his first visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was while on his third visit here that he had a narrow escape from the
+ head-hunters. He was staying at a village called "South Wind Harbor,"
+ which was near the border of savage territory. Mackay often walked on the
+ shore in the evening just before the meeting, always with a book in his
+ hand. One night he was strolling along in deep meditation when he noticed
+ some extremely large turtle tracks in the sand. He followed them, for he
+ liked to watch the big clumsy creatures. These green turtles were from
+ four to five feet in length. They would come waddling up from the sea,
+ scratch a hole in the sand with their flippers, lay their eggs, cover them
+ carefully, and with head erect and neck out-thrust waddle back. Mackay was
+ intensely interested in all the animal life of the island and made a study
+ of it whenever he had a chance. He knew the savages killed and ate these
+ turtles, but he supposed he was as yet too near the village to be molested
+ by them. So he followed the tracks and was nearing the edge of the forest,
+ when he heard a shout behind him. As he turned, one of his village friends
+ came running out of his hut waving to him frantically to come back.
+ Thinking some one must be ill, Mackay hurried toward the man, to find that
+ it was he himself who was in danger. The man explained breathlessly that
+ it was the habit of the wily savages to make marks in the sand resembling
+ turtle tracks to lure people into the forest. If Kai Bok-su had entered
+ the woods, his head would certainly have been lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was always hard to say farewell to Kaptsu-lan, the people were so
+ warm-hearted, so kind, and so anxious for him to stay. One morning just
+ before leaving after his third visit, Mackay had an experience that
+ brought him the greatest joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had stayed all night at the little fishing village where the first
+ chapel had been built. As usual he was up with the dawn, and after his
+ breakfast of cold boiled rice and pork he walked down to the shore for a
+ farewell look at the village. As he passed along the little crooked street
+ he could see old women sitting on the mud floors of their huts, by the
+ open door, weaving. They were all poor, wrinkled, toothless old folk with
+ faces seamed by years of hard heathen experience. But in their eyes shone
+ a new light, the reflection of the glory that they had seen when the
+ missionary showed them Jesus their Savior. And as they threw their thread
+ their quavering voices crooned the sweet words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a happy land Far, far away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And their old weary faces were lighted up with a hope and happiness that
+ had never been there in youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kai Bok-su smiled as he passed their doors and his eyes were misty with
+ tender tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just before him, playing on the sand with "jacks" or tops, just as he had
+ played not so very long ago away back in Canada, were the village boys.
+ And as they played they too were singing, their little piping voices,
+ sweet as birds, thrilling the morning air. And the words they sang were:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jesus loves me, this I know, For the Bible tells me so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They nodded and smiled to Kai Bok-su as he passed. He went down to the
+ shore where the wide Pacific flung long rollers away up the hard-packed
+ sand. The fishermen were going out to sea in the rosy morning light, and
+ as they stood up in their fishing-smacks, and swept their long oars
+ through the surf, they kept time to the motion with singing. And their
+ strong, brave voices rang out above the roar of the breakers:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'm not ashamed to own my Lord, Or to defend his cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And standing there on the sunlit shore the young missionary raised his
+ face to the gleaming blue heavens with an emotion of unutterable joy and
+ thanksgiving. And in that moment he knew what was that glory for which he
+ had so vaguely longed in childish years. It was the glory of work
+ accomplished for his Master's sake, and he was realizing it to the full.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. REENFORCEMENTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Some of Mackay's happiest days were spent with his students. He was such a
+ wonder of a man for work himself that he inspired every one else to do his
+ best, so the young men made rapid strides with their lessons. No matter
+ how busy he was, and he was surely one of the busiest men that ever lived,
+ he somehow found time for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes in his house, sometimes on the road, by the seashore, under a
+ banyan tree, here and there and everywhere, the missionary and his pupils
+ held their classes. If he went on a journey, they accompanied him and
+ studied by the way. And it was a familiar sight on north Formosan roads or
+ field paths to see Mackay, always with his book in one hand and his big
+ ebony stick under his arm, walking along surrounded by a group of young
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes there were as many as twenty in the student-band, but somewhere
+ in the country a new church would open, and the brightest of the class
+ would be called away to be its minister. But just as often a young
+ Christian would come to the missionary and ask if he too might not be
+ trained to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether at home or abroad, pupils and teacher had to resort to all sorts
+ of means to get away for an uninterrupted hour together. For Kai Bok-su
+ was always in demand to visit the sick or sad or troubled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a little kitchen separate from the house on the bluff, and over
+ this Mackay with his students built a second story. And here they would
+ often slip away for a little quiet time together. One night, about eleven
+ o'clock, Mackay was here alone poring over his books. The young men had
+ gone home to bed except two or three who were in the kitchen below. Some
+ papers had been dropped over a pipe-hole in the floor of the room where
+ Mackay was studying, and for some time he had been disturbed by a rustling
+ among them. At last without looking up, he called to his boys below: "I
+ think there are rats up here among my papers!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Koa Kau, one of the younger of the students, ran lightly up the stairs to
+ give battle to the intruders. What was his horror when he saw fully three
+ feet of a monster serpent sticking up through the pipe-hole and waving its
+ horrible head in the air just a little distance from Kai Bok-su's chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy gave a shout, darted down the stair, and with a sharp stick,
+ pinned the body of the snake to the wall below. The creature became
+ terribly violent, but Koa Kau held on valiantly and Mackay seized an old
+ Chinese spear that happened to be in the room above and pierced the
+ serpent through the head. They pulled its dead body down into the kitchen
+ below and spread it out. It measured nine feet. The students would not
+ rest until it was buried, and the remembrance of the horrible creature's
+ visit for some time spoiled the charm of the little upper room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rocks at Kelung harbor were another favorite spot for this little
+ traveling university to hold its classes. Sometimes they would take their
+ dinner and row out in a little sampan to the rocks outside the harbor and
+ there, undisturbed, they would study the whole day long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They always began the day's work with a prayer and a hymn of praise, and
+ no matter what subjects they might study, most of the time was spent on
+ the greatest of books. After a hard morning's work each one would gather
+ sticks, make a fire, and they would have their dinner of vegetables, rice,
+ and pork or buffalo-meat. Then there were oysters, taken fresh off the
+ rocks, to add to their bill of fare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At five in the afternoon, when the strain of study was beginning to tell,
+ they would vary the program. One or two of the boys would take a plunge
+ into the sea and bring up a subject for study,&mdash;a shell, some living
+ coral, sea-weed, sea-urchins, or some such treasure. They would examine
+ it, and Kai Bok-su, always delighted when on a scientific subject, would
+ give them a lesson in natural history. And he saw with joy how the wonders
+ of the sea and land opened these young men's minds to understand what a
+ great and wonderful God was theirs, who had made "the heaven and the earth
+ and the sea, and all that in them is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they visited a chapel in the country, they had a daily program which
+ they tried hard to follow. They studied until four o'clock every afternoon
+ and all were trained in speaking and preaching. After four they made
+ visits together to Christians or heathen, speaking always a word for their
+ Master. Every evening a public service was held at which Mackay preached.
+ These sermons were an important part of the young men's training, for he
+ always treated the gospel in a new way. A Hoa, who was Mackay's companion
+ for the greater part of sixteen years, stated that he had never heard Kai
+ Bok-su preach the same sermon twice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole the students liked their college best when it was moving. For
+ on the road, while their principal gave much time to the Bible and how to
+ present the gospel, he would enliven their walks by conversing about
+ everything by the way and making it full of interest. The structure of a
+ wayside flower, the geological formation of an overhanging rock, the
+ composition of the soil of the tea plantations, the stars that shone in
+ the sky when night came down upon them;&mdash;all these made the traveling
+ college a delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although his days were crammed with work, Mackay found time to make
+ friends among the European population of the island. They all liked and
+ admired him, and many of them tried to help the man who was giving his
+ life and strength so completely to others. They were familiar with his
+ quick, alert figure passing through the streets of Tamsui, with his
+ inevitable book and his big ebony cane. And they would smile and say,
+ "There goes Mackay; he's the busiest man in China." (*)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * See CHAPTER XIII, Formosa becomes Japanese territory.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The British consul in the old Dutch fort and the English commissioner of
+ customs proved true and loyal friends. The representatives of foreign
+ business firms, too, were always ready to lend him a helping hand where
+ possible. His most useful friends were the foreign medical men. They
+ helped him very much. They not only did all they could for his own
+ recovery when malaria attacked him, but they helped also to cure his
+ patients. Traveling scientists always gave him a visit to get his help and
+ advice. He had friends that were shipcaptains, officers, engineers,
+ merchants, and British consuls. Everybody knew the wonderful Kai Bok-su.
+ "Whirlwind Mackay," some of them called him, and they knew and admired him
+ with the true admiration that only a brave man can inspire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friends to whom he turned for help of the best kind were the English
+ Presbyterians in south Formosa. They, more than any others, knew his
+ trials and difficulties. They alone could enter with true sympathy into
+ all his triumphs. At one time Dr. Campbell, one of the south Formosan
+ missionaries, paid him a visit. He proved a delightful companion, and
+ together the two made a tour of the mission stations. Dr. Campbell
+ preached wherever they went and was a great inspiration to the people, as
+ well as to the students and to the missionary himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening, when they were in Kelung, Mackay, with his insatiable desire
+ to use every moment, suggested that they spend ten days without speaking
+ English, so that they might improve their Chinese. Dr. Campbell agreed,
+ and they started their "Chinese only." Next morning from the first early
+ call of "Liong tsong khi lai," "All, all, up come," not one word of their
+ native tongue did they speak. They had a long tramp that morning and there
+ was much to talk about and the conversation was all in Chinese, according
+ to the bargain. Dr. Campbell was ahead, and after an hour's talk he
+ suddenly turned upon his companion: "Mackay!" he exclaimed, "this
+ jabbering in Chinese is ridiculous, and two Scotchmen should have more
+ sense; let us return to our mother tongue." Which advice Mackay gladly
+ followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His next visitor was the Rev. Mr. Ritchie from south Formosa, one of the
+ friends who had first introduced him to his work. Every day of his visit
+ was a joy. With nine of Mackay's students, the two missionaries set out on
+ a trip through the north Formosa mission that lasted many weeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the more pleasant and helpful such companionship was the more alone
+ Mackay felt when it was over. His task was becoming too much for one man.
+ He was wanted on the northern coast, at the southern boundary of his
+ mission field, and away on the Kap-tsu-lan plain all at once. He was
+ crowded day and night with work. What with preaching, dentistry, attending
+ the sick, training his students, and encouraging the new churches, he had
+ enough on his hands for a dozen missionaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now at last the Church at home, in far-away Canada, bestirred herself
+ to help him. They had been hearing something of the wonderful mission in
+ Formosa, but they had heard only hints of it, for Mackay would not confess
+ how he was toiling day and night and how the work had grown until he was
+ not able to overtake it alone. But the Church understood something of his
+ need, and they now sent him the best present they could possibly give,&mdash;an
+ assistant. Just three years after Mackay had landed in Formosa, the Rev.
+ J. B. Fraser, M. D., and his wife and little ones arrived. He was a young
+ man, too, vigorous and ready for work. Besides being an ordained minister,
+ he was a physician as well, just exactly what the north Formosan mission
+ needed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along with the missionary, the Church had sent funds for a house for him
+ and also one for Mackay. So the poor old Chinese house on the bluff was
+ replaced by a modern, comfortable dwelling, and by its side another was
+ built for the new missionary and his family. One room of Mackay's house
+ was used as a study for his students.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the houses were built and the new doctor was able to use the
+ language, he began to fill a long-felt want. Mackay had always done a
+ little medical work, and the foreign doctor of Tamsui had been most kind
+ in giving his aid, but a doctor of his own, a missionary doctor, was
+ exactly what Kai Bok-su wanted. Soon the sick began to hear of the wonders
+ the missionary doctor could perform, and they flocked to him to be cured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must not be supposed that there were not already doctors in north
+ Formosa. There were many in Tamsui alone, and very indignant they were at
+ this new barbarian's success. But the native doctors were about the worst
+ trouble that the people had to bear. Their medical knowledge, like their
+ religion, was a mixture of ignorance and superstition, and some of their
+ practises would have been inexcusable except for the fact that they
+ themselves knew no better. There were two classes of medical men; those
+ who treated internal diseases and those who professed to cure external
+ maladies. It was hard to judge which class did the more mischief, but
+ perhaps the "inside doctors" killed more of their patients. Dog's flesh
+ was prescribed as a cure for dyspepsia, a chip taken from a coffin and
+ boiled and the water drunk was a remedy for catarrh, and an apology made
+ to the moon was a specific for wind-roughened skin. For the dreaded
+ malaria, the scourge of Formosa, the young Canadian doctor found many and
+ amazing remedies prescribed, some worse than the disease itself. The
+ native doctors believed malaria to be caused by two devils in a patient,
+ one causing the chills, the other the fever. One of the commonest
+ remedies, and one that was quite as sensible as any of the rest, was to
+ tie seven hairs plucked from a black dog around the sick one's wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the barbarian doctor opened his dispensary in Tamsui, a new era
+ dawned for the poor sick folk of north Formosa. The work went on
+ wonderfully well and Mackay found so much more time to travel in the
+ country that the gospel spread rapidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just when prospects were looking so fair and every one was happy and
+ hopeful, a sad event darkened the bright outlook of the two missionaries.
+ The young doctor had cured scores of cases, and had brought health and
+ happiness to many homes, but he was powerless to keep death from his own
+ door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And one day, a sad day for the mission of north Formosa, the mother was
+ called from husband and little ones to her home and her reward in heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the home on the bluff, the beautiful Christian home, which was a
+ pattern for all the Chinese, was broken up. The young doctor was compelled
+ to leave his patients, and taking his motherless children he returned with
+ them to Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church at home sent out another helper. The Rev. Kenneth Junor arrived
+ one year later, and once more the work received a fresh impetus. And then,
+ just about two years after Mr. Junor's arrival, Kai Bok-su found an
+ assistant of his own right in Formosa, and one who was destined to become
+ a wonderful help to him. And so one bright day, there was a wedding in the
+ chapel of the old Dutch fort, where the British consul married George
+ Leslie Mackay to a Formosan lady. Tui Chhang Mai, her name had been. She
+ was of a beautiful Christian character and for a long time she had been a
+ great help in the church. But as Mrs. Mackay she proved a marvelous
+ assistance to her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had long been a great grief to the missionary that, while the men would
+ come in crowds to his meetings, the poor women had to be left at home.
+ Sometimes in a congregation of two hundred there would be only two or
+ three women. Chinese custom made it impossible for a man missionary to
+ preach to the women. Only a few of the older ones came out. So the mothers
+ of the little children did not hear about Jesus and so could not teach
+ their little ones about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now everything was changed for them. They had a lady-missionary, and
+ one of their own people too. The Mackays went on a wedding-trip through
+ the country. Kai Bok-su walked, as usual, and his wife rode in a
+ sedan-chair. The wedding-trip was really a missionary tour; for they
+ visited all the chapels, and the women came to the meetings in crowds,
+ because they wanted to hear and see the lady who had married Kai Bok-su.
+ Often, after the regular meetings when the men had gone away, the women
+ would crowd in and gather round Mrs. Mackay and she would tell them the
+ story of Jesus and his love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a wonderful wedding-journey and it brought a double blessing
+ wherever the two went. Their experiences were not all pleasant. One day
+ they traveled over a sand plain so hot that Mackay's feet were blistered.
+ Another time they were drenched with rain. One afternoon there came up a
+ terrific wind storm. It blew Mrs. Mackay's sedan-chair over and sent her
+ and the carriers flying into the mud by the roadside. At another place
+ they all barely escaped drowning when crossing a stream. But the brave
+ young pair went through it all dauntlessly. The wife had caught something
+ of her husband's great spirit of sacrifice, and he was always the man on
+ fire, utterly forgetful of self.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For two years they worked happily together and at last a great day came to
+ Kai Bok-su. He had been nearly eight years in Formosa. It was time he came
+ home, the Church in Canada said, for a little rest and to tell the people
+ at home something of his great work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so he and his Formosan wife said good-by, amid tears and regrets on
+ all sides, and leaving Mr. Junor in charge with A Hoa to help, they set
+ sail for Canada. It was just a little over seven years since he had
+ settled in that little hut by the river, despised and hated by every one
+ about him; and now he left behind him twenty chapels, each with a native
+ preacher over it, and hundreds of warm friends scattered over all north
+ Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not quite the same Mackay who had stood on the deck of the America
+ seven years before. His eyes were as bright and daring as ever and his
+ alert figure as full of energy, but his face showed that his life had been
+ a hard one. And no wonder, for he had endured every kind of hardship and
+ privation in those seven years. He had been mobbed times without number.
+ He had faced death often, and day and night since his first year on the
+ island his footsteps had been dogged by the torturing malaria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he was still the great, brave Mackay and his home-coming was like the
+ return of a hero from battle. He went through Canada preaching in the
+ churches, and his words were like a call to arms. He swept over the
+ country like one of his own Formosan winds, carrying all before him.
+ Wherever he preached hearts were touched by his thrilling tales, and
+ purses opened to help in his work. Queen's University made him a Doctor of
+ Divinity; Mrs. Mackay, a lady of Detroit, gave him money enough to build a
+ hospital; and his home county, Oxford, presented him with $6,215 with
+ which to build a college.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He visited his old home and had many long talks of his childhood days with
+ his loved ones. And he was reminded of the big stone in the pasture-field
+ which he was so determined to break. And he thanked his heavenly Father
+ for allowing him to break the great rock of heathenism in north Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned to his mission work more on fire than ever. If he had been
+ received with acclaim in his native land, his Formosan friends' welcome
+ was not less warm. Crowds of converts, all his students who were not too
+ far inland, and among them, Mr. Junor, his face all smiles, were thronging
+ the dock, many of them weeping for joy. It was as if a long-absent father
+ had come back to his children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work went forward now by leaps and bounds. Mackay's first thought,
+ after a hurried visit to the chapels and their congregations, was to see
+ that the hospital and college were built.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All day long the sound of the builders could be heard up on the bluff near
+ the missionaries' houses, and in a wonderfully short time there arose two
+ beautiful, stately buildings. Mackay hospital they called one, not for Kai
+ Bok-su&mdash;he did not like things named for him&mdash;but in memory of
+ the husband of the kind lady who had furnished the money for it. The
+ school for training young men in the ministry was called Oxford College,
+ in honor of the county whose people had made it possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oxford College stood just overlooking the Tamsui river, two hundred feet
+ above its waters. The building was 116 feet long and 67 feet wide, and was
+ built of small red bricks brought from across the Formosa Channel. A wide,
+ airy hall ran down the middle of the building, and was used as a
+ lecture-room. On either side were rooms capable of accommodating fifty
+ students and apartments for two teachers and their families. There were,
+ besides, two smaller lecture-rooms, a museum filled with treasures
+ collected from all over Formosa by Dr. Mackay and his students, a library,
+ a bathroom, and a kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grounds about the college and hospital were very beautiful. Nature had
+ given one of the finest situations to be found about Tamsui, and Kai
+ Bok-su did the rest. The climate helped him, for it was no great task to
+ have a luxurious garden in north Formosa. So, in a few years there were
+ magnificent trees and hedges, and always glorious flower beds abloom all
+ the time around the missionary premises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all this was not accomplished without great toil, and Kai Bok-su
+ appeared never to rest in those building days. It seemed impossible that
+ one man should work so hard, he was in Tamsui superintending the hospital
+ building to-day, and away off miles in the country preaching to-morrow. He
+ never seemed to get time to eat, and he certainly slept less than his
+ allotted four hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great disappointment was pending, however, and one he saw coming nearer
+ every day. The trying Formosan climate was proving too much for his young
+ assistant, and one sad day he stood on the dock and saw Mr. Junor, pale
+ and weak and broken in health, sail away back to Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was always a brave soldier waiting to step into the breach, and
+ the next year Kai Bok-su had the joy of welcoming two new helpers, when
+ the Rev. Mr. Jamieson and his wife came out from Canada and settled in the
+ empty house on the bluff. Yes, and in time there came to his own house
+ other helpers&mdash;very little and helpless at first they were&mdash;but
+ they soon made the house ring with happy noise and filled the hearts of
+ their parents with joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were two ladies now to lead in the work for girls and women. Their
+ sisters in Canada came to their help too. The young men had a school in
+ Formosa, and why should there not be a school for women and girls? they
+ asked. And so the Women's Foreign Missionary Society of Canada sent to Dr.
+ Mackay money to build one. It took only two months to erect it. It stood
+ just a few rods from Oxford College, and was a fine, airy building. Here a
+ native preacher and his wife took up their abode and with the help of Mrs.
+ Mackay and two other native Christian women they strove to teach the girls
+ of north Formosa how to make beautiful Christian homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now to the two missionaries every prospect seemed bright. The college,
+ the girls' school, the hospital, were all in splendid working order. Mr.
+ and Mrs. Jamieson were giving their best assistance. A Hoa and the other
+ native pastors were working faithfully. God's blessing seemed to be
+ showering down upon the work and on every side were signs of growth. And
+ then, right from this shining sky, there fell a storm of such fierceness
+ that it threatened to wipe out completely the whole north Formosan
+ mission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. UNEXPECTED BOMBARDMENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ An enemy's battle-ships off the coast of Formosa! During all the spring
+ rumors of trouble had been coming across the channel from the mainland.
+ France (*) and China had been quarreling over a boundaryline in Tongking.
+ The affair had been settled but not in a way that pleased France. So,
+ without even waiting to declare war, she sent a fleet to the China Sea and
+ bombarded some of her enemy's ports. Formosa, of course, came in for her
+ share of the trouble, and it was early in the summer that the French
+ battle-ships appeared. They hove in sight, sailing down the Formosa
+ Channel or Strait one hot day, and instantly all Formosa was in an uproar
+ of alarm and rage. The rage was greater than the alarm, for China
+ cordially despised all peoples beyond her own border, and felt that the
+ barbarians would probably be too feeble to do them any harm. But that the
+ barbarians should dare to approach their coast with a war-vessel! That was
+ a terrible insult, and the fierce indignation of the people knew no
+ bounds. Their rage broke out against all foreigners. They did not
+ distinguish between the missionary from British soil and the French
+ soldiers on their enemy's vessels. They were all barbarians alike, the
+ Chinese declared, and as such were the deadly foe of China. This Kai
+ Bok-su was in league with the French, and the native Christians all over
+ Formosa were in league with him, and all deserved death!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * War in 1844.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ So hard days came for the Christians of north Formosa. Wherever there was
+ a house containing converts, there was riot and disorder. For bands of
+ enraged heathen, armed with knives and swords, would parade the streets
+ about them and threaten all with a violent death the moment the French
+ fired a shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some places near the coast the Christian people dared not leave their
+ houses, and whenever they sent out their children to buy food, often a
+ heathen neighbor would catch them, brandish knives over the terrified
+ little ones' heads and declare they would all be cut to pieces when the
+ barbarian ships came into port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every hour of the day and often in the night, letters came from all parts
+ of the country to Dr. Mackay. They were brought by runners who came at
+ great peril of their lives, and were sent by the poor Christians. Each
+ letter told the same tale; the lives and property of all the converts were
+ in grave danger if the enemy did not leave. And they all asked Kai Bok-su
+ to do something to help them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Kai Bok-su was a man with great power and influence both in Formosa
+ and in his far-off Canada, but he had no means of bringing that power to
+ bear on the French. And indeed his own life was in as great danger as any
+ one's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wrote to the Christians comforting them and enthusing them with his own
+ spirit. He bade them all be brave, and no matter what came, danger or
+ torture or death itself, they must be true to Jesus Christ. He went about
+ his work in the college or hospital just as usual, though he knew that any
+ day the angry mob from the town below might come raging up to destroy and
+ kill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French had entered Kelung harbor and the danger was growing more
+ serious every day when Mackay found it necessary to go to Palm Island, a
+ pretty islet in the mouth of the Kelung river. It was almost courting
+ death to go, but he had been sent for, and he went. He found the place
+ right under the French guns and in the midst of raging Chinese. Some of
+ the faithful students were there, and they were overcome with joy and hope
+ at the sight of him. He gathered them about him in a mission house for
+ prayer and a word of encouragement. Outside the Chinese soldiers paraded
+ up and down. Sometimes indeed they would burst into the room and threaten
+ the inmates with violence should the French fire. Kai Bok-su went on
+ quietly talking to his students. He urged them to be faithful and reminded
+ them of what their Master suffered at the hands of a mob for their sake.
+ But, in spite of their brave spirits, the little company could not help
+ listening for the boom of the French guns. It was fully expected that the
+ enemy would soon fire, and when they did, the Christians well knew there
+ would be little chance for them to escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But God had prepared a way out of the difficulty. The meeting was scarcely
+ over when a messenger came in, asking for the missionary. A Christian on
+ the mainland was very ill and wanted Kai Bok-su to visit him. Mackay with
+ his students left the island at once and went to the home of the sick man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had been gone but a short time when the thunder of the French cannon
+ broke over the harbor. The guns from the Chinese fort answered, and had
+ the missionary been on Palm Island he and his converts would surely have
+ been killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese were no match for the French gunners. The bombardment
+ destroyed the fort and killed every soldier who did not manage to get
+ away. A great shell crashed into the magazine of the fort, and the
+ explosion hurled masses of the concrete walls an incredible distance. The
+ city about the fort was completely deserted, for the people fled at the
+ first sound of the guns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the firing was over, the rabble broke loose and a perfect reign
+ of terror prevailed. The mob carried black flags and swept over town and
+ country, plundering and murdering. The Christians were of course the first
+ object of attack, and to tear down a church was the mob's fiercest joy.
+ Seven of the most beautiful chapels were completely destroyed and many
+ others injured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the town of Toa-liong-pong was the home of Koa Kau, one of Kai Bok-su's
+ most devoted students. Here was a lovely chapel built at great expense.
+ The crowd tore it to pieces from roof to foundation. Then, out of the
+ bricks of the ruin they erected a huge pile, eight feet high; they
+ plastered it over with mud, and on the face of it, next the highway where
+ every one might see it, they wrote in large Chinese characters:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MACKAY, THE BLACK-BEARDED BARBARIAN,
+ LIES HERE. HIS WORK IS ENDED.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ They knew that the first was not true, but they firmly believed the latter
+ statement, for they understood little of the power of the gospel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Sin-tiam the crowd of ruffians smashed the doors and windows of the
+ church. Then they took the communion roll and read aloud the names of the
+ Christians who had been baptized. As each name was announced, some of the
+ murderers would rush off toward the home of the one mentioned. Here they
+ would torture and often kill the members of the family. The native
+ preacher and his family barely escaped with their lives. One good old
+ Christian man with his wife, both over sixty, were dragged out into the
+ deep water of the Sin-tiam river. Here they were given a choice. If they
+ gave up Jesus Christ, their lives would be saved. If they still remained
+ Christians, they would be drowned right there and then. The brave old
+ couple refused to accept life at such a cost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm not ashamed to own my Lord," was a hymn Kai Bok-su had taught them,
+ and They had meant every word as they had sung it many times in the pretty
+ chapel by the river. And so they were "not ashamed" now. They were led
+ deeper and deeper into the water, and at every few feet the way of escape
+ was offered, but they steadily refused, and were at last flung into the
+ river&mdash;faithful martyrs who certainly won a crown of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were only two among many brave Christians who died for their
+ Master's sake. Some were put to tortures too horrible to tell to make them
+ give up their faith. Some were hung by their hair to trees, some were
+ kicked or beaten to death, many were slashed with knives until death
+ relieved their pain. And on every side the most noble Christian heroism
+ was shown. In all ages there have been those who died for their faith in
+ Jesus Christ; and these Formosan followers of their Master proved
+ themselves no less faithful than the martyrs of old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And where was Kai Bok-su while the mob raged over the country? Going about
+ his work in Tamsui as of old. Only now he worked both night and day, and
+ the anxiety for his poor converts kept him awake in the few hours when he
+ might have snatched some sleep. He was here, there, everywhere at once, it
+ seemed, writing letters to encourage the Christians in distress, visiting
+ those who were wavering to strengthen their faith, teaching his students,
+ praying, preaching, night and day, he never ceased; and always the mob
+ surged about him threatening his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French ships now sailed out of Kelung harbor and took up their
+ position opposite Tamsui. Every one knew this probably meant bombardment,
+ and Dr. Mackay and Mr. Jamieson, standing on the bluff before their
+ houses, looked at each other and each knew the other's thought.
+ Bombardment would mean that the mob would come raging up and destroy both
+ life and property on the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just as they expected the roar of guns to open, there sailed into
+ Tamsui harbor a vessel that flew a different flag from the French. Mackay,
+ looking at her through a glass, made out with joy the crosses on the red
+ banner of Britain! England had nothing to do with this Chinese-French war,
+ but as a British vessel can be found lying around almost any port in the
+ wide world, there of course happened to be one near Tamsui. She gained a
+ passport into the harbor and sailed in with a very kindly mission; it was
+ to protect the lives of foreigners, not only from the French guns, but
+ from the Chinese mobs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ship had been in the harbor but a short time when a young English
+ naval officer, carrying the British flag, came up the path to the houses
+ on the bluff. Dr. Mackay was in the library of Oxford College, lecturing
+ to his students, when the visitor entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionary made the sailor welcome and the young man told his errand.
+ Dr. Mackay was invited to bring his family and his valuables and come on
+ board the vessel to be the guest of the captain until the disturbance was
+ over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a most kindly invitation and Dr. Mackay shook his visitor's hand
+ warmly as he thanked him. He turned and translated the message to his
+ students, and their hearts stood still with dismay. If Kai Bok-su, their
+ stay and support, were to be taken away, what would become of them? But
+ Kai Bok-su had not changed with the changing circumstances. He was still
+ as brave and undaunted as though trouble had never come to his island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned to the officer again with a smile. "My family would not be hard
+ to move," he said, "but my valuables&mdash;I am afraid I could not take
+ them." He made a gesture toward the students standing about him. "These
+ young men and many more converts scattered all over north Formosa, are my
+ valuables. Many of them have faced death unflinchingly for my sake. They
+ are my valuables, and I cannot leave them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was bravely said, just as Kai Bok-su might be expected to speak, and
+ the English officer's eyes kindled with appreciation. The words found a
+ ready response in his heart. They were the words of a true soldier of the
+ King. The officer went back to his captain with Mackay's message and with
+ a deep admiration in his heart for the man who would rather face death
+ than leave his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the British man-of-war drew off, leaving the missionaries in the midst
+ of danger. And almost immediately, with a great bursting roar, the
+ bombardment from the French ships opened. Sometimes the shells flew high
+ over the town and up to the bluff, so Dr. and Mrs. Mackay put their three
+ little ones in a safe corner under the house; but they themselves as well
+ as Mr. and Mrs. Jamieson, went in and out to and from the college, and the
+ girls' school as though nothing were happening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every day Mackay's work grew heavier and his anxiety for the persecuted
+ Christians grew deeper. He ate very little, and he scarcely slept at all.
+ It was not the noise of the carnage about him that kept him awake. He
+ would have fallen asleep peacefully amidst bursting shells, but he had no
+ opportunity. The whole burden of the young Church, harassed by persecution
+ on all sides, seemed to rest upon his spirit. Anxiety for the Christians
+ in the inland stations from whom he could not hear weighed on him night
+ and day, and his brave spirit was put to the severest test.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only his great strong faith in God kept him up and kept up the spirits of
+ the converts who looked to him for an example. And a brave pattern he
+ showed them. Often he and A Hoa paced the lawn in front of the house while
+ shot and shell whizzed around them. During the worst of the bombardment
+ they came and went between the college and the house as if they had
+ charmed lives. One day there was a great roar and a shell struck Oxford
+ College, shaking it to its foundations. The smoke from fort and ships had
+ scarcely cleared away when, crash! and the girls' school was struck by a
+ bursting shell. Next moment there was a fearful bang and a great stone
+ that stood in front of the Mackays' house went up into the air in a
+ thousand fragments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the firing was hottest, Kai Bok-su would repeat to his students
+ the comforting Psalm:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night; nor for the arrow that
+ flieth by day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in spite of his brave demeanor, the strain on the shepherd of this
+ harassed flock was beginning to tell. And when the bombardment ceased and
+ the intense anxiety for his loved ones was over, Kai Bok-su suddenly
+ collapsed. Dr. Johnsen, the foreign physician of Tamsui, came hurriedly up
+ to the mission house to see him. His verdict sent a thrill of dismay
+ through every heart that loved him, from the anxious little wife by the
+ patient's side, to the poorest convert in the town below. Their beloved
+ Kai Bok-su had brain fever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Too much anxiety and too little sleep," said the medical man. "He must
+ sleep now," he added, "or he will die." But now that Kai Bok-su had a
+ chance to rest, he could not. Sleep had been chased away too long to stay
+ with him. Night and day he tossed about, wide awake and burning with
+ fever. His temperature was never less than 102 during those days, and all
+ the doctor's efforts could not lower it. The awful heat of September was
+ on, and the great typhoons that would soon sweep across the country and
+ clear the air had not yet come. The glaring sun and the stifling damp heat
+ were all against the patient. At last one day the doctor saw a crisis was
+ approaching. He stood looking down at the hot, flushed face, at the
+ burning eyes, and the restless hands that were never still, and he said to
+ himself, "If the fever does not go down to-day, he will die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor went along "College Road" toward his home, answering the eager,
+ anxious questions that met him on all sides with only a shake of his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Hoa followed him, his drawn face full of pleading. Was he no better? he
+ asked with quivering lips. It was the question poor A Hoa asked many, many
+ times a day, for he never left the house when not away on duty. The
+ doctor's face was full of sympathy and his own heart weighed down as he
+ sadly answered, "No."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I only had some ice," he muttered, knowing well he had none. "If there
+ was only one bit of ice in Tamsui, I'd save him yet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over in the British consulate Dr. Johnsen had another patient. Mr. Dodd
+ lay sick there, though not nearly as ill as the missionary, and the
+ physician's next visit was to him. When he entered he found a servant
+ carrying a tray with some ice on it to the sick room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ice!" cried the doctor, overjoyed. "Where did it come from?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The servant explained that the steamship Hailoong had just arrived in
+ Tamsui harbor with it that morning. The doctor entered Mr. Dodd's room.
+ Would he give him that ice to save Mackay's life? was the question he
+ asked. To save such a life as Mackay's! That was an absurd question, Mr.
+ Dodd declared, and he immediately ordered that every bit of ice he had
+ should be sent at once to the missionary's house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor hurried back up the hill with the precious remedy. He broke up
+ a piece and laid it like a little cushion on poor Kai Bok-su's hot
+ forehead; that forehead beneath which the busy brain, resting neither day
+ nor night, was burning up. It had not been there a great while before the
+ restless eyes lost their fire, the eyelids drooped and, wonderful sight,
+ Kai Bok-su sank into a sleep! The doctor hardly dared to breathe If he
+ could only be kept asleep now, he had a chance. Dr. Mackay had never been
+ a sleeper, he well knew. He was too restless, too energetic, to allow
+ himself even proper rest. When Dr. Fraser, his first assistant, had been
+ with him, he had struggled to persuade him to stay in bed at least six
+ hours every night, but not always with success. But now he was to show
+ what he could do in the matter of sleeping. All that night he lay,
+ breathing peacefully, the next day he slept on from morning till night,
+ and little by little the ice melted away on his forehead. He did not move
+ all the next night, and A Hoa and Mrs. Mackay and the doctor took turns at
+ his bedside watching that the precious ice was always there. Morning came
+ and it was all finished. The patient opened his eyes. He had slept
+ thirty-six hours, and a thrill of joy went through every Christian heart
+ in Tamsui, for their Kai Bok-su was saved!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though the crisis was over, he was still very weak, and such was the
+ state of affairs through the country that he was in no condition to cope
+ with them. Riot and plunder was the order of the day. News of churches
+ being destroyed, of faithful Christians being tortured or put to death,
+ were still coming to the mission house, and no one could tell what day
+ would bring Kai Boksu's turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now came an order from the British consul which the missionaries could
+ not disobey. He commanded that their families must be moved at once from
+ Formosa, as he could not answer for their protection. So at once
+ preparations for their departure were made, and Mr. Jamieson took his wife
+ and Mrs. Mackay and her three little ones and sailed away for Hongkong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But once more Kai Bok-su stayed behind. It cost him bitter pain to part
+ with his loved ones, knowing he might never see them again; he was weak
+ and spent with fever, and his poor body was worn to a shadow, but he
+ stubbornly refused to leave the men who had stood by him in every danger.
+ The consul commanded, the doctor pleaded, but no, Kai Bok-su would not go.
+ If the danger had grown greater, then all the more reason why he should
+ stay and comfort his people. And if God were pleased to send death, then
+ they would all die together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he was so weak and sick that the doctor feared that if he remained
+ there would be little chance for the mob to kill him: death would come
+ sooner. So he came to his stubborn patient with a new proposition. The
+ Fukien, a merchant steamship, was now lying in Tamsui harbor. She was to
+ run to Hongkong and back directly. If Mackay would only take that trip,
+ his physician urged, the sea air would make him new again, and he would
+ return in a short time and be ready to take up his work once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was that promise that moved Mackay's resolution. His utter weakness
+ held him down from work, and he longed with all his soul to go out through
+ the country to help the poor, suffering churches. So he finally consented
+ to take the short journey and pay a visit to his dear ones in Hongkong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not get back quite as soon as he intended, for the French blockade
+ delayed his vessel. But at last he stepped out upon the Tamsui dock into a
+ crowd of preachers, students, and converts who were weeping for joy about
+ him and exclaiming over his improved looks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voyage had certainly done wonders for him, and at once he declared he
+ must take a trip into the country and visit those who were left of the
+ churches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a desperate undertaking, for French soldiers were now scattered
+ through the country, guarding the larger towns and cities and everywhere
+ mobs of furious Chinese were ready to torture or kill every foreigner. But
+ it would take even greater difficulties than these to stop Kai Bok-su, and
+ he began at once to lay plans for going on a tour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He first went to the British consul and came back in high spirits with a
+ folded paper in his hand. He spread it out on the library table before A
+ Hoa and Sun-a, who were to go with him, and this is what it said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ British Consulate, Tamsui,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ May 27th, 1885.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To THE OFFICER IN CHIEF COMMAND OF THE FRENCH FORCES AT KELUNG:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bearer of this paper, the Rev. George Leslie Mackay, D.D., a British
+ subject, missionary in Formosa, wishes to enter Kelung, to visit his
+ chapel and his house there, and to proceed through Kelung to Kap-tsu-lan
+ on the east coast of Formosa to visit his converts there. Wherefore I, the
+ undersigned, consul for Great Britain at Tamsui, do beg the officer in
+ chief command of the French forces in Kelung to grant the said George
+ Leslie Mackay entry into, and a free and safe passage through, Kelung. He
+ will be accompanied by two Chinese followers, belonging to his mission,
+ named, respectively, Giam Chheng Hoa, and Iap Sun. A. FRATER, Her
+ Britannic Majesty's Consul at Tamsui.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had all the power of the British Empire behind them so long as they
+ held that paper. Then they hired a burdenbearer to carry their food, and
+ Mackay cut a bamboo pole, fully twenty feet long, and on it tied the
+ British flag. With this floating over them, the little army marched
+ through the rice-fields down to Kelung.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an adventurous journey. But, wonderful though it seemed, they came
+ through it safely. Poor Kai Bok-su's heart was torn as he saw the ravages
+ the mob had made on his churches. But what a cheer his heart received when
+ he found that persecution had strengthened the converts that were left and
+ everywhere the heathen marveled that men should die for the faith the
+ barbarian missionary had taught. They were taken prisoners once for German
+ spies, and led far out of their way. But they came back to Tamsui safely,
+ having greatly cheered the faithful Christians who still were true to
+ their Master, Jesus Christ. It was early in June, just one year from the
+ opening of the war, that the French sailed away. They were disgusted with
+ the whole affair, the commander of one vessel told Dr. Mackay, and they
+ were all very glad it was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. and Mrs. Jamieson and Dr. Mackay's family returned to their homes on
+ the bluff, and work started up again with its old vigor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But everywhere the heathen were in great glee. Christianity had been
+ destroyed with the chapels, they were sure. Wherever Mackay went, shouts
+ of derision followed him, and everywhere he could hear the joyful cry
+ "Long-tsong bo-khi!" which meant "The mission is wiped out!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But strange though it may seem, the mission had never been stronger, and
+ it soon began to assert itself. Dr. Mackay went at the work of repairing
+ the lost buildings with all the force of his nature. First, he and Mr.
+ Jamieson and A Hoa sat down and prepared a statement of their losses. This
+ they sent to the commander-in-chief of the Chinese forces, who had been
+ responsible for law and order. Without any delay or questioning of the
+ missionaries' rights, the general sent Dr. Mackay the sum asked for&mdash;ten
+ thousand Mexican dollars. (*)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *About $5000.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The next thing was to plan the new chapels and see to the building of
+ them. And before the shouts of "Long-tsong bo-khi" had well started, they
+ began to be contradicted by walls of brick or stone that rose up strong
+ and sure to show that the mission had not been wiped out. Three of the
+ chapels were commenced all at once&mdash;at Sintiam, at Bang-kah and at
+ Sek-khau. Before anything was done Dr. Mackay and a party of his students
+ went up to Sin-tiam to look over the site. They stood up on the pile of
+ ruins, surrounded by the Christians, and a crowd of heathen came around
+ gleefully to watch them in the hopes of seeing their despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to their amazement the little company of Christians led by the
+ wonderful Kai Bok-su, suddenly burst into a hymn of praise to God who had
+ brought them safely through all their troubles:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bless, O my soul, the Lord thy God, And not forgetful be Of all his
+ gracious benefits He hath bestowed on thee!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heathen listened in wonder to the words of praise where they had
+ expected lamentation, and they asked each other what was this strange
+ power that made men so strong and brave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And their amazement grew as the chapels, the lovely new chapels of stone
+ or brick, began to rise from the ruins of the old ones. And not only did
+ the old ones reappear, new and more beautiful, but as Dr. Mackay and his
+ native preachers went here and there over the country others peeped forth
+ like the hepaticas of springtime, until there were not only the forty
+ original chapels, but in a few years the number had increased to sixty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The triumphant shout that the mission had been wiped out ceased
+ completely, and the people declared that they had been fools to try to
+ destroy the chapels, for the result had been only bigger and better ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look now," said one old heathen, pointing a withered finger to the
+ handsome spire of the Bang-kah chapel, that lifted itself toward the sky,
+ "Look now, the chapel towers above our temple. It is larger than the one
+ we destroyed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His neighbors crowding about him and gazing up with superstitious awe at
+ the spire, agreed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If we touch this one he will build another and a bigger one," remarked
+ another man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We cannot stop the barbarian missionary," said the old heathen with an
+ air of conviction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, no one can stop the great Kai Boksu," they finally agreed, and so
+ they left off all opposition in despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yes, the cry of "Long-tsong bo-khi" had died, and the answer to it was
+ inscribed on the front of the splendid chapels that sprang up all over
+ north Formosa. For, just above the main entrance to each, worked out in
+ stucco plaster, was a picture of the burning bush, and around it in
+ Chinese the grand old motto:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nec tamen consumebatur" ("Yet it was not consumed.")
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. TRIUMPHAL MARCH
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Up and down the length and breadth of north Formosa, seeming to be in two
+ or three places at once, went Kai Bok-su, during this time of reviving
+ after the war. He would be in Kelung to-day superintending the new chapel
+ building, in Tamsui at Oxford College the next day, in Bangkah preaching a
+ short while after, and no one could tell just where the next day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But every one did know that wherever he went, Christians grew stronger and
+ heathen gave up their idols. The Kap-tsu-lan plain, away on the eastern
+ coast, seemed to be a sort of pet among all his mission fields, and he was
+ always turning his steps thither. For the Pe-pohoan who lived there, while
+ they were simple and warm-hearted and easily moved by the gospel story,
+ were not such strong characters as the Chinese. So the missionary felt he
+ must visit them often to help steady their faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not long after the close of the war, he set off on a trip to the
+ Kap-tsu-lan plain. Besides his students, he was accompanied by a young
+ German scientist Dr. Warburg had come from Germany to Formosa to collect
+ peculiar plants and flowers and to find any old weapons or relics of
+ interest belonging to the savage tribes. All these were for the use of the
+ university in Germany which had sent him out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young scientist was delighted with Dr. Mackay and found in him a very
+ interesting companion. They met in Kelung, and when Dr. Warburg found that
+ Dr. Mackay was going to visit the Kap-tsu-lan plain, he joined his party.
+ The stranger found many rare specimens of orchids on that trip and several
+ peculiar spear and arrow heads to be taken back as curios to Germany. But
+ he found something rarer and more wonderful and something for which he had
+ not come to search.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He saw in one place three hundred people gather about their missionary and
+ raise a ringing hymn of praise to the God of heaven, of whom they had not
+ so much as heard but a few short years before. He visited sixteen little
+ chapels and heard clever, brightfaced young Chinese preachers stand up in
+ them and tell the old, old story of Jesus and his love. And he realized
+ that these things were far more wonderful than the rarest curios he could
+ find in all Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he bade good-by to Dr. Mackay, he said: "I never saw anything like
+ this before. If scientific skeptics had traveled with a missionary as I
+ have and witnessed what I have witnessed on this plain, they would assume
+ a different attitude toward the heralds of the cross."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not many months later Dr. Mackay again went down the eastern coast. This
+ time he took three of his closest friends, all preacher students, Tan be,
+ Sun-a, and Koa Kau. With a coolie to carry provisions, their Bibles, their
+ forceps, and some malaria medicine, they started off fully equipped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By steam launch to Bang-kah, by a queer little railway train to
+ Tsui-tng-kha and by foot to Kelung was the first part of the journey. The
+ next part was a tramp over the mountains to Kap-tsu-lan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The road now grew rough and dangerous. Overhead hung loose rocks, huge
+ enough to crush the whole party should they fall. Underneath were wet,
+ slippery stones which might easily make one go sliding down into the chasm
+ below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As usual on this trip they had many hairbreadth escapes, for there were
+ savages too hiding up in the dense forest and waiting an opportunity to
+ spring out upon the travelers. Dr. Mackay was almost caught in a small
+ avalanche also. He leaped over a narrow stream-bed, and as he did so, he
+ dislodged a loose mass of rock above him. It came down with a fearful
+ crash, scattering the smaller pieces right upon his heels; but they passed
+ all dangers safely and toward evening reached the shore where the great
+ long Pacific billows rolled upon the sand. They were in the Kap-tsu-lan
+ plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their journey through the plain was like a triumphal march. Wherever a
+ chapel had been erected, there were converts to be examined; wherever
+ there was no chapel, the people gathered about the missionary and pleaded
+ for one. They often recalled the first visit of Kai Bok-su when "No room
+ for barbarians" were the only words that met him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Dr. Mackay wished to go farther on this journey than he had ever gone.
+ Some distance south of Kap-tsu-lan lay another district called the Ki-lai
+ plain. The people here were also aborigines of the island who had been
+ conquered by the Chinese like the Pepo-hoan. But the inhabitants of Ki-lai
+ were called Lam-si-hoan, which means "Barbarians of the south." Dr. Mackay
+ had never been among them, but they had heard the gospel. A missionary
+ from Oxford College had journeyed away down there to tell the people about
+ Jesus and had been working among them for some years. He was not a
+ graduate, not even a student&mdash;but only the cook! For Oxford College
+ was such a place of inspiration under Kai Bok-su, that even the servants
+ in the kitchen wanted to go out and preach the gospel. So the cook had
+ gone away to the Ki-lai plain, and, ever since he had left, Dr. Mackay had
+ longed to go and see how his work was prospering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So at one of the most southerly points of the Kap-tsu-lan plain he secured
+ a boat for the voyage south. The best he could get was a small craft quite
+ open, only twelve feet long. It was not a very fine vessel with which to
+ brave the Pacific Ocean, but where was the crazy craft in which Kai Bok-su
+ would not embark to go and tell the gospel to the heathen? The boat was
+ manned by six Pe-po-hoan rowers, all Christians, and at five o'clock in
+ the evening they pushed out into the surf of So Bay. A crowd of converts
+ came down to the shore to bid them farewell. As the boat shoved off the
+ friends on the beach started a hymn. The rowers and the missionaries
+ caught it up and the two groups joined, the sound of each growing fainter
+ and fainter to the other as the distance widened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All lands to God in joyful sounds Aloft your voices raise, Sing forth the
+ honor of his name, And glorious make his praise!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the land and the sea, answering each other, joined in praise to him
+ who was the Maker of both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the rowers pulled away in time to the swing of the Psalm, the boat
+ rounded a point, and the beloved figure of Kai Bok-su disappeared from
+ sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away down the coast the oarsmen pulled, and the four missionaries squeezed
+ themselves into as small a space as possible to be out of the way of the
+ oars. All the evening they rowed steadily, and as they still swept along
+ night came down suddenly. They kept close to the shore, where to their
+ right arose great mountains straight up from the water's edge. They were
+ covered with forest, and here and there in the blackness fires twinkled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Head-hunters!" said the helmsman, pointing toward them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away to the left stretched the Pacific Ocean, and above shone the stars in
+ the deep blue dome. It was a still, hot tropical night. From the land came
+ the heavy scent of flowers. The only sound that broke the stillness was
+ the regular thud, thud of the oars or the cry of some wild animal floating
+ out from the jungle. As they passed on through the warm darkness, the sea
+ took on that wonderful fiery glow that so often burns on the oceans of the
+ tropics. Every wave became a blaze of phosphorescence. Every ripple from
+ the oars ran away in many-colored flames&mdash;red, green, blue, and
+ orange. Kai Bok-su, sitting amazed at the glory to which the Pe-po-hoan
+ boatmen had become accustomed, was silent with awe. He had seen the
+ phosphorescent lights often before, but never anything like this. He put
+ his hand down into the molten sea and scooped up handfuls of what seemed
+ drops of liquid fire. And as his fingers dipped into the water they shone
+ like rods of red-hot iron. Over the gleaming iridescent surface, sparks of
+ fire darted like lightning, and from the little boat's sides flashed out
+ flames of gold and rose and amber. It was grand. And no wonder they all
+ joined&mdash;Chinese, Malayan, and Canadian&mdash;in making the dark
+ cliffs and the gleaming sea echo to the strains of praise to the One who
+ had created all this glory. <br /><br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ O come let us sing to the Lord,<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ To him our voices raise With joyful noise,<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ Let us the rock Of our salvation praise.<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ To him the spacious sea belongs,<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ For he the same did make;<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ The dry land also from his hand<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ Its form at first did take.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dawn came up out of the Pacific with a new glory of light and color that
+ dispelled the wonders of the night. It showed the voyagers that they were
+ very near a low shore where it would be possible to land. But the helmsman
+ shook his head at the proposal. He pointed out huts along the line of
+ forest and figures on the shore. And then with a common impulse, the
+ rowers swung round and pulled straight out to sea; for with Pe-po-hoan
+ experience they saw at once that here was a savage village, and not long
+ would their heads remain on their shoulders should they touch land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scorching sun soon poured its hot rays upon the tired rowers, but they
+ pulled steadily. They too, like Kai Bok-su, were anxious to take this
+ great good news of Jesus Christ to those who had not yet learned of him.
+ When safely out of reach of the headhunters, they once more turned south,
+ and, about noon, tired and hot, at last approached the first port of the
+ Ki-lai plain. Every one drew a sigh of relief, for the men had been rowing
+ steadily all night and half the day. As they drew near Dr. Mackay looked
+ eagerly at the queer village. It appeared to be half Chinese and half
+ Lam-si-hoan. It consisted of two rows of small thatched houses with a
+ street between nearly two hundred feet wide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rowers ran the boat up on the sloping pebbly beach and all stepped out
+ with much relief to stretch their stiffened limbs. They had scarcely done
+ so when a military officer came down the shore and approaching Dr. Mackay
+ made him welcome with the greatest warmth. There was a military encampment
+ here, and this was the officer as well as the headman of the village. He
+ invited Dr. Mackay and his friends to take dinner with him. Dr. Mackay
+ accepted with pleased surprise. This was far better than he had expected.
+ He was still more surprised to hear his name on every hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is the great Kai Bok-su," could be heard in tones of deepest respect
+ from fishermen at their nets and old women by the door and children
+ playing with their kites in the wide street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How do they know me?" he asked, as he was greeted by a rice-seller,
+ sitting at the open front of his shop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah, we have heard of you and your work in the north, Pastor Mackay," said
+ his host, smiling, "and our people want to hear of this new
+ Jehovah-religion too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cook-missionary had evidently spread wonderful reports of Kai Bok-su
+ and his gospel and so prepared the way. He was preaching just then in a
+ place called Ka-le-oan, farther inland. When the officer learned that Dr.
+ Mackay wanted to visit him he turned to his servant with a most surprising
+ order. It was to saddle his pony and bring him for Kai Bok-su to ride to
+ Ka-le-oan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pony came, sleek and plump and with a string of jingling bells
+ adorning him. A pony was a wonderful sight in Formosa, and Dr. Mackay had
+ not used any sort of animal in his work since that disastrous day when he
+ had tried in vain to ride the stubborn Lu-a. But now he gladly mounted the
+ sedate little steed and trotted away along the narrow pathway between the
+ rice-fields toward Ka-le-oan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Darkness had almost descended when he rode into the village and stopped
+ before a small grass-covered bamboo dwelling where the cook-preacher
+ lived. For years the people here had looked for Kai Bok-su's coming, for
+ years they had talked of this great event, and for years their preacher
+ had been writing and saying as he received his reply from the eager
+ missionary in Tamsui, "He may come soon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now he was really here! The sound of his horse's bells had scarcely
+ stopped before the preacher's house, when the news began to spread like
+ fire through the village. The preacher, who had worked so hard and waited
+ so long, wept for joy, and before he could make Dr. Mackay welcome in a
+ proper manner the room was filled with men, all wildly eager for a sight
+ of the great Kai Bok-su, while outside a crowd gathered about the door
+ striving to get even a glimpse of him. The ex-cook of Oxford College had
+ preached so faithfully that many were already converted to Christianity,
+ many more knew a good deal of the gospel, and crowds were ready to throw
+ away their idols. They were weary of their heathen rites and
+ superstitions. They were longing for something better, they scarcely knew
+ what. "But the mandarin will not let them become Christians," said the
+ preacher anxiously. "It is he who is keeping them from decision. He has
+ said that they must continue in idolatry, as a token of loyalty to China."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you sure that is true?" cried Dr. Mackay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The converts nodded. They had "heard" it said at least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Kai Bok-su was not the man to accept mere hearsay. He was always
+ wisely careful to avoid any collision with the authorities. But
+ remembering the kindness shown him back in Hoe-lien-kang, he could not
+ quite believe that the mandarin who had been so kind to him could be
+ hostile to the religion of Jesus Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To think was to act, and early the next morning, he was riding back to the
+ seacoast, to inquire how much of this rumor was true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His reception was very warm. It was all right, the officer declared.
+ Whatever had been said or done in the past must be forgotten. Kai Bok-su
+ might go where he pleased and preach his Jehovah-religion to whomsoever he
+ would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a very light-hearted rider the pony carried as he galloped back
+ along the narrow paths, with the good news for the villagers. The word
+ went round as soon as he arrived. Kai Bok-su wanted to know how many were
+ for the true God. All who would worship him were at once to clear their
+ houses of idols and declare that they would serve Jehovah and him only. At
+ dark a great crowd gathered in an open space in the village.
+ Representatives from five villages were there, chiefs were shouting to
+ their people, and when Dr. Mackay and his students arrived, the place was
+ all noise and confusion. He was puzzled. It almost looked as if there was
+ to be a riot, though the voices did not sound angry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He climbed up on a pile of rubbish and his face shone clear in the light
+ of the flaring torches. His voice rang out loud and commanding above the
+ tumult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is this noise about?" he cried. "Is there a difference of opinion
+ among you as to whether you shall worship these poor toys of wood and
+ stone, or the true God who is your Father?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paused and as if from one man came back the answer in a mighty shout:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, we will worship the true God!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tumult had been one of enthusiasm and not of dispute!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kai Bok-su's heart gave a great bound. For a moment he could not speak. He
+ who had so often stood up fearless and bold before a raging heathen mob,
+ now faltered before this sea of eager faces, upturned to him. It seemed
+ too good to be true that all this crowd, representing five villages, was
+ anxious to become followers of the God of heaven. His voice grew steady at
+ last, and standing up there in the flickering torchlight he told those
+ children of the plain what it meant to be a follower of Jesus Christ. It
+ was a late hour when the meeting broke up, but even then Dr. Mackay could
+ not go to bed. Never since the day that A Hoa, his first convert, had
+ accepted Jesus Christ as his Savior, had he felt such joy, and all night
+ he walked up and down in front of the preacher's house, unable to sleep
+ for the thankfulness to God that surged in his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morning brought a wonderful day for the Ki-lai plain. It was like a day
+ when freedom from slavery was announced. Had there been bells in the
+ village they would certainly have been rung. But joy bells were ringing in
+ every heart. Nobody could work all day. The rice-fields and the shops and
+ the pottery works lay idle. There was but one business to do that day, and
+ that was to get rid of their idols.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the morning the mayor of the place, or the headman as he was
+ called, came to the house to invite the missionary and his party to join
+ him. Behind him walked four big boys, carrying two large wicker baskets,
+ hanging from poles across their shoulders; and behind them came the whole
+ village, men, women, and children, their faces shining with a new joy. The
+ procession moved along from house to house. At every place it stopped and
+ out from the home were carried idols, ancestral tablets, mock-money,
+ flags, incense sticks, and all the stuff used in idol worship. These were
+ all emptied into the baskets carried by the boys. When even the temple had
+ been ransacked and the work of clearing out the idols in the village was
+ finished, the procession moved on to the next hamlet. The villages were
+ very near each other, so the journey was not wearisome; and at last when
+ every vestige of the old idolatrous life had been taken from the homes of
+ five villages, the happy crowd marched back to the first village. There
+ was a large courtyard near the temple and here the procession halted. The
+ boys dropped their well-filled baskets, and their contents were piled in
+ the center of the court. The people gathered about the heap and with
+ shouts of joy set fire to these signs of their lifelong slavery. Soon the
+ pile was blazing and crackling, and all the people, even the chiefs of the
+ villages, vied with each other in burning up the idols they had so lately
+ besought for blessings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then they turned toward the heathen temple and delivered it over to
+ Kai Bok-su for a chapel in which he and his students might preach the
+ gospel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the temple was lighted up for a new kind of worship. It had been
+ used for worship many, many times before, but oh, how different it was
+ this time! Instead of coming in fear of demons, dread of their gods'
+ anger, and determination to cheat them if possible, these poor folk
+ crowded into the new-old temple with light, happy hearts, as children
+ coming to their Father. And was not God their Father, only they had not
+ known him before?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heathen temple was dedicated to the worship of the true God by singing
+ the old but always new, one hundredth Psalm. The Lam-si-hoan were not very
+ good singers. They had not much idea of tune. They had less idea of just
+ when to start, and there was very little to be said about the harmony of
+ those hundreds of voices. But in spite of it all, Kai Bok-su had to
+ confess that never in the music of his homeland or in the more finished
+ harmonies of Europe, had he heard anything so grandly uplifting as when
+ those newly-freed people stood up in their idol temple and with heart and
+ soul and voice unitedly poured forth in thunderous volume of praise the
+ great command:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All people that on earth do dwell, Sing to the Lord with cheerful voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a whole week with his pony and groom, which were still his to do with
+ as he pleased, the busy missionary rode up and down this plain, visiting
+ the villages, preaching, and teaching the people how to live as Jesus
+ Christ their Savior had lived; for it was necessary to impress upon their
+ childlike minds that it would be of no use to burn up the idols in their
+ homes and temple unless they also gave up the still more harmful idols in
+ their hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at last the day came when the pony had to be returned to its owner and
+ the missionary and his helpers must leave. It was a sad day but a joyous
+ one&mdash;the day that great visit came to an end. Crowds of Christians,
+ fain to keep him, followed him down to the shore, and many kindly but
+ reluctant hands shoved the little boat out into the surf. And as the
+ rowers sent it skimming out over the great Pacific rollers, there rose
+ from the beach the parting hymn, the one that had dedicated the heathen
+ temple to the worship of the true God:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ All people that on earth do dwell,
+ Sing to the Lord with cheerful voice.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ and from the rowers and the missionaries in the boat, came back the glad
+ echo:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Know that the Lord is God indeed Without our aid he did us make.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were soon out of sight. The rowers pulled hard, but a stiff
+ northeaster straight from Japan was blowing against them, and they made
+ but little headway. Night came down, and they were again skirting those
+ dark cliffs, where, here and there, along the narrow strip of sand, the
+ night-fires of the savages flamed out against the dark tangle of foliage.
+ All night long the rowers struggled against the wind. They were afraid to
+ go out far for the waves were wild, they dared not land, for, crueler than
+ the sea, the head-hunters waited for them on the shore. And so all that
+ night, taking turns with the rowers, the missionary and his students
+ toiled against the wind and wave. The dawn came up gray and stormy, and
+ they were still tossing about among the white billows. No one had touched
+ food for twenty-four hours. They had rice in the boat, but there was no
+ place where they dared land to have it cooked. There was nothing to do but
+ to pull, pull at the oars, and a weary task it seemed, for the boat
+ appeared to make little headway, and the rowers barely succeeded in
+ keeping her from being dashed upon the rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were becoming almost too weak to keep any control over their boat,
+ when about three o'clock in the afternoon they managed to round a point.
+ There before them curved a beautiful bay. Behind it and on both sides
+ arose a perpendicular wall several hundred feet high. At its foot
+ stretched a narrow sandy beach. It was an ideal spot, secure from savages
+ both by land and sea. A shout of encouragement from Kai Bok-su was the one
+ thing needed. Tired arms and aching backs bent to the oars for one last
+ effort, and when the boat swept up on the sandy beach every one uttered a
+ heartfelt prayer of thankfulness to the Father who had provided this
+ little haven in a time of such distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of the journey was made safely, and just forty days after their
+ departure the four missionaries returned, worn out, to Tamsui.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. THE LAND OCCUPIED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ But Kai Bok-su had no sooner returned than he was off again. He was not
+ one of that sort who could settle down after an achievement, content to
+ rest for a little. He seemed to forget all about what had been done and
+ was "up and at it again." If he "did not know when he was beaten," neither
+ did he seem to know when he was successful; and like Alexander the Great
+ he was always sighing for new worlds to conquer, yes, and marching off and
+ conquering them too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But every time he returned to his work at Tamsui from one of these tours,
+ it was borne in upon him more forcibly every day that his faithful
+ assistant who was left in charge, could not long shoulder his work. Mr.
+ Jamieson was fighting a losing battle with ill health. The terrible
+ experiences during the war year, the hard work, and the trying Formosan
+ climate had all combined against him. His brave spirit could not always
+ sustain the body that was growing gradually weaker, and one day, a dark,
+ sad day, the devoted soul was set free from the poor pain-racked body. He
+ had given eight years of hard, faithful work to the study of the language
+ and to the service of the Master in the mission. Mrs. Jamieson returned to
+ Canada, and once more Dr. Mackay faced the work, unaided except by native
+ preachers. But he was not daunted even by this bereavement, for he always
+ lived in the perfect faith that God was on his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, he had by this time three new assistants in the mission-house on
+ the bluff. They did not even guess that they were any help to him, for
+ they could never go with him on his mission tours. But by their sweet
+ merry ways and their joyous welcome to father, when he returned, they did
+ help him greatly, and made his home-comings a delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How many did you baptize, father?" was baby George's inevitable question
+ on his father's return. For already the wise toddler had learned something
+ of the bitter enmity of the heathen world, and knew that converts meant
+ friends. Then father's home-coming meant presents too, wonderful things,
+ bows and arrows, rare curios for the museum in the college, and, once, a
+ pair of the funniest monkeys in the world, which proved most entertaining
+ playthings for the little boy and his two sisters. Another time the father
+ brought home a young bear to keep the monkeys company, but they were not
+ at all polite to their guest, for they made poor bruin's life miserable by
+ teasing him. They would torment him until he would stamp with rage. But he
+ was not always badly used, for when the three children would come out to
+ feed him, he was very happy, and he would show his pleasure by putting his
+ head between his paws and rolling over and over like a big ball of fur.
+ And he always seemed quite proud of his performance when his three little
+ keepers shrieked with laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next year after Mr. Jamieson's death the empty mission-house was once
+ more filled. In September the Rev. Mr. William and Mrs. Gauld sailed from
+ Canada, and with their arrival Dr. Mackay took new heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new missionaries had learned the language and their work was well
+ under way when the time came round once more for Dr. Mackay to go back to
+ Canada for a year's rest. This time there was quite a little party went
+ with him: his wife, their three children, and Koa Kau, one of his
+ students.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among those left to assist Mr. Gauld, there was none he relied upon more
+ than A Hoa. Mr. Gauld, at the close of his second year's work, wrote of
+ this fellow worker: "The longer and better I know him, the more I can love
+ him, trust his honesty, and respect his judgment. He knows his own people,
+ from the governor of the island to the ragged opium-smoking beggar, and
+ has influence with them all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were many others besides A Hoa to render the missionary faithful
+ help; among them Sun-a and Tan He, the latter pastor of the church of
+ Sin-tiam; and just because Kai Bok-su was away they worked the harder,
+ that he might receive a good report of them on his return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The separation was longer this time, for Dr. Mackay wished to send his
+ children to school, and he decided that they would remain in Canada two
+ years. He was made Moderator of the General Assembly, too, and the Church
+ at home needed him to stir them up to a greater desire to help those
+ beyond the seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was working and preaching in Canada, his heart turned always to
+ his beloved Formosa, and letters from the friends there were among his
+ greatest pleasures. A Hoa's of course, were doubly welcome. Pastor Giam,
+ the name by which he was now called, was Mr. Gauld's right-hand helper in
+ those days, and once he went alone on a tour away to the eastern shore.
+ While there he had an adventure of which he wrote to Kai Bok-su.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The other morning while walking on the seashore I saw a sailing-vessel
+ slowly drifting shoreward and in danger of being wrecked, for there was a
+ fog and a heavy sea. I hastened back to the chapel and beat the drum to
+ call the villagers to worship. As soon as it was over I asked converts and
+ heathen to go in their fishing-boats as quickly as possible and let the
+ sailors know they need not fear savages there, and if they wished to come
+ ashore a chapel would be given them to stay in. The whole crew came ashore
+ in the boats at once. I gave your old room to the captain, his wife and
+ child, and other accommodation to the rest. I then hurried away to a
+ mandarin and asked him to send men to protect the ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Kai Bok-su read the story and remembered that, twenty-five years
+ earlier, the crew of that vessel would have been murdered and their ship
+ plundered, he exclaimed with joy, "Blessed Christianity! Surely,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Blessings abound where'er He reigns!"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A Hoa had another tale to tell. One afternoon he had a strange
+ congregation in that little chapel. There were one hundred and forty-six
+ native converts and twenty-one Europeans. These were made up of seven
+ nationalities, British, American, French, Danish, Turkish, Swiss, and
+ Norwegian. Their ship was from America and was bound for Hongkong with
+ coal-oil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were amazed at seeing a pretty, neat chapel away in this wild, remote
+ place, which they had always supposed was overrun by head-hunters, and
+ indeed it was just that little chapel that had made the great change.
+ These men now entered it and joined the natives in worshiping the true
+ God, where, only a few years before, their blood would have stained the
+ sands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Hoa told them something of the great Kai Bok-su and the struggles he had
+ had with savages and other enemies, when he first came to this region. The
+ visitors were very much interested and did not wonder that the name "Kai
+ Bok-su" was held in such reverence. When they left, the captain presented
+ the little chapel with a bell, a lamp, and a mirror which were on board
+ his ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long months of separation were rolling around, when something happened
+ that brought Kai Bok-su back to his island in great haste. Once more war
+ swept over Formosa. This time the trouble was between China and Japan. The
+ big Empire proved no match for the clever Japanese, and everywhere China
+ was forced to give in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the places which Japan set her affections on was Formosa. She must
+ have the Beautiful Isle and have it at once. China was in no position to
+ say no, so the Chinese envoy went on board a Japanese vessel and sailed
+ toward Formosa. When in sight of its lovely mountains, without any
+ ceremony he pointed to the land and said, "There it is, take it." And that
+ was how Formosa became a province of Japan. At noon on May 26, 1895, the
+ dragon flag of China was hauled down from Formosan forts and the banner of
+ Japan was hoisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course this was not done without a struggle. The Formosans themselves
+ fought hard, and in the fight the Christians came in for times of trouble.
+ So Kai Bok-su, hearing that his "valuables" were again in danger, set sail
+ for Tamsui.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he arrived the war was practically over, but everywhere were signs of
+ strife. As soon as he was able, he took A Hoa and Koa Kau and visited the
+ chapels all over the country. Everywhere were sights to make his heart
+ very sad. The Japanese soldiers had used many of the chapels for military
+ stables, and they were in a filthy state. At one place the native preacher
+ was a prisoner, the Japanese believing him to be a spy. At another village
+ the Christians sadly led their missionary out to a tea plantation and
+ showed him the place where their beloved pastor had been shot by the
+ Japanese soldiers. Mackay stood beside his grave, his heart heavy with
+ sorrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his courage never left him. The native Christians everywhere forgot
+ their woes in the great joy of seeing him once more; and he joined them in
+ a brave attempt to put things to rights once more. The Japanese paid for
+ all damages done by their soldiers and in a short time the work was going
+ on splendidly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have no fear," wrote Dr. Mackay. "The King of kings is greater than
+ Emperor or Mikado. He will rule and overrule all things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His faith was rewarded, for when the troublous time was over, the
+ government of Japan proved better than that of China, and on the whole the
+ trial proved a blessing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oxford College had been closed while Dr. Mackay was away, and the girls'
+ school had not been opened since the war commenced, for it was not safe
+ for the girls and women to leave their homes during such disturbed times.
+ But now both schools reopened, and again Kai Bok-su with his cane and his
+ book and his crowd of students could be seen going up to the lecture
+ halls, or away out on the Formosan roads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had conquered so often, overcome such tremendous obstacles, and faced
+ unflinchingly so many awful dangers for the sake of his converts, that it
+ was no wonder that they adored him, their feeling amounting almost to
+ worship. "Kai Bok-su says it must be so" was sufficient to compel any one
+ in the north Formosa Church to do what was required. Surely never before
+ was a man so wonderfully rewarded in this life. He had given up all he
+ possessed for the glory of his Master and he had his full compensation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few happy years sped round. The time for him to go back home again was
+ drawing near when there came the first hint that he might soon be called
+ on a longer furlough than he would have in Canada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first, when the dread suspicion began to be whispered in the halls of
+ Oxford College and in the chapel gatherings throughout the country, people
+ refused to believe it. Kai Bok-su ill? No, no, it was only the malaria,
+ and he always arose from that and went about again. It could not be
+ serious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in spite of the fact that loving hearts refused to accept it, there
+ was no use denying the sad fact. There was something wrong with Kai
+ Bok-su. For months his voice had been growing weaker, the doctors had
+ examined his throat, and attended him, but it was all of no use. At last
+ he could not speak at all, but wrote his words on a slate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And everywhere in north Formosa, converts and students and preachers
+ watched and waited and prayed most fervently that he might soon recover.
+ Those who lived in Tamsui whispered to each other in tones of dread, as
+ they watched him come and go with slower steps than they had been
+ accustomed to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He will be well next month," they would say hopefully, or, "He will look
+ like himself when the rains dry." But little by little the conviction grew
+ that the beloved missionary was seriously ill, and a great gloom settled
+ all over north Formosa. There was a little gleam of joy when the doctor in
+ Tamsui advised him finally to go to Hongkong and see a specialist He went,
+ leaving many loving hearts waiting anxiously between hope and fear to hear
+ what the doctors would say. And prayers went up night and day from those
+ who loved him. From the heart-broken wife in the lonely house on the bluff
+ to the farthest-off convert on the Ki-lai plain, every Christian on the
+ island, even those in the south Formosa mission, prayed that the useful
+ life might be spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But God had other and greater plans for Kai Bok-su. He came back from
+ Hongkong, and the first look at his pale face told the dreaded truth. The
+ shadow of death lay on it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those were heart-breaking days in north Formosa. From all sides came such
+ messages of devotion that it seemed as if the passionate love of his
+ followers must hold him back. But a stronger love was calling him on. And
+ one bright June day, in 1901, when the green mountainsides, the blue
+ rivers, and the waving rice-fields of Formosa lay smiling in the sun, Kai
+ Bok-su heard once more that call that had brought him so far from home.
+ Once more he obeyed, and he opened his eyes on a new glory greater than
+ any of which he had ever dreamed. The task had been a hard one. The "big
+ stone" had been stubborn, but it had been broken, and not long after the
+ noontide of his life the tired worker was called home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They laid his poor, worn body up on the hill above the river, beside the
+ bodies of the Christians he had loved so well. And the soft Formosan grass
+ grew over his grave, the winds roared about it, and the river and the sea
+ sang his requiem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gallant Kai Bok-su! As he rests up there on his wind-swept height, there
+ are hearts in the valleys and on the plains of his beloved Formosa and in
+ his far-off native land that are aching for him. And sometimes to these
+ last comes the question "Was it well?" Was it well that he should wear out
+ that splendid life in such desperate toil among heathen that hated and
+ reviled him? And from every part of north Formosa, sounding on the wind,
+ comes many an answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up from the damp rice-fields, where the farmer goes to and fro in the gray
+ dawn, arises a song:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'm not ashamed to own my Lord, Or to defend his cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far away on the mountainside, the once savage mother draws her little one
+ to her and teaches him, not the old lesson of bloodshed, but the older one
+ of love and kindness, and together they croon:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jesus loves me, this I know, For the Bible tells me so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And up from scores of chapels dotting the land, comes the sound of the
+ old, old story of Jesus and his love, preached by native Formosans, and
+ from the thousand tongues of their congregations soars upward the Psalm:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All people that on earth do dwell, Sing to the Lord with cheerful voice!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These all unite in one great harmony, replying, "It is well!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But is it well with the work? What of his Beautiful Island, now that Kai
+ Bok-su has left for a greater work in a more beautiful land? Yes, it is
+ well also with Formosa. The work goes on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two thousand, one hundred members now in the four organized
+ congregations, and over fifty mission stations and outstations. But better
+ still there are in addition twenty-two hundred who have forsaken their
+ idols and are being trained to become church-members. The Formosa Church
+ out of its poverty gives liberally too. In 1911 they contributed more than
+ thirty-five hundred dollars to Christian work. "Every year," writes Mr.
+ Jack, "a special collection is taken by the Church for the work among the
+ Ami&mdash;the aborigines of the Ki-lai plain." This is the foreign mission
+ of the north Formosa Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Hoa lately followed his pastor to the home above, but many others
+ remain. Mr. Gauld and his family are still there, in the front of the
+ battle, and with him is a fine corps of soldiers, comprising fifty-nine
+ native and several Canadian missionaries, including the Rev. Dr. J. Y.
+ Ferguson and his wife, the Rev. Milton Jack and Mrs. Jack, the Rev. and
+ Mrs. Duncan MacLeod, Miss J. M. Kinney, Miss Hannah Connell, Miss Mabel G.
+ Clazie, and Miss Lily Adair. Miss Isabelle J. Elliott, a graduate nurse,
+ and deaconess, will join the staff shortly, and a few others will be sent
+ when secured, in order that the force may be sufficient to evangelize the
+ million people in north Formosa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Mackay and her two daughters, Helen and Mary, the latter having
+ married native preachers, Koa Kau and Tan He, are keeping up the work that
+ husband and father left. A new hospital is being built under Dr. Ferguson,
+ and plans are on foot for new school and college buildings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the latest arrived missionary? What of him? Why his name is George
+ Mackay, and he has just sailed from Canada as the first Mackay sailed
+ forty-one years earlier. He has been nine years in Canada and the United
+ States, at school and college, and now with his Canadian wife, has gone
+ back to his native land. Yes, Kai Bok-su's son has gone out to carry on
+ his father's work, and Formosa has welcomed him as no other missionary has
+ been welcomed since Kai Bok-su's day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these are not all. From far across the sea, in the land where Kai
+ Bok-su lived his boyhood days, comes a voice. It is the echo from the
+ hearts of other boys, who have read his noble life. And their answer is,
+ "We too will go out, as he went, and fight and win!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Black-Bearded Barbarian (George
+Leslie Mackay), by Mary Esther Miller MacGregor, AKA Marion Keith
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>