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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Civilization of China, by Herbert A. Giles
+ </title>
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+
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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%;}
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Civilization Of China, by Herbert A. Giles
+
+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 Civilization Of China
+
+Author: Herbert A. Giles
+
+Release Date: March 25, 2006 [EBook #2076]
+Last Updated: December 10, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CIVILIZATION OF CHINA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by John Bickers; Dagny and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE CIVILIZATION OF CHINA
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by HERBERT A. GILES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Professor of Chinese in the University of Cambridge, <br /> And sometime
+ H.B.M. Consul at Ningpo
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ Contents
+ </h2>
+ <table summary="" style="margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> <big><b>THE CIVILIZATION OF CHINA</b></big>
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I&mdash;THE FEUDAL AGE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II&mdash;LAW AND GOVERNMENT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III&mdash;RELIGION AND SUPERSTITION
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV&mdash;A.D. 220-1200 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V&mdash;WOMEN AND CHILDREN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI&mdash;LITERATURE AND EDUCATION
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII&mdash;PHILOSOPHY AND SPORT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII&mdash;RECREATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX&mdash;THE MONGOLS, 1260-1368
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X&mdash;MINGS AND CH'INGS,
+ 1368-1911 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI&mdash;CHINESE AND FOREIGNERS
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII&mdash;THE OUTLOOK </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_BIBL"> BIBLIOGRAPHY </a>
+ </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The aim of this work is to suggest a rough outline of Chinese civilization
+ from the earliest times down to the present period of rapid and startling
+ transition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been written, primarily, for readers who know little or nothing of
+ China, in the hope that it may succeed in alluring them to a wider and
+ more methodical survey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ H.A.G.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cambridge, May 12, 1911.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE CIVILIZATION OF CHINA
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I&mdash;THE FEUDAL AGE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is a very common thing now-a-days to meet people who are going to
+ "China," which can be reached by the Siberian railway in fourteen or
+ fifteen days. This brings us at once to the question&mdash;What is meant
+ by the term China?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taken in its widest sense, the term includes Mongolia, Manchuria, Eastern
+ Turkestan, Tibet, and the Eighteen Provinces, the whole being equivalent
+ to an area of some five million square miles, that is, considerably more
+ than twice the size of the United States of America. But for a study of
+ manners and customs and modes of thought of the Chinese people, we must
+ confine ourselves to that portion of the whole which is known to the
+ Chinese as the "Eighteen Provinces," and to us as China Proper. This
+ portion of the empire occupies not quite two-fifths of the whole, covering
+ an area of somewhat more than a million and a half square miles. Its chief
+ landmarks may be roughly stated as Peking, the capital, in the north;
+ Canton, the great commercial centre, in the south; Shanghai, on the east;
+ and the Tibetan frontier on the west.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any one who will take the trouble to look up these four points on a map,
+ representing as they do central points on the four sides of a rough
+ square, will soon realize the absurdity of asking a returning traveller
+ the very much asked question, How do you like China? Fancy asking a
+ Chinaman, who had spent a year or two in England, how he liked Europe!
+ Peking, for instance, stands on the same parallel of latitude as Madrid;
+ whereas Canton coincides similarly with Calcutta. Within the square
+ indicated by the four points enumerated above will be found variations of
+ climate, flowers, fruit, vegetables and animals&mdash;not to mention human
+ beings&mdash;distributed in very much the same way as in Europe. The
+ climate of Peking is exceedingly dry and bracing; no rain, and hardly any
+ snow, falling between October and April. The really hot weather lasts only
+ for six or eight weeks, about July and August&mdash;and even then the
+ nights are always cool; while for six or eight weeks between December and
+ February there may be a couple of feet of ice on the river. Canton, on the
+ other hand, has a tropical climate, with a long damp enervating summer and
+ a short bleak winter. The old story runs that snow has only been seen once
+ in Canton, and then it was thought by the people to be falling
+ cotton-wool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The northern provinces are remarkable for vast level plains, dotted with
+ villages, the houses of which are built of mud. In the southern provinces
+ will be found long stretches of mountain scenery, vying in loveliness with
+ anything to be seen elsewhere. Monasteries are built high up on the hills,
+ often on almost inaccessible crags; and there the well-to-do Chinaman is
+ wont to escape from the fierce heat of the southern summer. On one
+ particular mountain near Canton, there are said to be no fewer than one
+ hundred of such monasteries, all of which reserve apartments for guests,
+ and are glad to be able to add to their funds by so doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the north of China, Mongolian ponies, splendid mules, and donkeys are
+ seen in large quantities; also the two-humped camel, which carries heavy
+ loads across the plains of Mongolia. In the south, until the advent of the
+ railway, travellers had to choose between the sedan-chair carried on the
+ shoulders of stalwart coolies, or the slower but more comfortable
+ house-boat. Before steamers began to ply on the coast, a candidate for the
+ doctor's degree at the great triennial examination would take three months
+ to travel from Canton to Peking. Urgent dispatches, however, were often
+ forwarded by relays of riders at the rate of two hundred miles a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The market in Peking is supplied, among other things, with excellent
+ mutton from a fat-tailed breed of sheep, chiefly for the largely
+ Mohammedan population; but the sheep will not live in southern China,
+ where the goat takes its place. The pig is found everywhere, and
+ represents beef in our market, the latter being extremely unpalatable to
+ the ordinary Chinaman, partly perhaps because Confucius forbade men to
+ slaughter the animal which draws the plough and contributes so much to the
+ welfare of mankind. The staple food, the "bread" of the people in the
+ Chinese Empire, is nominally rice; but this is too costly for the peasant
+ of northern China to import, and he falls back on millet as its
+ substitute. Apples, pears, grapes, melons, and walnuts grow abundantly in
+ the north; the southern fruits are the banana, the orange, the pineapple,
+ the mango, the pomelo, the lichee, and similar fruits of a more tropical
+ character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cold storage has been practised by the Chinese for centuries. Blocks of
+ ice are cut from the river for that purpose; and on a hot summer's day a
+ Peking coolie can obtain an iced drink at an almost infinitesimal cost.
+ Grapes are preserved from autumn until the following May and June by the
+ simple process of sticking the stalk of the bunch into a large hard pear,
+ and putting it away carefully in the ice-house. Even at Ningpo, close to
+ our central point on the eastern coast of China, thin layers of ice are
+ collected from pools and ditches, and successfully stored for use in the
+ following summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The inhabitants of the coast provinces are distinguished from the dwellers
+ in the north and in the far interior by a marked alertness of mind and
+ general temperament. The Chinese themselves declare that virtue is
+ associated with mountains, wisdom with water, cynically implying that no
+ one is both virtuous and wise. Between the inhabitants of the various
+ provinces there is little love lost. Northerners fear and hate
+ southerners, and the latter hold the former in infinite scorn and
+ contempt. Thus, when in 1860 the Franco-British force made for Peking, it
+ was easy enough to secure the services of any number of Cantonese, who
+ remained as faithful as though the attack had been directed against some
+ third nationality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The population of China has never been exactly ascertained. It has been
+ variously estimated by foreign travellers, Sacharoff, in 1842, placing the
+ figure at over four hundred millions. The latest census, taken in 1902, is
+ said to yield a total of four hundred and ten millions. Perhaps three
+ hundred millions would be a juster estimate; even that would absorb no
+ less than one-fifth of the human race. From this total it is easy to
+ calculate that if the Chinese people were to walk past a given point in
+ single file, the procession would never end; long before the last of the
+ three hundred millions had passed by, a new generation would have sprung
+ up to continue the neverending line. The census, however, is a very old
+ institution with the Chinese; and we learn that in A.D. 156 the total
+ population of the China of those days was returned as a little over fifty
+ millions. In more modern times, the process of taking the census consists
+ in serving out house-tickets to the head of every household, who is
+ responsible for a proper return of all the inmates; but as there is no
+ fixed day for which these tickets are returnable, the results are
+ approximate rather than exact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, it is not uncommon to hear people talking of the Chinese language
+ as if it were a single tongue spoken all over China after a more or less
+ uniform standard. But the fact is that the colloquial is broken up into at
+ least eight dialects, each so strongly marked as to constitute eight
+ languages as different to the ear, one from another, as English, Dutch and
+ German, or French, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese. A Shanghai man, for
+ instance, is unintelligible to a Cantonese, and so on. All officials are
+ obliged, and all of the better educated merchants and others endeavour, if
+ only for business purposes, to learn something of the dialect spoken at
+ the court of Peking; and this is what is popularly known as "Mandarin."
+ The written language remains the same for the whole empire; which merely
+ means that ideas set down on paper after a uniform system are spoken with
+ different sounds, just as the Arabic numerals are written uniformly in
+ England, France and Germany, but are pronounced in a totally different
+ manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only difficulty of the spoken language, of no matter what dialect,
+ lies in the "tones," which simply means the different intonations which
+ may be given to one and the same sound, thus producing so many entirely
+ different meanings. But for these tones, the colloquial of China would be
+ absurdly easy, inasmuch as there is no such thing as grammar, in the sense
+ of gender, number, case, mood, tense, or any of the variations we
+ understand by that term. Many amusing examples are current of blunders
+ committed by faulty speakers, such as that of the student who told his
+ servant to bring him a goose, when what he really wanted was some salt,
+ both goose and salt having the same sound, <i>yen</i>, but quite different
+ intonations. The following specimen has the advantage of being true. A
+ British official reported to the Foreign Office that the people of
+ Tientsin were in the habit of shouting after foreigners, "Mao-tsu,
+ mao-tsu" (pronounced <i>mowdza</i>, <i>ow</i> as in <i>how</i>), from
+ which he gathered that they were much struck by the head-gear of the
+ barbarian. Now, it is a fact that <i>mao-tsu</i>, uttered with a certain
+ intonation, means a hat; but with another intonation, it means "hairy
+ one," and the latter, referring to the big beards of foreigners, was the
+ meaning intended to be conveyed. This epithet is still to be heard, and is
+ often preceded by the adjective "red."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The written characters, known to have been in use for the past three
+ thousand years, were originally rude pictures, as of men, birds, horses,
+ dogs, houses, the numerals (one, two, three, four), etc., etc., and it is
+ still possible to trace in the modified modern forms of these characters
+ more or less striking resemblances to the objects intended. The next step
+ was to put two or more characters together, to express by their
+ combination an abstract idea, as, for instance, a <i>hand</i> holding a <i>rod</i>
+ = father; but of course this simple process did not carry the Chinese very
+ far, and they soon managed to hit on a joint picture and phonetic system,
+ which enabled them to multiply characters indefinitely, new compounds
+ being formed for use as required. It is thus that new characters can still
+ be produced, if necessary, to express novel objects or ideas. The usual
+ plan, however, is to combine existing terms in such a way as to suggest
+ what is wanted. For instance, in preference to inventing a separate
+ character for the piece of ordnance known as a "mortar," the Chinese, with
+ an eye to its peculiar pose, gave it the appropriate name of a "frog gun."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, just as the natives and the dialects of the various parts of China
+ differ one from another, although fundamentally the same people and the
+ same language, so do the manners and customs differ to such an extent that
+ habits of life and ceremonial regulations which prevail in one part of the
+ empire do not necessarily prevail in another. Yet once more it will be
+ found that the differences which appear irreconcilable at first, do not
+ affect what is essential, but apply rather to matters of detail. Many
+ travellers and others have described as customs of the Chinese customs
+ which, as presented, refer to a part of China only, and not to the whole.
+ For instance, the ornamental ceremonies connected with marriage vary in
+ different provinces; but there is a certain ceremony, equivalent in one
+ sense to signing the register, which is almost essential to every marriage
+ contract. Bride and bridegroom must kneel down and call God to witness;
+ they also pledge each other in wine from two cups joined together by a red
+ string. Red is the colour for joy, as white is the colour for mourning.
+ Chinese note-paper is always ruled with red lines or stamped with a red
+ picture. One Chinese official who gave a dinner-party in foreign style,
+ even went so far as to paste a piece of red paper on to each
+ dinner-napkin, in order to counteract the unpropitious influence of white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reference has been made above to journeys performed by boat. In addition
+ to the Yangtsze and the Yellow River or Hoang ho (pronounced <i>Hwong haw</i>),
+ two of the most important rivers in the world, China is covered with a
+ network of minor streams, which in southern China form the chief lines of
+ transport. The Yangtsze is nothing more than a huge navigable river,
+ crossing China Proper from west to east. The Yellow River, which, with the
+ exception of a great loop to the north, runs on nearly parallel lines of
+ latitude, has long been known as "China's Sorrow," and has been
+ responsible for enormous loss of life and property. Its current is so
+ swift that ordinary navigation is impossible, and to cross it in boats is
+ an undertaking of considerable difficulty and danger. It is so called from
+ the yellowness of its water, caused by the vast quantity of mud which is
+ swept down by its rapid current to the sea; hence, the common saying,
+ "When the Yellow River runs clear," as an equivalent of the Greek Kalends.
+ The huge embankments, built to confine it to a given course, are
+ continually being forced by any unusual press of extra water, with
+ enormous damage to property and great loss of life, and from time to time
+ this river has been known to change its route altogether, suddenly
+ diverging, almost at a right angle. Up to the year 1851 the mouth of the
+ river was to the south of the Shantung promontory, about lat. 34 N.; then,
+ with hardly any warning, it began to flow to the north-east, finding an
+ outlet to the north of the Shantung promontory, about lat. 38 N.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain number of connecting links have been formed between the chief
+ lines of water communication, in the shape of artificial cuttings; but
+ there is nothing worthy the name of canal except the rightly named Grand
+ Canal, called by the Chinese the "river of locks," or alternatively the
+ "transport river," because once used to convey rice from the south to
+ Peking. This gigantic work, designed and executed in the thirteenth
+ century by the Emperor Kublai Khan, extended to about six hundred and
+ fifty miles in length, and completed an almost unbroken water
+ communication between Peking and Canton. As a wonderful engineering feat
+ it is indeed more than matched by the famous Great Wall, which dates back
+ to a couple of hundred years before Christ, and which has been glorified
+ as the last trace of man's handiwork on the globe to fade from the view of
+ an imaginary person receding into space. Recent exploration shows that
+ this wall is about eighteen hundred miles in length, stretching from a
+ point on the seashore somewhat east of Peking, to the northern frontier of
+ Tibet. Roughly speaking, it is twenty-two feet in height by twenty feet in
+ breadth; at intervals of a hundred yards are towers forty feet high, the
+ whole being built originally of brick, of which in some parts but mere
+ traces now remain. Nor is this the only great wall; ruins of other walls
+ on a considerable scale have lately been brought to light, the object of
+ all being one and the same&mdash;to keep back the marauding Tartars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Over the length and breadth of their boundless empire, with all its
+ varying climates and inhabitants, the Chinese people are free to travel,
+ for business or pleasure, at their own sweet will, and to take up their
+ abode at any spot without let or hindrance. No passports are required;
+ neither is any ordinary citizen obliged to possess other papers of
+ identification. Chinese inns are not exposed to the annoyance of
+ domicilary visits with reference to their clients for the time being; and
+ so long as the latter pay their way, and refrain from molesting others,
+ they will usually be free from molestation themselves. The Chinese,
+ however, are not fond of travelling; they love their homes too well, and
+ they further dread the inconveniences and dangers attached to travel in
+ many other parts of the world. Boatmen, carters, and innkeepers have all
+ of them bad reputations for extortionate charges; and the traveller may
+ sometimes happen upon a "black inn," which is another name for a den of
+ thieves. Still there have been many who travelled for the sake of
+ beautiful scenery, or in order to visit famous spots of historical
+ interest; not to mention the large body of officials who are constantly on
+ the move, passing from post to post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among those who believe that every nation must have reached its present
+ quarters from some other distant parts of the world, must be reckoned a
+ few students of the ancient history of China. Coincidences in language and
+ in manners and customs, mostly of a shadowy character, have led some to
+ suggest Babylonia as the region from which the Chinese migrated to the
+ land where they are now found. The Chinese possess authentic records of an
+ indisputably early past, but throughout these records there is absolutely
+ no mention, not even a hint, of any migration of the kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tradition places the Golden Age of China so far back as three thousand
+ years before Christ; for a sober survey of China's early civilization, it
+ is not necessary to push further back than the tenth century B.C. We shall
+ find evidence of such an advanced state of civilization at that later date
+ as to leave no doubt of a very remote antiquity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The China of those days, known even then as the Middle Kingdom, was a mere
+ patch on the empire of to-day. It lay, almost lozenge-shaped, between the
+ 34th and 40th parallels of latitude north, with the upper point of the
+ lozenge resting on the modern Peking, and the lower on Si-an Fu in Shensi,
+ whither the late Empress Dowager fled for safety during the Boxer rising
+ in 1900. The ancient autocratic Imperial system had recently been
+ disestablished, and a feudal system had taken its place. The country was
+ divided up into a number of vassal states of varying size and importance,
+ ruled each by its own baron, who swore allegiance to the sovereign of the
+ Royal State. The relations, however, which came to subsist, as time went
+ on, between these states, sovereign and vassal alike, as described in
+ contemporary annals, often remind the reader of the relations which
+ prevailed between the various political divisions of ancient Greece. The
+ rivalries of Athens and Sparta, whose capitals were only one hundred and
+ fifty miles apart&mdash;though a perusal of Thucydides makes one feel that
+ at least half the world was involved&mdash;find their exact equivalent in
+ the jealousies and animosities which stirred the feudal states of ancient
+ China, and in the disastrous campaigns and bloody battles which the states
+ fought with one another. We read of chariots and horsemanship; of feats of
+ arms and deeds of individual heroism; of forced marches, and of night
+ attacks in which the Chinese soldier was gagged with a kind of wooden bit,
+ to prevent talking in the ranks; of territory annexed and reconquered, and
+ of the violent deaths of rival rulers by poison or the dagger of the
+ assassin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the armies of these states went into battle they formed a line, with
+ the bowmen on the left and the spearmen on the right flank. The centre was
+ occupied by chariots, each drawn by either three or four horses harnessed
+ abreast. Swords, daggers, shields, iron-headed clubs some five to six feet
+ in length and weighing from twelve to fifteen pounds, huge iron hooks,
+ drums, cymbals, gongs, horns, banners and streamers innumerable, were also
+ among the equipment of war. Beacon-fires of wolves' dung were lighted to
+ announce the approach of an enemy and summon the inhabitants to arms.
+ Quarter was rarely if ever given, and it was customary to cut the ears
+ from the bodies of the slain. Parleys were conducted and terms of peace
+ arranged under the shelter of a banner of truce, upon which two words were
+ inscribed&mdash;"Stop fighting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beacon-fires above mentioned, very useful for summoning the feudal
+ barons to the rescue in case of need, cost one sovereign his throne. He
+ had a beautiful concubine, for the sake of whose company he neglected the
+ affairs of government. The lady was of a melancholy turn, never being seen
+ to smile. She said she loved the sound of rent silk, and to gratify her
+ whim many fine pieces of silk were torn to shreds. The king offered a
+ thousand ounces of gold to any one who would make her laugh; whereupon his
+ chief minister suggested that the beacon-fires should be lighted to summon
+ the feudal nobles with their armies, as though the royal house were in
+ danger. The trick succeeded; for in the hurry-skurry that ensued the
+ impassive girl positively laughed outright. Later on, when a real attack
+ was made upon the capital by barbarian hordes, and the beacon-fires were
+ again lighted, this time in stern reality, there was no response from the
+ insulted nobles. The king was killed, and his concubine strangled herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, a high state of civilization was enjoyed by these feudal
+ peoples, when not engaged in cutting each other's throats. They lived in
+ thatched houses constructed of rammed earth and plaster, with beaten
+ floors on which dry grass was strewn as carpet. Originally accustomed to
+ sit on mats, they introduced chairs and tables at an early date; they
+ drank an ardent spirit with their carefully cooked food, and wore robes of
+ silk. Ballads were sung, and dances were performed, on ceremonial and
+ festive occasions; hunting and fishing and agriculture were occupations
+ for the men, while the women employed themselves in spinning and weaving.
+ There were casters of bronze vessels, and workers in gold, silver, and
+ iron; jade and other stones were cut and polished for ornaments. The
+ written language was already highly developed, being much the same as we
+ now find it. Indeed, the chief difference lies in the form of the
+ characters, just as an old English text differs in form from a text of the
+ present day. What we may call the syntax of the language has remained very
+ much the same; and phrases from the old ballads of three thousand years
+ ago, which have passed into the colloquial, are still readily understood,
+ though of course pronounced according to the requirements of modern
+ speech. We can no more say how Confucius (551-479 B.C.) pronounced
+ Chinese, than we can say how Miltiades pronounced Greek when addressing
+ his soldiers before the battle of Marathon (490 B.C.). The "books" which
+ were read in ancient China consisted of thin slips of wood or bamboo, on
+ which the characters were written by means of a pencil of wood or bamboo,
+ slightly frayed at the end, so as to pick up a coloured liquid and
+ transfer it to the tablets as required. Until recently, it was thought
+ that the Chinese scratched their words on tablets of bamboo with a knife,
+ but now we know that the knife was only used for scratching out, when a
+ character was wrongly written.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The art of healing was practised among the Chinese in their pre-historic
+ times, but the earliest efforts of a methodical character, of which we
+ have any written record, belong to the period with which we are now
+ dealing. There is indeed a work, entitled "Plain Questions," which is
+ attributed to a legendary emperor of the Golden Age, who interrogates one
+ of his ministers on the cause and cure of all kinds of diseases; as might
+ be expected, it is not of any real value, nor can its date be carried back
+ beyond a few centuries B.C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Physicians of the feudal age classified diseases under the four seasons of
+ the year: headaches and neuralgic affections under <i>spring</i>, skin
+ diseases of all kinds under <i>summer</i>, fevers and agues under <i>autumn</i>,
+ and bronchial and pulmonary complaints under <i>winter</i>. They treated
+ the various complaints that fell under these headings by suitable doses of
+ one or more ingredients taken from the five classes of drugs, derived from
+ herbs, trees, living creatures, minerals, and grains, each of which class
+ contained medicines of five flavours, with special properties: <i>sour</i>
+ for nourishing the bones, <i>acid</i> for nourishing the muscles, <i>salt</i>
+ for nourishing the blood-vessels, <i>bitter</i> for nourishing general
+ vitality, and <i>sweet</i> for nourishing the flesh. The pulse has always
+ been very much to the front in the treatment of disease; there are at
+ least twenty-four varieties of pulse with which every doctor is supposed
+ to be familiar, and some eminent doctors have claimed to distinguish no
+ fewer than seventy-two. In the "Plain Questions" there is a sentence which
+ points towards the circulation of the blood,&mdash;"All the blood is under
+ the jurisdiction of the heart," a point beyond which the Chinese never
+ seem to have pushed their investigations; but of this curious feature in
+ their civilization, later on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was under the feudal system, perhaps a thousand years before Christ,
+ that the people of China began to possess family names. Previous to that
+ time there appear to have been tribal or clan names; these however were
+ not in ordinary use among the individual members of each clan, who were
+ known by their personal names only, bestowed upon them in childhood by
+ their parents. Gradually, it became customary to prefix to the personal
+ name a surname, adopted generally from the name of the place where the
+ family lived, sometimes from an appellation or official title of a
+ distinguished ancestor; places in China never take their names from
+ individuals, as with us, and consequently there are no such names as
+ Faringdon or Gislingham, the homes of the Fearings or Gislings of old.
+ Thus, to use English terms, a boy who had been called "Welcome" by his
+ parents might prefix the name of the place, Cambridge, where he was born,
+ and call himself Cambridge Welcome, the surname always coming first in
+ Chinese, as, for instance, in Li Hung-Chang. The Manchus, it must be
+ remembered, have no surnames; that is to say, they do not use their clan
+ or family names, but call themselves by their personal names only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chinese surnames, other than place names, are derived from a variety of
+ sources: from nature, as River, Stone, Cave; from animals, as Bear, Sheep,
+ Dragon; from birds, as Swallow, Pheasant; from the body, as Long-ears,
+ Squint-eye; from colours, as Black, White; from trees and flowers, as
+ Hawthorn, Leaf, Reed, Forest; and others, such as Rich, East, Sharp, Hope,
+ Duke, Stern, Tepid, Money, etc. By the fifth century before Christ, the
+ use of surnames had definitely become established for all classes, whereas
+ in Europe surnames were not known until about the twelfth century after
+ Christ, and even then were confined to persons of wealth and position.
+ There is a small Chinese book, studied by every schoolboy and entitled <i>The
+ Hundred Surnames</i>, the word "hundred" being commonly used in a
+ generally comprehensive sense. It actually contains about four hundred of
+ the names which occur most frequently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About two hundred and twenty years before Christ, the feudal system came
+ to an end. One aggressive state gradually swallowed up all the others; and
+ under the rule of its sovereign, China became once more an empire, and
+ such it has ever since remained. But although always an empire, the
+ throne, during the past two thousand years, has passed many times from one
+ house to another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extraordinary man who led his state to victory over each rival in
+ turn, and ultimately mounted the throne to rule over a united China, finds
+ his best historical counterpart in Napoleon. He called himself the First
+ Emperor, and began by sending an army of 300,000 men to fight against an
+ old and dreaded enemy to the north, recently identified beyond question
+ with the Huns. He dispatched a fleet to search for some mysterious islands
+ off the coast, thought by some to be the islands which form Japan. He
+ built the Great Wall, to a great extent by means of convict labour,
+ malefactors being condemned to long terms of penal servitude on the works.
+ His copper coinage was so uniformly good that the cowry disappeared
+ altogether from commerce during his reign. Above all things he desired to
+ impart a fresh stimulus to literary effort, but he adopted singularly
+ unfortunate means to secure this desirable end; for, listening to the
+ insidious flattery of courtiers, he determined that literature should
+ begin anew with his reign. He therefore determined to destroy all existing
+ books, finally deciding to spare those connected with three important
+ departments of human knowledge: namely, (1) works which taught the people
+ to plough, sow, reap, and provide food for the race; (2) works on the use
+ of drugs and on the healing art; and (3) works on the various methods of
+ foretelling the future which might lead men to act in accordance with, and
+ not in opposition to, the eternal fitness of things as seen in the
+ operations of Nature. Stringent orders were issued accordingly, and many
+ scholars were put to death for concealing books in the hope that the storm
+ would blow over. Numbers of valuable works perished in a vast
+ conflagration of books, and the only wonder is that any were preserved,
+ with the exception of the three classes specified above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 210 B.C. the First Emperor died, and his youngest son was placed upon
+ the throne with the title of Second Emperor. The latter began by carrying
+ out the funeral arrangements of his father, as described about a century
+ later by the first and greatest of China's historians:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the 9th moon the First Emperor was buried in Mount Li, which in the
+ early days of his reign he had caused to be tunnelled and prepared with
+ that view. Then, when he had consolidated the empire, he employed his
+ soldiery, to the number of 700,000, to bore down to the Three Springs
+ (that is, until water was reached), and there a firm foundation was laid
+ and the sarcophagus placed thereon. Rare objects and costly jewels were
+ collected from the palaces and from the various officials, and were
+ carried thither and stored in huge quantities. Artificers were ordered to
+ construct mechanical crossbows, which, if any one were to enter, would
+ immediately discharge their arrows. With the aid of quicksilver, rivers
+ were made&mdash;the Yangtsze, the Yellow River, and the great ocean&mdash;the
+ metal being made to flow from one into the other by machinery. On the roof
+ were delineated the constellations of the sky, on the floor the
+ geographical divisions of the earth. Candles were made from the fat of the
+ man-fish (walrus), calculated to last for a very long time. The Second
+ Emperor said: 'It is not fitting that the concubines of my late father who
+ are without children should leave him now;' and accordingly he ordered
+ them to accompany the dead monarch into the next world, those who thus
+ perished being many in number. When the internment was completed, some one
+ suggested that the workmen who had made the machinery and concealed the
+ treasure knew the great value of the latter, and that the secret would
+ leak out. Therefore, so soon as the ceremony was over, and the path giving
+ access to the sarcophagus had been blocked up at its innermost end, the
+ outside gate at the entrance to this path was let fall, and the mausoleum
+ was effectually closed, so that not one of the workmen escaped. Trees and
+ grass were then planted around, that the spot might look like the rest of
+ the mountain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The career of the Second Emperor finds an apt parallel in that of Richard
+ Cromwell, except that the former was put to death, after a short and
+ inglorious reign. Then followed a dynasty which has left an indelible mark
+ upon the civilization as well as on the recorded history of China. A
+ peasant, by mere force of character, succeeded after a three-years'
+ struggle in establishing himself upon the throne, 206 B.C., and his
+ posterity, known as the House of Han, ruled over China for four hundred
+ years, accidentally divided into two nearly equal portions by the
+ Christian era, about which date there occurred a temporary usurpation of
+ the throne which for some time threatened the stability of the dynasty in
+ the direct line of succession. To this date, the more northern Chinese
+ have no prouder title than that of a "son of Han."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the whole period of four hundred years the empire cannot be said to
+ have enjoyed complete tranquillity either at home or abroad. There were
+ constant wars with the Tartar tribes on the north, against whom the Great
+ Wall proved to be a somewhat ineffectual barrier. Also with the Huns, the
+ forbears of the Turks, who once succeeded in shutting up the founder of
+ the dynasty in one of his own cities, from which he only escaped by a
+ stratagem to be related in another connexion. There were in addition wars
+ with Korea, the ultimate conquest of which led to the discovery of Japan,
+ then at a low level of civilization and unable to enter into official
+ relations with China until A.D. 57, when an embassy was sent for the first
+ time. Those who are accustomed to think of the Chinese as an eminently
+ unwarlike nation will perhaps be surprised to hear that before the end of
+ the second century B.C. they had carried their victorious arms far away
+ into Central Asia, annexing even the Pamirs and Kokand to the empire. The
+ wild tribes of modern Yunnan were reduced to subjection, and their
+ territory may further be considered as added from about this period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At home, the eunuchs gave an immense deal of trouble by their restless
+ spirit of intrigue; besides which, for nearly twenty years the Imperial
+ power was in the hands of a famous usurper, named Wang Mang (pronounced <i>Wahng
+ Mahng</i>), who had secured it by the usual means of treachery and poison,
+ to lose it on the battle-field and himself to perish shortly afterwards in
+ a revolt of his own soldiery. But the most remarkable of all events
+ connected with the Han dynasty was the extended revival of learning and
+ authorship. Texts of the Confucian Canon were rescued from hiding-places
+ in which they had been concealed at the risk of death; editing committees
+ were appointed, and immense efforts were made to repair the mischief
+ sustained by literature at the hands of the First Emperor. The scholars of
+ the day expounded the teachings of Confucius as set forth in these texts;
+ and although their explanations were set aside in the twelfth century,
+ when an entirely new set of interpretations became (and remain) the
+ accepted standard for all students, it is mostly due to those early
+ efforts that the Confucian Canon has exercised such a deep and lasting
+ influence over the minds of the Chinese people. Unfortunately, it soon
+ became the fashion to discover old texts, and many works are now in
+ circulation which have no claim whatever to the antiquity to which they
+ pretend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the four hundred years of Han supremacy the march of civilization
+ went steadily forward. Paper and ink were invented, and also the
+ camel's-hair brush, both of which gave a great impetus to the arts of
+ writing and painting, the latter being still in a very elementary stage.
+ The custom of burying slaves with the dead was abolished early in the
+ dynasty. The twenty-seven months of mourning for parents&mdash;nominally
+ three years, as is now again the rule&mdash;was reduced to a more
+ manageable period of twenty-seven days. Literary degrees were first
+ established, and perpetual hereditary rank was conferred upon the senior
+ descendant of Confucius in the male line, which has continued in unbroken
+ succession down to the present day. The head of the Confucian clan is now
+ a duke, and resides in a palace, taking rank with, if not before, the
+ highest provincial authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The extended military campaigns in Central Asia during this period brought
+ China into touch with Bactria, then an outlying province of ancient
+ Greece. From this last source, the Chinese learnt many things which are
+ now often regarded as of purely native growth. They imported the grape,
+ and made from it a wine which was in use for many centuries, disappearing
+ only about two or three hundred years ago. Formerly dependent on the
+ sun-dial alone, the Chinese now found themselves in possession of the
+ water-clock, specimens of which are still to be seen in full working
+ order, whereby the division of the day into twelve two-hour periods was
+ accurately determined. The calendar was regulated anew, and the science of
+ music was reconstructed; in fact, modern Chinese music may be said to
+ approximate closely to the music of ancient Greece. Because of the
+ difference of scale, Chinese music does not make any appeal to Western
+ ears; at any rate, not in the sense in which it appealed to Confucius, who
+ has left it on record that after listening to a certain melody he was so
+ affected as not to be able to taste meat for three months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II&mdash;LAW AND GOVERNMENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the earliest ages of which history professes to take cognizance,
+ persons who wished to dispose of their goods were obliged to have recourse
+ to barter. By and by shells were adopted as a medium of exchange, and then
+ pieces of stamped silk, linen, and deerskin. These were followed by
+ circular discs of copper, pierced with a round hole, the forerunners of
+ the ordinary copper coins of a century or two later, which had square
+ holes, and bore inscriptions, as they still do in the present day. Money
+ was also cast in the shape of "knives" and of "trouser," by which names
+ specimens of this early coinage (mostly fakes) are known to connoisseurs.
+ Some of these were beautifully finished, and even inlaid with gold. Early
+ in the ninth century, bills of exchange came into use; and from the middle
+ of the twelve century paper money became quite common, and is still in
+ general use all over China, notes being issued in some places for amounts
+ less even than a shilling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Measures of length and capacity were fixed by the Chinese after an
+ exceedingly simple process. The grain of millet, which is fairly uniform
+ in size, was taken as the unit of both. Ten of these grains, laid
+ end-ways, formed the inch, ten of which made a foot, and ten feet a <i>chang</i>.
+ The decimal system has always prevailed in China, with one curious
+ exception: sixteen ounces make a pound. How this came to be so does not
+ appear to be known; but in this case it is the pound which is the unit of
+ weight, and not the lower denomination. The word which for more than
+ twenty centuries signified "pound" to the Chinese, was originally the rude
+ picture of an axe-head; and there is no doubt that axe-heads, being all of
+ the same size, were used in weighing commodities, and were subsequently
+ split, for convenience's sake, into sixteen equal parts, each about
+ one-third heavier than the English ounce. For measures of capacity, we
+ must revert to the millet-grain, a fixed number of which set the standard
+ for Chinese pints and quarts. The result of this rule-of-thumb calculation
+ has been that weights and measures vary all over the empire, although
+ there actually exist an official foot, pound and pint, as recognized by
+ the Chinese government. In one and the same city a tailor's foot will
+ differ from a carpenter's foot, an oilman's pint from a spirit-merchant's
+ pint, and so on. The final appeal is to local custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the definitive establishment of the monarchy, two hundred years
+ before the Christian era, a system of government was inaugurated which has
+ proceeded, so far as essentials are concerned, upon almost uniform lines
+ down to the present day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is an ancient and well-recognized principle in China, that every inch
+ of soil belongs to the sovereign; consequently, all land is held on
+ consideration of a land-tax payable to the emperor, and so long as this
+ tax is forthcoming, the land in question is practically freehold, and can
+ be passed by sale from hand to hand for a small conveyancing fee to the
+ local authorities who stamp the deeds. Thus, the foreign concessions or
+ settlements in China were not sold or parted with in any way by the
+ Chinese; they were "leased in perpetuity" so long as the ground-rent is
+ paid, and remain for all municipal and such purposes under the
+ uncontrolled administration of the nation which leased them. The land-tax
+ may be regarded as the backbone of Chinese finance; but although nominally
+ collected at a fixed rate, it is subject to fluctuations due to bad
+ harvests and like visitations, in which cases the tax is accepted at a
+ lower rate, in fact at any rate the people can afford to pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The salt and other monopolies, together with the customs, also contribute
+ an important part of China's revenue. There is the old native customs
+ service, with its stations and barriers all over the empire, and the
+ foreign customs service, as established at the treaty ports only, in order
+ to deal with shipments on foreign vessels trading with China. The
+ traditional and well-marked lines of taxation are freely accepted by the
+ people; any attempt, however, to increase the amounts to be levied, or to
+ introduce new charges of any kind, unless duly authorized by the people
+ themselves, would be at once sternly resisted. As a matter of fact, the
+ authorities never run any such risks. It is customary, when absolutely
+ necessary, and possibly desirable, to increase old or to introduce new
+ levies, for the local authorities to invite the leading merchants and
+ others concerned to a private conference; and only when there is a general
+ consent of all parties do the officials venture to put forth proclamations
+ saying that such and such a tax will be increased or imposed, as the case
+ may be. Any other method may lead to disastrous results. The people refuse
+ to pay; and coercion is met at once by a general closing of shops and
+ stoppage of trade, or, in more serious cases, by an attack on the official
+ residence of the offending mandarin, who soon sees his house looted and
+ levelled with the ground. In other words, the Chinese people tax
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nominal form of government, speaking without reference to the new
+ constitution which will be dealt with later on, is an irresponsible
+ autocracy; its institutions are likewise autocratic in form, but
+ democratic in operation. The philosopher, Mencius (372-289 B.C.), placed
+ the people first, the gods second, and the sovereign third, in the scale
+ of national importance; and this classification has sunk deep into the
+ minds of the Chinese during more than two thousand years past. What the
+ people in China will not stand is injustice; at the same time they will
+ live contentedly under harsh laws which they have at one time or another
+ imposed upon themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of the great dynasties has always begun with a Penal Code of its own,
+ based upon that of the outgoing dynasty, but tending to be more and more
+ humane in character as time goes on. The punishments in old days were
+ atrocious in their severity; the Penal Code of the present dynasty, which
+ came into force some two hundred and fifty years ago, has been pronounced
+ by competent judges to take a very high rank indeed. It was introduced to
+ replace a much harsher code which had been in operation under the Ming
+ dynasty, and contains the nominally immutable laws of the empire, with
+ such modifications and restrictions as have been authorized from time to
+ time by Imperial edict. Still farther back in Chinese history, we come
+ upon punishments of ruthless cruelty, such as might be expected to prevail
+ in times of lesser culture and refinement. Two thousand years ago, the
+ Five Punishments were&mdash;branding on the forehead, cutting off the
+ nose, cutting off the feet, mutilation, and death; for the past two
+ hundred and fifty years, these have been&mdash;beating with the light
+ bamboo, beating with the heavy bamboo, transportation for a certain
+ period, banishment to a certain distance, and death, the last being
+ subdivided into strangling and decapitation, according to the gravity of
+ the offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two actual instruments of torture are mentioned, one for compressing the
+ ankle-bones, and the other for squeezing the fingers, to be used if
+ necessary to extort a confession in charges of robbery and homicide,
+ confession being regarded as essential to the completion of the record.
+ The application, however, of these tortures is fenced round in such a way
+ as to impose great responsibility upon the presiding magistrate; and in
+ addition to the risk of official impeachment, there is the more dreaded
+ certainty of loss of influence and of popular esteem. Mention is made in
+ the code of the so-called "lingering death," according to which first one
+ arm is chopped off, then the other; the two legs follow in the same way;
+ two slits are made on the breast, and the heart is torn out; decapitation
+ finishes the proceedings. It is worthy of note that, although many
+ foreigners have been present from time to time at public executions,
+ occasionally when the "lingering death" has been announced, not one has
+ established it as a fact beyond a doubt that such a process has ever been
+ carried out. Not only that; it is also well known that condemned criminals
+ are allowed to purchase of themselves, or through their friends, if they
+ have any, spirits or opium with which to fortify their courage at the last
+ moment. There is indeed a tradition that stupefying drinks are served out
+ by the officials to the batches of malefactors as they pass to the
+ execution ground at Peking. It would still remain to find executioners
+ capable of performing in cold blood such a disgusting operation as the
+ "lingering death" is supposed to be. The ordinary Chinaman is not a fiend;
+ he does not gloat in his peaceful moments, when not under the influence of
+ extreme excitement, over bloodshed and cruelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The generally lenient spirit in which the Penal Code of China was
+ conceived is either widely unknown, or very often ignored. For instance,
+ during the excessive summer heats certain punishments are mitigated, and
+ others remitted altogether. Prompt surrender and acknowledgment of an
+ offence, before it is otherwise discovered, entitles the offender, with
+ some exceptions, to a full and free pardon; as also does restitution of
+ stolen property to its owner by a repentant thief; while a criminal guilty
+ of two or more offences can be punished only to the extent of the
+ principal charge. Neither are the near relatives, nor even the servants,
+ of a guilty man, punishable for concealing his crime and assisting him to
+ escape. Immense allowances are made for the weakness of human nature, in
+ all of which may be detected the tempering doctrines of the great Sage. A
+ feudal baron was boasting to Confucius that in his part of the country the
+ people were so upright that a son would give evidence against a father who
+ had stolen a sheep. "With us," replied Confucius, "the father screens the
+ son, and the son screens the father; that is real uprightness." To another
+ questioner, a man in high authority, who complained of the number of
+ thieves, the Master explained that this was due to the greed of the upper
+ classes. "But for this greed," he added, "even if you paid people to
+ steal, they would not do so." To the same man, who inquired his views on
+ capital punishment, Confucius replied: "What need is there for capital
+ punishment at all? If your aims are worthy, the people also will be
+ worthy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many other striking features of the Penal Code. No marriage, for
+ instance, may be contracted during the period of mourning for parents,
+ which in theory extends to three full years, but in practice is reckoned
+ at twenty-seven months; neither may musical instruments be played by near
+ relatives of the dead. During the same period, no mandarin may hold
+ office, but must retire into private life; though the observance of this
+ rule is often dispensed with in the case of high officials whose presence
+ at their posts may be of considerable importance. In such cases, by
+ special grace of the emperor, the period of retirement is cut down to
+ three months, or even to one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The death of an emperor is followed by a long spell of national
+ tribulation. For one hundred days no man may have his head shaved, and no
+ woman may wear head ornaments. For twelve months there may be no marrying
+ or giving in marriage among the official classes, a term which is reduced
+ to one hundred days for the public at large. The theatres are supposed to
+ remain closed for a year, but in practice they shut only for one hundred
+ days. Even thus great hardships are entailed upon many classes of the
+ community, especially upon actors and barbers, who might be in danger of
+ actual starvation but for the common-sense of their rulers coupled with
+ the common rice-pot at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The law forbidding marriage between persons of the same surname is widely,
+ but not universally, in operation. No Smith may marry a Smith; no Jones
+ may marry a Jones; the reason of course being that all of the same surname
+ are regarded as members of the same family. However, there are large
+ districts in certain parts of China where the people are one and all of
+ the surname, and where it would be a great hardship&mdash;not to mention
+ the impossibility of enforcing the law&mdash;if intermarriages of the kind
+ were prohibited. Consequently, they are allowed, but only if the
+ contracting parties are so distantly related that, according to the legal
+ table of affinity, they would not wear mourning for one another in case of
+ death&mdash;in other words, not related at all. The line of descent is now
+ traced through the males, but there is reason to believe that in early
+ days, as is found to be often the case among uncivilized tribes, the
+ important, because more easily recognizable, parent was the mother. Thus
+ it is illegal for first cousins of the same surname to marry, and legal if
+ the surnames are different; in the latter case, however, centuries of
+ experience have taught the Chinese to frown upon such unions as
+ undesirable in the extreme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Penal Code forbids water burial, and also cremation; but it is
+ permitted to the children of a man dying at a great distance to consume
+ their father's corpse with fire if positively unable to bring it back for
+ ordinary burial in his native district. The idea is that with the aid of
+ fire immediate communication is set up with the spirit-world, and that the
+ spirit of the deceased is thus enabled to reach his native place, which
+ would be impossible were the corpse to remain intact. Hence the horror of
+ dying abroad, common to all Chinese, and only faced if there is a
+ reasonable probability that their remains will be carried back to the
+ ancestral home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the above law, the cremation of Buddhist priests is universal,
+ and the practice is tolerated without protest. Priests who are getting on
+ in years, or who are stricken with a mortal disease, are compelled by rule
+ to move into a certain part of their monastery, known as the Abode of a
+ Long Old Age, in which they are required&mdash;not to die, for death does
+ not come to a good priest, but&mdash;to enter into Nirvana, which is a
+ sublime state of conscious freedom from all mental and physical
+ disturbance, not to be adequately described in words. At death, the priest
+ is placed in a chair, his chin supported by a crutch, and then put into a
+ wooden box, which on the appointed day is carried in procession, with
+ streaming banners, through the monastery, and out into the
+ cremation-ground attached, his brother priests chanting all the while that
+ portion of the Buddhist liturgies set apart as the service for the dead,
+ but which being in Pali, not a single one of them can understand. There
+ have, of course, been many highly educated priests at one time and another
+ during the long reign of Buddhism in China; but it is safe to say that
+ they are no longer to be met with in the present day. The Buddhist
+ liturgies have been written out in Chinese characters which reproduce the
+ sounds of the original Indian language, and these the priests learn by
+ heart without understanding a word of their meaning. The box with the dead
+ man in it is now hoisted to the top of a funeral pyre, which has been well
+ drenched with oil, and set alight; and when the fire has burnt out, the
+ ashes are reverently collected and placed in an urn, which is finally
+ deposited in a mausoleum kept for that purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life is remarkably safe in China. No man can be executed until his name
+ has been submitted to the emperor, which of course means to his ministers
+ at the capital. The Chinese, however, being, as has been so often stated,
+ an eminently practical people, understand that certain cases admit of no
+ delay; and to prevent the inevitable lynching of such criminals as
+ kidnappers, rebels, and others, caught red-handed, high officials are
+ entrusted with the power of life and death, which they can put into
+ immediate operation, always taking upon themselves full responsibility for
+ their acts. The essential is to allay any excitement of the populace, and
+ to preserve the public peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the general administration of the law great latitude is allowed, and
+ injustice is rarely inflicted by a too literal interpretation of the Code.
+ Stealing is of course a crime, yet no Chinese magistrate would dream of
+ punishing a hungry man for simple theft of food, even if such a case were
+ ever brought into court. Cake-sellers keep a sharp eye on their wares;
+ farmers and market-gardeners form associates for mutual protection, and
+ woe to the thief who gets caught&mdash;his punishment is short and sharp.
+ Litigation is not encouraged, even by such facilities as ought to be given
+ to persons suffering wrongs; there is no bar, or legal profession, and
+ persons who assist plaintiffs or defendants in the conduct of cases, are
+ treated with scant courtesy by the presiding magistrate and are lucky if
+ they get off with nothing worse. The majority of commercial cases come
+ before the guilds, and are settled without reference to the authorities.
+ The ordinary Chinese dread a court of justice, as a place in which both
+ parties manage to lose something. "It is not the big devil," according to
+ the current saying, "but the little devils" who frighten the suitor away.
+ This is because official servants receive no salary, but depend for their
+ livelihood on perquisites and tips; and the Chinese suitor, who is a party
+ to the system, readily admits that it is necessary "to sprinkle a little
+ water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither do any officials in China, high or low, receive salaries, although
+ absurdly inadequate sums are allocated by the Government for that purpose,
+ for which it is considered prudent not to apply. The Chinese system is to
+ some extent the reverse of our own. Our officials collect money and pay it
+ into the Treasury, from which source fixed sums are returned to them as
+ salaries. In China, the occupants of petty posts collect revenue in
+ various ways, as taxes or fees, pay themselves as much as they dare, and
+ hand up the balance to a superior officer, who in turn pays himself in the
+ same sense, and again hands up the balance to his superior officer. When
+ the viceroy of a province is reached, he too keeps what he dares, sending
+ up to the Imperial exchequer in Peking just enough to satisfy the powers
+ above him. There is thus a continual check by the higher grade upon the
+ lower, but no check on such extortion as might be practised upon the
+ tax-payer. The tax-payer sees to that himself. Speaking generally, it may
+ be said that this system, in spite of its unsatisfactory character, works
+ fairly well. Few officials overstep the limits which custom has assigned
+ to their posts, and those who do generally come to grief. So that when the
+ dishonesty of the Chinese officials is held up to reprobation, it should
+ always be remembered that the financial side of their public service is
+ not surrounded with such formalities and safeguards as to make robbery of
+ public money difficult, if not almost impossible. It is, therefore, all
+ the more cheering when we find, as is frequently the case, retiring or
+ transferred mandarins followed by the good wishes and affection of the
+ people over whom they have been set to rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until quite recently, there has been no such thing in China as municipal
+ administration and rating, and even now such methods are only being
+ tentatively introduced in large cities where there are a number of foreign
+ residents. Occupants of houses are popularly supposed to "sweep the snow
+ from their own doorsteps," but the repair of roads, bridges, drains, etc.,
+ has always been left to the casual philanthropy of wealthy individuals,
+ who take these opportunities of satisfying public opinion in regard to the
+ obligations of the rich towards the poor. Consequently, Chinese cities are
+ left without efficient lighting, draining, or scavengering; and it is
+ astonishing how good the health of the people living under these
+ conditions can be. There is no organized police force; but cities are
+ divided into wards, and at certain points barriers are drawn across the
+ streets at night, with perhaps one watchman to each. It is not considered
+ respectable to be out late at night, and it is not safe to move about
+ without a lantern, which is carried, for those who can afford the luxury,
+ by a servant preceding them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One difference between life in China and life in this country may be
+ illustrated to a certain extent in the following way. Supposing a
+ traveller, passing through an English village, to be hit on the head by a
+ stone. Unless he can point out his assailant, the matter is at an end. In
+ China, all the injured party has to do is to point out the village&mdash;or,
+ if a town, the ward&mdash;in which he was assaulted. Then the headman of
+ such town or ward is summoned before the authorities and fined,
+ proportionately to the offence, for allowing rowdy behaviour in his
+ district. The headman takes good care that he does not pay the fine
+ himself. In the same way, parents are held responsible for the acts of
+ their children, and householders for those of their servants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III&mdash;RELIGION AND SUPERSTITION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese are emphatically not a religious people, though they are very
+ superstitious. Belief in a God has come down from the remotest ages, but
+ the old simple creed has been so overlaid by Buddhism as not to be
+ discernible at the present day. Buddhism is now the dominant religion of
+ China. It is closely bound up with the lives of the people, and is a
+ never-failing refuge in sickness or worldly trouble. It is no longer the
+ subtle doctrine which was originally presented to the people of India, but
+ something much more clearly defined and appreciable by the plainest
+ intellect. Buddha is the saviour of the people through righteousness
+ alone, and Buddhist saints are popularly supposed to possess intercessory
+ powers. Yet reverence is always wanting; and crowds will laugh and talk,
+ and buy and sell sweetmeats, in a Buddhist temple, before the very eyes of
+ the most sacred images. So long as divine intervention is not required, an
+ ordinary Chinaman is content to neglect his divinities; but no sooner does
+ sickness or financial trouble come upon the family, than he will hurry off
+ to propitiate the gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He accomplishes this through the aid of the priests, who receive his
+ offerings of money, and light candles or incense at the shrine of the
+ deity to be invoked. Buddhist priests are not popular with the Chinese,
+ who make fun of their shaven heads, and doubt the sincerity of their
+ convictions as well as the purity of their lives. "No meat nor wine may
+ enter here" is a legend inscribed at the gate of most Buddhist temples,
+ the ordinary diet as served in the refectory being strictly vegetarian. A
+ tipsy priest, however, is not an altogether unheard-of combination, and
+ has provided more than one eminent artist with a subject of an interesting
+ picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the ordeal through which a novice must pass before being admitted to
+ holy orders is a severe tax upon nerve and endurance. In the process of a
+ long ritual, at least three, or even so many as nine, pastilles are placed
+ upon the bald scalp of the head. These are then lighted, and allowed to
+ burn down into the skin until permanent scars have been formed, the
+ unfortunate novice being supported on both sides by priests who encourage
+ him all the time to bear what must be excruciating pain. The fully
+ qualified priest receives a diploma, on the strength of which he may
+ demand a day and a night's board and lodging from the priests of any
+ temple all over the empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a very early date Buddhism had already taken a firm hold on the
+ imagination of Chinese poets and painters, the latter of whom loved to
+ portray the World-honoured One in a dazzling hue of gold. A poet of the
+ eighth century A.D., who realized for the first time the inward meaning of
+ the Law, as it is called, ended a panegyric on Buddhism with the following
+ lines:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ O thou pure Faith, had I but known thy scope,
+ The Golden God had long since been my hope!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Taoism is a term often met with in books about China. We are told that the
+ three religions of the people are Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism, this
+ being the order of precedence assigned to them in A.D. 568. Confucianism
+ is of course not a religion at all, dealing as it does with duty towards
+ one's neighbour and the affairs of this life only; and it will be seen
+ that Taoism, in its true sense, has scarcely a stronger claim. At a very
+ remote day, some say a thousand, and others six hundred, years before the
+ Christian era, there flourished a wise man named Lao Tzu, which may be
+ approximately pronounced as <i>Loudza</i> (<i>ou</i> as in <i>loud</i>),
+ and understood to mean the Old Philosopher. He was a very original
+ thinker, and a number of his sayings have been preserved to us by ancient
+ authors, whom they had reached by tradition; that is to say, the Old
+ Philosopher never put his doctrines into book form. There is indeed in
+ existence a work which passes under his name, but it is now known to be a
+ forgery, and is generally discarded by scholars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great flaw in the teaching of the Old Philosopher was its extremely
+ impractical character, its unsuitability to the needs of men and women
+ engaged in the ordinary avocations of life. In one sense he was an
+ Anarchist, for he held that the empire would fare better if there were no
+ government at all, the fact being that violence and disorder had always
+ been conspicuous even under the best rulers. Similarly, he argued that we
+ should get along more profitably with less learning, because then there
+ would be fewer thieves, successful thieving being the result of mental
+ training. It is not necessary to follow him to his most famous doctrine,
+ namely, that of doing nothing, by which means, he declared, everything
+ could be done, the solution of which puzzle of left everybody to find out
+ for himself. Among his quaint sayings will be found several maxims of a
+ very different class, as witness his injunction, "Requite evil with
+ kindness," and "Mighty is he who conquers himself." Of the latter, the
+ following illustration is given by a commentator. Two men meeting in the
+ street, one said to the other, "How fat you have grown!" "Yes," replied
+ his friend, "I have lately won a battle." "What do you mean?" inquired the
+ former. "Why, you see," said the latter, "so long as I was at home,
+ reading about ancient kings, I admired nothing but virtue; then, when I
+ went out of doors, I was attracted by the charms of wealth and power.
+ These two feelings fought inside me, and I began to lose flesh; but now
+ love of virtue has conquered, and I am fat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The teachings of the Old Philosopher were summed up in the word <i>Tao</i>,
+ pronounced as <i>tou(t)</i>, which originally meant a road, a way; and as
+ applied to doctrines means simply the right way or path of moral conduct,
+ in which mankind should tread so as to lead correct and virtuous lives.
+ Later on, when Buddhism was introduced, this Taoism, with all its
+ paradoxes and subtleties, to which alchemy and the concoction of an elixir
+ of life had been added, gradually began to lose its hold upon the people;
+ and in order to stem the tide of opposition, temples and monasteries were
+ built, a priesthood was established in imitation of the Buddhists, and all
+ kinds of ceremonies and observances were taken from Buddhism, until, at
+ the present day, only those who know can tell one from the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although alchemy, which was introduced from Greece, via Bactria, in the
+ second century B.C., has long ceased to interest the Chinese public, who
+ have found out that gold is more easily made from the sweat of the brow
+ than from copper or lead; and although only a few silly people now believe
+ that any mixture of drugs will produce an elixir of life, able to confer
+ immortality upon those who drink it; nevertheless, Taoism still professes
+ to teach the art of extending life, if not indefinitely, at any rate to a
+ considerable length. This art would probably go some way towards extending
+ life under any circumstances, for it consists chiefly in deep and regular
+ breathing, preferably of morning air, in swallowing the saliva three times
+ in every two hours, in adopting certain positions for the body and limbs,
+ which are also strengthened by gymnastic exercises, and finally, as
+ borrowed from the Buddhists, in remaining motionless for some hours a day,
+ the eyes shut, and the mind abstracted as much as possible from all
+ surrounding influences. The upshot of these and other practices is the
+ development of "the pure man," on which Chuang Tzu (<i>Chwongdza</i>), a
+ Taoist philosopher of the third and fourth centuries B.C., to be mentioned
+ again, writes as follows: "But what is a pure man? The pure men of old
+ acted without calculation, not seeking to secure results. They laid no
+ plans. Therefore, failing, they had no cause for regret; succeeding, no
+ cause for congratulation. And thus they could scale heights without fear;
+ enter water without becoming wet, and fire without feeling hot. The pure
+ men of old slept without dreams, and waked without anxiety. They ate
+ without discrimination, breathing deep breaths. For pure men draw breath
+ from their heels; the vulgar only from their throats."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coupled with what may be called intellectual Taoism, as opposed to the
+ grosser form under which this faith appeals to the people at large, is a
+ curious theory that human life reaches the earth from some extraordinarily
+ dazzling centre away in the depths of space, "beyond the range of
+ conceptions." This centre appears to be the home of eternal principles,
+ the abode of a First Cause, where perfectly spotless and pure beings
+ "drink of the spiritual and feed on force," and where likeness exists
+ without form. To get back to that state should be the object of all men,
+ and this is only to be attained by a process of mental and physical
+ purification prolonged through all conditions of existence. Then, when
+ body and soul are fitted for the change, there comes what ordinary mortals
+ call death; and the pure being closes his eyes, to awake forthwith in his
+ original glory from the sleep which mortals call life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many centuries Buddhism and Taoism were in bitter antagonism.
+ Sometimes the court was Buddhist, sometimes Taoist; first one faith was
+ suppressed altogether, then the other; in A.D. 574 both were abolished in
+ deference to Confucianism, which, however, no emperor has ever dared to
+ interfere with seriously. At present, all the "three religions" flourish
+ happily side by side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese believe firmly in the existence of spirits, which they
+ classify simply as good and evil. They do not trouble their heads much
+ about the former, but they are terribly afraid of the latter. Hideous
+ devils infest dark corners, and lie in wait to injure unfortunate
+ passers-by, often for no cause whatever. The spirits of persons who have
+ been wronged are especially dreaded by those who have done the wrong. A
+ man who has been defrauded of money will commit suicide, usually by
+ poison, at the door of the wrongdoer, who will thereby first fall into the
+ hands of the authorities, and if he escapes in that quarter, will still
+ have to count with the injured ghost of his victim. A daughter-in-law will
+ drown or hang herself to get free from, and also to avenge, the tyranny or
+ cruelty of her husband's mother. These acts lead at once to family feuds,
+ which sometimes end in bloodshed; more often in money compensation; and
+ the known risk of such contingencies operates as a wholesome check upon
+ aggressive treatment of the weak by the strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Divination and fortune-telling have always played a conspicuous part in
+ ordinary Chinese life. Wise men, of the magician type, sit at stalls in
+ street and market-place, ready for a small fee to advise those who consult
+ them on any enterprise to be undertaken, even of the most trivial kind.
+ The omens can be taken in various ways, as by calculation based upon
+ books, of which there is quite a literature, or by drawing lots inscribed
+ with mystic signs, to be interpreted by the fortune-teller. Even at
+ Buddhist temples may be found two kidney-shaped pieces of wood, flat on
+ one side and round on the other, which are thrown into the air before an
+ altar, the results&mdash;two flats, two rounds, or one of each&mdash;being
+ interpreted as unfavourable, medium, and very favourable, respectively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all Chinese superstitions, the one that has been most persistent, and
+ has exerted the greatest influence upon national life, is the famous
+ Wind-and-Water system (<i>feng shui</i>) of geomancy. According to the
+ principles which govern this system, and of which quite a special
+ literature exists, the good or evil fortunes of individuals and the
+ communities are determined by the various physical aspects and conditions
+ which surround their everyday life. The shapes of hills, the presence or
+ absence of water, the position of trees, the height of buildings, and so
+ forth, are all matters of deep consideration to the professors of the
+ geomantic art, who thrive on the ignorance of superstitious clients. They
+ are called in to select propitious sites for houses and graves; and it
+ often happens that if the fortunes of a family are failing, a geomancer
+ will be invited to modify in some way the arrangement of the ancestral
+ graveyard. Houses in a Chinese street are never built up so as to form a
+ line of uniform height; every now and again one house must be a little
+ higher or a little lower than its neighbour, or calamity will certainly
+ ensue. It is impossible to walk straight into an ordinary middle-class
+ dwelling-house. Just inside the front door there will be a fixed screen,
+ which forces the visitor to turn to the right or to the left; the avowed
+ object being to exclude evil spirits, which can only move in straight
+ lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mention of the ancestral graveyard brings to mind the universal worship of
+ ancestors, which has been from time immemorial such a marked feature of
+ Chinese religious life. At death, the spirit of a man or woman is believed
+ to remain watching over the material interests of the family to which the
+ deceased had belonged. Offerings of various kinds, including meat and
+ drink, are from time to time made to such a spirit, supposed to be
+ particularly resident in an ancestral hall&mdash;or cupboard, as the case
+ may be. These offerings are made for the special purpose of conciliating
+ the spirit, and of obtaining in return a liberal share of the blessings
+ and good things of this life. This is the essential feature of the rite,
+ and this it is which makes the rite an act of worship pure and simple; so
+ that only superficial observers could make the mistake of classifying
+ ancestral worship, as practised in China, with such acts as laying wreaths
+ upon the tombs of deceased friends and relatives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With reference to the spirit or soul, the Chinese have held for centuries
+ past that the soul of every man is twofold; in a popular acceptation it is
+ sometimes regarded as threefold. One portion is that which expresses the
+ visible personality, and is permanently attached to the body; the other
+ has the power of leaving the body, carrying with it an appearance of
+ physical form, which accounts for a person being seen in two different
+ places at once. Cases of catalepsy or trance are explained by the Chinese
+ as the absence from the body of this portion of the soul, which is also
+ believed to be expelled from the body by any violent shock or fright.
+ There is a story of a man who was so terrified at the prospect of
+ immediate execution that his separable soul left his body, and he found
+ himself sitting on the eaves of a house, from which point he could see a
+ man bound, and waiting for the executioner's sword. Just then, a reprieve
+ arrived, and in a moment he was back again in his body. Mr. Edmund Gosse,
+ who can hardly have been acquainted with the Chinese view, told a similar
+ story in his <i>Father and Son</i>: "During morning and evening prayers,
+ which were extremely lengthy and fatiguing, I fancied that one of my two
+ selves could flit up, and sit clinging to the cornice, and look down on my
+ other self and the rest of us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some parts of China, planchette is frequently resorted to as a means of
+ reading the future, and adapting one's actions accordingly. It is a purely
+ professional performance, being carried through publicly before some altar
+ in a temple, and payment made for the response. The question is written
+ down on a piece of paper, which is burnt at the altar apparently before
+ any one could gather knowledge of its contents; and the answer from the
+ god is forthwith traced on a tray of sand, word by word, each word being
+ obliterated to make room for the next, by two men, supposed to be ignorant
+ of the question, who hold the ends of a V-shaped instrument from the point
+ of which a little wooden pencil projects at right angles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another method of extracting information from the spirits of the unseen
+ world is nothing more or less than hypnotism, which has long been known to
+ the Chinese, and is mentioned in literature so far back as the middle of
+ the seventeenth century. With all the paraphernalia of altar, candles,
+ incense, etc., a medium is thrown into a hypnotic condition, during which
+ his body is supposed to be possessed by a spirit, and every word he may
+ utter to be divinely inspired. An amusing instance is recorded of a medium
+ who, while under hypnotic influence, not only blurted out the pecuniary
+ defalcations of certain men who had been collecting in aid of temple
+ restoration, but went so far as to admit that he had had some of the money
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This same influence is also used in cases of serious illness, but always
+ secretly, for such practices, as well as dark <i>seances</i> for
+ communicating with spirits, are strictly forbidden by the Chinese
+ authorities, who regard the employment of occult means as more likely to
+ be subversive of morality than to do any good whatever to a sick person,
+ or to any one else. All secret societies of any sort or kind are equally
+ under the ban of the law, the assumption&mdash;a very justifiable one&mdash;being
+ that the aim of these societies is to upset the existing order of
+ political and social life. The Heaven-and-Earth Society is among the most
+ famous, and the most dreaded, partly perhaps because it has never been
+ entirely suppressed. The lodges of this fraternity, the oath of fidelity,
+ and the ceremonial of admission, remind one forcibly of Masonry in the
+ West; but the points of conduct are merely coincidences, and there does
+ not appear to be any real connexion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the most curious of all these institutions is the Golden Orchid
+ Society, the girl-members of which swear never to marry, and not only
+ threaten, but positively commit suicide upon any attempt at coercion. At
+ one time this society became such a serious menace that the authorities
+ were compelled to adopt severe measures of repression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another old-established society is that of the Vegetarians, who eat no
+ meat and neither smoke nor drink. From their seemingly harmless ranks it
+ is said that the Boxers of 1900 were largely recruited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For nearly twenty-five centuries the Chinese have looked to Confucius for
+ their morals. Various religions have appealed to the spiritual side of the
+ Chinese mind, and Buddhism has obtained an ascendancy which will not be
+ easily displaced; but through all this long lapse of time the morality of
+ China has been under the guidance of their great teacher, Confucius
+ (551-479 B.C.), affectionately known to them as the "uncrowned king," and
+ recently raised to the rank of a god.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His doctrines, in the form sometimes of maxims, sometimes of answers to
+ eager inquirers, were brought together after his death&mdash;we do not
+ know exactly how soon&mdash;and have influenced first and last an enormous
+ proportion of the human race. Confucius taught man's duty to his
+ neighbour; he taught virtue for virtue's sake, and not for the hope of
+ reward or fear of punishment; he taught loyalty to the sovereign as the
+ foundation stone of national prosperity, and filial piety as the basis of
+ all happiness in the life of the people. As a simple human moralist he saw
+ clearly the limitations of humanity, and refused to teach his disciples to
+ return good for evil, as suggested by the Old Philosopher, declaring
+ without hesitation that evil should be met by justice. The first
+ systematic writer of Chinese history, who died about 80 B.C., expressed
+ himself on the position and influence of Confucius in terms which have
+ been accepted as accurate for twenty centuries past: "Countless are the
+ princes and prophets that the world has seen in its time&mdash;glorious in
+ life, forgotten in death. But Confucius, though only a humble member of
+ the cotton-clothed masses, remains with us after numerous generations. He
+ is the model for such as would be wise. By all, from the Son of Heaven
+ down to the meanest student, the supremacy of his principles is freely and
+ fully admitted. He may indeed be pronounced the divinest of men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Son of Heaven is of course the Emperor, who is supposed to be God's
+ chosen representative on earth, and responsible for the right conduct and
+ well-being of all committed to his care. Once every year he proceeds in
+ state to the Temple of Heaven at Peking; and after the due performance of
+ sacrificial worship he enters alone the central raised building with
+ circular blue-tiled roof, and there places himself in communication with
+ the Supreme Being, submitting for approval or otherwise his stewardship
+ during the preceding twelve months. Chinese records go so far as to
+ mention letters received from God. There is a legend of the sixth century
+ A.D., which claims that God revealed Himself to a hermit in a retired
+ valley, and bestowed on him a tablet of jade with a mysterious
+ inscription. But there is a much more circumstantial account of a written
+ communication which in A.D. 1008 descended from heaven upon mount T'ai,
+ the famous mountain in Shantung, where a temple has been built to mark the
+ very spot. The emperor and his courtiers regarded this letter with
+ profound reverence and awe, which roused the ire of a learned statesman of
+ the day. The latter pointed out that Confucius, when asked to speak, so
+ that his disciples might have something to record, had bluntly replied:
+ "Does God speak? The four seasons pursue their courses and all things are
+ produced; but does God say anything?" Therefore, he argued, if God does
+ not speak to us, still less will He write a letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that the receipt of such a letter is mentioned in the dynastic
+ history of the period must not be allowed to discredit in any way the
+ general truth and accuracy of Chinese annals, which, as research
+ progresses, are daily found to be far more trustworthy than was ever
+ expected to be the case. We ourselves do not wholly reject the old
+ contemporary chronicles of Hoveden and Roger of Wendover because they
+ mention a letter from Christ on the neglect of the Sabbath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Chinese life, social and political alike, filial piety may be regarded
+ as the keystone of the arch. Take that away, and the superstructure of
+ centuries crumbles to the ground. When Confucius was asked by one of his
+ disciples to explain what constituted filial piety, he replied that it was
+ a difficult obligation to define; while to another disciple he was able to
+ say without hesitation that the mere support of parents would be
+ insufficient, inasmuch as food is what is supplied even to horses and
+ dogs. According to the story-books for children, the obligation has been
+ interpreted by the people at large in many different ways. The twenty-four
+ standard examples of filial children include a son who allowed mosquitoes
+ to feed upon him, and did not drive them away lest they should go and
+ annoy his parents; another son who wept so passionately because he could
+ procure no bamboo shoots for his mother that the gods were touched, and up
+ out of the ground came some shoots which he gathered and carried home;
+ another who when carrying buckets of water would slip and fall on purpose,
+ in order to make his parents laugh; and so on. No wonder that Confucius
+ found filial piety beyond his powers of definition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now for a genuine example. There is a very wonderful novel in which a very
+ affecting love-story is worked out to a terribly tragic conclusion. The
+ heroine, a beautiful and fascinating girl, finally dies of consumption,
+ and the hero, a wayward but none the less fascinating youth, enters the
+ Buddhist priesthood. A lady, the mother of a clever young official, was so
+ distressed by the pathos of the tale that she became quite ill, and
+ doctors prescribed medicines in vain. At length, when things were becoming
+ serious, the son set to work and composed a sequel to this novel, in which
+ he resuscitated the heroine and made the lovers happy by marriage; and in
+ a short time he had the intense satisfaction of seeing his mother restored
+ to health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other forms of filial piety, which bear no relation whatever to the
+ fanciful fables given above, are commonly practised by all classes. In
+ consequence of the serious or prolonged illness of parents, it is very
+ usual for sons and daughters to repair to the municipal temple and pray
+ that a certain number of years may be cut off their own span of life and
+ added to that of the sick parents in question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us now pause to take stock of some of the results which have accrued
+ from the operation and influence of Confucianism during such a long
+ period, and over such swarming myriads of the human race. It is a
+ commonplace in the present day to assert that the Chinese are hardworking,
+ thrifty, and sober&mdash;the last-mentioned, by the way, in a land where
+ drunkenness is not regarded as a crime. Shallow observers of the
+ globe-trotter type, who have had their pockets picked by professional
+ thieves in Hong-Kong, and even resident observers who have not much
+ cultivated their powers of observation and comparison, will assert that
+ honesty is a virtue denied to the Chinese; but those who have lived long
+ in China and have more seriously devoted themselves to discover the truth,
+ may one and all be said to be arrayed upon the other side. The amount of
+ solid honesty to be met with in every class, except the professionally
+ criminal class, is simply astonishing. That the word of the Chinese
+ merchant is as good as his bond has long since become a household word,
+ and so it is in other walks of life. With servants from respectable
+ families, the householder need have no fear for his goods. "Be loyal,"
+ says the native maxim, "to the master whose rice you eat;" and this maxim
+ is usually fulfilled to the letter. Hence, it is that many foreigners who
+ have been successful in their business careers, take care to see, on their
+ final departure from the East, that the old and faithful servant, often of
+ twenty to thirty years' standing, shall have some provision for himself
+ and his family. In large establishments, especially banks, in which great
+ interests are at stake, it is customary for the Chinese staff to be
+ guaranteed by some wealthy man (or firm), who deposits securities for a
+ considerable amount, thus placing the employer in a very favourable
+ position. The properly chosen Chinese servant who enters the household of
+ a foreigner, is a being to whom, as suggested above, his master often
+ becomes deeply attached, and whom he parts with, often after many years of
+ service, to his everlasting regret. Such a servant has many virtues. He is
+ noiseless over his work, which he performs efficiently. He can stay up
+ late, and yet rise early. He lives on the establishment, but in an
+ out-building. He provides his own food. He rarely wants to absent himself,
+ and even then will always provide a reliable <i>locum tenens</i>. He
+ studies his master's ways, and learns to anticipate his slightest wishes.
+ In return for these and other services he expects to get his wages
+ punctually paid, and to be allowed to charge, without any notice being
+ taken of the same, a commission on all purchases. This is the Chinese
+ system, and even a servant absolutely honest in any other way cannot
+ emancipate himself from its grip. But if treated fairly, he will not abuse
+ his chance. One curious feature of the system is that if one master is in
+ a relatively higher position than another, the former will be charged by
+ his servants slightly more than the latter by his servants for precisely
+ the same article. Many attempts have been made by foreigners to break
+ through this "old custom," especially by offering higher wages; but signal
+ failure has always been the result, and those masters have invariably
+ succeeded best who have fallen in with the existing institution, and have
+ tried to make the best of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is one more, and in many ways the most important, side of a Chinese
+ servant's character. He will recognize frankly, and without a pang, the
+ superior position and the rights of his master; but at the same time, if
+ worth keeping, he will exact from his master the proper respect due from
+ man to man. It is wholly beside the mark to say that he will not put up
+ for a moment with the cuffs and kicks so freely administered to his Indian
+ colleague. A respectable Chinese servant will often refuse to remain with
+ a master who uses abusive or violent language, or shows signs of
+ uncontrollable temper. A lucrative place is as nothing compared with the
+ "loss of face" which he would suffer in the eyes of his friends; in other
+ words, with his loss of dignity as a man. If a servant will put up with a
+ blow, the best course is to dismiss him at once, as worthless and
+ unreliable, if not actually dangerous. Confucius said: "If you mistrust a
+ man, do not employ him; if you employ a man, do not mistrust him;" and
+ this will still be found to be an excellent working rule in dealings with
+ Chinese servants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV&mdash;A.D. 220-1200
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The long-lived and glorious House of Han was brought to a close by the
+ usual causes. There were palace intrigues and a temporary usurpation of
+ the throne, eunuchs of course being in the thick of the mischief; added to
+ which a very serious rebellion broke out, almost as a natural consequence.
+ First and last there arose three aspirants to the Imperial yellow, which
+ takes the place of purple in ancient Rome; the result being that, after
+ some years of hard fighting, China was divided into three parts, each
+ ruled by one of the three rivals. The period is known in history as that
+ of the Three Kingdoms, and lasted from A.D. 220 to A.D. 265. This short
+ space of time was filled, especially the early years, with stirring deeds
+ of heroism and marvellous strategical operations, fortune favouring first
+ one of the three commanders and then another. The whole story of these
+ civil wars is most graphically told in a famous historical romance
+ composed about a thousand years afterwards. As in the case of the Waverley
+ novels, a considerable amount of fiction has been interwoven with truth to
+ make the narrative more palatable to the general reader; but its basis is
+ history, and the work is universally regarded among the Chinese themselves
+ as one of the most valuable productions in the lighter branches of their
+ literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three to four centuries which follow on the above period were a time
+ of political and social disorganisation, unfavourable, according to
+ Chinese writers, to the development of both literature and art. The House
+ of Chin, which at first held sway over a once more united empire, was
+ severely harassed by the Tartars on the north, who were in turn
+ overwhelmed by the House of Toba. The latter ruled for some two hundred
+ years over northern China, while the southern portions were governed by
+ several short-lived native dynasties. A few points in connexion with these
+ times deserve perhaps brief mention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old rule of twenty-seven months of mourning for parents was
+ re-established, and has continued in force down to the present day. The
+ Japanese sent occasional missions, with tribute; and the Chinese, who had
+ already in A.D. 240 dispatched an envoy to Japan, repeated the compliment
+ in 608. An attempt was made to conquer Korea, and envoys were sent to
+ countries as far off as Siam. Buddhism, which had been introduced many
+ centuries previously&mdash;no one can exactly say when&mdash;began to
+ spread far and wide, and appeared to be firmly established. In A.D. 399 a
+ Buddhist priest, named Fa Hsien, started from Central China and travelled
+ to India across the great desert and over the Hindu Kush, subsequently
+ visiting Patna, Benares, Buddha-Gaya, and other well-known spots, which he
+ accurately described in the record of his journey published on his return
+ and still in existence. His object was to obtain copies of the sacred
+ books, relics and images, illustrative of the faith; and these he safely
+ conveyed to China by sea from India, via Ceylon (where he spent three
+ years), and Sumatra, arriving after an absence of fifteen years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year A.D. 618 the House of T'ang entered upon its glorious course
+ of three centuries in duration. Under a strong but dissolute ruler
+ immediately preceding, China had once more become a united empire,
+ undivided against itself; and although wars and rebellions were not
+ wanting to disturb the even tenor of its way, the general picture
+ presented to us under the new dynasty of the T'angs is one of national
+ peace, prosperity, and progress. The name of this House has endured, like
+ that of Han, to the present day in the popular language of the people; for
+ just as the northerners still delight to style themselves "good sons of
+ Han," so are the southerners still proud to speak of themselves as "men of
+ T'ang."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the chief political events of this period was the usurpation of
+ power by the Empress Wu&mdash;at first, as nominal regent on behalf of a
+ step-child, the son and heir of her late husband by his first wife, and
+ afterwards, when she had set aside the step-child, on her own account.
+ There had been one previous instance of a woman wielding the Imperial
+ sceptre, namely, the Empress Lu of the Han dynasty, to whom the Chinese
+ have accorded the title of legitimate ruler, which has not been allowed to
+ the Empress Wu. The latter, however, was possessed of much actual ability,
+ mixed with a kind of midsummer madness; and so long as her great
+ intellectual faculties remained unimpaired, she ruled, like her successor
+ of some twelve centuries afterwards, with a rod of iron. In her old age
+ she was deposed and dismissed to private life, the rightful heir being
+ replaced upon his father's throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the more extravagant acts of her reign are some which are still
+ familiar to the people of to-day. Always, even while her husband was
+ alive, she was present, behind a curtain, at councils and audiences; after
+ his death she was accustomed to take her place openly among the ministers
+ of state, wearing a false beard. In 694 she gave herself the title of
+ Divine Empress, and in 696 she even went so far as to style herself God
+ Almighty. In her later years she became hopelessly arrogant and
+ overbearing. No one was allowed to say that the Empress was fair as a lily
+ or lovely as a rose, but that the lily was fair or the rose lovely as Her
+ Majesty. She tried to spread the belief that she was really the Supreme
+ Being by forcing flowers artificially and then in the presence of her
+ courtiers ordering them to bloom. On one occasion she commanded some
+ peonies to bloom; and because they did not instantly obey, she caused
+ every peony in the capital to be pulled up and burnt, and prohibited the
+ cultivation of peonies ever afterwards. She further decided to place her
+ sex once and for all on an equality with man. For that purpose women were
+ admitted to the public examinations, official posts being conferred upon
+ those who were successful; and among other things they were excused from
+ kneeling while giving evidence in courts of justice. This innovation,
+ however, did not fulfil its promise; and with the disappearance of its
+ vigorous foundress, the system also disappeared. It was not actually the
+ first time in Chinese history that the experiment had been tried. An
+ emperor of the third century A.D. had already opened public life to women,
+ and it is said that many of them rose to high office; but here too the
+ system was of short duration, and the old order was soon restored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another striking picture of the T'ang dynasty is presented by the career
+ of an emperor who is usually spoken of as Ming Huang, and who, after
+ distinguishing himself at several critical junctures, mounted the throne
+ in 712, in succession to his father, who had abdicated in his favour. He
+ began with economy, closing the silk factories and forbidding the palace
+ ladies to wear jewels or embroideries, considerable quantities of which
+ were actually burnt. He was a warm patron of literature, and schools were
+ established in every village. Fond of music, he founded a college for
+ training youth of both sexes in this art. His love of war and his growing
+ extravagance led to increased taxation, with the usual consequences in
+ China&mdash;discontent and rebellion. He surrounded himself by a brilliant
+ court, welcoming men of genius in literature and art; at first for their
+ talents alone, but finally for their readiness to participate in scenes of
+ revelry and dissipation provided for the amusement of a favourite
+ concubine, the ever-famous Yang Kuei-fei (pronounced <i>Kway-fay</i>).
+ Eunuchs were appointed to official posts, and the grossest forms of
+ religious superstition were encouraged. Women ceased to veil themselves,
+ as of old. At length, in 755, a serious rebellion broke out, and a year
+ later the emperor, now an old man of seventy-one, fled before the storm.
+ He had not proceeded far before his soldiery revolted and demanded
+ vengeance upon the whole family of the favourite, several unworthy members
+ of which had been raised to high positions and loaded with honours. The
+ wretched emperor was forced to order the head eunuch to strangle his
+ idolized concubine, while the rest of her family perished at the hands of
+ the troops. He subsequently abdicated in favour of his son, and spent the
+ last six years of his life in seclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This tragic story has been exquisitely told in verse by one of China's
+ foremost poets, who was born only a few years later. He divides his poem
+ into eight parts, dealing with the <i>ennui</i> of the monarch until he
+ discovers <i>beauty</i>, the <i>revelry</i> of the pair together, followed
+ by the horrors of <i>flight</i>, to end in the misery of <i>exile</i>
+ without her, the <i>return</i> when the emperor passes again by the fatal
+ spot, <i>home</i> where everything reminds him of her, and finally <i>spirit-land</i>.
+ This last is a figment of the poet's imagination. He pictures the
+ disconsolate emperor sending a magician to discover Yang Kuei-fei's
+ whereabouts in the next world, and to bear to her a message of
+ uninterrupted love. The magician, after a long search, finds her in one of
+ the Isles of the Blest, and fulfils his commission accordingly.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Her features are fixed and calm, though myriad tears fall,
+ Wetting a spray of pear-bloom, as it were with the raindrops of
+ spring.
+ Subduing her emotions, restraining her grief, she tenders thanks
+ to His Majesty.
+ Saying how since their parting she had missed his form and voice;
+ And how, although their love on earth had so soon come to an end,
+ The days and months among the Blest were still of long duration.
+ And now she turns and gazes towards the above of mortals,
+ But cannot discern the Imperial city, lost in the dust and haze.
+ Then she takes out the old keepsake, tokens of undying love,
+ A gold hairpin, an enamel brooch, and bids the magician carry
+ these back.
+ One half of the hairpin she keeps, and one half of the enamel
+ brooch,
+ Breaking with her hands the yellow gold, and dividing the enamel
+ in two.
+ "Tell him," she said, "to be firm of heart, as this gold and
+ enamel,
+ And then in heaven or on earth below we two may meet once more."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The magnificent House of T'ang was succeeded by five insignificant
+ dynasties, the duration of all of which was crowded into about half a
+ century. Then, in A.D. 960, began the rule of the Sungs (pronounced <i>Soongs</i>),
+ to last for three hundred years and rival in national peace and prosperity
+ any other period in the history of China. The nation had already in a
+ great measure settled down to that state of material civilization and
+ mental culture in which it has remained to the present time. To the
+ appliances of ordinary Chinese life it is probable that but few additions
+ have been made since a very early date. The dress of the people has indeed
+ undergone several variations, but the ploughs and hoes, the water-wheels
+ and well-sweeps, the tools of the artisans, mud huts, carts, junks,
+ chairs, tables, chopsticks, etc., which we still see in China, are
+ probably very much those of two thousand years ago. Mencius, of the third
+ century B.C., observed that written characters had the same form, and
+ axle-trees the same breadth, all over the empire; and to this day an
+ unaltering uniformity is one of the chief characteristics of the Chinese
+ people in every department of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite, however, of the peaceful aspirations of the House of Sung, the
+ Kitan Tartars were for ever encroaching upon Chinese territory, and
+ finally overran and occupied a large part of northern China, with their
+ capital where Peking now stands. This resulted in an amicable arrangement
+ to divide the empire, the Kitans retaining their conquests in the north,
+ from which, after about two hundred years, they were in turn expelled by
+ the Golden Tartars, who had previously been subject to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many volumes, rather than pages, would be required to do justice to the
+ statesmen, soldiers, philosophers, poets, historians, art critics, and
+ other famous men of this dynasty. It has already been stated that the
+ interpretation of the Confucian Canon, accepted at the present day, dates
+ from this period; and it may now be of interest to give a brief account of
+ another remarkable movement connected with the dynasty, though in quite a
+ different line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wang An-shih (as <i>shi</i> in <i>shirk</i>), popularly known as the
+ Reformer, was born in 1021. In his youth a keen student, his pen seemed to
+ fly over the paper. He rose to high office; and by the time he was
+ forty-eight he found himself installed as confidential adviser to the
+ emperor. He then entered upon a series of startling political reforms,
+ said to be based upon new and more correct interpretations of portions of
+ the Confucian Canon, which still remained, so far as explanation was
+ concerned, just as it had been left by the scholars of the Han dynasty.
+ This appeal to authority was, of course, a mere blind, cleverly introduced
+ to satisfy the bulk of the population, who were always unwilling to move
+ in any direction where no precedent is forthcoming. One of his schemes,
+ the express object of which was to decrease taxation and at the same time
+ to increase the revenue, was to secure a sure and certain market for all
+ products, as follows. From the produce of a given district, enough was to
+ be set aside (1) for the payment of taxes, and (2) to supply the wants of
+ the district; (3) the balance was then to be taken over by the state at a
+ low rate, and held for a rise or forwarded to some centre where there
+ happened to be a demand. There would be thus a certainty of market for the
+ farmer, and an equal certainty for the state to make profits as a
+ middleman. Another part of this scheme consisted in obligatory advances by
+ the state to cultivators of land, whether these farmers required the money
+ or not, the security for the loans being in each case the growing crops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was also a system of tithing for military purposes, under which
+ every family having more than two males was bound to supply one to serve
+ as a soldier; and in order to keep up a breed of cavalry horses, every
+ family was compelled to take charge of one, which was provided, together
+ with its food, by the government. There was a system under which money
+ payments were substituted for the old-fashioned and vexatious method of
+ carrying on public works by drafts of forced labourers; and again another
+ under which warehouses for bartering and hypothecating goods were
+ established all over the empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all his innovations the most interesting was that all land was to be
+ remeasured and an attempt made to secure a more equitable incidence of
+ taxation. The plan was to divide up the land into equal squares, and to
+ levy taxes in proportion to the fertility of each. This scheme proved for
+ various reasons to be unworkable; and the bitter opposition with which,
+ like all his other measures of reform, it was received by his opponents,
+ did not conduce to success. Finally, he abolished all restrictions upon
+ the export of copper, the result being that even the current copper "cash"
+ were melted down and made into articles for sale and exportation. A panic
+ ensued, which Wang met by the simple expedient of doubling the value of
+ each cash. He attempted to reform the examination system, requiring from
+ the candidate not so much graces of style as a wide acquaintance with
+ practical subjects. "Accordingly," says one Chinese author, "even the
+ pupils at the village schools threw away their text-books of rhetoric, and
+ began to study primers of history, geography, and political economy"&mdash;a
+ striking anticipation of the movement in vogue to-day. "I have myself
+ been," he tells us, "an omnivorous reader of books of all kinds, even, for
+ example, of ancient medical and botanical works. I have, moreover, dipped
+ into treatises on agriculture and on needlework, all of which I have found
+ very profitable in aiding me to seize the great scheme of the Canon
+ itself." But like many other great men, he was in advance of his age. He
+ fell into disfavour at court, and was dismissed to a provincial post; and
+ although he was soon recalled, he retired into private life, shortly
+ afterwards to die, but not before he had seen the whole of his policy
+ reversed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His career stands out in marked contrast with that of the great statesman
+ and philosopher, Chu Hsi (pronounced <i>Choo Shee</i>), who flourished
+ A.D. 1130-1200. His literary output was enormous and his official career
+ successful; but his chief title to fame rests upon his merits as a
+ commentator on the Confucian Canon. As has been already stated, he
+ introduced interpretations either wholly or partly at variance with those
+ which had been put forth by the scholars of the Han dynasty, and hitherto
+ received as infallible, thus modifying to a certain extent the prevailing
+ standard of political and social morality. His guiding principle was
+ merely one of consistency. He refused to interpret words in a given
+ passage in one sense, and the same words occurring elsewhere in another
+ sense. The effect of this apparently obvious method was magical; and from
+ that date the teachings of Confucius have been universally understood in
+ the way in which Chu Hsi said they ought to be understood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To his influence also must be traced the spirit of materialism which is so
+ widely spread among educated Chinese. The God in whom Confucius believed,
+ but whom, as will be seen later on, he can scarcely be said to have
+ "taught," was a passive rather than an active God, and may be compared
+ with the God of the Psalms. He was a personal God, as we know from the
+ ancient character by which He was designated in the written language of
+ early ages, that character being a rude picture of a man. This view was
+ entirely set aside by Chu Hsi, who declared in the plainest terms that the
+ Chinese word for God meant nothing more than "abstract right;" in other
+ words, God was a principle. It is impossible to admit such a proposition,
+ which was based on sentiment and not on sound reasoning. Chu Hsi was
+ emphatically not a man of religious temperament, and belief in the
+ supernatural was distasteful to him; he was for a short time under the
+ spell of Buddhism, but threw that religion over for the orthodoxy of
+ Confucianism. He was, therefore, anxious to exclude the supernatural
+ altogether from the revised scheme of moral conduct which he was deducing
+ from the Confucian Canon, and his interpretation of the word "God" has
+ been blindly accepted ever since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Chu Hsi died, his coffin is said to have taken up a position,
+ suspended in the air, about three feet from the ground. Whereupon his
+ son-in-law, falling on his knees beside the bier, reminded the departed
+ spirit of the great principles of which he had been such a brilliant
+ exponent in life&mdash;and the coffin descended gently to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V&mdash;WOMEN AND CHILDREN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese are very fond of animals, and especially of birds; and on the
+ whole they may be said to be kind to their animals, though cases of
+ ill-treatment occur. At the same time it must be carefully remembered that
+ such quantum of humanity as they may exhibit is entirely of their own
+ making; there is no law to act persuasively on brutal natures, and there
+ is no Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to see that any
+ such law is enforced. A very large number of beautiful birds, mostly
+ songless, are found in various parts of China, and a great variety of
+ fishes in the rivers and on the coast. Wild animals are represented by the
+ tiger (in both north and south), the panther and the bear, and even the
+ elephant and the rhinoceros may be found in the extreme south-west. The
+ wolf and the fox, the latter dreaded as an uncanny beast, are very widely
+ distributed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still less would there be any ground for establishing a Society for the
+ Prevention of Cruelty to Children, the very name of which would make an
+ ordinary, unsophisticated Chinaman stare. Chinese parents are, if
+ anything, over-indulgent to their children. The father is, indeed,
+ popularly known as the "Severe One," and it is a Confucian tradition that
+ he should not spare the rod and so spoil the child, but he draws the line
+ at a poker; and although as a father he possesses the power of life and
+ death over his offspring, such punishments as are inflicted are usually of
+ the mildest description. The mother, the "Gentle One," is, speaking
+ broadly, a soft-hearted, sweet-natured specimen of humanity; one of those
+ women to whom hundreds of Europeans owe deep debts of gratitude for the
+ care and affection lavished upon their alien children. In the absence of
+ the Severe One, it falls to her to chastise when necessary; and we even
+ read of a son who wept, not because his mother hurt him, but because,
+ owing to her advanced age, she was no longer able to hit him hard enough!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among other atrocious libels which have fastened upon the fair fame of the
+ Chinese people, first and foremost stands the charge of female
+ infanticide, now happily, though still slowly, fading from the
+ calculations of those who seek the truth. Fifty years ago it was generally
+ believed that the Chinese hated their female children, and got rid of them
+ in early infancy by wholesale murder. It may be admitted at once that boys
+ are preferred to girls, inasmuch as they carry on the family line, and see
+ that the worship of ancestors is regularly performed in due season. Also,
+ because girls require dowries, which they take away with them for the
+ benefit of other families than their own; hence the saying, "There is no
+ thief like a family of five daughters," and the term "lose-money goods,"
+ as jestingly applied to girls, against which may be set another term, "a
+ thousand ounces of gold," which is commonly used of a daughter. Of course
+ it is the boy who is specially wanted in a family; and little boys are
+ often dressed as little girls, in order to deceive the angels of disease
+ and death, who, it is hoped, may thus pass them over as of less account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To return to the belief formerly held that female infanticide was rampant
+ all over China. The next step was for the honest observer to admit that it
+ was not known in his own particular district, but to declare that it was
+ largely practised elsewhere. This view, however, lost its validity when
+ residents "elsewhere" had to allow that no traces of infanticide could be
+ found in their neighbourhood; and so on. Luckily, still greater comfort is
+ to be found in the following argument,&mdash;a rare example of proving a
+ negative&mdash;from which it will be readily seen that female infanticide
+ on any abnormal scale is quite beyond the bounds of the possible. Those
+ who have even a bowing acquaintance with Chinese social life will grant
+ that every boy, at about the age of eighteen, is provided by his parents
+ with a wife. They must also concede the notorious fact that many
+ well-to-do Chinese take one or more concubines. The Emperor, indeed, is
+ allowed seventy; but this number exists only on paper as a regulation
+ maximum. Now, if every Chinaman has one wife, and many have two, over and
+ above the host of girls said to be annually sacrificed as worthless
+ babies, it must follow that the proportion of girls born in China
+ enormously outnumbers the proportion of boys, whereas in the rest of the
+ world boys are well known to be always in the majority. After this, it is
+ perhaps superfluous to state that, apart from the natural love of the
+ parent, a girl is really, even at a very early age, a marketable
+ commodity. Girls are sometimes sold into other families to be brought up
+ as wives for the sons; more often, to be used as servants, under what is
+ of course a form of slavery, qualified by the important condition, which
+ can be enforced by law, that when of a marriageable age, the girl's master
+ shall find her a husband. Illegitimate children, the source of so much
+ baby-farming and infanticide elsewhere, are practically unknown in China;
+ and the same may be said of divorce. A woman cannot legally divorce her
+ husband. In rare cases she will leave him, and return to her family, in
+ spite of the fact that he can legally insist upon her return; for she
+ knows well that if her case is good, the husband will not dare to risk the
+ scandal of an exposure, not to mention the almost certain vengeance of her
+ affronted kinsmen. It is also the fear of such vengeance that prevents
+ mothers-in-law from ill-treating the girls who pass into their new homes
+ rather as servants than daughters to the husband's mother. Every woman, as
+ indeed every man, has one final appeal by which to punish an oppressor.
+ She may commit suicide, there being no canon, legal or moral, against
+ self-slaughter; and in China, where, contrary to widespread notions on the
+ subject, human life is held in the highest degree sacred, this course is
+ sure to entail trouble and expense, and possibly severe punishment, if the
+ aggrieved parties are not promptly conciliated by a heavy money payment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man may divorce his wife for one of the seven following reasons:&mdash;Want
+ of children, adultery, neglect of his parents, nagging, thieving (i.e.
+ supplying her own family with his goods, popularly known as "leakage"),
+ jealous temper and leprosy. To the above, the humanity of the lawgiver has
+ affixed three qualifying conditions. He may not put her away on any of the
+ above grounds if she has duly passed through the period of mourning for
+ his parents; if he has grown rich since their marriage; if she has no
+ longer any home to which she can return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Altogether, the Chinese woman has by no means such a bad time as is
+ generally supposed to be the case. Even in the eye of the law, she has
+ this advantage over a man, that she cannot be imprisoned except for high
+ treason and adultery, and is to all intents and purposes exempt from the
+ punishment of the bamboo. Included in this exemption are the aged and the
+ young, the sick, the hungry and naked, and those who have already suffered
+ violence, as in a brawl. Further, in a well-known handbook, magistrates
+ are advised to postpone, in certain circumstances, the infliction of
+ corporal punishment; as for instance, when either the prisoner or they
+ themselves may be under the influence of excitement, anger or drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bamboo is the only instrument with which physical punishment may
+ legally be inflicted; and its infliction on a prisoner or recalcitrant
+ witness, in order to extort evidence, constitutes what has long been
+ dignified as "torture;" but even that is now, under a changing system,
+ about to disappear. This must not be taken to mean that torture, in our
+ sense of the term, has never been applied in China. The real facts of the
+ case are these. Torture, except as already described, being
+ constitutionally illegal, no magistrate would venture to resort to it if
+ there were any chance of his successful impeachment before the higher
+ authorities, upon which he would be cashiered and his official career
+ brought abruptly to an end. Torture, therefore, would have no terrors for
+ the ordinary citizen of good repute and with a backing of substantial
+ friends; but for the outcast, the rebel, the highway robber (against whom
+ every man's hand would be), the disreputable native of a distant province,
+ and also for the outer barbarian (e.g. the captives at the Summer Palace
+ in 1860), another tale must be told. No consequences, except perhaps
+ promotion, would follow from too rigorous treatment in such cases as
+ these.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Resort to the bamboo as a means of extorting the confession of a prisoner
+ is regarded by the people rather as the magistrate's confession of his own
+ incapacity. The education of the official, too easily and too freely
+ turned into ridicule, gives him an insight into human nature which,
+ coupled with a little experience, renders him extremely formidable to the
+ shifty criminal or the crafty litigant. As a rule, he finds no need for
+ the application of pain. There is a quaint story illustrative of such
+ judicial methods as would be sure to meet with full approbation in China.
+ A magistrate, who after several hearings had failed to discover, among a
+ gang accused of murder, what was essential to the completion of the case,
+ namely, the actual hand which struck the fatal blow, notified the
+ prisoners that he was about to invoke the assistance of the spirits, with
+ a view to elicit the truth. Accordingly, he caused the accused men,
+ dressed in the black clothes of criminals, to be led into a large barn,
+ and arranged around it, face to the wall. Having then told them that an
+ accusing angel would shortly come among them, and mark the back of the
+ guilty man, he went outside and had the door shut, and the place darkened.
+ After a short interval, when the door was thrown open, and the men were
+ summoned to come forth, it was seen directly that one of the number had a
+ white mark on his back. This man, in order to make all secure, had turned
+ his back to the wall, not knowing, what the magistrate well knew, that the
+ wall had been newly white-washed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the punishment of crime by flogging, a sentence of one or two
+ hundred&mdash;even more&mdash;blows would seem to be cruel and disgusting;
+ happily, it may be taken for granted that such ferocious sentences are
+ executed only in such cases as have been mentioned above. An acute
+ observer, for many years a member of the municipal police force in
+ Shanghai, whose duty it was to see that floggings were administered to
+ Chinese criminals, stated plainly in a public report that the bamboo is
+ not necessarily a severe ordeal, and that one hundred blows are at times
+ inflicted so lightly as to leave scarcely a mark behind, though the
+ recipient howls loudly all the time. Those criminals who have money can
+ always manage to square the gaoler; and the gaoler has acquired a certain
+ knack in laying on, the upshot being great cry and little wool, very
+ satisfactory to the culprit. Even were we to accept the cruellest estimate
+ in regard to punishment by the bamboo, it would only go to show that
+ humanitarian feelings in China are lagging somewhat behind our own. In <i>The
+ Times</i> of March 1, 1811, we read that, for allowing French prisoners to
+ escape from Dartmoor, three men of the Nottingham militia were sentenced
+ to receive 900 lashes each, and that one of them actually received 450
+ lashes in the presence of pickets from every regiment in the garrison. On
+ New Year's Day, 1911, a eunuch attempted to assassinate one of the
+ Imperial Princes. For this he was sentenced to be beaten to death, some
+ such ferocious punishment being necessary, in Chinese eyes, to vindicate
+ the majesty of the law. That end having been attained, the sentence was
+ commuted to eighty blows with the bamboo and deportation to northern
+ Manchuria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese woman often, in mature life, wields enormous influence over
+ the family, males included, and is a kind of private Empress Dowager. A
+ man knows, says the proverb, but a woman knows better. As a widow in early
+ life, her lot is not quite so pleasant. It is not thought desirable for
+ widows to remarry; but if she remains single, she becomes "a rudderless
+ boat;" round which gathers much calumny. Many young women brave public
+ opinion, and enter into second nuptials. If they are bent upon remarrying,
+ runs the saying, they can no more be prevented than the sky can be
+ prevented from raining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The days of "golden lilies," as the artificially small feet of Chinese
+ women are called, are generally believed to date from the tenth century
+ A.D., though some writers have endeavoured to place the custom many
+ centuries earlier. It must always be carefully remembered that Manchu
+ women&mdash;the women of the dynasty which has ruled since 1644&mdash;do
+ not compress their feet. Consequently, the empresses of modern times have
+ feet of the natural size; neither is the practice in force among the
+ Hakkas, a race said to have migrated from the north of China to the south
+ in the thirteenth century; nor among the hill tribes; nor among the
+ boating population of Canton and elsewhere. Small feet are thus in no way
+ associated with aristocracy or gentleness of birth; neither is there any
+ foundation for the generally received opinion that the Chinese lame their
+ women in this way to keep them from gadding about. Small-footed women may
+ be seen carrying quite heavy burdens, and even working in the fields; not
+ to mention that many are employed as nurses for small children. Another
+ explanation is that women with bound feet bear finer children and
+ stronger; but the real reason lies in another direction, quite beyond the
+ scope of this book. The question of charm may be taken into consideration,
+ for any Chinaman will bear witness to the seductive effect of a
+ gaily-dressed girl picking her way on tiny feet some three inches in
+ length, her swaying movements and delightful appearance of instability
+ conveying a general sense of delicate grace quite beyond expression in
+ words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady of the tenth century, to whom the origin of small feet is
+ ascribed, wished to make her own feet like two new moons; but whether she
+ actually bound them, as at the present day, is purely a matter of
+ conjecture. The modern style of binding inflicts great pain for a long
+ time upon the little girls who have to endure it. They become very shy on
+ the subject, and will on no account show their bare feet, though Manchu
+ women and others with full-sized feet frequently walk about unshod, and
+ the boat-girls at Canton and elsewhere never seem to wear shoes or
+ stockings at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "pigtail," or long plait of hair worn by all Chinamen, for the
+ abolition of which many advanced reformers are now earnestly pleading, is
+ an institution of comparatively modern date. It was imposed by the
+ victorious Manchu-Tartars when they finally established their dynasty in
+ 1644, not so much as a badge of conquest, still less of servitude, but as
+ a means of obliterating, so far as possible, the most patent distinction
+ between the two races, and of unifying the appearance, if not the
+ aspirations, of the subjects of the Son of Heaven. This obligation was for
+ some time strenuously resisted by the natives of Amoy, Swatow, and
+ elsewhere in that neighbourhood. At length, when compelled to yield, it is
+ said that they sullenly wound their queues round their heads and covered
+ them with turbans, which are still worn by natives of those parts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peculiar custom of shaving the head in front, and allowing the hair to
+ grow long behind, is said to have been adopted by the Manchus out of
+ affectionate gratitude to the horse, an animal which has played an
+ all-important part in the history and achievements of the race. This view
+ is greatly reinforced by the cut of the modern official sleeves, which
+ hang down, concealing the hands, and are shaped exactly like a pair of
+ horse's hoofs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In many respects the Manchu conquerors left the Chinese to follow their
+ own customs. No attempt was made to coerce Chinese women, who dress their
+ hair in styles totally different from that of the Manchu women; there are,
+ too, some tolerated differences between the dress of the Manchu and
+ Chinese men, but these are such as readily escape notice. Neither was any
+ attempt made in the opening years of the conquest to interfere with
+ foot-binding by Chinese women; but in 1664 an edict was issued forbidding
+ the practice. Readers may draw their own conclusions, when it is added
+ that four years after the edict was withdrawn. Hopes are now widely and
+ earnestly entertained that with the dawn of the new era, this cruel custom
+ will become a thing of the past; it is, however, to be feared that those
+ who have been urging on this desirable reform may be, like all reformers,
+ a little too sanguine of immediate success, and that a comparatively long
+ period will have to go by before the last traces of foot-binding disappear
+ altogether. Meanwhile, it seems that the Government has taken the
+ important step of refusing admission to the public schools of all girls
+ whose feet are bound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disappearance of the queue is another thing altogether. It is not a
+ native Chinese institution; there would be no violation of any cherished
+ tradition of antiquity if it were once and for ever discarded. On the
+ contrary, if the Chinese do not intend to follow the Japanese and take to
+ foreign clothes, there might be a return to the old style of doing the
+ hair. The former dress of the Japanese was one of the numerous items
+ borrowed by them from China; it was indeed the national dress of the
+ Chinese for some three hundred years, between A.D. 600-900. One little
+ difficulty will vanish with the queue. A Chinese coolie will tie his tail
+ round his head when engaged on work in which he requires to keep it out of
+ the way, and the habit has become of real importance with the use of
+ modern machinery; but on the arrival of his master, he should at once drop
+ it, out of respect, a piece of politeness not always exhibited in the
+ presence of a foreign employer. The agitation, now in progress, for the
+ final abolition of the queue may be due to one or all of the following
+ reasons. Intelligent Chinese may have come to realize that the fashion is
+ cumbrous and out of date. Sensitive Chinese may fear that it makes them
+ ridiculous in the eyes of foreigners. Political Chinese, who would gladly
+ see the re-establishment of a native dynasty, may look to its
+ disappearance as the first step towards throwing off the Manchu yoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, the ruling Manchus have shown themselves very careful not to
+ wound the susceptibilities of their Chinese subjects. Besides allowing the
+ women to retain their own costume, and the dead, men and women alike, to
+ be buried in the costume of the previous dynasty, it was agreed from the
+ very first that no Chinese concubines should be taken into the Palace.
+ This last condition seems to be a concession pure and simple to the
+ conquered; there is little doubt, however, that the wily Manchus were only
+ too ready to exclude a very dangerous possibility of political intrigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI&mdash;LITERATURE AND EDUCATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese people reverence above all things literature and learning;
+ they hate war, bearing in mind the saying of Mencius, "There is no such
+ thing as a <i>righteous</i> war; we can only assert that some wars are
+ better than others;" and they love trade and the finesse of the
+ market-place. China can boast many great soldiers, in modern as well as in
+ ancient days; but anything like a proper appreciation of the military arm
+ is of quite recent growth. "Good iron is not used for nails, nor good men
+ for soldiers," says the proverb; and again, "One stroke of the civilian's
+ pen reduces the military official to abject submission." On the other
+ hand, it is admitted that "Civilians give the empire peace, and soldiers
+ give it security."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chinese parents have never, until recent days, willingly trained their
+ sons for the army. They have always wished their boys to follow the
+ stereotyped literary curriculum, and then, after passing successfully
+ through the great competitive examinations, to rise to high civil office
+ in the state. A good deal of ridicule has been heaped of late on the
+ Chinese competitive examination, the subjects of which were drawn
+ exclusively from the Confucian Canon, and included a knowledge of ancient
+ history, of a comprehensive scheme of morality, initiated by Confucius,
+ and further elaborated by Mencius (372-289 B.C.), of the ballads and
+ ceremonial rites of three thousand years ago, and of an aptitude for
+ essay-writing and the composition of verse. The whole curriculum may be
+ fitly compared with such an education as was given to William Pitt and
+ others among our own great statesmen, in which an ability to read the
+ Greek and Roman classics, coupled with an intimate knowledge of the
+ Peloponnesian War, carried the student about as far as it was considered
+ necessary for him to go. The Chinese course, too, has certainly brought to
+ the front in its time a great many eminent men, who have held their own in
+ diplomacy, if not in warfare, with the subtlest intellects of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their system of competitive examinations has indeed served the Chinese
+ well. It is the brightest spot in the whole administration, being
+ absolutely above suspicion, such as attaches to other departments of the
+ state. Attempts have been made from time to time to gain admission by
+ improper means to the list of successful candidates, and it would be
+ absurd to say that not one has ever succeeded; the risk, however, is too
+ great, for the penalty on detection may be death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ordeal itself is exceedingly severe, as well for the examiners as for
+ the candidates. At the provincial examinations, held once in every third
+ year, an Imperial Commissioner, popularly known as the Grand Examiner, is
+ sent down from Peking. On arrival, his residence is formally sealed up,
+ and extraordinary precautions are taken to prevent friends of intending
+ candidates from approaching him in any way. There is no age limit, and men
+ of quite mature years are to be found competing against youths hardly out
+ of their teens; indeed, there is an authenticated case of a man who
+ successfully graduated at the age of seventy-two. Many compete year after
+ year, until at length they decide to give it up as a bad job.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At an early hour on the appointed day the candidates begin to assemble,
+ and by and by the great gates of the examination hall are thrown open, and
+ heralds shriek out the names of those who are to enter. Each one answers
+ in turn as his name is called, and receives from the attendants a roll of
+ paper marked with the number of the open cell he is to occupy in one of
+ the long alleys into which the examination hall is divided. Other writing
+ materials, as well as food, he carries with him in a basket, which is
+ always carefully searched at the door, and in which "sleeve" editions of
+ the classics have sometimes been found. When all have taken their seats,
+ the Grand Examiner burns incense, and closes the entrance gates, through
+ which no one will be allowed to pass, either in or out, dead or alive,
+ until the end of the third day, when the first of the three sessions is at
+ an end, and the candidates are released for the night. In case of death,
+ not unusual where ten or twelve thousand persons are cooped up day and
+ night in a confined space, the corpse is hoisted over the wall; and this
+ would be done even if it were that of the Grand Examiner himself, whose
+ place would then be taken by the chief Assistant Examiner, who is also
+ appointed by the Emperor, and accompanies the Grand Examiner from Peking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long strain of three bouts of three days each has often been found
+ sufficient to unhinge the reason, with a variety of distressing
+ consequences, the least perhaps of which may be seen in a regular
+ percentage of blank papers handed in. On one occasion, a man handed in a
+ copy of his last will and testament; on another, not very long ago, the
+ mental balance of the Grand Examiner gave way, and a painful scene ensued.
+ He tore up a number of the papers already handed in, and bit and kicked
+ every one who came near him, until he was finally secured and bound hand
+ and foot in his chair. A candidate once presented himself dressed in
+ woman's clothes, with his face highly rouged and powdered, as is the
+ custom. He was arrested at the entrance gate, and quietly sent home to his
+ friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Overwork, in the feverish desire to get into the Government service, is
+ certainly responsible for the mental break-down of a large proportion of
+ the comparatively few lunatics found in China. There being no lunatic
+ asylums in the empire, it is difficult to form anything like an exact
+ estimate of their number; it can only be said, what is equally true of
+ cripples or deformed persons, that it is very rare to meet them in the
+ streets or even to hear of their existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a further measure of precaution against corrupt practices at
+ examinations, the papers handed in by the candidates are all copied out in
+ red ink, and only these copies are submitted to the examiners. The
+ difficulty therefore of obtaining favourable treatment, on the score of
+ either bribery or friendship, is very much increased. The Chinese, who
+ make no attempt to conceal or excuse, in fact rather exaggerate any
+ corruption in their public service generally, do not hesitate to declare
+ with striking unanimity that the conduct of their examination system is
+ above suspicion, and there appears to be no valid reason why we should not
+ accept this conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole system is now undergoing certain modifications, which, if wisely
+ introduced, should serve only to strengthen the national character. The
+ Confucian teachings, which are of the very highest order of morality, and
+ which have moulded the Chinese people for so many centuries, helping
+ perhaps to give them a cohesion and stability remarkable among the nations
+ of the world, should not be lightly cast aside. A scientific training,
+ enabling us to annihilate time and space, to extend indefinitely the uses
+ and advantages of matter in all its forms, and to mitigate the burden of
+ suffering which is laid upon the greater portion of the human race, still
+ requires to be effectively supplemented by a moral training, to teach man
+ his duty towards his neighbour. From the point of view of science, the
+ Chinese are, of course, wholly out of date, though it is only within the
+ past hundred and fifty years that the West has so decisively outstripped
+ the East. If we go back to the fifteenth century, we shall find that the
+ standard of civilization, as the term is usually understood, was still
+ much higher in China than in Europe; while Marco Polo, the famous Venetian
+ traveller of the thirteenth century, who actually lived twenty-four years
+ in China, and served as an official under Kublai Khan, has left it on
+ record that the magnificence of Chinese cities, and the splendour of the
+ Chinese court, outrivalled anything he had ever seen or heard of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pushing farther back into antiquity, we easily reach a time when the
+ inhabitants of the Middle Kingdom "held learning in high esteem, while our
+ own painted forefathers were running naked and houseless in the woods, and
+ living on berries and raw meat." In inventive, mechanical and engineering
+ aptitudes the Chinese have always excelled; as witness&mdash;only to
+ mention a few&mdash;the art of printing (<i>see below</i>); their
+ water-wheels and other clever appliances for irrigation; their wonderful
+ bridges (not to mention the Great Wall); the "taxicab," or carriage fitted
+ with a machine for recording the distance traversed, the earliest notice
+ of which takes us back to the fourth century A.D.; the system of
+ fingerprints for personal identification, recorded in the seventh century
+ A.D.; the carved ivory balls which contain even so many as nine or ten
+ other balls, of diminishing size, one within another; a chariot carrying a
+ figure which always pointed south, recorded as in existence at a very
+ early date, though unfortunately the specifications which have came down
+ to us from later dates will not work out, as in the case of the "taxicab."
+ The story goes that this chariot was invented about 1100 B.C., by a
+ wonderful hero of the day, in order to enable an ambassador, who had come
+ to the court of China from a far distant country in the south, to find his
+ way expeditiously home. The compass proper the Chinese cannot claim; it
+ was probably introduced into China by the Arabs at a comparatively late
+ date, and has been confused with the south-pointing chariot of earlier
+ ages. As to gunpowder, something of that nature appears to have been used
+ for fireworks in the seventh century; and something of the nature of a gun
+ is first heard of during the Mongol campaigns of the thirteenth century;
+ but firearms were not systematically employed until the fifteenth century.
+ Add to the above the art of casting bronze, brought to a high pitch of
+ excellence seven or eight centuries before the Christian era, if not
+ earlier; the production of silk, mentioned by Mencius (372-289 B.C.) as
+ necessary for the comfort of old age; the cultivation of the tea-plant
+ from time immemorial; also the discovery and manufacture of porcelain some
+ sixteen centuries ago, subsequently brought to a perfection which leaves
+ all European attempts hopelessly out-classed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In many instances the Chinese seem to have been so near and yet so far.
+ There is a distinct tradition of flying cars at a very remote date; and
+ rough woodcuts have been handed down for many centuries, showing a car
+ containing two passengers, flying through the clouds and apparently
+ propelled by wheels of a screw pattern, set at right angles to the
+ direction in which the travellers are proceeding. But there is not a scrap
+ of evidence to show what was the motive power which turned the wheels.
+ Similarly, iron ships are mentioned in Chinese literature so far back as
+ the tenth century, only, however, to be ridiculed as an impossibility; the
+ circulation of the blood is hinted at; added to which is the marvellous
+ anticipation of anaesthetics as applied to surgery, to be mentioned later
+ on, an idea which also remained barren of results for something like
+ sixteen centuries, until Western science stepped in and secured the prize.
+ Here it may be fairly argued that, considering the national repugnance to
+ mutilation of the body in any form, it could hardly be expected that the
+ Chinese would seek to facilitate a process to which they so strongly
+ object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the domain of painting, we are only just beginning to awake to the fact
+ that in this direction the Chinese have reached heights denied to all save
+ artists of supreme power, and that their art was already on a lofty level
+ many centuries before our own great representatives had begun to put brush
+ to canvas. Without going so far back as the famous picture in the British
+ Museum, by an artist of the fourth and fifth centuries A.D., the point may
+ perhaps be emphasized by quotation from the words of a leading art-critic,
+ referring to painters of the tenth and eleventh centuries:&mdash;"To the
+ Sung artists and poets, mountains were a passion, as to Wordsworth. The
+ landscape art thus founded, and continued by the Japanese in the fifteenth
+ century, must rank as the greatest school of landscape which the world has
+ seen. It is the imaginative picturing of what is most elemental and most
+ august in Nature&mdash;liberating visions of storm or peace among abrupt
+ peaks, plunging torrents, trembling reed-beds&mdash;and though having a
+ fantastic side for its weakness, can never have the reproach of pretty
+ tameness and mere fidelity which form too often the only ideal of Western
+ landscape."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great Chinese artists unite in dismissing fidelity to outline as of little
+ importance compared with reproduction of the spirit of the object painted.
+ To paint a tree successfully, it is necessary to produce not merely shape
+ and colour but the vitality and "soul" of the original. Until with the
+ last two or three centuries, nature itself was always appealed to as the
+ one source of true inspiration; then came the artist of the studio, since
+ which time Chinese art has languished, while Japanese art, learned at the
+ feet of Chinese artists from the fourteenth century onwards, has come into
+ prominent notice, and is now, with extraordinary versatility, attempting
+ to assimilate the ideals of the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following words were written by a Chinese painter of the fifth
+ century:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To gaze upon the clouds of autumn, a soaring exaltation in the soul; to
+ feel the spring breeze stirring wild exultant thoughts;&mdash;what is
+ there in the possession of gold and gems to compare with delights like
+ these? And then, to unroll the portfolio and spread the silk, and to
+ transfer to it the glories of flood and fell, the green forest, the
+ blowing winds, the white water of the rushing cascade, as with a turn of
+ the hand a divine influence descends upon the scene. . . . These are the
+ joys of painting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as in poetry, so in pictorial art, the artist avoids giving full
+ expression to his theme, and leaving nothing for the spectator to supply
+ by his own imaginative powers. "Suggestion" is the key-note to both the
+ above arts; and in both, "Impressionism" has been also at the command of
+ the gifted, centuries before the term had passed into the English
+ language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Literature and art are indeed very closely associated in China. Every
+ literary man is supposed to be more or less a painter, or a musician of
+ sorts; failing personal skill, it would go without saying that he was a
+ critic, or at the lowest a lover, of one or the other art, or of both. All
+ Chinese men, women and children seem to love flowers; and the poetry which
+ has gathered around the blossoms of plum and almond alone would form a not
+ inconsiderable library of itself. Yet a European bouquet would appear to a
+ man of culture as little short of a monstrosity; for to enjoy flowers, a
+ Chinaman must see only a single spray at a time. The poorly paid clerk
+ will bring with him to his office in the morning some trifling bud, which
+ he will stick into a tiny vase of water, and place beside him on his desk.
+ The owner of what may be a whole gallery of pictures will invite you to
+ tea, followed by an inspection of his treasures; but on the same afternoon
+ he will only produce perhaps a single specimen, and scout the idea that
+ any one could call for more. If a long landscape, it will be gradually
+ unwound from its roller, and a portion at a time will be submitted for the
+ enjoyment and criticism of his visitors; if a religious or historical
+ picture, or a picture of birds or flowers, of which the whole effort must
+ be viewed in its completeness, it will be studied in various senses,
+ during the intervals between a chat and a cup of tea. Such concentration
+ is absolutely essential, in the eyes of the Chinese critic, to a true
+ interpretation of the artist's meaning, and to a just appreciation of his
+ success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The marvellous old stories of grapes painted by Zeuxis of ancient Greece,
+ so naturally that birds came to peck at them; and of the curtain painted
+ by Parrhasius which Zeuxis himself tried to pull aside; and of the horse
+ by Apelles at which another horse neighed&mdash;all these find their
+ counterparts in the literature of Chinese art. One painter, in quite early
+ days, painted a perch and hung it over a river bank, when there was
+ immediately a rush of otters to secure it. Another painted the creases on
+ cotton clothes so exactly that the clothes looked as if they had just come
+ from the wash. Another produced pictures of cats which would keep a place
+ free from rats. All these efforts were capped by those of another artist,
+ whose picture of the North Wind made people feel cold, while his picture
+ of the South Wind made people feel hot. Such exaggerations are not
+ altogether without their value; they suggest that Chinese art must have
+ reached a high level, and this has recently been shown to be nothing more
+ than the truth, by the splendid exhibition of Chinese pictures recently on
+ view in the British Museum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The literary activities of the Chinese, and their output of literature,
+ have always been on a colossal scale; and of course it is entirely due to
+ the early invention of printing that, although a very large number of
+ works have disappeared, still an enormous bulk has survived the ravages of
+ war, rebellion and fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This art was rather developed than invented. There is no date, within a
+ margin even of half a century either way, at which we can say that
+ printing was invented. The germ is perhaps to be found in the engraving of
+ seals, which have been used by the Chinese as far back as we can go with
+ anything like historical certainty, and also of stone tablets from which
+ rubbings were taken, the most important of these being the forty-six
+ tablets on which five of the sacred books of Confucianism were engraved
+ about A.D. 170, and of which portions still remain. However this may be,
+ it was during the sixth century A.D. that the idea of taking impressions
+ on paper from wooden blocks seems to have arisen, chiefly in connexion
+ with religious pictures and tracts. It was not widely applied to the
+ production of books in general until A.D. 932, when the Confucian Canon
+ was so printed for the first time; from which point onwards the extension
+ of the art moved with rapid strides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is very noticeable that the Chinese, who are extraordinarily averse to
+ novelties, and can hardly be induced to consider any innovations, when
+ once convinced of their real utility, waste no further time in securing to
+ themselves all the advantages which may accrue. This was forcibly
+ illustrated in regard to the introduction of the telegraph, against which
+ the Chinese had set their faces, partly because of the disturbance of
+ geomantic influences caused by the tall telegraph poles, and partly
+ because they sincerely doubted that the wires could achieve the results
+ claimed. But when it was discovered that some wily Cantonese had learnt
+ over the telegraph the names of the three highest graduates at the Peking
+ triennial examination, weeks before the names could be known in Canton by
+ the usual route, and had enriched himself by buying up the tickets bearing
+ those names in the great lotteries which are always held in connexion with
+ this event, Chinese opposition went down like a house of cards; and the
+ only question with many of the literati was whether, at some remote date,
+ the Chinese had not invented telegraphy themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moveable types of baked clay were invented about A.D. 1043, and some
+ centuries later they were made of wood and of copper or lead; but they
+ have never gained the favour accorded to block-printing, by which most of
+ the great literary works have been produced. The newspapers of modern days
+ are all printed from moveable types, and also many translations of foreign
+ books, prepared to meet the increasing demand for Western learning. The
+ Chinese have always been a great reading people, systematic education
+ culminating in competitive examinations for students going back to the
+ second century A.D. This is perhaps a suitable place for explaining that
+ the famous <i>Peking Gazette</i>, often said to be the oldest newspaper in
+ the world, is not really a newspaper at all, in that it contains no news
+ in our sense of the term. It is a record only of court movements, list of
+ promoted officials, with a few selected memorials and edicts. It is
+ published daily, but was not printed until the fifteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every Chinese boy may be said to have his chance. The slightest sign of a
+ capacity for book-learning is watched for, even among the poorest. Besides
+ the opportunity of free schools, a clever boy will soon find a patron; and
+ in many cases, the funds for carrying on a curriculum, and for entering
+ the first of the great competitions, will be subscribed in the district,
+ on which the candidate will confer a lasting honour by his success. A
+ promising young graduate, who has won his first degree with honours, is at
+ once an object of importance to wealthy fathers who desire to secure him
+ as a son-in-law, and who will see that money is not wanting to carry him
+ triumphantly up the official ladder. Boys without any gifts of the kind
+ required, remain to fill the humbler positions; those who advance to a
+ certain point are drafted into trade; while hosts of others who just fall
+ short of the highest, become tutors in private families, schoolmasters,
+ doctors, fortune-tellers, geomancers, and booksellers' hacks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of high-class Chinese literature, it is not possible to give even the
+ faintest idea in the space at disposal. It must suffice to say that all
+ branches are adequately represented, histories, biographies, philosophy,
+ poetry and essays on all manner of subjects, offering a wide field even to
+ the most insatiate reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here a remark may be interjected, which is very necessary for the
+ information of those who wish to form a true estimate of the Chinese
+ people. Throughout the Confucian Canon, a collection of ancient works on
+ which the moral code of the Chinese is based, there is not a single word
+ which could give offence, even to the most sensitive, on questions of
+ delicacy and decency. That is surely saying a good deal, but it is not
+ all; precisely the same may be affirmed of what is mentioned above as
+ high-class Chinese literature, which is pure enough to satisfy the most
+ strait-laced. Chinese poetry, of which there is in existence a huge mass,
+ will be searched in vain for suggestions of impropriety, for sly innuendo,
+ and for the other tricks of the unclean. This extraordinary purity of
+ language is all the more remarkable from the fact that, until recent
+ years, the education of women has not been at all general, though many
+ particular instances are recorded of women who have themselves achieved
+ success in literary pursuits. It is only when we come to the novel, to the
+ short story, or to the anecdote, which are not usually written in
+ high-class style, and are therefore not recognized as literature proper,
+ that this exalted standard is no longer always maintained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are, indeed, a great number of novels, chiefly historical and
+ religious, in which the aims of the writers are on a sufficiently high
+ level to keep them clear of what is popularly known as pornography or
+ pig-writing; still, when all is said and done, there remains a balance of
+ writing curiously in contrast with the great bulk of Chinese literature
+ proper. As to the novel, the long story with a worked-out plot, this is
+ not really a local product. It seems to have come along with the Mongols
+ from Central Asia, when they conquered China in the thirteenth century,
+ and established their short-lived dynasty. Some novels, in spite of their
+ low moral tone, are exceedingly well written and clever, graphic in
+ description, and dramatic in episode; but it is curious that no writer of
+ the first rank has ever attached his name to a novel, and that the
+ authorship of all the cleverest is a matter of entire uncertainty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The low-class novel is purposely pitched in a style that will be easily
+ understood; but even so, there is a great deal of word- and
+ phrase-skipping to be done by many illiterate readers, who are quite
+ satisfied if they can extract the general sense as they go along. The
+ book-language, as cultivated by the best writers, is to be freely
+ understood only by those who have stocked their minds well with the
+ extensive phraseology which has been gradually created by eminent men
+ during the past twenty-five centuries, and with historical and
+ biographical allusions and references of all sorts and things. A word or
+ two, suggesting some apposite allusion, will often greatly enhance the
+ beauty of a composition for the connoisseur, but will fall flat on the
+ ears of those to whom the quotation is unknown. Simple objects in everyday
+ life often receive quaint names, as handed down in literature, with which
+ it is necessary to be familiar. For instance, a "fairy umbrella" means a
+ mushroom; a "gentleman of the beam" is a burglar, because a burglar was
+ once caught sitting on one of the open beams inside a Chinese roof; a
+ "slender waist" is a wasp; the "throat olive" is the "Adam's apple"&mdash;which,
+ by the way, is an excellent illustration from the opposite point of view;
+ "eyebrow notes" means notes at the top of a page; "cap words" is sometimes
+ used for "preface;" the "sweeper-away of care" is wine; "golden balls" are
+ oranges; the "golden tray" is the moon; a "two-haired man" is a
+ grey-beard; the "hundred holes" is a beehive; "instead of the moon" is a
+ lantern; "instead of steps" is a horse; "the man with the wooden skirt" is
+ a shopman; to "scatter sleep" means to give hush-money; and so on, almost
+ <i>ad infinitum</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chinese medical literature is on a very voluminous scale, medicine having
+ always occupied a high place in the estimation of the people, in spite of
+ the fact that its practice has always been left to any one who might
+ choose to take it up. Surgery, even of an elementary kind, has never had a
+ chance; for the Chinese are extremely loath to suffer any interference
+ with their bodies, believing, in accordance with Confucian dogma, that as
+ they received them from their parents, so they should carry them into the
+ presence of their ancestors in the next world. Medicine, as still
+ practised in China, may be compared with the European art of a couple of
+ centuries ago, and its exceedingly doubtful results are fully appreciated
+ by patients at large. "No medicine," says one proverb, "is better than a
+ middling doctor;" while another points out that "Many sons of clever
+ doctors die of disease."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Legend, however, tells us of an extraordinary physician of the fifth
+ century B.C. who was able to see into the viscera of his patients&mdash;an
+ apparent anticipation of the X-rays&mdash;and who, by his intimate
+ knowledge of the human pulse, effected many astounding cures. We also read
+ of an eminent physician of the second and third centuries A.D. who did add
+ surgery to this other qualifications. He was skilled in the use of
+ acupuncture and cautery; but if these failed he would render his patient
+ unconscious by a dose of hashish, and then operate surgically. He is said
+ to have diagnosed a case of diseased bowels by the pulse alone, and then
+ to have cured it by operation. He offered to cure the headaches of a
+ famous military commander of the day by opening his skull under hashish;
+ but the offer was rudely declined. This story serves to show, in spite of
+ its marvellous setting, that the idea of administering an anaesthetic to
+ carry out a surgical operation must be credited, so far as priority goes,
+ to the Chinese, since the book in which the above account is given cannot
+ have been composed later than the twelfth century A.D.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII&mdash;PHILOSOPHY AND SPORT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Chinese philosophy covers altogether too large a field to be dealt with,
+ even in outline, on a scale suitable to this volume; only a few of its
+ chief features can possibly be exhibited in the space at disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beginning with moral philosophy, we are confronted at once with what was
+ in early days an extremely vexed question; not perhaps entirely set at
+ rest even now, but allowed to remain in suspense amid the universal
+ acceptance of Confucian teachings. Confucius himself taught in no
+ indistinct terms that man is born good, and that he becomes evil only by
+ contact with evil surroundings. He does not enlarge upon this dogma, but
+ states it baldly as a natural law, little anticipating that within a
+ couple of centuries it was to be called seriously in question. It remained
+ for his great follower, Mencius, born a hundred years later, to defend the
+ proposition against all comers, and especially against one of no mean
+ standing, the philosopher Kao (<i>Cow</i>). Kao declared that
+ righteousness is only to be got out of man's nature in the same way that
+ good cups and bowls are to be got out of a block of willow wood, namely,
+ by care in fashioning them. Improper workmanship would produce bad
+ results; good workmanship, on the other hand, would produce good results.
+ In plain words, the nature of man at birth is neither good nor bad; and
+ what it becomes afterwards depends entirely upon what influences have been
+ brought to bear and in what surroundings it has come to maturity. Mencius
+ met this argument by showing that in the process of extracting cups and
+ bowls from a block of wood, the wood as a block is destroyed, and he
+ pointed out that, according to such reasoning, man's nature would also be
+ destroyed in the process of getting righteousness out of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, Kao maintained that man's nature has as little concern with good or
+ evil as water has with east or west; for water will flow indifferently
+ either one way or the other, according to the conditions in each case. If
+ there is freedom on the east, it will flow east; if there is freedom on
+ the west, it will flow west; and so with human nature, which will move
+ similarly in the direction of either good or evil. In reply, Mencius
+ freely admitted that water would flow either east or west; but he asked if
+ it would flow indifferently up or down. He then declared that the bent of
+ human nature towards good is precisely like the tendency of water to flow
+ down and not up. You can force water to jump up, he said, by striking it,
+ and by mechanical appliances you can make it flow to the top of a hill;
+ but what you do in such cases is entirely contrary to the nature of water,
+ and is merely the result of violence, such violence, in fact, as is
+ brought into play when man's nature is bent towards evil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That which men get at birth," said Kao, "is their nature," implying that
+ all natures were the same, just as the whiteness of a white feather is the
+ same as the whiteness of white snow; whereupon Mencius showed that on this
+ principle the nature of a dog would be the same as that of a an ox, or the
+ nature of an ox the same as that of a man. Finally, Mencius declared that
+ for whatever evil men may commit, their natures can in nowise be blamed.
+ In prosperous times, he argued, men are mostly good, whereas in times of
+ scarcity the opposite is the case; these two conditions, however, are not
+ to be charged against the natures with which God sent them into the world,
+ but against the circumstances in which the individuals in question have
+ been situated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question, however, of man's original nature was not set permanently at
+ rest by the arguments of Mencius. A philosopher, named Hsun Tzu (<i>Sheundza</i>),
+ who flourished not very much later than Mencius, came forward with the
+ theory that so far from being good according to Confucius, or even neutral
+ according to Kao, the nature of man at birth is positively evil. He
+ supports this view by the following arguments. From his earliest years,
+ man is actuated by a love of gain for his own personal enjoyment. His
+ conduct is distinguished by selfishness and combativeness. He becomes a
+ slave to envy, hatred, and other passions. The restraint of law, and the
+ influence and guidance of teachers, are absolutely necessary to good
+ government and the well-being of social life. Just as wood must be
+ subjected to pressure in order to make it straight, and metal must be
+ subjected to the grindstone in order to make it sharp, so must the nature
+ of man be subjected to training and education in order to obtain from it
+ the virtues of justice and self-sacrifice which characterize the best of
+ the human race. It is impossible to maintain that man's nature is good in
+ the same sense that his eyes see and his ears hear; for in the latter
+ there is no alternative. An eye which does not see, is not an eye; an ear
+ which does not hear, is not an ear. This proves that whereas seeing and
+ hearing are natural to man, goodness is artificial and acquired. Just as a
+ potter produces a dish or a carpenter a bench, working on some material
+ before them, so do the sages and teachers of mankind produce righteousness
+ by working upon the nature of man, which they transform in the same way
+ that the potter transforms the clay or the carpenter the wood. We cannot
+ believe that God has favourites, and deals unkindly with others. How,
+ then, is it that some men are evil while others are good? The answer is,
+ that the former follow their natural disposition, while the latter submit
+ to restraints and follow the guidance of their teachers. It is indeed true
+ that any one may become a hero, but all men do not necessarily become
+ heroes, nor is there any method by which they can be forced to do so. If a
+ man is endowed with a capacity for improvement, and is placed in the hands
+ of good teachers, associating at the same time with friends whose actions
+ display such virtues as self-sacrifice, truth, kindness, and so forth, he
+ will naturally imbibe principles which will raise him to the same
+ standard; whereas, if he consorts with evil livers, he will be a daily
+ witness of deceit, corruption, and general impurity of conduct, and will
+ gradually lapse into the same course of life. If you do not know your son,
+ says the proverb, look at his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next step was taken by the philosopher Yang Hsiung (<i>Sheeyoong</i>),
+ 53 B.C. to A.D. 18. He started a theory which occupies a middle place
+ between the last two theories discussed above, teaching that the nature of
+ man at birth is neither wholly good nor wholly evil, but a mixture of
+ both, and that development in either direction depends altogether on
+ environment. A compromise in matters of faith is not nearly so picturesque
+ as an extreme, and Yang's attempted solution has attracted but scant
+ attention, though always mentioned with respect. The same may also be said
+ of another attempt to smooth obvious difficulties in the way of accepting
+ either of the two extremes or the middle course proposed by Yang Hsiung.
+ The famous Han Yu, to be mentioned again shortly, was a pillar and prop of
+ Confucianism. He flourished between A.D. 768 and 824, and performed such
+ lasting services in what was to him the cause of truth, that his tablet
+ has been placed in the Confucian temple, an honour reserved only for those
+ whose orthodoxy is beyond suspicion. Yet he ventured upon an attempt to
+ modify this important dogma, taking care all the time to appear as if he
+ were criticizing Mencius rather than Confucius, on whom, of course, the
+ real responsibility rests. He declared, solely upon his own authority,
+ that the nature of man is not uniform but divided into three grades&mdash;namely,
+ highest, middle, and lowest. Thus, natures of the highest grade are good,
+ wholly good, and nothing but good; natures of the lowest grade are evil,
+ wholly evil, and nothing but evil; while natures of the middle grade may,
+ under right direction, rise to the highest grade, or, under wrong
+ direction, sink to the lowest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another question, much debated in the age of Mencius, arose out of the
+ rival statements of two almost contemporary philosophers, Mo Ti (<i>Maw
+ Tee</i>) and Yang Chu. The former taught a system of mutual and
+ consequently universal love as a cure for all the ills arising from
+ misgovernment and want of social harmony. He pointed out, with much truth,
+ that if the feudal states would leave one another alone, families cease to
+ quarrel, and thieves cease to steal, while sovereign and subject lived on
+ terms of benevolence and loyalty, and fathers and sons on terms of
+ kindness and filial piety&mdash;then indeed the empire would be well
+ governed. But beyond suggesting the influence of teachers in the
+ prohibition of hatred and the encouragement of mutual love, our
+ philosopher does little or nothing to aid us in reaching such a desirable
+ consummation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctrine of Yang Chu is summed up as "every man for himself," and is
+ therefore diametrically opposed to that of Mo Ti. A questioner one day
+ asked him if he would consent to part with a single hair in order to
+ benefit the whole world. Yang Chu replied that a single hair could be of
+ no possible benefit to the world; and on being further pressed to say what
+ he would do if a hair were really of such benefit, it is stated that he
+ gave no answer. On the strength of this story, Mencius said: "Yang's
+ principle was, every man for himself. Though by plucking out a single hair
+ he might have benefited the whole world, he would not have done so. Mo's
+ system was universal love. If by taking off every hair from the crown of
+ his head to the sole of his foot he could have benefited the empire, he
+ would have done so. Neither of these two doctrines is sound; a middle
+ course is the right one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The origin of the visible universe is a question on which Chinese
+ philosophers have very naturally been led to speculate. Legend provides us
+ with a weird being named P'an Ku, who came into existence, no one can
+ quite say how, endowed with perfect knowledge, his function being to set
+ the gradually developing universe in order. He is often represented
+ pictorially with a huge adze in his hand, and engaged in constructing the
+ world out of the matter which has just begun to take shape. With his death
+ the detailed part of creation appeared. His breath became the wind; his
+ voice, the thunder; his left eye, the sun; his right eye, the moon; his
+ blood yielded rivers; his hair grew into trees and plants; his flesh
+ became the soil; his sweat descended as rain; and the parasites which
+ infested his body were the forerunners of the human race. This sort of
+ stuff, however, could only appeal to the illiterate; for intellectual and
+ educated persons something more was required. And so it came about that a
+ system, based originally upon the quite incomprehensible Book of Changes,
+ generally regarded as the oldest portion of the Confucian Canon, was
+ gradually elaborated and brought to a finite state during the eleventh and
+ twelfth centuries of our era. According to this system, there was a time,
+ almost beyond the reach of expression in figures, when nothing at all
+ existed. In the period which followed, there came into existence,
+ spontaneously, a principle, which after another lapse of time resolved
+ itself into two principles with entirely opposite characteristics. One of
+ these principles represented light, heat, masculinity, and similar
+ phenomena classed as positive; the other represented darkness, cold,
+ femininity, and other phenomena classed as negative. The interaction of
+ these two principles in duly adjusted proportions produced the five
+ elements, earth, fire, water, wood, and metal; and with their assistance
+ all Nature as we see it around us was easily and rapidly developed. Such
+ is the Confucian theory, at any rate so called, for it cannot be shown
+ that Confucius ever entertained these notions, and his alleged connexion
+ with the Canon of Changes is itself of doubtful authenticity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chuang Tzu (<i>Chwongdza</i>), a philosopher of the third and fourth
+ centuries B.C., who was not only a mystic but also a moralist and a social
+ reformer, has something to say on the subject: "If there is existence,
+ there must have been non-existence. And if there was a time when nothing
+ existed, then there must have been a time before that, when even nothing
+ did not exist. Then when nothing came into existence, could one really say
+ whether it belonged to existence or non-existence?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing" was rather a favourite term with Chuang Tzu for the exercise of
+ his wit. Light asked Nothing, saying: "Do you, sir, exist, or do you not
+ exist?" But getting no answer to his question, Light set to work to watch
+ for the appearance of Nothing. Hidden, vacuous&mdash;all day long he
+ looked but could not see it, listened but could not hear it, grasped at
+ but could not seize it. "Bravo!" cried Light; "who can equal this? I can
+ get to be nothing [meaning darkness], but I can't get to be not nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Confucius would have nothing to say on the subject of death and a future
+ state; his theme was consistently this life and its obligations, and he
+ regarded speculation on the unknown as sheer waste of time. When one of
+ three friends died and Confucius sent a disciple to condole with the other
+ two, the disciple found them sitting by the side of the corpse, merrily
+ singing and playing on the lute. They professed the then comparatively new
+ faith which taught that life was a dream and death the awakening. They
+ believed that at death the pure man "mounts to heaven, and roaming through
+ the clouds, passes beyond the limits of space, oblivious of existence, for
+ ever and ever without end." When the shocked disciple reported what he had
+ seen, Confucius said, "These men travel beyond the rule of life; I travel
+ within it. Consequently, our paths do not meet; and I was wrong in sending
+ you to mourn. They look on life as a huge tumour from which death sets
+ them free. All the same they know not where they were before birth, nor
+ where they will be after death. They ignore their passions. They take no
+ account of their ears and eyes. Backwards and forwards through all
+ eternity, they do not admit a beginning or an end. They stroll beyond the
+ dust and dirt of mortality, to wander in the realms of inaction. How
+ should such men trouble themselves with the conventionalities of this
+ world, or care what people may think of them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life comes, says Chuang Tzu, and cannot be declined; it goes, and cannot
+ be stopped. But alas, the world thinks that to nourish the physical frame
+ is enough to preserve life. Although not enough, it must still be done;
+ this cannot be neglected. For if one is to neglect the physical frame,
+ better far to retire at once from the world, since by renouncing the world
+ one gets rid of the cares of the world. There is, however, the vitality
+ which informs the physical frame; that must be equally an object of
+ incessant care. Then he whose physical frame is perfect and whose vitality
+ remains in its original purity&mdash;he is one with God. Man passes
+ through this sublunary life as a sunbeam passes through a crack; here one
+ moment, and gone the next. Neither are there any not equally subject to
+ the ingress and egress of mortality. One modification brings life; then
+ comes another, and there is death. Living creatures cry out; human beings
+ feel sorrow. The bow-case is slipped off; the clothes'-bag is dropped; and
+ in the confusion the soul wings its flight, and the body follows, on the
+ great journey home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attention has already been drawn to this necessary cultivation of the
+ physical frame, and Chuan Tzu gives an instance of the extent to which it
+ was carried. There was a certain man whose nose was covered with a very
+ hard scab, which was at the same time no thicker than a fly's wing. He
+ sent for a stonemason to chip it off; and the latter plied his adze with
+ great dexterity while the patient sat absolutely rigid, without moving a
+ muscle, and let him chip. When the scab was all off, the nose was found to
+ be quite uninjured. Such skill was of course soon noised abroad, and a
+ feudal prince, who also had a scab on his nose, sent for the mason to take
+ it off. The mason, however, declined to try, alleging that the success did
+ not depend so much upon the skill of the operator as upon the mental
+ control of the patient by which the physical frame became as it were a
+ perfectly inanimate object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Contemporary with Chuang Tzu, but of a very different school of thought,
+ was the philosopher Hui Tzu (<i>Hooeydza</i>). He was particularly fond of
+ the quibbles which so delighted the sophists or unsound reasoners of
+ ancient Greece. Chuang Tzu admits that he was a man of many ideas, and
+ that his works would fill five carts&mdash;this, it must be remembered,
+ because they were written on slips of wood tied together by a string run
+ through eyelets. But he adds that Hui Tzu's doctrines are paradoxical, and
+ his terms used ambiguously. Hui Tzu argued, for instance, that such
+ abstractions as hardness and whiteness were separate existences, of which
+ the mind could only be conscious separately, one at a time. He declared
+ that there are feathers in a new-laid egg, because they ultimately appear
+ on the chick. He maintained that fire is not hot; it is the man who feels
+ hot. That the eye does not see; it is the man who sees. That compasses
+ will not make a circle; it is the man. That a bay horse and a dun cow are
+ three; because taken separately they are two, and taken together they are
+ one: two and one make three. That a motherless colt never had a mother;
+ when it had a mother, it was not motherless. That if you take a stick a
+ foot long and every day cut it in half, you will never come to the end of
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of what use, asked his great rival, is Hui Tzu to the world? His efforts
+ can only be compared with those of a gadfly or a mosquito. He makes a
+ noise to drown an echo. He is like a man running a race with his own
+ shadow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Chuang Tzu was about to die, his disciples expressed a wish to give
+ him a splendid funeral. But Chuang Tzu said: "With heaven and earth for my
+ coffin and my shell; with the sun, moon and stars as my burial regalia;
+ and with all creation to escort me to my grave,&mdash;are not my funeral
+ paraphernalia ready to hand?" "We fear," argued the disciples, "lest the
+ carrion kite should eat the body of our Master;" to which Chuang Tzu
+ replied: "Above ground I shall be food for kites; below ground for
+ mole-crickets and ants. Why rob one to feed the other?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Life in China is not wholly made up of book-learning and commerce. The
+ earliest Chinese records exhibit the people as following the chase in the
+ wake of the great nobles, more as a sport than as the serious business it
+ must have been in still more remote ages; and the first emperors of the
+ present dynasty were also notable sportsmen, who organized periodical
+ hunting-tours on a scale of considerable magnificence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hawking was practised at least so far back as a century before Christ; for
+ we have a note on a man of that period who "loved to gallop after wily
+ animals with horse and dog, or follow up with falcon the pheasant and the
+ hare." The sport may be seen in northern China at the present day. A hare
+ is put up, and a couple of native greyhounds are dispatched after it;
+ these animals, however, would soon be distanced by the hare, which can run
+ straight away from them without doubling, but for the sudden descent of
+ the falcon, and a blow from its claw, often stunning the hare at the first
+ attempt, and enabling the dogs to come up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sportsmen who have to make their living by the business frequently descend
+ to methods which are sometimes very ingenious, and more remunerative than
+ the gun, but can hardly be classified as sport. Thus, a man in search of
+ wild duck will mark down a flock settled on some shallow sheet of water.
+ He will then put a crate over his head and shoulders, and gradually
+ approach the flock as though the crate were drifting on the surface. Once
+ among them, he puts out a hand under water, seizes hold of a duck's legs,
+ and rapidly pulls the bird down. The sudden disappearance of a colleague
+ does not seem to trouble its companions, and in a short time a very
+ considerable bag has been obtained. Tradition says that Confucius was fond
+ of sport, but would never let fly at birds sitting; which, considering
+ that his weapon was a bow-and-arrow, must be set down as a marvel of
+ self-restraint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scores of Chinese poets have dwelt upon the joys of angling, and fishing
+ is widely carried on over the inland waters; but the rod, except as a
+ matter of pure sport, has given place to the businesslike net. The account
+ of the use of fishing cormorants was formerly regarded as a traveller's
+ tale. It is quite true, however, that small rafts carrying several of
+ these birds, with a fisherman gently sculling at the stern, may be seen on
+ the rivers of southern China. The cormorant seizes a passing fish, and the
+ fisherman takes the fish from its beak. The bird is trained with a ring
+ round its neck, which prevents it from swallowing the prey; while for each
+ capture it is rewarded with a small piece of fish. Well-trained cormorants
+ can be trusted to fish without the restraint of the ring. Confucius,
+ again, is said to have been fond of fishing, but he would not use a net;
+ and there was another sage of antiquity who would not even use a hook, but
+ fished with a straight piece of iron, apparently thinking that the
+ advantage would be an unfair one as against the resources of the fish; and
+ declaring openly that he would only take such fish as wished to be caught.
+ By such simple narratives do the Chinese strive to convey great truths to
+ childish ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many sports were once common in China which have long since passed out of
+ the national life, and exist only in the record of books. Among these may
+ be mentioned "butting," a very ancient pastime, mentioned in history two
+ centuries before the Christian era. The sport consisted in putting an
+ ox-skin, horns and all, over the head, and then trying to knock one's
+ adversary out of time by butting at him after the fashion of bulls, the
+ result being, as the history of a thousand years later tells us, "smashed
+ heads, broken arms, and blood running in the Palace yard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The art of boxing, which included wrestling, had been practised by the
+ Chinese several centuries before butting was introduced. Its most
+ accomplished exponents were subsequently found among the priests of a
+ Buddhist monastery, built about A.D. 500; and it was undoubtedly from
+ their successors that the Japanese acquired a knowledge of the modern <i>jiu-jitsu</i>,
+ which is simply the equivalent of the old Chinese term meaning "gentle
+ art." A few words from a chapter on "boxing" in a military work of the
+ sixteenth century will give some idea of the scope of the Chinese sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The body must be quick to move, the hands quick to take advantage, and
+ the legs lightly planted but firm, so as to advance or retire with effect.
+ In the flying leap of the leg lies the skill of the art; in turning the
+ adversary upside down lies its ferocity; in planting a straight blow with
+ the fist lies its rapidity; and in deftly holding the adversary face
+ upwards lies its gentleness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Football was played in China at a very early date; originally, with a ball
+ stuffed full of hair; from the fifth century A.D., with an inflated
+ bladder covered with leather. A picture of the goal, which is something
+ like a triumphal arch, has come down to us, and also the technical names
+ and positions of the players; even more than seventy kinds of kicks are
+ enumerated, but the actual rules of the game are not known. It is recorded
+ by one writer that "the winners were rewarded with flowers, fruit and
+ wine, and even with silver bowls and brocades, while the captain of the
+ losing team was flogged, and suffered other indignities." The game, which
+ had disappeared for some centuries, is now being revived in Chinese
+ schools and colleges under the control of foreigners, and finds great
+ favour with the rising generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Polo is first mentioned in Chinese literature under the year A.D. 710, the
+ reference being to a game played before the Emperor and his court. The
+ game was very much in vogue for a long period, and even women were taught
+ to play&mdash;on donkey-back. The Kitan Tartars were the most skilful
+ players; it is doubtful if the game originated with them, or if it was
+ introduced from Persia, with which country China had relations at a very
+ early date. A statesman of the tenth century, disgusted at the way in
+ which the Emperor played polo to excess, presented a long memorial, urging
+ his Majesty to discontinue the practice. The reasons given for this advice
+ were three in number. "(1) When sovereign and subject play together, there
+ must be contention. If the sovereign wins, the subject is ashamed; if the
+ former loses, the latter exults. (2) To jump on a horse and swing a
+ mallet, galloping here and there, with no distinctions of rank, but only
+ eager to be first and win, is destructive of all ceremony between
+ sovereign and subject. (3) To make light of the responsibilities of
+ empire, and run even the remotest risk of an accident, is to disregard
+ obligations to the state and to her Imperial Majesty the Empress."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has always been recognized that the chief duty of a statesman is to
+ advise his master without fear or favour, and to protest loudly and openly
+ against any course which is likely to be disadvantageous to the
+ commonwealth, or to bring discredit on the court. It has also been always
+ understood that such protests are made entirely at the risk of the
+ statesman in question, who must be prepared to pay with his head for
+ counsels which may be stigmatized as unpatriotic, though in reality they
+ may be nothing more than unpalatable at the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year A.D. 814 the Emperor, who had become a devout Buddhist, made
+ arrangements for receiving with extravagant honours a bone of Buddha,
+ which had been forwarded from India to be preserved as a relic. This was
+ too much for Han Yu (already mentioned), the leading statesman of the day,
+ who was a man of the people, raised by his own genius, and who, to make
+ things worse, had already been banished eleven years previously for
+ presenting an offensive Memorial on the subject of tax-collection, for
+ which he had been forgiven and recalled. He promptly sent in a respectful
+ but bitter denunciation of Buddha and all his works, and entreated his
+ Majesty not to stain the Confucian purity of thought by tolerating such a
+ degrading exhibition as that proposed. But for the intercession of
+ friends, the answer to this bold memorial would have been death; as it was
+ he was banished to the neighbourhood of the modern Swatow, then a wild and
+ barbarous region, hardly incorporated into the Empire. There he set
+ himself to civilize the rude inhabitants, until soon recalled and once
+ more reinstated in office; and to this day there is a shrine dedicated to
+ his memory, containing the following inscription: "Wherever he passed, he
+ purified."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another great statesman, who flourished over two hundred years later, and
+ also several times suffered banishment, in an inscription to the honour
+ and glory of his predecessor, put down the following words: "Truth began
+ to be obscured and literature to fade; supernatural religions sprang up on
+ all sides, and many eminent scholars failed to oppose their advance, until
+ Han Yu, the cotton-clothed, arose and blasted them with his derisive
+ sneer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the fourteenth century there has existed a definite organization,
+ known as the Censorate, the members of which, who are called the "ears and
+ eyes" of the sovereign, make it their business to report adversely upon
+ any course adopted by the Government in the name of the Emperor, or by any
+ individual statesman, which seems to call for disapproval. The reproving
+ Censor is nominally entitled to complete immunity from punishment; but in
+ practice he knows that he cannot count too much upon either justice or
+ mercy. If he concludes that his words will be unforgivable, he hands in
+ his memorial, and draws public attention forthwith by committing suicide
+ on the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be allowed to commit suicide, and not to suffer the indignity of a
+ public execution, is a privilege sometimes extended to a high official
+ whose life has become forfeit under circumstances which do not call for
+ special degradation. A silken cord is forwarded from the Emperor to the
+ official in question, who at once puts an end to his life, though not
+ necessarily by strangulation. He may take poison, as is usually the case,
+ and this is called "swallowing gold." For a long time it was believed that
+ Chinese high officials really did swallow gold, which in view of its
+ non-poisonous character gave rise to an idea that gold-leaf was employed,
+ the leaf being inhaled and so causing suffocation. Some simple folk,
+ Chinese as well as foreigners, believe this now, although native
+ authorities have pointed out that workmen employed in the extraction of
+ gold often steal pieces and swallow them, without any serious consequences
+ whatever. Another explanation, which has also the advantage of being the
+ true one, is that "swallowing gold" is one of the roundabout phrases in
+ which the Chinese delight to express painful or repulsive subjects. No
+ emperor ever "dies," he becomes "a guest on high." No son will say that
+ his parents are "dead;" but merely that "they are not." The death of an
+ official is expressed by "he is drawing no salary;" of an ordinary man it
+ may be said that "he has become an ancient," very much in the same way
+ that we say "he has joined the majority." A corpse in a coffin is in its
+ "long home;" when buried, it is in "the city of old age," or on "the
+ terrace of night." To say grossly, then, that a man took poison would be
+ an offence to ears polite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII&mdash;RECREATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To return, after a long digression. The age of manly sport, as above
+ described, has long passed away; and the only hope is for a revival under
+ the changing conditions of modern China. Some few athletic exercises have
+ survived; and until recently, archery, in which the Tartars have always
+ excelled, was regarded almost as a semi-divine accomplishment. Kite-flying
+ has reached a high level of skill. Clever little "messengers" have been
+ devised, which run up the string, carrying fire-crackers which explode at
+ a great height. There is a game of shuttlecock, without the battledore,
+ for which the feet are used as a substitute; and "diavolo," recently
+ introduced into Europe, is an ancient Chinese pastime. A few Manchus, too,
+ may be seen skating during the long northern winter, but the modern
+ inhabitant of the Flowery Land, be he Manchu or Chinese, much prefers an
+ indoor game to anything else, especially when, as is universally the case,
+ a stake of money is involved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gambling is indeed a very marked feature of Chinese life. A child buying a
+ cake will often go double or quits with the stall-keeper, to see if he is
+ to have two cakes or nothing, the question being settled by a throw of
+ dice in a bowl. Of the interval allowed for meals, a gang of coolies will
+ devote a portion to a game of cards. The cards used are smaller than the
+ European pack, and of course differently marked; they were the invention
+ of a lady of the Palace in the tenth century, who substituted imitation
+ leaves of gilt paper for real leaves, which had previously been adopted
+ for playing some kind of game. There are also various games played with
+ chequers, some of great antiquity; and there is chess, that is to say, a
+ game so little differing from our chess as to leave no doubt as to the
+ common origin of both. In all of these the money element comes in; and it
+ is not too much to say that more homes are broken up, and more misery
+ caused by this truly national vice than can be attributed to any other
+ cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For pleasure pure and simple, independent of gains and losses, the theatre
+ occupies the warmest place in every Chinaman's heart. If gambling is a
+ national vice in China, the drama must be set off as the national
+ recreation. Life would be unthinkable to the vast majority if its monotony
+ were not broken by the periodical performance of stage-plays. It is from
+ this source that a certain familiarity with the great historical episodes
+ of the past may be pleasantly picked up over a pipe and a cup of tea;
+ while the farce, occasionally perhaps erring on the side of breadth,
+ affords plenty of merriment to the laughter-loving crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ability to make Chinamen laugh is a great asset; and a foreigner who
+ carries this about with him will find it stand him in much better stead
+ than a revolver. When, many years ago, a vessel was wrecked on the coast
+ of Formosa, the crew and passengers were at once seized, and confined for
+ some time in a building, where traces of their inscriptions could be seen
+ up to quite a recent date. At length, they were all taken out for
+ execution; but before the ghastly order was carried out, one of the number
+ so amused everybody by cutting capers and turning head over heels, that
+ the presiding mandarin said he was a funny fellow, and positively allowed
+ him to escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the farce itself, it is not so much the actual wit of the
+ dialogue which carries away the audience as the refined skill of the
+ actor, who has to pass through many trials before he is considered to be
+ fit for the stage. Beginning as quite a boy, in addition to committing to
+ memory a large number of plays&mdash;not merely his own part, but the
+ whole play&mdash;he has to undergo a severe physical training, part of
+ which consists in standing for an hour every day with his mouth wide open,
+ to inhale the morning air. He is taught to sing, to walk, to strut, and to
+ perform a variety of gymnastic exercises, such as standing on his head, or
+ turning somersaults. His first classification is as male or female actor,
+ no women having been allowed to perform since the days of the Emperor
+ Ch'ien Lung (A.D. 1736-1796), whose mother was an actress, just as in
+ Shakespeare's time the parts for women were always taken by young men or
+ boys. When once this is settled, it only remains to enrol him as
+ tragedian, comedian, low-comedy actor, walking gentleman or lady, and
+ similar parts, according to his capabilities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not too much to say that women are very little missed on the Chinese
+ stage. The make-up of the actor is so perfect, and his imitation of the
+ feminine voice and manner, down to the smallest detail, even to the small
+ feet, is so exact in every point, that he would be a clever observer who
+ could positively detect impersonation by a man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Generally speaking, a Chinese actor has many more difficulties to face
+ than his colleague in the West. In addition to the expression of all
+ shades of feeling, from mirth to melancholy, the former has to keep up a
+ perpetual make-believe in another sense, which is further great strain
+ upon his nerves. There being no scenery, no furniture, and no appointments
+ of any except the slenderest kind upon the stage, he has to create in the
+ minds of his audience a belief that all these missing accessories are
+ nevertheless before their eyes. A general comes upon the scene, with a
+ whip in his hand, and a studied movement not only suggests that he is
+ dismounting from a horse, but outlines the animal itself. In the same
+ manner, he remounts and rides off again; while some other actor speaks
+ from the top of a small table, which is forthwith transfigured, and
+ becomes to all intents and purposes a castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of those who might be apt to smile at the simple Chinese mind which
+ can tolerate such absurdities in the way of make-believe, require to be
+ reminded that the stage in the days of Queen Elizabeth was worked on very
+ much the same lines. Sir Philip Sidney tells us that the scene of an
+ imagined garden with imagined flowers had to do duty at one time for an
+ imagined shipwreck, and at another for an imagined battlefield, the
+ spectator in the latter case being helped out by two opposing soldiers
+ armed with swords and bucklers. Even Shakespeare, in the Prologue to his
+ play of <i>Henry V</i>, speaks of imagining one man to be an army of a
+ thousand, and says:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Think, when we talk of horses that you see them
+ Printing their proud hoofs i' the receiving earth;
+ For 'tis your thoughts that now must deck our kings.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Here, then, is good authority for the quaint system that still prevails in
+ China.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hundreds of Chinese pilgrims annually went their weary way to the top of
+ Mount Omi in the province of Ssuch'uan, and gaze downward from a sheer and
+ lofty precipice to view a huge circular belt of light, which is called the
+ Glory of Buddha. Some see it, some do not; the Chinese say that the whole
+ thing is a question of faith. In a somewhat similar sense, the dramatic
+ enthusiast sees before him such beings of the mind as the genuine actor is
+ able to call up. The Philistine cannot reach this pitch; but he is sharp
+ enough to see other things which to the eye of the sympathetic spectator
+ are absolutely non-existent. Some of the latter will be enumerated below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese stage has no curtain; and the orchestra is on the stage
+ itself, behind the actors. There is no prompter and no call-boy. Stage
+ footmen wait at the sides to carry in screens, small tables, and an odd
+ chair or two, to represent houses, city walls, and so on, or hand cups of
+ tea to the actors when their throats become dry from vociferous singing,
+ which is always in falsetto. All this in the face of the audience. Dead
+ people get up and walk off the stage; or while lying dead, contrive to
+ alter their facial expression, and then get up and carry themselves off.
+ There is no interval between one play and the next following, which
+ probably gives rise to the erroneous belief that Chinese plays are long,
+ the fact being that they are very short. According to the Penal Code,
+ there may be no impersonation of emperors and empresses of past ages, but
+ this clause is now held to refer solely to the present dynasty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the man in the street and his children, there are to be seen
+ everywhere in China where a sufficient number of people gather together,
+ Punch-and-Judy shows of quite a high class in point of skill and general
+ attractiveness. These shows are variously traced back to the eighth and
+ second centuries B.C., and to the seventh century A.D., even the latest of
+ which periods would considerably antedate the appearance of performing
+ marionettes in this country or on the Continent. Associated with the
+ second century B.C., the story runs that the Emperor of the day was
+ closely besieged by a terrible Hun chieftain, who was accompanied by his
+ wife. It occurred to one of his Majesty's staff to exhibit on the walls of
+ the town, in full view of the enemy, a number of manikins, dressed up to a
+ deceptive resemblance to beautiful girls. The wife of the Hun chieftain
+ then persuaded her husband to draw off his forces, and the Emperor
+ escaped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the Chinese marionettes, little plays on familiar subjects are
+ performed; many are of a more serious turn than the loves of Mr. Punch,
+ while others again are of the knock-about style so dear to the ordinary
+ boy and girl. Besides such entertainments as these, the streets of a
+ Chinese city offer other shows to those who desire to be amused. An
+ acrobat, a rope-dancer or a conjurer will take up a pitch right in the
+ middle of the roadway, and the traffic has to get on as best it can. A
+ theatrical stage will sometimes completely block a street, and even
+ foot-passengers will have to find their way round. There is also the
+ public story-reader, who for his own sake will choose a convenient spot
+ near to some busy thoroughfare; and there, to an assembled crowd, he will
+ read out, not in the difficult book-language, but in the colloquial
+ dialect of the place, stories of war and heroism, soldiers led to
+ night-attacks with wooden bits in their mouths to prevent them from
+ talking in the ranks, the victory of the loyal and the rout and slaughter
+ of the rebel. Or it may be a tale of giants, goblins and wizards; the
+ bewitching of promising young men by lovely maidens who turn out to be
+ really foxes in disguise, ending as usual in the triumph of virtue and the
+ discomfiture of vice. The fixed eyes and open mouths of the crowd,
+ listening with rapt attention, is a sight which, once seen, is not easily
+ forgotten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the ordinary man, China is simply peopled with bogies and devils, the
+ spirits of the wicked or of those unfortunate enough not to secure decent
+ burial with all its accompanying worship and rites. These creatures, whose
+ bodies cast no shadow, lurk in dark corners, ready to pounce on some
+ unwary passer-by and possibly tear out his heart. Many a Confucianist,
+ sturdy in his faith that "devils only exist for those who believe in
+ them," will hesitate to visit by night a lonely spot, or even to enter a
+ disused tumbledown building by day. Some of the stories told are certainly
+ well fitted to make a deep impression upon young and highly-strung nerves.
+ For instance, one man who was too fond of the bottle placed some liquor
+ alongside his bed, to be drunk during the night. On stretching out his
+ hand to reach the flask, he was seized by a demon, and dragged gradually
+ into the earth. In response to his shrieks, his relatives and neighbours
+ only arrived in time to see the ground close over his head, just as though
+ he had fallen into water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this story it will be rightly gathered that the Chinese mostly sleep
+ on the ground floor. In Peking, houses of more than one storey are
+ absolutely barred; the reason being that each house is built round a
+ courtyard, which usually has trees in it, and in which the ladies of the
+ establishment delight to sit and sew, and take the air and all the
+ exercise they can manage to get.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another blood-curdling story is that of four travellers who arrived by
+ night at an inn, but could obtain no other accommodation than a room in
+ which was lying the corpse of the landlord's daughter-in-law. Three of the
+ four were soon snoring; the fourth, however, remained awake, and very soon
+ heard a creaking of the trestles on which was the dead body dressed out in
+ paper robes, ready for burial. To his horror he saw the girl get up, and
+ go and breathe on his companions; so by the time she came to him he had
+ his head tucked well under the bedclothes. After a little while he kicked
+ one of the others; but finding that his friend did not move, he suddenly
+ grabbed his own trousers and made a bolt for the door. In a moment the
+ corpse was up and after him, following him down the street, and gaining
+ gradually on him, no one coming to the rescue in spite of his loud shrieks
+ as he ran. So he slipped behind a tree, and dodged right and left, the
+ infuriated corpse also dodging right and left, and making violent efforts
+ to get him. At length, the girl made a rush forward with one arm on each
+ side, in the hope of thus grabbing her victim. The traveller, however,
+ fell backwards and escaped her clutch, while she remained rigidly
+ embracing the tree. By and by he was found senseless on the ground; and
+ the corpse was removed from the tree, but with great difficulty, as the
+ fingers were buried in the bark so deep that the nails were not even
+ visible. The other three travellers were found dead in their beds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Periodical feasting may be regarded as another form of amusement by which
+ the Chinese seek to relieve the monotony of life. They have never reserved
+ one day in seven for absolute rest, though of late years Chinese merchants
+ connected with foreign trade have to some extent fallen in with the
+ observance of Sunday. Quite a number of days during the year are set apart
+ as public holidays, but no one is obliged to keep them as such, unless he
+ likes, with one important exception. The festival of the New Year cannot
+ be ignored by any one. For about ten days before this date, and twenty
+ days after it, the public offices are closed and no business is
+ transacted, the seal of each official is handed over for safe keeping to
+ the official's wife, a fact which helps to dispose of the libel that women
+ in China are the down-trodden creatures they are often represented to be.
+ All debts have to be paid and accounts squared by midnight on the last day
+ of the old year. A few nights previously, offerings of an excessively
+ sticky sweetmeat are made to the Spirit of the Hearth, one of whose
+ functions is that of an accusing angel. The Spirit is then on the point of
+ starting for his annual visit to heaven, and lest any of the disclosures
+ he might make should entail unpleasant consequences, it is adjudged best
+ that he shall be rendered incapable of making any disclosures at all. The
+ unwary god finds his lips tightly glued together, and is unable to utter a
+ single word. Meanwhile, fire-crackers are being everywhere let off on a
+ colossal scale, the object being to frighten away the evil spirits which
+ have collected during the past twelve months, and to begin the year
+ afresh. The day itself is devoted to calling, in one's best clothes, on
+ relatives, friends and official superiors, for all of whom it is customary
+ to leave a present. The relatives and friends receive "wet" gifts, such as
+ fruit or cakes; officials also receive wet gifts, but underneath the top
+ layer will be found something "dry," in the shape of silver or bank-notes.
+ Everybody salutes everybody with the conventional saying, "New joy, new
+ joy; get rich, get rich!" Yet here again, as in all things Chinese, we
+ find a striking exception to this good-natured rule. No one says "Get
+ rich, get rich!" to the undertaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A high authority (on other matters) has recently stated that the Chinese
+ calendar "begins just when the Emperor chooses to say it shall. He is like
+ the captain of a ship, who says of the hour, 'Make it so,' and it is so."
+ The truth is that New Year's Day is determined by the Astronomical Board,
+ according to fixed rules, just as Easter is determined; and it may fall on
+ any day between the 21st of January and the 20th of February, but neither
+ before the former date nor after the latter date, in spite even of the
+ most threatening orders from the Palace. This book will indeed have been
+ written in vain if the reader lays it down without having realized that no
+ such wanton interference on the part of their rulers would be tolerated by
+ the Chinese people. But we are wandering away from merry-making and
+ festivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In their daily life the Chinese are extremely moderate eaters and mostly
+ tea-drinkers, even the wealthy confining themselves to few and simple
+ dishes of pork, fowl, or fish, with the ever-present accompaniment of
+ rice. The puppy-dog, on which the people are popularly believed to live,
+ as the French on frogs, is a stall-fed animal, and has always been, and
+ still is, an article of food; but the consumption of dog-flesh is really
+ very restricted, and many thousands of Chinamen have never tasted dog in
+ their lives. According to the popular classification of foods, those who
+ live on vegetables get strong, those who live on meat become brave, those
+ who live on grain acquire wisdom, and those who live on air become divine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At banquets the scene changes, and course after course of curiously
+ compounded and highly spiced dishes, cooked as only Chinese cooks know
+ how, are placed before the guests. The wine, too, goes merrily round;
+ bumpers are drunk at short intervals, and the wine-cups are held upside
+ down, to show that there are no heel-taps. Forfeits are exacted over the
+ game of "guess-fingers," for failure to cap a verse, or for any other
+ equally sufficient (or insufficient) reason; and the penalty is an extra
+ bumper for the loser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This lively picture requires, perhaps, a little further explanation.
+ Chinese "wine" is an ardent spirit distilled from rice, and is modified in
+ various ways so as to produce certain brands, some of which are of quite
+ moderate strength, and really may be classed as wine. It is always drunk
+ hot, the heat being supplied by vessels of boiling water, in which the
+ pewter wine-flasks are kept standing. The wine-cups are small, and it is
+ possible to drink a good many of them without feeling in the least
+ overcome. Even so, many diners now refuse to touch wine at all, the excuse
+ always being that it flushes the face uncomfortably. Perhaps they fear an
+ undeserved imputation of drunkenness, remembering their own cynical
+ saying: "A bottle-nosed man may be a tee-totaller, but no one will believe
+ it." To judge from their histories and their poetry, the Chinese seem once
+ upon a time to have been a fairly tipsy nation: now-a-days, the truth lies
+ the other way. An official who died A.D. 639, and was the originator of
+ epitaphs in China, wrote his own, as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Fu I loved the green hills and white clouds . . .
+ Alas! he died of drink!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There are exceptions, no doubt, as to every rule in every country; but
+ such sights as drunken men tumbling about the streets, or lying senseless
+ by the roadside, are not to be seen in China. "It is not wine," says the
+ proverb, "which makes a man drunk; it is the man himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even at banquets, which are often very rich and costly, unnecessary
+ expense is by no means encouraged. Dishes of fruit, of a kind which no one
+ would wish to eat, and which are placed on the table for show or ornament,
+ are simply clever imitations in painted wood, and pass from banquet to
+ banquet as part of the ordinary paraphernalia of a feast; no one is
+ deceived. The same form of open and above-board deception appears in many
+ other ways. There are societies organized for visiting in a comfortable
+ style of pilgrimage some famous mountain of historic interest. Names are
+ put down, and money is collected; and then the party starts off by boat or
+ in sedan-chairs, as the case may be. On arriving at the mountain, there is
+ a grand feast, and after the picnic, for such it is, every one goes home
+ again. That is the real thing; now for the imitation. Names are put down,
+ and money is collected, as before; but the funds are spent over a feast at
+ home, alongside of a paper mountain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another of these deceptions, which deceive nobody, is one which might be
+ usefully adapted to life in other countries. A Chinaman meeting in the
+ street a friend, and having no leisure to stop and talk, or perhaps
+ meeting some one with whom he may be unwilling to talk, will promptly put
+ up his open fan to screen his face, and pass on. The suggestion is that,
+ wishing to pass without notice, he fails to see the person in question,
+ and it would be a serious breach of decorum on the part of the latter to
+ ignore the hint thus conveyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Japan, who may be said to have borrowed the civilization of China, lock,
+ stock and barrel&mdash;her literature, her moral code, her arts, her
+ sciences, her manners and customs, her ceremonial, and even her national
+ dress&mdash;invented the folding fan, which in the early part of the
+ fifteenth century formed part of the tribute sent from Korea to Peking,
+ and even later was looked upon by the Chinese as quite a curiosity. In the
+ early ages, fans were made of feathers, as still at the present day; but
+ the more modern fan of native origin is a light frame of bamboo, wood or
+ ivory, round or otherwise, over which silk is stretched, offering a
+ convenient medium for the inscription of poems, or for paintings, as
+ exchanged between friend and friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same innocent form of deception, which deceives nobody, is carried out
+ when two officials, seated in sedan-chairs, have to pass one another. If
+ they are of about equal rank, etiquette demands that they should alight
+ from their chairs, and perform mutual salutations. To obviate the extreme
+ inconvenience of this rule, large wooden fans are carried in all
+ processions of the kind, and these are hastily thrust between the passing
+ officials, so that neither becomes aware of the other's existence on the
+ scene. The case is different when one of the two is of higher rank. The
+ official of inferior grade is bound to stop and get out of his chair while
+ his superior passes by, though even now he has a chance of escape; he
+ hears the gong beaten to clear the way for the great man, whose rank he
+ can tell from the number of consecutive blows given; and hurriedly turns
+ off down a side street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An historical instance of substituting the shadow for the reality is that
+ of the great general Ts'ao Ts'ao, third century A.D., who for some breach
+ of the law sentenced himself to death, but satisfied his sense of justice
+ by cutting off his hair. An emperor of the sixth century, who was a devout
+ Buddhist, and therefore unable to countenance any destruction of life, had
+ all the sacrificial animals made of dough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opium question, which will claim a few words later on, has been
+ exhaustively threshed out; and in view of the contradictory statements for
+ and against the habit of opium smoking, it is recognized that any
+ conclusion, satisfactory to both parties, is a very remote possibility.
+ The Chinese themselves, who are chiefly interested in the argument, have
+ lately come to a very definite conclusion, which is that opium has to go;
+ and it seems that in spite of almost invincible obstacles, the sincerity
+ and patriotism which are being infused into the movement will certainly,
+ sooner or later, achieve the desired end. It is perhaps worth noting that
+ in the Decree of 1906, which ordered the abolition of opium smoking, the
+ old Empress Dowager, who was herself over sixty and a moderate smoker,
+ inserted a clause excusing from the operation of the new law all persons
+ already more than sixty years of age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX&mdash;THE MONGOLS, 1260-1368
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Lack of patriotism is often hurled by foreigners as a reproach to the
+ Chinese. The charge cannot be substantiated, any more than it could be if
+ directed against some nation in Europe. If willingness to sacrifice
+ everything, including life itself, may be taken as a fair test of genuine
+ patriotism, then it will be found, if historical records be not ignored,
+ that China has furnished numberless brilliant examples of true patriots
+ who chose to die rather than suffer dishonour to themselves or to their
+ country. A single instance must suffice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time is the close of the thirteenth century, when the Mongols under
+ Kublai Khan were steadily dispossessing the once glorious and powerful
+ House of Sung, and placing the empire of China under alien rule. Disaster
+ followed disaster, until almost the last army of the Sungs was cut to
+ pieces, and the famous statesman and general in command, Wen (pronounced
+ <i>One</i>) T'ien-hsian, fell into the hands of the Mongols. He was
+ ordered, but refused, to write and advise capitulation, and every effort
+ was subsequently made to induce him to own allegiance to the conquerors.
+ He was kept in prison for three years. "My dungeon," he wrote, "is lighted
+ by the will-o'-the-wisp alone; no breath of spring cheers the murky
+ solitude in which I dwell. Exposed to mist and dew, I had many times
+ thought to die; and yet, through the seasons of two revolving years,
+ disease hovered around me in vain. The dank, unhealthy soil to me became
+ Paradise itself. For there was that within me which misfortune could not
+ steal away; and so I remained firm, gazing at the white clouds floating
+ over my head, and bearing in my heart a sorrow boundless as the sky."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At length he was summoned into the presence of Kublai Khan, who said to
+ him, "What is it you want?" "By the grace of the Sung Emperor," he
+ replied, "I became His Majesty's Minister. I cannot serve two masters. I
+ only ask to die." Accordingly, he was executed, meeting his death with
+ composure, and making an obeisance in the direction of the old capital.
+ His last words were, "My work is finished." Compare this with the quiet
+ death-bed of another statesman, who flourished in the previous century. He
+ had advised an enormous cession of territory to the Tartars, and had
+ brought about the execution of a patriot soldier, who wished to recover it
+ at all costs. He was loaded with honours, and on the very night he died he
+ was raised to the rank of Prince. He was even canonized, after the usual
+ custom, as Loyalty Manifested, on a mistaken estimate of his career; but
+ fifty years later his title was changed to False and Foul and his honours
+ were cancelled, while the people at large took his degraded name for use
+ as an alternative to spittoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two names of quite recent patriots deserve to be recorded here as a
+ tribute to their earnest devotion to the real interests of their country,
+ and incidentally for the far-reaching consequences of their heroic act,
+ which probably saved the lives of many foreigners in various parts of
+ China. It was during the Boxer troubles in Peking, at the beginning of the
+ siege of the legations, that Yuan Ch'ang and Hsu Ching-ch'eng, two high
+ Chinese officials, ventured to memorialize the Empress Dowager upon the
+ fatal policy, and even criminality, of the whole proceedings, imploring
+ her Majesty at a meeting of the Grand Council to reconsider her intention
+ of issuing orders for the extermination of all foreigners. In spite of
+ their remonstrances, a decree was issued to that effect and forwarded to
+ the high authorities of the various provinces; but it failed to accomplish
+ what had been intended, for these two heroes, taking their lives in their
+ hands, had altered the words "slay all foreigners" into "protect all
+ foreigners." Some five to six weeks later, when the siege was drawing to a
+ close, the alteration was discovered; and next day those two men were
+ hurriedly beheaded, meeting death with such firmness and fortitude as only
+ true patriotism could inspire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mongols found it no easy task to dispossess the House of Sung, which
+ had many warm adherents to its cause. It was in 1206 that Genghis Khan
+ began to make arrangements for a projected invasion of China, and by 1214
+ he was master of all the enemy's territory north of the Yellow River,
+ except Peking. He then made peace with the Golden Tartar emperor of
+ northern China; but his suspicions were soon aroused, and hostilities were
+ renewed. In 1227 he died, while conducting a campaign in Central Asia; and
+ it remained for his vigorous grandson, Kublai Khan, to complete the
+ conquest of China more than half a century afterwards. So early as 1260,
+ Kublai was able to proclaim himself emperor at Xanadu, which means
+ Imperial Capital, and lay about one hundred and eighty miles north of
+ modern Peking, where, in those days known as Khan-baligh (Marco Polo's
+ Cambaluc), he established himself four years later; but twenty years of
+ severe fighting had still to pass away before the empire was finally
+ subdued. The Sung troops were gradually driven south, contesting every
+ inch of ground with a dogged resistance born of patriotic endeavour. In
+ 1278 Canton was taken, and the heroic Wen T'ien-hsiang was captured
+ through the treachery of a subordinate. In 1279 the last stronghold of the
+ Sungs was beleaguered by land and sea. Shut up in their ships which they
+ formed into a compact mass and fortified with towers and breastworks, the
+ patriots, deprived of fresh water, harassed by attacks during the day and
+ by fire-ships at night, maintained the unequal struggle for a month. But
+ when, after a hard day's fighting, the Sung commander found himself left
+ with only sixteen vessels, he fled up a creek. His retreat was cut off;
+ and then at length despairing of his country, he bade his wife and
+ children throw themselves overboard. He himself, taking the young emperor
+ on his back, followed their example, and thus brought the great Sung
+ dynasty to an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The grandeur of Kublai Khan's reign may be gathered from the pages of
+ Marco Polo, in which, too, allusion is made to Bayan, the skilful general
+ to whom so much of the military success of the Mongols was due. Korea,
+ Burma, and Annam became dependencies of China, and continued to send
+ tribute as such even up to quite modern times. Hardly so successful was
+ Kublai Khan's huge naval expedition against Japan, which, in point of
+ number of ships and men, the insular character of the enemy's country, the
+ chastisement intended, and the total loss of the fleet in a storm, aided
+ by the stubborn resistance offered by the Japanese themselves&mdash;suggests
+ a very obvious comparison with the object and fate of the Spanish Armada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the more peaceful developments of Mongol rule at this epoch may be
+ mentioned the introduction of a written character for the Mongol language.
+ It was the work of a Tibetan priest, named Baschpa, and was based upon the
+ written language of a nation known as the Ouigours (akin to the Turks),
+ which had in turn been based upon Syraic, and is written in vertical lines
+ connected by ligatures. Similarly, until 1599 there was no written Manchu
+ language; a script, based upon the Mongol, was then devised, also in
+ vertical lines or columns like Chinese, but read from left to right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under Kublai Khan the calendar was revised, and the Imperial Academy was
+ opened; the Yellow River was explored to its source, and bank-notes were
+ made current. The Emperor himself was an ardent Buddhist, but he took care
+ that proper honours were paid to Confucius; on the other hand, he issued
+ orders that all Taoist literature of the baser kind was to be destroyed.
+ Behind all this there was extortionate taxation, a form of oppression the
+ Chinese have never learned to tolerate, and discontent led to disorder.
+ Kublai's grandson was for a time an honest ruler and tried to stem the
+ tide, but by 1368 the mandate of the Mongols was exhausted. They were an
+ alien race, and the Chinese were glad to get rid of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chinese soldiers are often stigmatized as arrant cowards, who run away at
+ the slightest provocation, their first thought being for the safety of
+ their own skins. No doubt Chinese soldiers do run away&mdash;sometimes; at
+ other times they fight to the death, as has been amply proved over and
+ over again. It is the old story of marking the hits and not the misses. A
+ great deal depends upon sufficiency and regularity of pay. Soldiers with
+ pay in arrear, half clad, hungry, and ill armed, as has frequently been
+ the case in Chinese campaigns, cannot be expected to do much for the flag.
+ Given the reverse of these conditions, things would be likely to go badly
+ with the enemy, whosoever he might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Underneath a mask of complete facial stolidity, the Chinese conceal one of
+ the most exciteable temperaments to be found in any race, as will soon be
+ discovered by watching an ordinary street row between a couple of men, or
+ still better, women. A Chinese crowd of men&mdash;women keep away&mdash;is
+ a good-tempered and orderly mob, partly because not inflamed by drink,
+ when out to enjoy the Feast of the Lanterns, or to watch the twinkling
+ lamps float down a river to light the wandering ghosts of the drowned on
+ the night of their All Souls' Day, sacred to the memory of the dead; but a
+ rumour, a mere whisper, the more baseless often the more potent, will
+ transform these law-abiding people into a crowd of fiends. In times when
+ popular feeling runs high, as when large numbers of men were said to be
+ deprived suddenly and mysteriously of their queues, or when the word went
+ round, as it has done on more occasions than one, that foreigners were
+ kidnapping children in order to use their eyes for medicine,&mdash;in such
+ times the masses, incited by those who ought to know better, get
+ completely out of hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A curious and tragic instance of this excitability occurred some years
+ ago. The viceroy of a province had succeeded in organizing a contingent of
+ foreign-drilled troops, under the guidance and leadership of two qualified
+ foreign instructors. After some time had elapsed, and it was thought that
+ the troops were sufficiently trained to make a good show, it was arranged
+ that a sham fight should be held in the presence of the viceroy himself.
+ The men were divided into two bodies under the two foreign commanders, and
+ in the course of operations one body had to defend a village, while the
+ other had to attack it. When the time came to capture the village at the
+ point of the bayonet, both sides lost their heads; there was a fierce
+ hand-to-hand fight in stern reality, and before this could be effectively
+ stopped four men had been killed outright and sixteen badly wounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Considering how squalid many Chinese homes are, it is all the more
+ astonishing to find such deep attachment to them. There exists in the
+ language a definite word for <i>home</i>, in its fullest English sense. As
+ a written character, it is supposed to picture the idea of a family, the
+ component parts being a "roof" with "three persons" underneath. There is,
+ indeed, another and more fanciful explanation of this character, namely,
+ that it is composed of a "roof" with a "pig" underneath, the forms for
+ "three men" and "pig" being sufficiently alike at any rate to justify the
+ suggestion. This analysis would not be altogether out of place in China
+ any more than in Ireland; but as a matter of fact the balance of evidence
+ is in favour of the "three men," which number, it may be remarked, is that
+ which technically constitutes a crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever may be the literary view of the word "home," it is quite certain
+ that to the ordinary Chinaman there is no place like it. "One mile away
+ from home is not so good as being in it," says a proverb with a punning
+ turn which cannot be brought out in English. Another says, "Every day is
+ happy at home, every moment miserable abroad." It may therefore be
+ profitable to look inside a Chinese home, if only to discover wherein its
+ attractiveness lies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All such homes are arranged more or less on the patriarchal system; that
+ is to say, at the head of the establishment are a father and mother, who
+ rank equally so far as their juniors are concerned; the mother receiving
+ precisely the same share of deference in life, and of ancestral worship
+ after death, as the father. The children grow up; wives are sought for the
+ boys, and husbands for the girls, at about the ages of eighteen and
+ sixteen, respectively. The former bring their wives into the paternal
+ home; the latter belong, from the day of their marriage, to the paternal
+ homes of their husbands. Bachelors and old maids have no place in the
+ Chinese scheme of life. Theoretically, bride and bridegroom are not
+ supposed to see each other until the wedding-day, when the girl's veil is
+ lifted on her arrival at her father-in-law's house; in practice, the young
+ people usually manage to get at least a glimpse of one another, usually
+ with the connivance of their elders. Thus the family expands, and one of
+ the greatest happinesses which can befall a Chinaman is to have "five
+ generations in the hall." Owing to early marriage, this is not nearly so
+ uncommon as it is in Western countries. There is an authentic record of an
+ old statesman who had so many descendants that when they came to
+ congratulate him on his birthdays, he was quite unable to remember all
+ their names, and could only bow as they passed in line before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to income and expenditure, the earnings of the various members go into
+ a common purse, out of which expenses are paid. Every one has a right to
+ food and shelter; and so it is that if some are out of work, the strain is
+ not individually felt; they take their rations as usual. On the death of
+ the father, it is not at all uncommon for the mother to take up the reins,
+ though it is more usual for the eldest son to take his place. Sometimes,
+ after the death of the mother&mdash;and then it is accounted a bad day for
+ the family fortunes&mdash;the brothers cannot agree; the property is
+ divided, and each son sets up for himself, a proceeding which is forbidden
+ by the Penal Code during the parents' lifetime. Meanwhile, any member of
+ the family who should disgrace himself in any way, as by becoming an
+ inveterate gambler and permanently neglecting his work, or by developing
+ the opium vice to great excess, would be formally cast out, his name being
+ struck off the ancestral register. Men of this stamp generally sink lower
+ and lower, until they swell the ranks of professional beggars, to die
+ perhaps in a ditch; but such cases are happily of rare occurrence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the ordinary peaceful family, regulated according to Confucian
+ principles of filial piety, fraternal love, and loyalty to the sovereign,
+ we find love of home exalted to a passion; and bitter is the day of
+ leave-taking for a long absence, as when a successful son starts to take
+ up his official appointment at a distant post. The latter, not being able
+ to hold office in his native province, may have a long and sometimes
+ dangerous journey to make, possibly to the other end of the empire. In any
+ case, years must elapse before he can revisit "the mulberry and the elm"&mdash;the
+ garden he leaves behind. He may take his "old woman" and family with him,
+ or they may follow later on; as another alternative, the "old woman" with
+ the children may remain permanently in the ancestral home, while the
+ husband carries on his official career alone. Under such circumstances as
+ the last-mentioned, no one, including his own wife, is shocked if he
+ consoles himself with a "small old woman," whom he picks up at his new
+ place of abode. The "small old woman" is indeed often introduced into
+ families where the "principal old woman" fails to contribute the first of
+ "the three blessings of which every one desires to have plenty," namely,
+ sons, money, and life. Instances are not uncommon of the wife herself
+ urging this course upon her husband; and but for this system the family
+ line would often come to an end, failing recourse to another system,
+ namely, adoption, which is also brought into play when all hope of a
+ lineal descendant is abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether she has children or not, the principal wife&mdash;the only wife,
+ in fact&mdash;never loses her supremacy as the head of the household. The
+ late Empress Dowager was originally a concubine; by virtue of motherhood
+ she was raised to the rank of Western Empress, but never legitimately took
+ precedence of the wife, whose superiority was indicated by her title of
+ Eastern Empress, the east being more honourable than the west. The emperor
+ always sits with his face towards the south.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of Sung Hung, a statesman who flourished about the time of the
+ Christian era, pleasantly illustrates a chivalrous side of the Chinese
+ character. This man raised himself from a humble station in life to be a
+ minister of state, and was subsequently ennobled as marquis. The emperor
+ then wished him to put away his wife, who was a woman of the people, and
+ marry a princess; to which he nobly replied: "Sire, the partner of my
+ porridge days shall never go down from my hall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the miseries of exile from the ancestral home, lurid pictures have been
+ drawn by many poets and others. One man, ordered from some soft southern
+ climate to a post in the colder north, will complain that the spring with
+ its flowers is too late in arriving; another "cannot stand the water and
+ earth," by which is meant that the climate does not agree with him; a
+ third is satisfied with his surroundings, but is still a constant sufferer
+ from home-sickness. Such a one was the poet who wrote the following lines:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Away to the east lie fair forests of trees,
+ From the flowers on the west comes a scent-laden breeze,
+ Yet my eyes daily turn to my far-away home,
+ Beyond the broad river, its waves and its foam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And such, too, is the note of innumerable songs in exile, written for the
+ most part by officials stationed in distant parts of the empire; sometimes
+ by exiles in a harsher sense, namely, those persons who have been banished
+ to the frontier for disaffection, maladministration of government, and
+ like offences. A bright particular gem in Chinese literature, referring to
+ love of home, was the work of a young poet who received an appointment as
+ magistrate, but threw it up after a tenure of only eighty-three days,
+ declaring that he could not "crook the hinges of his back for five pecks
+ of rice a day," that being the regulation pay of his office. It was
+ written to celebrate his own return, and runs as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Homewards I bend my steps. My fields, my gardens, are choked with weeds:
+ should I not go? My soul has led a bondsman's life: why should I remain to
+ pine? But I will waste no grief upon the past: I will devote my energies
+ to the future. I have not wandered far astray. I feel that I am on the
+ right track once again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lightly, lightly, speeds my boat along, my garments fluttering to the
+ gentle breeze. I inquire my route as I go. I grudge the slowness of the
+ dawning day. From afar I descry by old home, and joyfully press onwards in
+ my haste. The servants rush forth to meet me: my children cluster at the
+ gate. The place is a wilderness; but there is the old pine-tree and my
+ chrysanthemums. I take the little ones by the hand, and pass in. Wine is
+ brought in full bottles, and I pour out in brimming cups. I gaze out at my
+ favourite branches. I loll against the window in my new-found freedom. I
+ look at the sweet children on my knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now I take my pleasure in my garden. There is a gate, but it is
+ rarely opened. I lean on my staff as I wander about or sit down to rest. I
+ raise my head and contemplate the lovely scene. Clouds rise, unwilling,
+ from the bottom of the hills: the weary bird seeks its nest again. Shadows
+ vanish, but still I linger round my lonely pine. Home once more! I'll have
+ no friendships to distract me hence. The times are out of joint for me;
+ and what have I to seek from men? In the pure enjoyment of the family
+ circle I will pass my days, cheering my idle hours with lute and book. My
+ husbandmen will tell me when spring-time is nigh, and when there will be
+ work in the furrowed fields. Thither I shall repair by cart or by boat,
+ through the deep gorge, over the dizzy cliff, trees bursting merrily into
+ leaf, the streamlet swelling from its tiny source. Glad is this renewal of
+ life in due season: but for me, I rejoice that my journey is over. Ah, how
+ short a time it is that we are here! Why, then, not set our hearts at
+ rest, ceasing to trouble whether we remain or go? What boots it to wear
+ out the soul with anxious thoughts? I want not wealth: I want not power:
+ heaven is beyond my hopes. Then let me stroll through the bright hours, as
+ they pass, in my garden among my flowers; or I will mount the hill and
+ sing my song, or weave my verse beside the limpid brook. Thus will I work
+ out my allotted span, content with the appointments of Fate, my spirit
+ free from care."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides contributing a large amount of beautiful poetry, this author
+ provided his own funeral oration, the earliest which has come down to us,
+ written just before his death in A.D. 427. Funeral orations are not only
+ pronounced by some friend at the grave, but are further solemnly consumed
+ by fire, in the belief that they will thus reach the world of spirits, and
+ be a joy and an honour to the deceased, in the same sense that paper
+ houses, horses, sedan-chairs, and similar articles, are burnt for the use
+ of the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X&mdash;MINGS AND CH'INGS, 1368-1911
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The first half of the fourteenth century, which witnessed the gradual
+ decline of Mongol influence and power, was further marked by the birth of
+ a humble individual destined to achieve a new departure in the history of
+ the empire. At the age of seventeen, Chu Yuan-chang lost both his parents
+ and an elder brother. It was a year of famine, and they died from want of
+ food. He had no money to buy coffins, and was forced to bury them in
+ straw. He then, as a last resource, decided to enter the Buddhist
+ priesthood, and accordingly enrolled himself as a novice; but together
+ with the other novices, he was soon dismissed, the priests being unable to
+ provide even for their own wants. After this he wandered about, and
+ finally joined a party of rebels commanded by one of his own uncles.
+ Rapidly rising to the highest military rank, he gradually found himself at
+ the head of a huge army, and by 1368 was master of so many provinces that
+ he proclaimed himself first emperor of the Great Ming dynasty, under the
+ title of Hung (<i>Hoong</i>) Wu, and fixed his capital at Nanking. In
+ addition to his military genius, he showed almost equal skill in the
+ administration of the empire, and also became a liberal patron of
+ literature and education. He organized the present system of examinations,
+ now in a transition state; restored the native Chinese style of dress as
+ worn under the T'ang dynasty, which is still the costume seen on the
+ stage; published a Penal Code of mitigated severity; drew up a kind of
+ Domesday Book under which taxation was regulated; and fixed the coinage
+ upon a proper basis, government notes and copper <i>cash</i> being equally
+ current. Eunuchs were prohibited from holding official posts, and Buddhism
+ and Taoism were both made state religions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This truly great monarch died in 1398, and was succeeded by a grandson,
+ whose very receding forehead had been a source of much annoyance to his
+ grandfather, though the boy grew up clever and could make good verses. The
+ first act of this new emperor was to dispossess his uncles of various
+ important posts held by them; but this was not tolerated by one of them,
+ who had already made himself conspicuous by his talents, and he promptly
+ threw off his allegiance. In the war which ensued, victory attended his
+ arms throughout, and at length he entered Nanking, the capital, in
+ triumph. And now begins one of those romantic episodes which from time to
+ time lend an unusual interest to the dry bones of Chinese history. In the
+ confusion which followed upon the entry of troops into his palace, the
+ young and defeated emperor vanished, and was never seen again; although in
+ after years pretenders started up on more than one occasion, and obtained
+ the support of many in their efforts to recover the throne. It is supposed
+ that the fugitive made his way to the distant province of Yunnan in the
+ garb of a Buddhist priest, left to him, so the story runs, by his
+ grandfather. After nearly forty years of wandering, he is said to have
+ gone to Peking and to have lived in seclusion in the palace there until
+ his death. He was recognized by a eunuch from a mole on his left foot, but
+ the eunuch was afraid to reveal his identity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The victorious uncle mounted the throne in the year 1403, under the now
+ famous title of Yung Lo (<i>Yoong Law</i>), and soon showed that he could
+ govern as well as he could fight. He brought immigrants from populous
+ provinces to repeople the districts which had been laid waste by war.
+ Peking was built, and in 1421 the seat of government was transferred
+ thither, where it has remained ever since. A new Penal Code was drawn up.
+ Various military expeditions were despatched against the Tartars, and
+ missions under the charge of eunuchs were sent to Java, Sumatra, Siam, and
+ even reached Ceylon and the Red Sea. The day of doubt in regard to the
+ general accuracy of Chinese annals has gone by; were it otherwise, a
+ recent (1911) discovery in Ceylon would tend to dispel suspicion on one
+ point. A tablet has just been unearthed at Galle, bearing an inscription
+ in Arabic, Chinese and Tamil. The Arabic is beyond decipherment, but
+ enough is left of the Chinese to show that the tablet was erected in 1409
+ to commemorate a visit by the eunuch Cheng Ho, who passed several times
+ backwards and forwards over that route. In 1411 the same eunuch was sent
+ as envoy to Japan, and narrowly escaped with his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The emperor was a warm patron of literature, and succeeded in bringing
+ about the achievement of the most gigantic literary task that the world
+ has ever seen. He employed a huge staff of scholars to compile an
+ encyclopaedia which should contain within the compass of a single work all
+ that had ever been written in the four departments of (1) the Confucian
+ Canon, (2) history, (3) philosophy, and (4) general literature, including
+ astronomy, geography, cosmogony, medicine, divination, Buddhism, Taoism,
+ handicrafts and arts. The completed work, over which a small army of
+ scholars&mdash;more than two thousand in all&mdash;had spent five years,
+ ran to no fewer than 22,877 sections, to which must be added an index
+ occupying 60 sections. The whole was bound up (Chinese style) in 11,000
+ volumes, averaging over half-an-inch in thickness, and measuring one foot
+ eight inches in length by one foot in breadth. Thus, if all these were
+ laid flat one upon another, the column so formed would rise considerably
+ higher than the very top of St. Paul's. Further, each section contains
+ about twenty leaves, making a total of 917,480 pages for the whole work,
+ with a grand total of 366,000,000 words. Taking 100 Chinese words as the
+ equivalent of 130 English, due to the greater condensation of Chinese
+ literary style, it will be found that even the mighty river of the <i>Encyclopedia
+ Britannica</i> "shrinks to a rill" when compared with this overwhelming
+ specimen of Chinese industry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was never printed; even a Chinese emperor, and enthusiastic patron of
+ literature to boot, recoiled before the enormous cost of cutting such a
+ work on blocks. It was however transcribed for printing, and there appear
+ to have been at one time three copies in existence. Two of these perished
+ at Nanking with the downfall of the dynasty in 1644, and the third was in
+ great part destroyed in Peking during the siege of the Legations in 1900.
+ Odd volumes have been preserved, and bear ample witness to the
+ extraordinary character of the achievement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This emperor was an ardent Buddhist, and the priests of that religion were
+ raised to high positions and exerted considerable influence at court. In
+ times of famine there were loud complaints that some ten thousand priests
+ were living comfortably at Peking, while the people of several provinces
+ were reduced to eating bark and grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The porcelain of the Ming dynasty is famous all over the world. Early in
+ the sixteenth century a great impetus was given to the art, owing to the
+ extravagant patronage of the court, which was not allowed to pass without
+ openly expressed remonstrance. The practice of the pictorial art was very
+ widely extended, and the list of Ming painters is endless, containing as
+ it does over twelve hundred names, some few of which stand for a high
+ level of success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the close of the sixteenth century the Portuguese appeared upon
+ the scene, and settled themselves at Macao, the ownership of which has
+ been a bone of contention between China and Portugal ever since. It is a
+ delightful spot, with an excellent climate, not very far from Canton, and
+ was for some time the residence of the renowned poet Camoens. Not far from
+ Macao lies the island of Sancian, where St. Francois Xavier died. He was
+ the first Roman Catholic missionary of more modern times to China, but he
+ never set foot on the mainland. Native maps mark the existence of "Saint's
+ Grave" upon the island, though he was actually buried at Goa. There had
+ previously been a Roman Catholic bishop in Peking so far back as the
+ thirteenth century, from which date it seems likely that Catholic converts
+ have had a continuous footing in the empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1583, Matteo Ricci, the most famous of all missionaries who have ever
+ reached China, came upon the scene at Canton, and finally, in 1601, after
+ years of strenuous effort succeeded in installing himself at Peking, with
+ the warm support of the emperor himself, dying there in 1610. Besides
+ reforming the calendar and teaching geography and science in general, he
+ made a fierce attack upon Buddhism, at the same time wisely leaving
+ Confucianism alone. He was the first to become aware of the presence in
+ China of a Jewish colony, which had been founded in 1163. It was from his
+ writings that truer notions of Chinese civilization than had hitherto
+ prevailed, began to spread in the West. "Mat. Riccius the Jesuite," says
+ Burton in his <i>Anatomy of Melancholy</i> (1651), "and some others,
+ relate of the industry of the Chinaes most populous countreys, not a
+ beggar, or an idle person to be seen, and how by that means they prosper
+ and flourish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1625 an important find was made. A large tablet, with a long
+ inscription in Chinese and a shorter one in Syraic, was discovered in
+ central China. The inscription, in an excellent state of preservation,
+ showed that the tablet had been set up in A.D. 781 by Nestorian
+ missionaries, and gave a general idea of the object and scope of the
+ Christian religion. The genuineness of this tablet was for many years in
+ dispute&mdash;Voltaire, Renan, and others of lesser fame, regarding it as
+ a pious fraud&mdash;but has now been established beyond any possibility of
+ doubt; its value indeed is so great that an attempt was made quite
+ recently to carry it off to America. Nestorian Christianity is mentioned
+ by Marco Polo, but disappears altogether after the thirteenth century,
+ without leaving any trace in Chinese literature of its once flourishing
+ condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last emperor of the Ming dynasty meant well, but succumbed to the
+ stress of circumstances. Eunuchs and over-taxation brought about the
+ stereotyped consequence&mdash;rebellion; rebellion, too, headed by an able
+ commander, whose successive victories soon enabled him to assume the
+ Imperial title. In the capital all was confusion. The treasury was empty;
+ the garrison were too few to man the walls; and the ministers were anxious
+ to secure each his own safety. On April 9, 1644, Peking fell. During the
+ previous night the emperor, who had refused to flee, slew the eldest
+ princess, commanded the empress to commit suicide, and sent his three sons
+ into hiding. At dawn the bell was struck for the court to assemble; but no
+ one came. His Majesty then ascended the Coal Hill in the palace grounds,
+ and wrote a last decree on the lapel of his robe: "WE, poor in virtue and
+ of contemptible personality, have incurred the wrath of God on high. My
+ ministers have deceived me. I am ashamed to meet my ancestors; and
+ therefore I myself take off my crown, and with my hair covering my face
+ await dismemberment at the hands of the rebels. Do not hurt a single one
+ of my people." He then hanged himself, as also did one faithful eunuch;
+ and his body, together with that of the empress, was reverently encoffined
+ by the rebels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So ended the Ming dynasty, of glorious memory, but not in favour of the
+ rebel commander, who was driven out of Peking by the Manchus and was
+ ultimately slain by local militia in a distant province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The subjugation of the empire by the victors, who had the disadvantage of
+ being an alien race, was effected with comparative ease and rapidity. It
+ was carried out by a military occupation of the country, which has
+ survived the original necessity, and is part of the system of government
+ at the present day. Garrisons of Tartar troops were stationed at various
+ important centres of population, each under the command of an officer of
+ the highest military grade, whose duty it was to co-operate with, and at
+ the same time watch and act as a check upon, the high authorities employed
+ in the civil administration. Those Tartar garrisons still occupy the same
+ positions; and the descendants of the first battalions, with occasional
+ reinforcements from Peking, live side by side and in perfect harmony with
+ the strictly Chinese populations, though the two races do not intermarry
+ except in very rare cases. These Bannermen, as they are called, in
+ reference to eight banners or corps under which they are marshalled, may
+ be known by their square heavy faces, which contrast strongly with the
+ sharper and more astute-looking physiognomies of the Chinese. They speak
+ the dialect of Peking, now regarded as the official or "mandarin"
+ language, just as the dialect of Nanking was, so long as that city
+ remained the capital of the empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In many respects the conquering Tartars have been themselves conquered by
+ the people over whom they set themselves to rule. They have adopted the
+ language, written and colloquial, of China; and they are fully as proud as
+ the purest-blooded Chinese of the vast literature and glorious traditions
+ of those past dynasties of which they have made themselves joint heirs.
+ Manchu, the language of the conquerors, is still kept alive at Peking. By
+ a fiction, it is supposed to be the language of the sovereign; but the
+ emperors of China have now in their youth to make a study of Manchu, and
+ so do the official interpreters and others whose duty it is to translate
+ from Chinese into Manchu all documents submitted to what is called the
+ "sacred glance" of His Majesty. In a similar sense, until quite a recent
+ date, skill in archery was required of every Bannerman; and it was
+ undoubtedly a great wrench when the once fatally effective weapon was
+ consigned to an unmerited oblivion. But though Bannermen can no longer
+ shoot with the bow and arrow, they still continue to draw monthly
+ allowances from state funds, as an hereditary right obtained by conquest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the nine emperors of the Manchu, or Great Ch'ing dynasty, who have
+ already occupied the dragon throne and have become "guests on high," two
+ are deserving of special mention as fit to be ranked among the wisest and
+ best rulers the world has ever known. The Emperor K'ang Hsi (<i>Khahng
+ Shee</i>) began his reign in 1662 and continued it for sixty-one years, a
+ division of time which has been in vogue for many centuries past. He
+ treated the Jesuit Fathers with kindness and distinction, and availed
+ himself in many ways of their scientific knowledge. He was an
+ extraordinarily generous and successful patron of literature. His name is
+ inseparably connected with the standard dictionary of the Chinese
+ language, which was produced under his immediate supervision. It contains
+ over forty thousand words, not a great number as compared with European
+ languages which have coined innumerable scientific terms, but even so, far
+ more than are necessary either for daily life or for literary purposes.
+ These words are accompanied in each case by appropriate quotations from
+ the works of every age and of every style, arranged chronologically, thus
+ anticipating to some extent the "historical principles" in the still more
+ wonderful English dictionary by Sir James Murray and others, now going
+ through the press. But the greatest of all the literary achievements
+ planned by this emperor was a general encyclopaedia, not indeed on quite
+ such a colossal scale as that one produced under the Ming dynasty and
+ already described, though still of respectable dimensions, running as it
+ does in a small-sized edition to 1,628 octavo volumes of about 200 pages
+ to each. The term encyclopaedia must not be understood in precisely the
+ same sense as in Western countries. A Chinese encyclopaedia deals with a
+ given subject not by providing an up-to-date article written by some
+ living authority, but by exhibiting extracts from authors of all ages,
+ arranged chronologically, in which the subject in question is discussed.
+ The range of topics, however, is such that the above does not always apply&mdash;as,
+ for instance, in the biographical section, which consists merely of lives
+ of eminent men taken from various sources. In the great encyclopaedia
+ under consideration, in addition to an enormous number of lives of men,
+ covering a period of three thousand years, there are also lives of over
+ twenty-four thousand eminent women, or nearly as many as all the lives in
+ our own <i>National Dictionary of Biography</i>. An original copy of this
+ marvellous production, which by the way is fully illustrated, may be seen
+ at the British Museum; a small-sized edition, more suitable for practical
+ purposes and printed from movable type, was issued about twenty years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Skipping an emperor under whose reign was initiated that violent
+ persecution of Roman Catholics which has continued more or less openly
+ down to the present day, we come to the second of the two monarchs before
+ mentioned, whose long and beneficent reigns are among the real glories of
+ the present dynasty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor Ch'ien Lung (<i>Loong</i>) ascended the throne in 1735, when
+ twenty-five years of age; and though less than two hundred years ago,
+ legend has been busy with his person. According to some native accounts,
+ his hands are said to have reached below his knees; his ears touched his
+ shoulders; and his eyes could see round behind his head. This sort of
+ stuff, is should be understood, is not taken from reliable authorities. It
+ cannot be taken from the dynastic history for the simple reason that the
+ official history of a dynasty is not published until the dynasty has come
+ to an end. There is, indeed, a faithful record kept of all the actions of
+ each reigning emperor in turn; good and evil are set down alike, without
+ fear or favour, for no emperor is ever allowed to get a glimpse of the
+ document by which posterity will judge him. Ch'ien Lung had no cause for
+ anxiety on this score; whatever record might leap to light, he never could
+ be shamed. An able ruler, with an insatiable thirst for knowledge, and an
+ indefatigable administrator, he rivals his grandfather's fame as a
+ sovereign and a patron of letters. His one amiable weakness was a fondness
+ for poetry; unfortunately, for his own. His output was enormous so far as
+ number of pieces go; these were always short, and proportionately trivial.
+ No one ever better illustrated one half of the cynical Chinese saying: "We
+ love our own compositions, but other men's wives." He disliked
+ missionaries, and forbade the propagation of the Christian religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After ten years of internal reorganization, his reign became a succession
+ of wars, almost all of which were brought to a successful conclusion. His
+ generals led a large army into Nepaul and conquered the Goorkhas, reaching
+ a point only some sixty miles distant from British territory. Burma was
+ forced to pay tribute; Chinese supremacy was established in Tibet; Kuldja
+ and Kashgaria were added to the empire; and rebellions in Formosa and
+ elsewhere were suppressed. In fifty years the population was nearly
+ doubled, and the empire on the whole enjoyed peace and prosperity. In 1750
+ a Portuguese embassy reached Peking; and was followed by Lord Macartney's
+ famous mission and a Dutch mission in 1793. Two years after the venerable
+ emperor had completed a reign of sixty years, the full Chinese cycle;
+ whereupon he abdicated in favour of his son, and died in 1799.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI&mdash;CHINESE AND FOREIGNERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A virtue which the Chinese possess in an eminent degree is the rather rare
+ one of gratitude. A Chinaman never forgets a kind act; and what is still
+ more important, he never loses the sense of obligation to his benefactor.
+ Witness to this striking fact has been borne times without number by
+ European writers, and especially by doctors, who have naturally enjoyed
+ the best opportunities for conferring favours likely to make a deep
+ impression. It is unusual for a native to benefit by a cure at the hands
+ of a foreign doctor, and then to go away and make no effort to express his
+ gratitude, either by a subscription to a hospital, a present of silk or
+ tea, or perhaps an elaborate banner with a golden inscription, in which
+ his benefactor's skill is likened to that of the great Chinese doctors of
+ antiquity. With all this, the patient will still think of the doctor, and
+ even speak of him, not always irreverently, as a foreign devil. A Chinaman
+ once appeared at a British Consulate, with a present of some kind, which
+ he had brought from his home a hundred miles away, in obedience to the
+ command of his dying father, who had formerly been cured of ophthalmia by
+ a foreign doctor, and who had told him, on his deathbed, "never to forget
+ the English." Yet this present was addressed in Chinese: "To His
+ Excellency the Great English Devil, Consul X."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinaman may love you, but you are a devil all the same. It is most
+ natural that he should think so. For generation upon generation China was
+ almost completely isolated from the rest of the world. The people of her
+ vast empire grew up under influences unchanged by contact with other
+ peoples. Their ideals became stereotyped from want of other ideals to
+ compare with, and possibly modify, their own. Dignity of deportment and
+ impassivity of demeanour were especially cultivated by the ruling classes.
+ Then the foreign devil burst upon the scene&mdash;a being as antagonistic
+ to themselves in every way as it is possible to conceive. We can easily
+ see, from pictures, not intended to be caricatures, what were the chief
+ features of the foreigner as viewed by the Chinaman. Red hair and blue
+ eyes, almost without exception; short and extremely tight clothes; a quick
+ walk and a mobility of body, involving ungraceful positions either sitting
+ or standing; and with an additional feature which the artist could not
+ portray&mdash;an unintelligible language resembling the twittering of
+ birds. Small wonder that little children are terrified at these strange
+ beings, and rush shrieking into their cottages as the foreigner passes by.
+ It is perhaps not quite so easy to understand why the Mongolian pony has
+ such a dread of the foreigner and usually takes time to get accustomed to
+ the presence of a barbarian; some ponies, indeed, will never allow
+ themselves to be mounted unless blindfolded. Then there are the dogs, who
+ rush out and bark, apparently without rhyme or reason, at every passing
+ foreigner. The Chinese have a saying that one dog barks at nothing and the
+ rest bark at him; but that will hardly explain the unfailing attack so
+ familiar to every one who has rambled through country villages. The
+ solution of this puzzle was extracted with difficulty from an amiable
+ Chinaman who explained that what the animals, and indeed his
+ fellow-countrymen as well, could not help noticing, was the frowzy and
+ very objectionable smell of all foreigners, which, strangely enough, is
+ the very accusation which foreigners unanimously bring against the Chinese
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compare these characteristics with the universal black hair and black eyes
+ of men and women throughout China, exclusive of a rare occasional albino;
+ with the long, flowing, loose robes of officials and of the well-to-do;
+ with their slow and stately walk and their rigid formality of position,
+ either sitting or standing. To the Chinese, their own language seems to be
+ the language of the gods; they know they have possessed it for several
+ thousand years, and they know nothing at all of the barbarian. Where does
+ he come from? Where can he come from except from the small islands which
+ fringe the Middle Kingdom, the world, in fact, bounded by the Four Seas?
+ The books tell us that "Heaven is round, Earth is square;" and it is
+ impossible to believe that those books, upon the wisdom of which the
+ Middle Kingdom was founded, can possibly be wrong. Such was a very natural
+ view for the Chinaman to take when first brought really face to face with
+ the West; and such is the view that in spite of modern educational
+ progress is still very widely held. The people of a country do not unlearn
+ in a day the long lessons of the past. He was quite a friendly mandarin,
+ taking a practical view of national dress, who said in conversation: "I
+ can't think why you foreigners wear your clothes so tight; it must be very
+ difficult to catch the fleas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an offset against the virtue of gratitude must be placed the
+ deep-seated spirit of revenge which animates all classes. Though not
+ enumerated among their own list of the Seven passions&mdash;joy, anger,
+ sorrow, fear, love, hatred and desire&mdash;it is perhaps the most
+ over-mastering passion to which the Chinese mind is subject. It is revenge
+ which prompts the unhappy daughter-in-law to throw herself down a well,
+ consoled by the thought of the trouble, if not ruin, she is bringing on
+ her persecutors. Revenge, too, leads a man to commit suicide on the
+ doorstep of some one who has done him an injury, for he well knows what it
+ means to be entangled in the net which the law throws over any one on
+ whose premises a dead body may thus be found. There was once an absurd
+ case of a Chinese woman, who deliberately walked into a pond until the
+ water reached up to her knees, and remained there, alternately putting her
+ lips below the surface, and threatening in a loud voice to drown herself
+ on the spot, as life had been made unbearable by the presence of foreign
+ barbarians. In this instance, had the suicide been carried out, vengeance
+ would have been wreaked in some way on the foreigner by the injured ghost
+ of the dead woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The germ of this spirit of revenge, this desire to get on level terms with
+ an enemy, as when a life is extracted for a life, can be traced, strangely
+ enough, to the practice of filial piety and fraternal love, the very
+ cornerstone of good government and national prosperity. In the Book of
+ Rites, which forms a part of the Confucian Canon, and contains rules not
+ only for the performance of ceremonies but also for the guidance of
+ individual conduct, the following passage occurs: "With the slayer of his
+ father, a man may not live under the same sky; against the slayer of his
+ brother, a man must never have to go home to fetch a weapon; with the
+ slayer of his friend, a man may not live in the same state." Being now
+ duly admitted among the works which constitute the Confucian Canon, the
+ above-mentioned Book of Rites enjoys an authority to which it can hardly
+ lay claim on the ground of antiquity. It is a compilation made during the
+ first century B.C., and is based, no doubt, on older existing documents;
+ but as it never passed under the editorship of either Confucius or
+ Mencius, it would be unfair to jump to the conclusion that either of these
+ two sages is in any way responsible for, or would even acquiesce in, a
+ system of revenge, the only result of which would be an endless chain of
+ bloodshed and murder. The Chinese are certainly as constant in their hates
+ as in their friendships. To use a phrase from their own language, if they
+ love a man, they love him to the life; if they hate a man they hate him to
+ the death. As we have already noted, the Old Philosopher urged men to
+ requite evil with good; but Confucius, who was only a mortal himself, and
+ knew the limitations of mortality, substituted for an ideal doctrine the
+ more practical injunction to requite evil with justice. It is to be feared
+ that the Chinese people fall short in practice even of this lower
+ standard. "Be just to your enemy" is a common enough maxim; but one for
+ which only a moderate application can be claimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has often been urged against the Chinese that they have very little
+ idea of time. A friendly Chinaman will call, and stay on so persistently
+ that he often outstays his welcome. This infliction is recognized and felt
+ by the Chinese themselves, who have certain set forms of words by which
+ they politely escape from a tiresome visitor; among their vast stores of
+ proverbs they have also provided one which is much to the point: "Long
+ visits bring short compliments." Also, in contradiction of the view that
+ time is no value to the Chinaman, there are many familiar maxims which
+ say, "Make every inch of time your own!" "Half-an-hour is worth a thousand
+ ounces of silver," etc. An "inch of time" refers to the sundial, which was
+ known to the Chinese in the earliest ages, and was the only means they had
+ for measuring time until the invention or introduction&mdash;it is not
+ certain which&mdash;of the more serviceable <i>clepsydra</i>, or
+ water-clock, already mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This consists of several large jars of water, with a tube at the bottom of
+ each, placed one above another on steps, so that the tube of an upper jar
+ overhangs the top of a lower jar. The water from the top jar is made to
+ drip through its tube into the second jar, and so into a vessel at the
+ bottom, which contains either the floating figure of a man, or some other
+ kind of index to mark the rise of the water on a scale divided into
+ periods of two hours each. The day and night were originally divided by
+ the Chinese into twelve such periods; but now-a-days watches and clocks
+ are in universal use, and the European division into twenty-four hours
+ prevails everywhere. Formerly, too, sticks of incense, to burn for a
+ certain number of hours, as well as graduated candles, made with the
+ assistance of the water-clock, were in great demand; these have now quite
+ disappeared as time-recorders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese year is a lunar year. When the moon has travelled twelve times
+ round the earth, the year is completed. This makes it about ten days short
+ of our solar year; and to bring things right again, an extra month, that
+ is a thirteenth month, is inserted in every three years. When foreigners
+ first began to employ servants extensively, the latter objected to being
+ paid their wages according to the European system, for they complained
+ that they were thus cheated out of a month's wages in every third year. An
+ elaborate official almanack is published annually in Peking, and
+ circulated all over the empire; and in addition to such information as
+ would naturally be looked for in a work of the kind, the public are
+ informed what days are lucky, and what days are unlucky, the right and the
+ wrong days for doing or abstaining from doing this, that, or the other.
+ The anniversaries of the death-days of the sovereigns of the ruling
+ dynasty are carefully noted; for on such days all the government offices
+ are supposed to be shut. Any foreign official who wishes to see a mandarin
+ for urgent business will find it possible to do so, but the visitor can
+ only be admitted through a side-door; the large entrance-gate cannot
+ possibly be opened under any circumstances whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No notice of the Chinese people, however slight or general in character,
+ could very well attain its object unless accompanied by some more detailed
+ account of their etiquette than is to be gathered from the few references
+ scattered over the preceding pages. Correct behaviour, whether at court,
+ in the market-place, or in the seclusion of private life, is regarded as
+ of such extreme importance&mdash;and breaches of propriety in this sense
+ are always so severely frowned upon&mdash;that it behoves the foreigner
+ who would live comfortably and at peace with his Chinese neighbours, to
+ pick up at least a casual knowledge of an etiquette which in outward form
+ is so different from his own, and yet in spirit is so identically the
+ same. A little judicious attention to these matters will prevent much
+ unnecessary friction, leading often to a row, and sometimes to a
+ catastrophe. Chinese philosophers have fully recognized in their writings
+ that ceremonies and salutations and bowings and scrapings and rules of
+ precedence and rules of the road are not of any real value when considered
+ apart from the conditions with which they are usually associated; at the
+ same time they argue that without such conventional restraints, nothing
+ but confusion would result. Consequently, a regular code of etiquette has
+ been produced; but as this deals largely with court and official
+ ceremonial, and a great part of the remainder has long since been quietly
+ ignored, it is more to the point to turn to the unwritten code which
+ governs the masses in their everyday life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the foreigner who would mix easily with the Chinese people, it is
+ above all necessary to understand not only that the street regulations of
+ Europe do not apply in China; but also that he will there find a set of
+ regulations which are tacitly agreed upon by the natives, and which, if
+ examined without prejudice, can only be regarded as based on common sense.
+ An ordinary foot-passenger, meeting perhaps a coolie with two buckets of
+ water suspended one at each end of a bamboo pole, or carrying a bag of
+ rice, weighing one, two, or even three hundredweight, is bound to move out
+ of the burden-carrier's path, leaving to him whatever advantages the road
+ may offer. This same coolie, meeting a sedan chair borne by two or more
+ coolies like himself, must at once make a similar concession, which is in
+ turn repeated by the chair-bearers in favour of any one riding a horse. On
+ similar grounds, an empty sedan-chair must give way to one in which there
+ is a passenger; and though not exactly on such rational grounds, it is
+ understood that horse, chair, coolie and foot-passenger all clear the road
+ for a wedding or other procession, as well as for the retinue of a
+ mandarin. A servant, too, should stand at the side of the road to let his
+ master pass. As an exception to the general rule of common sense which is
+ so very noticeable in all Chinese institutions, if only one takes the
+ trouble to look for it, it seems to be an understood thing that a man may
+ not only stand still wherever he pleases in a Chinese thoroughfare, but
+ may even place his burden or barrow, as the fancy seizes him, sometimes
+ right in the fairway, from which point he will coolly look on at the
+ streams of foot-passengers coming and going, who have to make the best of
+ their way round such obstructions. It is partly perhaps on this account
+ that friends who go for a stroll together never walk abreast but always in
+ single file, shouting out their conversation for all the world to hear;
+ this, too, even in the country, where a more convenient formation would
+ often, but not always, be possible. Shopkeepers may occupy the path with
+ tables exposing their wares, and itinerant stall-keepers do not hesitate
+ to appropriate a "pitch" wherever trade seems likely to be brisk. The
+ famous saying that to have freedom we must have order has not entered
+ deeply into Chinese calculations. Freedom is indeed a marked feature of
+ Chinese social life; some small sacrifices in the cause of order would
+ probably enhance rather than diminish the great privileges now enjoyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few points are of importance in the social etiquette of indoor life, and
+ should not be lightly ignored by the foreigner, who, on the other hand,
+ would be wise not to attempt to substitute altogether Chinese forms and
+ ceremonies for his own. Thus, no Chinaman, and, it may be added, no
+ European who knows how to behave, fails to rise from his chair on the
+ entrance of a visitor; and it is further the duty of a host to see that
+ his visitor is actually seated before he sits down himself. It is
+ extremely impolite to precede a visitor, as in passing through a door; and
+ on parting, it is usual to escort him to the front entrance. He must be
+ placed on the left of the host, this having been the post of honour for
+ several centuries, previous to which it was the seat to the right of the
+ host, as with us, to which the visitor was assigned. At such interviews it
+ would not be correct to allude to wives, who are no more to be mentioned
+ than were the queen of Spain's legs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One singular custom in connection with visits, official and otherwise,
+ ignorance of which has led on many occasions to an awkward moment, is the
+ service of what is called "guest-tea." At his reception by the host every
+ visitor is at once supplied with a cup of tea. The servant brings two
+ cups, one in each hand, and so manages that the cup in his left hand is
+ set down before the guest, who faces him on his right hand, while that for
+ his master is carried across and set down in an exactly opposite sense.
+ The tea-cups are so handed, as it were with crossed hands, even when the
+ host, as an extra mark of politeness, receives that intended for his
+ visitor, and himself places it on the table, in this case being careful to
+ use <i>both</i> hands, it being considered extremely impolite to offer
+ anything with one hand only employed. Now comes the point of the
+ "guest-tea," which, as will be seen, it is quite worth while to remember.
+ Shortly after the beginning of the interview, an unwary foreigner, as
+ indeed has often been the case, perhaps because he is thirsty, or because
+ he may think it polite to take a sip of the fragrant drink which has been
+ so kindly provided for him, will raise the cup to his lips. Almost
+ instantaneously he will hear a loud shout outside, and become aware that
+ the scene is changing rapidly for no very evident reason&mdash;only too
+ evident, however, to the surrounding Chinese servants, who know it to be
+ their own custom that so soon as a visitor tastes his "guest-tea," it is a
+ signal that he wishes to leave, and that the interview is at an end. The
+ noise is simply a bawling summons to get ready his sedan-chair, and the
+ scurrying of his coolies to be in their places when wanted. There is
+ another side to this quaint custom, which is often of inestimable
+ advantage to a busy man. A host, who feels that everything necessary has
+ been said, and wishes to free himself from further attendance, may grasp
+ his own cup and invite his guest to drink. The same results follow, and
+ the guest has no alternative but to rise and take his leave. In ancient
+ days visitors left their shoes outside the front door, a custom which is
+ still practised by the Japanese, the whole of whose civilization&mdash;this
+ cannot be too strongly emphasized&mdash;was borrowed originally from
+ China.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is considered polite to remove spectacles during an interview, or even
+ when meeting in the street; though as this rather unreasonable rule has
+ been steadily ignored by foreigners, chiefly, no doubt, from
+ unacquaintance with it, the Chinese themselves make no attempt to observe
+ it so far as foreigners are concerned. In like manner, it is most
+ unbecoming for any "read-book man," no matter how miserably poor he is, to
+ receive a stranger, or be seen himself abroad, in short clothes; but this
+ rule, too, is often relaxed in the presence of foreigners, who wear short
+ clothes themselves. Honest poverty is no crime in China, nor is it in any
+ way regarded as cause for shame; it is even more amply redeemed by
+ scholarship than is the case in Western countries. A man who has gained a
+ degree moves on a different level from the crowd around him, so profound
+ is the respect shown to learning. If a foreigner can speak Chinese
+ intelligibly, his character as a barbarian begins to be perceptibly
+ modified; and if to the knack of speech he adds a tolerable acquaintance
+ with the sacred characters which form the written language, he becomes
+ transfigured, as one in whom the influence of the holy men of old is
+ beginning to prevail over savagery and ignorance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not without reason that the term "sacred" is applied above to the
+ written words or characters. The Chinese, recognizing the extraordinary
+ results which have been brought about, silently and invisibly, by the
+ operation of written symbols, have gradually come to invest these symbols
+ with a spirituality arousing a feeling somewhat akin to worship. A piece
+ of paper on which a single word has once been written or printed, becomes
+ something other than paper with a black mark on it. It may not be lightly
+ tossed about, still less trampled underfoot; it should be reverently
+ destroyed by fire, here again used as a medium of transmission to the
+ great Beyond; and thus its spiritual essence will return to those from
+ whom it originally came. In the streets of a Chinese city, and
+ occasionally along a frequented highroad, may be seen small ornamental
+ structures into which odd bits of paper may be thrown and burnt, thus
+ preventing a desecration so painful to the Chinese mind; and it has often
+ been urged against foreigners that because they are so careless as to what
+ becomes of their written and printed paper, the matter contained in
+ foreign documents and books must obviously be of no great value. It is
+ even considered criminal to use printed matter for stiffening the covers
+ or strengthening the folded leaves of books; still more so, to employ it
+ in the manufacture of soles for boots and shoes, though in such cases as
+ these the weakness of human nature usually carries the day. Still, from
+ the point of view of the Taoist faith, the risk is too serious to be
+ overlooked. In the sixth of the ten Courts of Purgatory, through one or
+ more of which sinners must pass after death in order to expiate their
+ crimes on earth, provision is made for those who "scrape the gilding from
+ the outside of images, take holy names in vain, show no respect for
+ written paper, throw down dirt and rubbish near pagodas and temples, have
+ in their possession blasphemous or obscene books and do not destroy them,
+ obliterate or tear books which teach man to be good," etc., etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this, the sixth Court, presided over, like all the others, by a judge,
+ and furnished with all the necessary means and appliances for carrying out
+ the sentences, there are sixteen different wards where different
+ punishments are applied according to the gravity of the offence. The
+ wicked shade may be sentenced to kneel for long periods on iron shot, or
+ to be placed up to the neck in filth, or pounded till the blood runs out,
+ or to have the mouth forced open with iron pincers and filled with
+ needles, or to be bitten by rats, or nipped by locusts while in a net of
+ thorns, or have the heart scratched, or be chopped in two at the waist, or
+ have the skin of the body torn off and rolled up into spills for lighting
+ pipes, etc. Similar punishments are awarded for other crimes; and these
+ are to be seen depicted on the walls of the municipal temple, to be found
+ in every large city, and appropriately named the Chamber of Horrors. It is
+ doubtful if such ghastly representations of what is to be expected in the
+ next world have really any deterrent effect upon even the most illiterate
+ of the masses; certainly not so long as health is present and things are
+ generally going well. "The devil a monk" will any Chinaman be when the
+ conditions of life are satisfactory to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As has already been stated, his temperament is not a religious one; and
+ even the seductions and threats of Buddhism leave him to a great extent
+ unmoved. He is perhaps chiefly influenced by the Buddhist menace of
+ rebirth, possibly as a woman, or worse still as an animal. Belief in such
+ a contingency may act as a mild deterrent under a variety of
+ circumstances; it certainly tends to soften his treatment of domestic
+ animals. Not only because he may some day become one himself, but also
+ because among the mules or donkeys which he has to coerce through long
+ spells of exhausting toil, he may be unwittingly belabouring some friend
+ or acquaintance, or even a member of his own particular family. This
+ belief in rebirth is greatly strengthened by a large number of recorded
+ instances of persons who could recall events which had happened in their
+ own previous state of existence, and whose statements were capable of
+ verification. Occasionally, people would accurately describe places and
+ buildings which they could not have visited, while many would entertain a
+ dim consciousness of scenes, sights and sounds, which seemed to belong to
+ some other than the present life. There is a record of one man who could
+ remember having been a horse, and who vividly recalled the pain he had
+ suffered when riders dug their knees hard into his sides. This, too, in
+ spite of the administration in Purgatory of a cup of forgetfulness,
+ specially designed to prevent in those about to reborn any remembrance of
+ life during a previous birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, the most awful punishment inflicted in Purgatory upon sinners
+ is one which, being purely mental, may not appeal so powerfully to the
+ masses as the coarse tortures mentioned above. In the fifth Court, the
+ souls of the wicked are taken to a terrace from which they can hear and
+ see what goes on in their old homes after their own deaths. "They see
+ their last wishes disregarded, and their instructions disobeyed. The
+ property they scraped together with so much trouble is dissipated and
+ gone. The husband thinks of taking another wife; the widow meditates
+ second nuptials. Strangers are in possession of the old estate; there is
+ nothing to divide amongst the children. Debts long since paid are brought
+ again for settlement, and the survivors are called upon to acknowledge
+ false claims upon the departed. Debts owed are lost for want of evidence,
+ with endless recriminations, abuse, and general confusion, all of which
+ falls upon the three families&mdash;father's, mother's, and wife's&mdash;connected
+ with the deceased. These in their anger speak ill of him that is gone. He
+ sees his children become corrupt, and friends fall away. Some, perhaps,
+ may stroke the coffin and let fall a tear, departing quickly with a cold
+ smile. Worse than that, the wife sees her husband tortured in gaol; the
+ husband sees his wife a victim to some horrible disease, lands gone,
+ houses destroyed by flood or fire, and everything in an unutterable plight&mdash;the
+ reward of former sins."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Confucius declined absolutely to discuss the supernatural in any form or
+ shape, his one object being to improve human conduct in this life, without
+ attempting to probe that state from which man is divided by death. At the
+ same time, he was no scoffer; for although he declared that "the study of
+ the supernatural is injurious indeed," and somewhat cynically bade his
+ followers "show respect to spiritual beings, but keep them at a distance,"
+ yet in another passage we read: "He who offends against God has no one to
+ whom he can pray." Again, when he was seriously ill, a disciple asked if
+ he might offer up prayer. Confucius demurred to this, pointing out that he
+ himself had been praying for a considerable period; meaning thereby that
+ his life had been one long prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII&mdash;THE OUTLOOK
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is a very common statement made by persons who have lived in China&mdash;among
+ the people, but not of them&mdash;and the more superficial the
+ acquaintance, the more emphatically is the statement made, that the
+ ordinary Chinaman, be he prince or peasant, offers to the Western observer
+ an insoluble puzzle in every department of his life. He is, in fact, a
+ standing enigma; a human being, it may be granted, but one who can no more
+ be classed than his unique monosyllabic language, which still stands
+ isolated and alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This estimate is largely based upon some exceedingly false inferences. It
+ seems to be argued that because, in a great many matters, the Chinaman
+ takes a diametrically opposite view to our own, he must necessarily be a
+ very eccentric fellow; but as these are mostly matters of convention, the
+ argument is just as valid against us as against him. "Strange people,
+ those foreigners," he may say, and actually does say; "they make their
+ compass point north instead of south. They take off their hats in company
+ instead of keeping them on. They mount a horse on its left instead of on
+ its right side. They begin dinner with soup instead of dessert, and end it
+ with dessert instead of soup. They drink their wine cold instead of hot.
+ Their books all open at the wrong end, and the lines in a page are
+ horizontal instead of vertical. They put their guests on the right instead
+ of on the left, though it is true that we did that until several hundred
+ years ago. Their music, too, is so funny, it is more like noise; and as
+ for their singing, it is only very loud talking. Then their women are so
+ immodest; striding about in ball-rooms with very little on, and embracing
+ strange men in a whirligig which they call dancing, but very unlike the
+ dignified movements which our male dancers exhibit in the Confucian
+ temple. Their men and women shake hands, though know from our sacred Book
+ of Rites that men and women should not even pass things from one to
+ another, for fear their hands should touch. Then, again, all foreigners,
+ sometimes the women also, carry sticks, which can only be for beating
+ innocent people; and their so-called mandarins and others ride races and
+ row boats, instead of having coolies to do these things for them. They are
+ strange people indeed; very clever at cunning, mechanical devices, such as
+ fire-ships, fire-carriages, and air-cars; but extremely ferocious and
+ almost entirely uncivilized."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such would be a not exaggerated picture of the mental attitude of the
+ Chinaman towards his enigma, the foreigner. From the Chinaman's
+ imperturbable countenance the foreigner seeks in vain for some indications
+ of a common humanity within; and simply because he has not the wit to see
+ it, argues that it is not there. But there it is all the time. The
+ principles of general morality, and especially of duty towards one's
+ neighbour, the restrictions of law, and even the conventionalities of
+ social life, upon all of which the Chinaman is more or less nourished from
+ his youth upwards, remain, when accidental differences have been brushed
+ away, upon a bed-rock of ground common to both East and West; and it is
+ difficult to see how such teachings could possibly turn out a race of men
+ so utterly in contrast with the foreigner as the Chinese are usually
+ supposed to be. It is certain that anything like a full and sincere
+ observance of the Chinese rules of life would result in a community of
+ human beings far ahead of the "pure men" dreamt of in the philosophy of
+ the Taoists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As has already been either stated or suggested, the Chinese seem to be
+ actuated by precisely the same motives which actuate other peoples. They
+ delight in the possession of wealth and fame, while fully alive to the
+ transitory nature of both. They long even more for posterity, that the
+ ancestral line may be carried on unbroken. They find their chief pleasures
+ in family life, and in the society of friends, of books, of mountains, of
+ flowers, of pictures, and of objects dear to the collector and the
+ connoisseur. Though a nation of what the Scotch would call "sober eaters,"
+ they love the banquet hour, and to a certain extent verify their own
+ saying that "Man's heart is next door to his stomach." In centuries past a
+ drunken nation, some two to three hundred years ago they began to come
+ under the influence of opium, and the abuse of alcohol dropped to a
+ minimum. Opium smoking, less harmful a great deal than opium eating, took
+ the place of drink, and became the national vice; but the extent of its
+ injury to the people has been much exaggerated, and is not to be compared
+ with that of alcohol in the West. It is now, in consequence of recent
+ legislation, likely to disappear, on which result there could be nothing
+ but the warmest congratulations to offer, but for the fact that something
+ else, more insidious and deadly still, is rapidly taking its place. For a
+ time, it was thought that alcohol might recover its sway, and it is still
+ quite probable that human cravings for stimulant of some kind will find a
+ partial relief in that direction. The present enemy, however, and one that
+ demands serious and immediate attention, is morphia, which is being
+ largely imported into China in the shape of a variety of preparations
+ suitable to the public demand. A passage from opium to morphia would be
+ worse, if possible, than from the frying-pan into the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question has often been asked, but has never found a satisfactory
+ answer, why and how it is that Chinese civilization has persisted through
+ so many centuries, while other civilizations, with equal if not superior
+ claims to permanency, have been broken up and have disappeared from the
+ sites on which they formerly flourished. Egypt may be able to boast of a
+ high level of culture at a remoter date than we can reach through the
+ medium of Chinese records, for all we can honestly claim is that the
+ Chinese were a remarkably civilized nation a thousand years before Christ.
+ That was some time before Greek civilization can be said to have begun;
+ yet the Chinese nation is with us still, and but for contact with the
+ Western barbarian, would be leading very much the same life that it led so
+ many centuries ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some would have us believe that the bond which has held the people
+ together is the written language, which is common to the whole Empire, and
+ which all can read in the same sense, though the pronunciation of words
+ varies in different provinces as much as that of words in English, French,
+ or German. Others have suggested that to the teachings of Confucius, which
+ have outlived the competition of Taoism, Buddhism and other faiths, China
+ is indebted for the tie which has knitted men's hearts together, and
+ enabled them to defy any process of disintegration. There is possibly some
+ truth in all such theories; but these are incomplete unless a considerable
+ share of the credit is allowed to the spirit of personal freedom which
+ seems to breathe through all Chinese institutions, and to unite the people
+ in resistance to every form of oppression. The Chinese have always
+ believed in the divine right of kings; on the other hand, their kings must
+ bear themselves as kings, and live up to their responsibilities as well as
+ to the rights they claim. Otherwise, the obligation is at an end, and
+ their subjects will have none of them. Good government exists in Chinese
+ eyes only when the country is prosperous, free from war, pestilence and
+ famine. Misgovernment is a sure sign that God has withdrawn His mandate
+ from the emperor, who is no longer fit to rule. It then remains to replace
+ the emperor by one who is more worthy of Divine favour, and this usually
+ means the final overthrow of the dynasty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese assert their right to put an evil ruler to death, and it is
+ not high treason, or criminal in any way, to proclaim this principle in
+ public. It is plainly stated by the philosopher Mencius, whose writings
+ form a portion of the Confucian Canon, and are taught in the ordinary
+ course to every Chinese youth. One of the feudal rulers was speaking to
+ Mencius about a wicked emperor of eight hundred years back, who had been
+ attacked by a patriot hero, and who had perished in the flames of his
+ palace. "May then a subject," he asked, "put his sovereign to death?" To
+ which Mencius replied that any one who did violence to man's natural
+ charity of heart, or failed altogether in his duty towards his neighbour,
+ was nothing more than an unprincipled ruffian; and he insinuated that it
+ had been such a ruffian, in fact, not an emperor in the true sense of the
+ term, who had perished in the case they were discussing. Another and most
+ important point to be remembered in any attempt to discover the real
+ secret of China's prolonged existence as a nation, also points in the
+ direction of democracy and freedom. The highest positions in the state
+ have always been open, through the medium of competitive examinations, to
+ the humblest peasant in the empire. It is solely a question of natural
+ ability coupled with an intellectual training; and of the latter, it has
+ already been shown that there is no lack at the disposal of even the
+ poorest. China, then, according to a high authority, has always been at
+ the highest rung of the democratic ladder; for it was no less a person
+ than Napoleon who said: "Reasonable democracy will never aspire to
+ anything more than obtaining an equal power of elevation for all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to enforce their rights by the simplest and most bloodless means,
+ the Chinese have steadily cultivated the art of combining together, and
+ have thus armed themselves with an immaterial, invisible weapon which
+ simply paralyses the aggressor, and ultimately leaves them masters of the
+ field. The extraordinary part of a Chinese boycott or strike is the
+ absolute fidelity by which it is observed. If the boatmen or chair-coolies
+ at any place strike, they all strike; there are no blacklegs. If the
+ butchers refuse to sell, they all refuse, entirely confident in each
+ other's loyalty. Foreign merchants who have offended the Chinese guilds by
+ some course of action not approved by those powerful bodies, have often
+ found to their cost that such conduct will not be tolerated for a moment,
+ and that their only course is to withdraw, sometimes at considerable loss,
+ from the untenable position they had taken up. The other side of the medal
+ is equally instructive. Some years ago, the foreign tea-merchants at a
+ large port, in order to curb excessive charges, decided to hoist the
+ Chinese tea-men, or sellers of tea, with their own petard. They organized
+ a strict combination against the tea-men, whose tea no colleague was to
+ buy until, by what seemed to be a natural order of events, the tea-men had
+ been brought to their knees. The tea-men, however, remained firm, their
+ countenances impassive as ever. Before long, the tea-merchants discovered
+ that some of their number had broken faith, and were doing a roaring
+ business for their own account, on the terms originally insisted on by the
+ tea-men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no longer any doubt that China is now in the early stages of
+ serious and important changes. Her old systems of education and
+ examination are to be greatly modified, if not entirely remodelled. The
+ distinctive Chinese dress is to be shorn of two of its most distinguishing
+ features&mdash;the <i>queue</i> of the man and the small feet of the
+ woman. The coinage is to be brought more into line with commercial
+ requirements. The administration of the law is to be so improved that an
+ honest demand may be made&mdash;as Japan made it some years back&mdash;for
+ the abolition of extra-territoriality, a treaty obligation under which
+ China gives up all jurisdiction over resident foreigners, and agrees that
+ they shall be subject, civilly and criminally alike, only to their own
+ authorities. The old patriarchal form of government, autocratic in name
+ but democratic in reality, which has stood the Chinese people in such good
+ stead for an unbroken period of nearly twenty-two centuries, is also to
+ change with the changes of the hour, in the hope that a new era will be
+ inaugurated, worthy to rank with the best days of a glorious past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here perhaps it may be convenient if a slight outline is given of the
+ course marked out for the future. China is to have a "constitution" after
+ the fashion of most foreign nations; and her people, whose sole weapon of
+ defence and resistance, albeit one of deadly efficiency, has hitherto been
+ combination of the masses against the officials set over them, are soon to
+ enjoy the rights of representative government. By an Imperial decree,
+ issued late in 1907, this principle was established; and by a further
+ decree, issued in 1908, it was ordered that at the end of a year
+ provincial assemblies, to deliberate on matters of local government, were
+ to be convened in all the provinces and certain other portions of the
+ empire, as a first step towards the end in view. Membership of these
+ assemblies was to be gained by election, coupled with a small property
+ qualification; and the number of members in each assembly was to be in
+ proportion to the number of electors in each area, which works out roughly
+ at about one thousand electors to each representative. In the following
+ year a census was to be taken, provincial budgets were to be drawn up, and
+ a new criminal code was to be promulgated, on the strength of which new
+ courts of justice were to be opened by the end of the third year. By 1917,
+ there was to be a National Assembly or Parliament, consisting of an Upper
+ and Lower House, and a prime minister was to be appointed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 14th of October 1909 these provincial assemblies met for the first
+ time. The National Assembly was actually opened on the 3rd of October
+ 1910; and in response to public feeling, an edict was issued a month later
+ ordering the full constitution to be granted within three years from date.
+ It is really a single chamber, which contains the elements of two. It is
+ composed of about one hundred members, appointed by the Throne and drawn
+ from certain privileged classes, including thirty-two high officials and
+ ten distinguished scholars, together with the same number of delegates
+ from the provinces. Those who obtain seats are to serve for three years,
+ and to have their expenses defrayed by the state. It is a consultative and
+ not an executive body; its function is to discuss such subjects as
+ taxation, the issue of an annual budget, the amendment of the law, etc.,
+ all of which subjects are to be approved by the emperor before being
+ submitted to this assembly, and also to deal with questions sent up for
+ decision from the provincial assemblies. Similarly, any resolution to be
+ proposed must be backed by at least thirty members, and on being duly
+ passed by a majority, must then be embodied in a memorial to the Throne.
+ For passing and submitting resolutions which may be classed under various
+ headings as objectionable, the assembly can at once be dissolved by
+ Imperial edict.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are, so far, no distinct parties in the National Assembly, that is,
+ as regards the places occupied in the House. Men of various shades of
+ opinion, Radicals, Liberals and Conservatives, are all mixed up together.
+ The first two benches are set aside for representatives of the nobility,
+ with precedence from the left of the president round to his right. Then
+ come officials, scholars and leading merchants on the next two benches.
+ Behind them, again, on four rows of benches, are the delegates from the
+ provincial assemblies. There is thus a kind of House of Lords in front,
+ with a House of Commons, the representatives of the nation, at the back.
+ The leanings of the former class, as might be supposed, are mostly of a
+ conservative tendency, while the sympathies of the latter are rather with
+ progressive ideas; at the same time, there will be found among the Lords a
+ certain sprinkling of Radicals, and among the Commons not a few whose
+ views are of an antiquated, not to say reactionary, type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the above scheme the Chinese people are given to understand quite
+ clearly that while their advice in matters concerning the administration
+ of government will be warmly welcomed, all legislative power will remain,
+ as heretofore, confined to the emperor alone. At the first blush, this
+ seems like giving with one hand and taking away with the other; and so
+ perhaps it would work out in more than one nation of the West. But those
+ who know the Chinese at home know that when they offer political advice
+ they mean it to be taken. The great democracy of China, living in the
+ greatest republic the world has ever seen, would never tolerate any
+ paltering with national liberties in the present or in the future, any
+ more than has been the case in the past. Those who sit in the seats of
+ authority at the capital are far too well acquainted with the temper of
+ their countrymen to believe for a moment that, where such vital interests
+ are concerned, there can be anything contemplated save steady and
+ satisfactory progress towards the goal proposed. If the ruling Manchus
+ seize the opportunity now offered them, then, in spite of simmering
+ sedition here and there over the empire, they may succeed in continuing a
+ line which in its early days had a glorious record of achievement, to the
+ great advantage of the Chinese nation. If, on the other hand, they neglect
+ this chance, there may result one of those frightful upheavals from which
+ the empire has so often suffered. China will pass again through the
+ melting-pot, to emerge once more, as on all previous occasions, purified
+ and strengthened by the process.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_BIBL" id="link2H_BIBL">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ 1. <i>The Chinese Classics</i>, by James Legge, D.D., late Professor of
+ Chinese at Oxford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A translation of the whole of the Confucian Canon, comprising the Four
+ Books in which are given the discourses of Confucius and Mencius, the Book
+ of History, the Odes, the Annals of Confucius' native State, the Book of
+ Rites, and the Book of Changes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. <i>The Ancient History of China</i>, by F. Hirth, Ph.D., Professor of
+ Chinese at Columbia University, New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sketch of Chinese history from fabulous ages down to 221 B.C.,
+ containing a good deal of information of an antiquarian character, and
+ altogether placing in its most attractive light what must necessarily be
+ rather a dull period for the general reader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. <i>China</i>, by E. H. Parker, Professor of Chinese at Victoria
+ University, Manchester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A general account of China, chiefly valuable for commercial and
+ statistical information, sketch-maps of ancient trade-routes, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. <i>A Chinese Biographical Dictionary</i>, by H. A. Giles, LL.D.,
+ Professor of Chinese at the University of Cambridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This work contains 2579 short lives of Chinese Emperors, statesmen,
+ generals, scholars, priests, and other classes, including some women, from
+ the earliest times down to the present day, arranged alphabetically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. <i>A Comprehensive Geography of the Chinese Empire</i>, by L. Richard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This work is rightly named "comprehensive," for it contains a great deal
+ of information which cannot be strictly classed as geographical, all of
+ which, however, is of considerable value to the student.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6. <i>Descriptive Sociology (Chinese)</i>, by E. T. C. Werner, H.B.M.
+ Consul at Foochow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A volume of the series initiated by Herbert Spenger. It consists of a
+ large number of sociological facts grouped and arranged in chronological
+ order, and is of course purely a work of reference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7. <i>A History of Chinese Literature</i>, by H. A. Giles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_NOTE" id="link2H_NOTE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Notes on two or three hundred writers of history, philosophy, biography,
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ travel, poetry, plays, fiction, etc., with a large number of translated
+ extracts grouped under the above headings and arranged in chronological
+ order.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ 8. <i>Chinese Poetry in English Verse</i>, by H. A. Giles.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Rhymed translations of nearly two hundred short poems from the earliest
+ ages down to the present times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 9. <i>An Introduction to the History of Chinese Pictorial Art</i>, by H.
+ A. Giles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_NOTE" id="link2H_NOTE_">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Notes on the lives and works of over three hundred painters of all
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ages, chiefly translated from the writings of Chinese art-critics, with
+ sixteen reproductions of famous Chinese pictures.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ 10. <i>Scraps from a Collector's Note-book</i>, by F. Hirth.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ Chiefly devoted to notes on painters of the present dynasty, 1644- 1905,
+ with twenty-one reproductions of famous pictures, forming a complementary
+ supplement to No. 9.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 11. <i>Religions of Ancient China</i>, by H. A. Giles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A short account of the early worship of one God, followed by brief notices
+ of Taoism, Buddhism, Nestorian Christianity, Mahommedanism, and other less
+ well-known faiths which have been introduced at various dates into China.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 12. <i>Chinese Characteristics</i>, by the Rev. Arthur Smith, D.D.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A humorous but at the same time serious examination into the modes of
+ thought and springs of action which peculiarly distinguish the Chinese
+ people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 13. <i>Village Life in China</i>, by the Rev. Arthur Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scope of this work is sufficiently indicated by its title.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 14. <i>China under the Empress Dowager</i>, by J. O. Bland, and E.
+ Backhouse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An interesting account of Chinese Court Life between 1860 and 1908, with
+ important sidelights on the Boxer troubles and the Siege of the Legations
+ in 1900.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 15. <i>The Imperial History of China</i>, by Rev. J. Macgowan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A short and compact work on a subject which has not been successfully
+ handled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 16. <i>Indiscreet Letters from Peking</i>, by B. Putnam Weale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though too outspoken to meet with general approbation, this work is
+ considered by many to give the most faithful account of the Siege of the
+ Legations, as seen by an independent witness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 17. <i>Buddhism as a Religion</i>, by H. Hackmann, Lic. Theol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very useful volume, translated from the German, showing the various
+ developments of Buddhism in different parts of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 18. <i>Chuang Tzu</i>, by H. A. Giles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A complete translation of the writings of the leading Taoist philosopher,
+ who flourished in the fourth and third centuries B.C.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
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