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+The Project Gutenberg E-text of America Through the Spectacles of an Oriental
+Diplomat, by Wu Tingfang
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of America Through the Spectacles of an
+Oriental Diplomat, by Wu Tingfang
+
+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: America Through the Spectacles of an Oriental Diplomat
+
+Author: Wu Tingfang
+
+Posting Date: August 3, 2008 [EBook #609]
+Release Date: August, 1996
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SPECTACLES, ORIENTAL DIPLOMAT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by A. Light. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+America
+<BR>
+Through the Spectacles of an Oriental Diplomat
+</H1>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<P CLASS="transnote">
+[Note on text: Italicized sections are capitalized. A few obvious
+errors have been corrected. Some footnotes have been added, and are
+clearly marked.]
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Introduction:
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+While this book is by no means famous, it is a remarkable chance to
+look at America of 1914 through the eyes of an outsider. Wu Tingfang
+shows evidence of having thought through many issues of relevance to
+the United States, and while some of his thoughts are rather odd&mdash;such
+as his suggestion that the title of President be replaced by the title
+of Emperor; and others are unfortunately wrong&mdash;such as his hopes for
+peace, written on the eve of the First World War; they are all
+well-considered and sometimes show remarkable insight into American
+culture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even so, it should be remarked that he makes some errors, including
+some misunderstandings of American and Western ideas and an
+idealization of Chinese culture, and humanity in general, in some
+points&mdash;while I do not wish to refute his claims about China, I would
+simply point out that many of the things he praises have been seen
+differently by many outside observers, just as Wu Tingfang sometimes
+looks critically at things in America which he does not fully
+understand (and, unfortunately, he is sometimes all too correct)&mdash;in
+all these cases (on both sides) some leeway must be given to account
+for mutual misunderstandings. Still, his observations allow us to see
+ourselves as others see us&mdash;and regardless of accuracy those
+observations are useful, if only because they will allow us to better
+communicate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The range of topics covered is also of particular interest. Wu
+Tingfang wrote this book at an interesting juncture in
+history&mdash;airplanes and motion pictures had recently been invented, (and
+his expectations for both these inventions have proven correct), and
+while he did not know it, a tremendous cultural shift was about to take
+place in the West due to the First World War and other factors. I will
+leave it to the reader to see which ideas have caught on and which have
+not. The topics include:
+</P>
+
+<P class="blockquote">
+Immigration; the Arms Race and changes in technology;
+one-time six year terms for the office of President;
+religion and/or ethics in the classroom; women's equality;
+fashion; violence in the theatre (violence on television);
+vegetarianism; and, cruelty to animals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I will also note that a few passages seem satiric in nature, though I
+am not certain that it isn't merely a clash of cultures.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+ Alan R. Light. Birmingham, Alabama. May, 1996.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+AMERICA
+<BR>
+Through the Spectacles of an Oriental Diplomat
+</H1>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+by Wu Tingfang, LL.D.
+</H2>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+ Late Chinese Minister to the United States of America, Spain, Peru,
+ Mexico and Cuba; recently Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister
+ of Justice for the Provincial Government of the Republic of China, etc.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="preface"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Preface
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Of all nations in the world, America is the most interesting to the
+Chinese. A handful of people left England to explore this country:
+gradually their number increased, and, in course of time, emigrants
+from other lands swelled the population. They were governed by
+officials from the home of the first settlers, but when it appeared to
+them that they were being treated unjustly, they rebelled and declared
+war against their rulers, the strongest nation on the face of the
+earth. After seven years of strenuous, perilous, and bloody warfare,
+during which thousands of lives were sacrificed on both sides, the
+younger race shook off the yoke of the older, and England was compelled
+to recognize the independence of the American States. Since then, in
+the comparatively short space of one hundred and thirty years, those
+revolutionists and their descendants, have not only made the
+commonwealth the richest in the world, but have founded a nation whose
+word now carries weight with all the other great powers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The territory at first occupied was not larger than one or two
+provinces of China, but by purchase, and in other ways, the
+commonwealth has gradually grown till now it extends from the Atlantic
+to the Pacific Ocean, from the north where ice is perpetual to the
+south where the sun is as hot as in equatorial Singapore. This young
+republic has already produced many men and women who are distinguished
+in the fields of literature, science, art and invention. There hosts
+of men, who in their youth were as poor as church mice, have, by dint
+of perseverance and business capacity, become multi-millionaires.
+There you may see the richest man in the world living a simple and
+abstemious life, without pomp and ostentation, daily walking in the
+streets unattended even by a servant. Many of them have so much money
+that they do not know what to do with it. Many foreign counts, dukes,
+and even princes have been captured by their wealthy and handsome
+daughters, some of whom have borne sons who have become high officers
+of state in foreign lands. There you find rich people who devote their
+time and wealth to charitable works, sometimes endowing libraries not
+only in their own land, but all over the world; there you will find
+lynching tolerated, or impossible of prevention; there one man may kill
+another, and by the wonderful process of law escape the extreme penalty
+of death; there you meet the people who are most favorably disposed
+toward the maintenance of peace, and who hold conferences and
+conventions with that object in view almost every year; there an
+American multi-millionaire devotes a great proportion of his time to
+the propaganda of peace, and at his own expense has built in a foreign
+country a palatial building to be used as a tribunal of peace.[1] Yet
+these people have waged war on behalf of other nationalities who they
+thought were being unjustly treated and when victorious they have not
+held on to the fruits of their victory without paying a reasonable
+price.[2] There the inhabitants are, as a rule, extremely patriotic,
+and in a recent foreign war many gave up their businesses and
+professions and volunteered for service in the army; one of her richest
+sons enlisted and equipped a whole regiment at his own expense, and
+took command of it. In that country all the citizens are heirs
+apparent to the throne, called the White House. A man may become the
+chief ruler for a few years, but after leaving the White House he
+reverts to private citizenship; if he is a lawyer he may practise and
+appear before a judge, whom he appointed while he was president. There
+a woman may become a lawyer and plead a case before a court of justice
+on behalf of a male client; there freedom of speech and criticism are
+allowed to the extreme limit, and people are liable to be annoyed by
+slanders and libels without much chance of obtaining satisfaction;
+there you will see women wearing "Merry Widow" hats who are not widows
+but spinsters, or married women whose husbands are very much alive, and
+the hats in many cases are as large as three feet in diameter;[3] there
+you may travel by rail most comfortably on palace cars, and at night
+you may sleep on Pullman cars, to find in the morning that a young lady
+has been sleeping in the berth above your bed. The people are most
+ingenious in that they can float a company and water the stock without
+using a drop of fluid; there are bears and bulls in the Stock Exchange,
+but you do not see these animals fight, although they roar and yell
+loudly enough. It is certainly a most extraordinary country. The
+people are wonderful and are most interesting and instructive to the
+Chinese.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Such a race should certainly be very interesting to study. During my
+two missions to America where I resided nearly eight years, repeated
+requests were made that I should write my observations and impressions
+of America. I did not feel justified in doing so for several reasons:
+first, I could not find time for such a task amidst my official duties;
+secondly, although I had been travelling through many sections of the
+country, and had come in contact officially and socially with many
+classes of people, still there might be some features of the country
+and some traits of the people which had escaped my attention; and
+thirdly, though I had seen much in America to arouse my admiration, I
+felt that here and there, there was room for improvement, and to be
+compelled to criticize people who had been generous, courteous, and
+kind was something I did not wish to do. In answer to my scruples I
+was told that I was not expected to write about America in a partial or
+unfair manner, but to state impressions of the land just as I had found
+it. A lady friend, for whose opinion I have the highest respect, said
+in effect, "We want you to write about our country and to speak of our
+people in an impartial and candid way; we do not want you to bestow
+praise where it is undeserved; and when you find anything deserving of
+criticism or condemnation you should not hesitate to mention it, for we
+like our faults to be pointed out that we may reform." I admit the
+soundness of my friend's argument. It shows the broad-mindedness and
+magnanimity of the American people. In writing the following pages I
+have uniformly followed the principles laid down by my American lady
+friend. I have not scrupled to frankly and freely express my views,
+but I hope not in any carping spirit; and I trust American readers will
+forgive me if they find some opinions they cannot endorse. I assure
+them they were not formed hastily or unkindly. Indeed, I should not be
+a sincere friend were I to picture their country as a perfect paradise,
+or were I to gloss over what seem to me to be their defects.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] This magnificent building at The Hague, which is aptly called the
+Palace of Peace, was formally opened on the 28th of August, 1913, in
+the presence of Queen Wilhelmina, Mr. Carnegie (the founder) and a
+large assembly of foreign representatives.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[2] I refer to the Spanish-American War. Have captured the Philippine
+Islands, the United States paid $20,000,000, gold, for it to the
+Spanish Government.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[3] This was several years ago. Fashions change every year. The
+present type is equally ludicrous.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+Contents
+</H2>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+ <A HREF="#preface">Preface</A><BR>
+ Chapter 1. <A HREF="#chap01">The Importance of Names</A><BR>
+ Chapter 2. <A HREF="#chap02">American Prosperity</A><BR>
+ Chapter 3. <A HREF="#chap03">American Government</A><BR>
+ Chapter 4. <A HREF="#chap04">America and China</A><BR>
+ Chapter 5. <A HREF="#chap05">American Education</A><BR>
+ Chapter 6. <A HREF="#chap06">American Business Methods</A><BR>
+ Chapter 7. <A HREF="#chap07">American Freedom and Equality</A><BR>
+ Chapter 8. <A HREF="#chap08">American Manners</A><BR>
+ Chapter 9. <A HREF="#chap09">American Women</A><BR>
+ Chapter 10. <A HREF="#chap10">American Costumes</A><BR>
+ Chapter 11. <A HREF="#chap11">American versus Chinese Civilization</A><BR>
+ Chapter 12. <A HREF="#chap12">American versus Chinese Civilization (Continued)</A><BR>
+ Chapter 13. <A HREF="#chap13">Dinners, Banquets, Etc.</A><BR>
+ Chapter 14. <A HREF="#chap14">Theaters</A><BR>
+ Chapter 15. <A HREF="#chap15">Opera and Musical Entertainments</A><BR>
+ Chapter 16. <A HREF="#chap16">Conjuring and Circuses</A><BR>
+ Chapter 17. <A HREF="#chap17">Sports</A><BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+AMERICA
+<BR>
+Through the Spectacles of an Oriental Diplomat
+</H1>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 1. The Importance of Names
+</H3>
+
+<P CLASS="poem">
+ "What's in a name? That which we call a rose<BR>
+ By any other name would smell as sweet."<BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Notwithstanding these lines, I maintain that the selection of names is
+important. They should always be carefully chosen. They are apt to
+influence friendships or to excite prejudices according to their
+significance. We Chinese are very particular in this matter. When a
+son is born the father or the grandfather chooses a name for the infant
+boy which, according to his horoscope, is likely to insure him success,
+or a name is selected which indicates the wish of the family for the
+new-born child. Hence such names as "happiness", "prosperity",
+"longevity", "success", and others, with like propitious import, are
+common in China. With regard to girls their names are generally
+selected from flowers, fruits, or trees. Particular care is taken not
+to use a name which has a bad meaning. In Washington I once met a man
+in an elevator whose name was "Coffin". Was I to be blamed for
+wondering if the elevator would be my coffin? On another occasion I
+met a man whose name was "Death", and as soon as I heard his name I
+felt inclined to run away, for I did not wish to die. I am not
+superstitious. I have frequently taken dinner with thirteen persons at
+the table, and I do not hesitate to start on a journey on a Friday. I
+often do things which would not be done by superstitious persons in
+China. But to meet a man calling himself "Coffin" or "Death" was too
+much for me, and with all my disbelief in superstition I could not help
+showing some repugnance to those who bore such names.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Equally important, if not more so, is the selection of a name for a
+state or a nation. When the several states of America became
+independent they called themselves the "United States of America"&mdash;a
+very happy idea. The Union was originally composed of thirteen states,
+covering about 300,000 square miles; it is now composed of forty-eight
+states and three territories, which in area amount to 3,571,492 square
+miles, practically as large in extent as China, the oldest nation in
+the world. It should be noted that the name is most comprehensive: it
+might comprise the entire continent of North and South America. It is
+safe to say that the founders of the nation did not choose such a name
+without consideration, and doubtless the designation "United States of
+America" conceals a deep motive. I once asked a gentleman who said he
+was an American whether he had come from South or North America, or
+whether he was a Mexican, a Peruvian or a native of any of the
+countries in Central America? He replied with emphasis that he was an
+American citizen of the United States. I said it might be the United
+States of Mexico, or Argentina, or other United States, but he answered
+that when he called himself a citizen it could not mean any other than
+that of the United States of America. I have asked many other
+Americans similar questions and they all have given me replies in the
+same way. We Chinese call our nation "The Middle Kingdom"; it was
+supposed to be in the center of the earth. I give credit to the
+founders of the United States for a better knowledge of geography than
+that possessed by my countrymen of ancient times and do not assume that
+the newly formed nation was supposed to comprise the whole continent of
+North and South America, yet the name chosen is so comprehensive as to
+lead one naturally to suspect that it was intended to include the
+entire continent. However, from my observation of their national
+conduct, I believe their purpose was just and humane; it was to set a
+noble example to the sister nations in the Western Hemisphere, and to
+knit more closely all the nations on that continent through the bonds
+of mutual justice, goodwill and friendship. The American nation is,
+indeed, itself a pleasing and unique example of the principle of
+democracy. Its government is ideal, with a liberal constitution, which
+in effect declares that all men are created equal, and that the
+government is "of the people, for the people, and by the people."
+Anyone with ordinary intelligence and with open eyes, who should visit
+any city, town or village in America, could not but be impressed with
+the orderly and unostentatious way in which it is governed by the local
+authorities, or help being struck by the plain and democratic character
+of the people. Even in the elementary schools, democracy is taught and
+practised. I remember visiting a public school for children in
+Philadelphia, which I shall never forget. There were about three or
+four hundred children, boys and girls, between seven and fourteen years
+of age. They elected one of their students as mayor, another as judge,
+another as police commissioner, and in fact they elected for the
+control of their school community almost all the officials who usually
+govern a city. There were a few Chinese children among the students,
+and one of them was pointed out to me as the police superintendent.
+This not only eloquently spoke of his popularity, but showed goodwill
+and harmony among the several hundred children, and the entire absence
+of race feeling. The principals and teachers told me that they had no
+difficulty whatever with the students. If one of them did anything
+wrong, which was not often, he would be taken by the student policeman
+before the judge, who would try the case, and decide it on its merits,
+and punish or discharge his fellow student as justice demanded. I was
+assured by the school authorities that this system of self-government
+worked admirably; it not only relieved the teachers of the burden of
+constantly looking after the several hundred pupils, but each of them
+felt a moral responsibility to behave well, for the sake of preserving
+the peace and good name of the school. Thus early imbued with the idea
+of self-government, and entrusted with the responsibilities of its
+administration, these children when grown up, take a deep interest in
+federal and municipal affairs, and, when elected for office, invariably
+perform their duties efficiently and with credit to themselves.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It cannot be disputed that the United States with its democratic system
+of government has exercised a great influence over the states and
+nations in Central and South America. The following data showing the
+different nations of America, with the dates at which they turned their
+respective governments from Monarchies into Republics, all subsequent
+to the independence of the United States, are very significant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mexico became a Republic in 1823, Honduras in 1839, Salvador in 1839,
+Nicaragua in 1821, Costa Rica in 1821, Panama in 1903, Colombia in
+1819, Venezuela in 1830, Ecuador in 1810, Brazil in 1889, Peru in 1821,
+Bolivia in 1825, Paraguay in 1811, Chile in 1810, Argentina in 1824,
+and Uruguay in 1828.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These Republics have been closely modelled upon the republican form of
+government of the United States; thus, nearly all the nations or states
+on the continent of America have become Republics. Canada still
+belongs to Great Britain. The fair and generous policy pursued by the
+Imperial Government of Great Britain accounts for the Canadians'
+satisfaction with their political position, and for the fact that they
+do not wish a change. It must be noted, however, that a section of the
+American people would like to see Canada incorporated with the United
+States. I remember that at a public meeting held in Washington, at
+which Sir Wilfrid Laurier, then Premier of Canada, was present, an
+eminent judge of the Federal Supreme Court jocularly expressed a wish
+that Canada should be annexed to the United States. Later, Mr. Champ
+Clark, a leader of the Democratic party in the House of
+Representatives, addressed the House urging the annexation of Canada.
+Even if these statements are not taken seriously they at least show the
+feelings of some people, and he would be a bold man who would prophesy
+the political status of Canada in the future. There is, however, no
+present indication of any change being desired by the Canadians, and it
+may be safely presumed that the existing conditions will continue for
+many years to come. This is not to be wondered at, for Canada though
+nominally a British colony practically enjoys almost all the privileges
+of an independent state. She possesses a constitution similar to that
+of the United Kingdom, with a parliament of two houses, called the
+"Senate", and the "House of Commons". The Sovereign of Great Britain
+appoints only the Governor General who acts in his name, but the
+Dominion is governed by a responsible Ministry, and all domestic
+affairs are managed by local officials, without interference from the
+Home Government. Canadians enjoy as many rights as the inhabitants of
+England, with the additional advantage that they do not have to bear
+the burden of maintaining an army and navy. Some years ago, if I
+remember rightly, in consequence of some agitation or discussion for
+independence, the late Lord Derby, then Secretary of State for the
+Colonies, stated that if the Canadians really wished for independence,
+the Home Government would not oppose, but that they should consider if
+they would gain anything by the change, seeing that they already had
+self-government, enjoyed all the benefits of a free people, and that
+the only right the Home Government reserved was the appointment of the
+Governor-General, although it assumed the responsibility of protecting
+every inch of their territory from encroachment. Since this sensible
+advice from the Colonial Secretary, I have heard nothing more of the
+agitation for independence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From a commercial point of view, and for the welfare of the people,
+there is not much to choose to-day between a Limited Monarchy and a
+Republic. Let us, for instance, compare England with the United
+States. The people of England are as free and independent as the
+people of the United States, and though subjects, they enjoy as much
+freedom as Americans. There are, however, some advantages in favor of
+a Republic. Americans until recently paid their President a salary of
+only $50,000 a year; it is now $75,000 with an additional allowance of
+$25,000 for travelling expenses. This is small indeed compared with
+the Civil List of the King or Emperor of any great nation. There are
+more chances in a Republic for ambitious men to distinguish themselves;
+for instance, a citizen can become a president, and practically assume
+the functions of a king or an emperor. In fact the President of the
+United States appoints his own cabinet officials, ambassadors,
+ministers, etc. It is generally stated that every new president has
+the privilege of making more than ten thousand appointments. With
+regard to the administration and executive functions he has in practice
+more power than is usually exercised by a king or an emperor of a
+Constitutional Monarchy. On the other hand, in some matters, the
+executive of a Republic cannot do what a king or an emperor can do; for
+example, a president cannot declare war against a foreign nation
+without first obtaining the consent of Congress. In a monarchical
+government the king or the cabinet officials assume enormous
+responsibilities. Lord Beaconsfield (then Mr. D'Israeli), while he was
+Prime Minister of England, purchased in 1875 from the Khedive of Egypt
+176,602 Suez Canal shares for the sum of 3,976,582 Pounds on his own
+responsibility, and without consulting the Imperial Parliament. When
+Parliament or Congress has to be consulted about everything, great
+national opportunities to do some profitable business must undoubtedly
+be sometimes lost. No such bold national investment as that made by
+Lord Beaconsfield could have been undertaken by any American president
+on his own responsibility. Mr. Cleveland, when president of the United
+States, said that "the public affairs of the United States are
+transacted in a glass house."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Washington, in his farewell address, advised his compatriots that on
+account of the detached and distant situation of their country they
+should, in extending their commercial relations with foreign nations,
+have as little political connection with them as possible; and he asked
+this pertinent and pregnant question, "Why, by interweaving our destiny
+with that of any part of Europe, entangle our peace and prosperity in
+the toils of European ambition, rivalship, interest, humor, or
+caprice?" In 1823, twenty-seven years after Washington's celebrated
+address, President Monroe in his annual message to Congress warned the
+European Powers not to plant any new colonies on any portion of the
+American hemisphere, as any attempt on their part to extend their
+system in that part of the world would be considered as dangerous to
+the peace and safety of the United States. This "Monroe Doctrine", as
+it has since been called, practically protects every state and country
+on the American continent from attack or interference by any foreign
+power, and it cannot be denied that it has been and is now the chief
+factor in preserving the integrity of all the countries on that
+continent. Thus the United States is assuming the role of guardian
+over the other American nations. In the city of Washington there is an
+International Bureau of the American Republics, in which all the
+Republics of Central and South America are represented. It is housed
+in a magnificent palace made possible by the beneficence of Mr. Andrew
+Carnegie, the American multi-millionaire and philanthropist, and the
+contributions of the different governments. It cost 750,000 gold
+dollars, and Mr. John Barrett, the capable and popular director of the
+Bureau, has well called it "a temple of friendship and commerce and a
+meeting place for the American Republics." The Bureau is supported by
+the joint contributions of the twenty-one American Republics, and its
+affairs are controlled by a governing board composed of their
+diplomatic representatives in Washington, with the American Secretary
+of State as chairman ex officio. This institution no doubt strengthens
+the position of the United States and is calculated to draw the
+American Republics into closer friendship.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 2. American Prosperity
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+One of the main causes of the prosperity of the great American Republic
+is its natural resources. It possesses coal, oil, silver, gold,
+copper, and all the other mineral ores. Nature seems, indeed, to have
+provided almost everything that man needs. The soil is rich; wheat and
+every kind of fruit can be grown; but favorable as are these native
+conditions they could not be turned to any great advantage without the
+skill and industry of enterprising men. Many countries in Africa and
+Asia possess equal advantages, but they are not equally prosperous.
+This leads me to the consideration of another reason for America's
+growth. The men who have migrated to the United States have not been
+rich people. They went there to make a living. They were prepared to
+work, their purpose was to improve their condition, and they were
+willing to undertake any manual or mental labor to accomplish their
+object. They were hardy and strong and could bear a heavy strain.
+Their children inherited their good qualities, and so an American is
+generally more hard working and enterprising than most of the people in
+Europe and elsewhere.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another reason for America's success is the great freedom which each
+citizen enjoys. Every man considers himself the equal of every other,
+and a young man who is ambitious will not rest until he reaches the top
+of his profession or trade. Thousands of Americans who were once very
+poor, have become millionaires or multi-millionaires. Many of them had
+no college education, they taught themselves, and some of them have
+become both literary and scholarly. A college or university education
+does not necessarily make a man learned; it only gives him the
+opportunity to learn. It is said that some college men have proven
+themselves to be quite ignorant, or rather that they do not know so
+much as those who have been self-taught. I do not in any way wish to
+disparage a college education; no doubt men who have been trained in a
+university start in life with better prospects and with a greater
+chance of success, but those men who have not had such advantages have
+doubtless done much to make their country great and prosperous, and
+they ought to be recognized as great men.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The general desire of the American people to travel abroad is one of
+their good traits. People who never leave their homes cannot know
+much. A person may become well-informed by reading, but his practical
+knowledge cannot be compared with that of a person who has travelled.
+We Chinese are great sinners in this regard. A Chinese maxim says, "It
+is dangerous to ride on horseback or to go on a voyage": hence until
+very recently we had a horror of going abroad. A person who remains
+all his life in his own town is generally narrow-minded,
+self-opinioned, and selfish. The American people are free from these
+faults. It is not only the rich and the well-to-do who visit foreign
+countries, but tradesmen and workmen when they have saved a little
+money also often cross the Atlantic. Some years ago a Senator in
+Washington told me that he crossed the Atlantic Ocean every summer and
+spent several months in Europe, and that the next trip would be his
+twenty-eighth voyage. I found, however, that he had never gone beyond
+Europe. I ventured to suggest that he should extend his next annual
+journey a little farther and visit Japan, China, and other places in
+the Far East which I felt sure he would find both interesting and
+instructive. I have travelled through many countries in Europe and
+South America, and wherever I have gone and at whatever hotel I have
+put up, I have always found some Americans, and on many occasions I
+have met friends and acquaintances whom I had known in Washington or
+New York. But it is not only the men who go abroad; in many cases
+ladies also travel by themselves. On several occasions lady friends
+from Washington, Philadelphia, and New York have visited me in Peking.
+This is one of the Americans' strong points. Is it not wiser and much
+more useful to disburse a few hundred dollars or so in travelling and
+gaining knowledge, coming in contact with other peoples and enlarging
+the mind, than to spend large sums of money in gaudy dresses, precious
+stones, trinkets, and other luxuries?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a large country like America where a considerable portion of the
+land still remains practically uncultivated or undeveloped, hardy,
+industrious, and patient workmen are a necessity. But the almost
+unchecked influx of immigrants who are not desirable citizens cannot
+but harm the country. In these days of international trade it is right
+that ingress and egress from one country to another should be
+unhampered, but persons who have committed crimes at home, or who are
+ignorant and illiterate, cannot become desirable citizens anywhere.
+They should be barred out of the United States of America. It is well
+known that foreigners take part in the municipal and federal affairs of
+the country as soon as they become citizens. Now if such persons
+really worked for the good of their adopted country, there could be no
+objection to this, but it is no secret that many have no such motives.
+That being so, it is a question whether steps should not be taken to
+limit their freedom. On the other hand, as many farms suffer from lack
+of workmen, people from whatever country who are industrious, patient,
+and persevering ought to be admitted as laborers. They would be a
+great boon to the nation. The fear of competition by cheap labor is
+causeless; regulations might be drawn up for the control of these
+foreign laborers, and on their arrival they could be drafted to those
+places where their services might be most urgently needed. So long as
+honest and steady workmen are excluded for no reason other than that
+they are Asiatics, while white men are indiscriminately admitted, I
+fear that the prosperity of the country cannot be considered permanent,
+for agriculture is the backbone of stable wealth. Yet at present it is
+the country's wealth which is one of the important factors of America's
+greatness. In the United States there are thousands of individuals
+whose fortunes are counted by seven or eight figures in gold dollars.
+And much of this money has been used to build railways, or to develop
+manufactories and other useful industries. The country has grown great
+through useful work, and not on account of the army and navy. In 1881
+America's army numbered only 26,622 men, and her navy consisted of only
+24 iron-clads, 2 torpedo-boats, and 25 tugs, but in 1910 the peace
+strength of her army was 96,628 and the navy boasted 33 battleships and
+120 armored cruisers of different sizes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Within the last few years it has been the policy of many nations to
+increase the army and to build as many Dreadnaughts and
+super-dreadnaughts as possible. Many statesmen have been infected by
+this Dreadnaught fever. Their policy seems to be based on the idea
+that the safety of a nation depends on the number of its battleships.
+Even peaceful and moderate men are carried away by this hobby, and
+support it. It is forgotten that great changes have taken place during
+the last twenty or thirty years; that a nation can now be attacked by
+means quite beyond the reach of Dreadnaughts. The enormous sums spent
+on these frightful monsters, if applied to more worthy objects, would
+have a greater effect in preserving the nations' heritages than
+anything these monstrosities can do.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The nation which has a large army and a strong navy may be called
+powerful, but it cannot be considered great without other good
+requisites. I consider a nation as great when she is peacefully,
+justly, and humanely governed, and when she possesses a large number of
+benevolent and good men who have a voice in the administration. The
+greater the number of good men that a nation possesses the greater she
+becomes. America is known to have a large number of such men and
+women, men and women who devote their time and money to preaching peace
+among the nations. Mr. Andrew Carnegie is worth a hundred
+Dreadnaughts. He and others like him are the chief factors in
+safeguarding the interests and welfare of America. The territory of
+the United States is separated from Europe and other countries by vast
+oceans; so that it would be difficult, if not impossible, for a foe to
+successfully attack any portion of that country. But who wishes to
+attack her? She has scarcely an enemy. No country is invaded by
+another without cause, and as the United States is in friendly
+relations with all the Powers, there is no reason to fear foreign
+invasion. Even should a foreign power successfully attack her and
+usurp a portion of her territories, a supposition which is most
+improbable, would the enemy be able to hold what he seized? History
+shows that no conquered country has ever been successfully and
+permanently kept without the people's consent, and there is not the
+least chance that the Americans will ever consent to the rule of a
+foreign government.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is to be hoped that the United States will not follow the example of
+other nations and unduly increase her armaments, but that she will take
+the lead in the universal peace movement and show the world that a
+great power can exist and maintain her position without force of arms.
+I am aware that general disarmament is not popular among statesmen,
+that it has been denounced by an eminent authority as a "will-o'-the
+wisp", that arbitration has been styled a "Jack-o'-lantern", but this
+is not the first time a good and workable scheme has been branded with
+opprobrious names. The abolition of slavery was at one time considered
+to be an insane man's dream; now all people believe in it. Will the
+twentieth century witness the collapse of our present civilization?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Why are the world's armaments constantly increasing? To my mind it is
+due to two causes, one of which is mistrust. One nation begins to
+build Dreadnaughts, another does the same through fear and mistrust.
+The second cause is that it is the fashion of some nations to follow
+the example of others that they may preserve their position as great
+naval powers. But it is unnecessary for the United States to show such
+mistrust or to follow such fashion. She should rather, as becomes a
+great and powerful nation, take an independent course of her own. If
+she sets the example other nations in due time will follow her. The
+peace of the world will be more surely guarded, and America will win
+the approbation, the respect, and the gratitude of all peace-loving
+people.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 3. American Government
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Democratic principles were enunciated by Chinese philosophers as long
+ago as 4,500 years, and from time to time various emperors and
+statesmen have endeavored to apply them to the government of China, but
+these principles in all their minute details have been exemplified only
+by the wisdom of the statesmen in the West. In the United States they
+are in full swing. As China has now become a Republic, not in name
+only but in fact, it will be well for her statesmen and politicians to
+examine the American constitution, and to study its workings. To do
+this at close range it will be necessary for the student to visit
+Washington, the Capital of the United States of America. Here he will
+find the President, or the chief of the nation. With the co-operation
+of his Cabinet and a large staff of assistants, the President
+administers the affairs of the Federal Government. He may be a new man
+and have had no previous training in diplomacy, and little
+administrative experience, but in all probability he is a man of
+resource and adaptability, who has mastered every detail of his high
+office. All important matters are referred to him, so that his daily
+work taxes his whole strength and energy. Another part of his function
+is to see the Congressmen, Senators, or Representatives, and others who
+call to see him on business, and this takes up a great part of his
+time. In fact, he is expected to be, and generally is, 'Suaviter in
+modo, fortiter in re'.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In Washington the National Congress, which is composed of the Senate
+and of the House of Representatives, holds its sittings in the Capitol,
+and passes bills subject to the approval of the President. If he signs
+a bill it becomes law, and binds the nation. The basic principle of
+democracy is the sovereignty of the people, but as the people cannot of
+themselves govern the country, they must delegate their power to agents
+who act for them. Thus they elect the Chief Magistrate to govern the
+country, and legislators to make the laws. The powers given to these
+agents are irrevocable during their respective terms of office. The
+electors are absolutely bound by their actions. Whatever laws Congress
+may pass, the people must strictly obey; thus the servants of the
+people really become their masters. There is no fear, however, that
+their masters pro tempore will betray their trust, as any neglect of
+duty on their part, or disregard of the wishes of their constituents,
+would most likely destroy their chances of re-election.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+According to the terms of the Constitution, the senators and
+representatives must be residents of the states for which they are
+chosen. This is an excellent provision, insuring that the people's
+delegates possess local knowledge and know how to safeguard the
+interests and welfare of the states which sent them to Washington. On
+the other hand, as each state, irrespective of its size, is entitled to
+elect only two Senators, and to send only a limited number of
+Representatives to the House, proportionally to its population,
+unfortunately it frequently happens that eminent, capable, and
+well-known public men, of large experience, are deprived of an
+opportunity to serve their country. In England, and in some other
+lands, the electors may choose as their representative a resident of
+any city, borough, or county as they please, and it only occasionally
+happens that the member of Parliament actually lives in the district
+which he represents. Is it advisable to adopt a similar system in the
+United States? It could not be done without amending the Constitution,
+and this would not be easy; but every nation, as well as each
+individual, should be prepared, at all times, to receive fresh light,
+and be willing to change old customs to suit new conditions, and so I
+make the suggestion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fixing of four years as the term of office for the President was an
+excellent idea, intended no doubt to prevent an unpopular or bad
+President from remaining too long in power. It is, however, gradually
+dawning on the minds of intelligent people that this limited term,
+though excellent in theory, is very inconvenient in practice. However
+intelligent and capable a new President may be, several months must
+elapse before he can thoroughly understand all the details incidental
+to his exalted position, involving, in addition to unavoidable social
+functions, the daily reception of callers, and many other multifarious
+duties. By the time he has become familiar with these matters, and the
+work of the office is running smoothly, half of his term has gone; and
+should he aspire to a second term, which is quite natural, he must
+devote a great deal of time and attention to electioneering. Four
+years is plainly too short a period to give any President a chance to
+do justice either to himself or to the nation which entrusted him with
+his heavy responsibilities. Presidential elections are national
+necessities, but the less frequently they occur the better for the
+general welfare of the country. Those who have been in the United
+States during campaign years, and have seen the complicated working of
+the political machinery, and all its serious consequences, will, I feel
+convinced, agree with what I say. During the greater part of the year
+in which a President has to be elected the entire nation is absorbed in
+the event, all the people, both high and low, being more or less keenly
+interested in the issue, and the preparations leading up to it. They
+seem to put everything else in the shade, and to give more attention to
+this than to anything else. Politicians and officials who have a
+personal interest in the result, will devote their whole time and
+energy to the work. Others who are less active, still, directly or
+indirectly, take their share in the electioneering. Campaign funds
+have to be raised and large sums of money are disbursed in many
+directions. All this sadly interrupts business; it not only takes many
+business men from their more legitimate duties, but it prevents
+merchants and large corporations from embarking in new enterprises, and
+so incidentally limits the demand for labor. In short, the whole
+nation is practically hurled into a state of bustle and excitement, and
+the general trade of the country is seriously affected. A young man in
+Washington, who was engaged to be married, once told me that he was too
+busy to think of marriage until the election was over.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If the French system were followed, and the President were elected by a
+majority of the combined votes of the Senate and the House of
+Representatives, the inconveniences, the excitements and expense above
+enumerated might be avoided, but I think the people of America would
+rather endure these evils than be deprived of the pleasure of electing
+their President themselves. The alternate remedy, so far as I can see,
+is to extend the presidential term to, say, six or seven years, without
+any chance of a re-election. If this proposal were adopted, the
+President would be more free and independent, he would not be haunted
+by the bugbear of losing his position by temporarily displeasing his
+political friends, he could give his undivided attention, as he cannot
+do now, to federal affairs, and work without bias or fear, and without
+interruption, for the welfare of his nation. He would have more chance
+of really doing something for his country which was worth while. A
+further advantage is that the country would not be so frequently
+troubled with the turmoil and excitement arising from the presidential
+election. If I were allowed to prophecy, I should say that the young
+Republic of China, profiting by the experiences of France and America,
+will most likely adopt the French system of electing its President, or
+develop a system somewhat similar to it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One of the defects in the American way of government is the spoils
+system, in accordance with the maxim, "To the victor belongs the
+spoils." The new President has the right of dismissing a large number
+of the holders of Federal Offices, and to appoint in their places his
+friends, or men of his party who have rendered it services, or who have
+otherwise been instrumental in getting him elected. I am told that
+thousands of officials are turned out in this way every four years.
+President Jackson introduced the practice, and almost every succeeding
+President has continued it. This spoils system has been adopted by
+almost every state and municipality; it forms indeed the corner-stone
+of practical politics in the United States. In every country, all over
+the world, there are cases where positions and places of emolument have
+been obtained through influential friends, but to dismiss public
+servants who are doing useful work, for no better reason than simply to
+make room for others, is very bad for the civil service, and for the
+country it serves. Attempts to remedy these evils have been made
+within recent years by the introduction of what is called "Civil
+Service Reform", by which a candidate is appointed to a post after an
+examination, and the term of his service is fixed. If this is to be
+strictly adhered to in all cases, the President will be, to a great
+extent, deprived of the means of rewarding his political friends. In
+that case I doubt if the professional politicians and wire pullers will
+be so active and arduous as they have hitherto been, as the chief aim
+in securing the election of the nominee will have been taken away.
+Great credit is due to President Taft for his courage and impartiality,
+in that after assuming the duties of the high office to which he was
+elected, he gave appointments to men according to their ability,
+irrespective of party claims, and even went so far as to invite one or
+two gentlemen of known ability, who belonged to the opposite party, to
+become members of his Cabinet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In America men are not anxious for official offices. Men possessing
+talent and ability, with business acumen, are in great demand, and can
+distinguish themselves in their several professions in various ways;
+they can easily attain a position of wealth and influence, and so such
+men keep out of politics. It must not, however, be inferred from this
+that the government officials in America are incompetent. On the
+contrary I gladly testify from my personal experience that the work
+done by them is not only efficient, but that, taken as a whole, they
+compare most favorably with any other body of government officials in
+Europe. Still, on account of the small salaries paid, it is not to be
+wondered at that exceptionally good men cannot be induced to accept
+official positions. I have known several Cabinet Ministers who, after
+holding their offices for two or three years, were obliged to resign
+and resume their former business, and a President has been known to
+experience great difficulty in getting good and competent men to
+succeed them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These remarks do not apply to the President, not because the
+President's salary is large, for compared with what European Kings and
+Emperors receive it is very small, but because the position is, far and
+above any other, the largest gift the people can bestow. No one has
+ever been known to refuse a presidential nomination. I believe anyone
+to whom it was offered would always gladly accept it. I have conversed
+with some in America who told me that they were heirs apparent to the
+White House, and so they are, for they are just as eligible candidates
+for the position, as is the Crown Prince to succeed to a throne in any
+European country. Even a lady was once nominated as a presidential
+candidate, although she did not obtain many votes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One of the things which arouses my admiration is the due observance by
+the people of the existing laws and the Constitution. Every one obeys
+them, from the President to the pedler, without any exception.
+Sometimes, however, by a too strict and technical interpretation of the
+law, it works a hardship. Let me quote a case. According to Article
+1, Section 6, of the Constitution, "no Senator or Representative shall,
+during the time for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil
+office under the authority of the United States, which shall have been
+created, or the emoluments whereof shall have been increased, during
+such time." A certain Senator was appointed by the President to a
+Cabinet office, but it happened that the salary attached to that office
+had been raised during the time he was in the Senate, and so it was
+held that he could draw only the salary which was allowed before he
+became a Senator, and that he was not entitled to the increase which
+was sanctioned by Congress while he was in the Senate, although at the
+time he had not the slightest notion that the increase would ever
+affect his own pocket.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The relation of the states to the Federal Government is peculiar and
+unique. I will illustrate my point by correcting a mistake often made
+by foreigners in regard to the different provinces of China. It is
+generally assumed by Western writers that each province in China is
+self-governed, and that the provincial authorities act independently
+and in defiance of the injunctions of the Peking Government. The
+facts, however, are that until the establishment of the Republic, all
+the officials in the Provinces were appointed or sanctioned by the
+Peking Government, and that by an Imperial decree even a Viceroy or
+Governor could, at any moment, be changed or dismissed, and that no
+important matter could be transacted without the Imperial sanction.
+How does this compare with the states in America? Every American
+boasts that his state is independent of the Federal Government. All
+officials, from the Governor downward, are, in every state, elected by
+the people. Each state is provided with a Legislature consisting of a
+Senate and a House of Representatives, also elected by the popular
+vote. The state has very large, and almost absolute, legislative and
+executive powers, and is competent to deal with all matters not
+reserved by the Constitution for the Federal Government. Each state is
+also independent of every other state. The criminal and civil laws,
+including all matters pertaining to the transfer of and the succession
+to property, as well as marriage, divorce and fiscal laws, are within
+the scope of the state administrations. The authorities of each state
+naturally do their best to make their own state as populous and
+prosperous as possible. Thus in some states the laws concerning
+divorce, corporations, and landed property, are more favorable than in
+other states. A person, for example, unable to obtain a divorce in his
+own state, can, without difficulty, attain his object in another state.
+What is expressly prohibited by statute in one state may be perfectly
+legitimate in the neighboring state. It is the same with the local
+taxes; fees and taxes are not uniform; in one state they are heavy,
+while in another they are comparatively light. A stranger would
+naturally be surprised to find such a condition of things in a great
+nation like America, and would wonder how the machinery of such a
+government can work so well. Nevertheless he will find that everything
+goes on smoothly. This can be explained only by the fact that the
+inhabitants of one state often remove to other states, and by
+commercial and other dealings and social associations they mix
+together, so that, notwithstanding the dissimilarity of conditions in
+different states, the people easily adapt themselves to the local
+surroundings, and, so far as I can find, no friction or quarrel has
+ever arisen between two states. However, would it not be better for
+all the states to appoint an interstate committee to revise and codify
+their laws with a view to making them uniform?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Foreigners living in America sometimes find themselves at a
+disadvantage, owing to the state being independent of the control of
+the Federal Government. This point can be better illustrated by a case
+which happened some years ago in one of the states. A foreigner, who
+was the subject of a European country, was attacked by a mob, and his
+property destroyed. He laid his complaint before the local
+authorities, but it appeared that he could not obtain the redress he
+sought. His consul did all he could for him by appealing to the local
+authorities, but without success; finally the matter was reported to
+his ambassador in Washington, who immediately interested himself in the
+affair and brought it before the Secretary of State. The Secretary,
+after going into the facts of the case, said that all he could do was
+to write to the Governor of that state and request him to take the
+matter up, but the Governor, for some reason or other, did not take any
+such action as would have given satisfactory redress to the foreigner.
+His ambassador made frequent appeals to the Secretary of State, but the
+Secretary was powerless, as the Constitution does not empower the
+Federal Government to interfere in state matters. This seems a blemish
+in the administration of foreign affairs in the United States of
+America. Suppose a foreigner should be ill-treated or murdered in a
+state, and no proper redress be given, the Federal Government cannot
+send its officers to arrest the culprit. All it can do is to ask the
+Governor of that state to take action, and if he fail to do so there is
+no remedy. Fortunately such a case rarely happens, but for the more
+efficient carrying on of their state affairs, is it not better in
+special cases to invest the Federal Government with larger powers than
+those at present possessed by it? I am aware that this opens up a
+serious question; that Congress will be very reluctant to confer on the
+Federal Government any power to interfere in the state affairs, knowing
+that the states would not tolerate such an interference; but as there
+is a large and ever increasing number of aliens residing in the United
+States, it naturally follows that riots, and charges of ill treatment
+of foreigners now and then do occur. Now state officials can, as a
+rule, be trusted to deal with these matters fairly, but where local
+prejudice against a class of aliens runs high, is it not advisable to
+leave to the Federal officials, who are disinterested, the settlement
+of such cases? For the sake of cordial foreign relations, and to avoid
+international complications, this point, I venture to suggest, should
+be seriously considered by the Federal and the State Governments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The question as to what form of government should be adopted by any
+country is not easy to decide. The people of America would no doubt
+claim that their system is the best, while the people of the monarchial
+governments in Europe would maintain that theirs is preferable. This
+is mostly a matter of education, and people who have been accustomed to
+their own form of government naturally like it best. There are
+communities who have been long accustomed to the old system of
+monarchial government, with their ancient traditions and usages. There
+are other communities, with a different political atmosphere, where all
+the people share in the public affairs of State. It would be
+manifestly improper to introduce a democratic government among the
+former. It would not suit their tastes nor fit in with their ideas.
+What is good for one nation is not necessarily good for another. Each
+system of government has its good points, provided that they are
+faithfully and justly carried out. The aim to secure the happiness and
+comfort of the people and to promote the peace and prosperity of the
+nation should always be kept in view. As long as these objects can be
+secured it does not matter much whether the government is monarchial,
+republican, or something else.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It may pertinently be asked why China has become a Republic, since from
+time immemorial she has had a monarchial form of government. The
+answer is that the conditions and circumstances in China are peculiar,
+and are different from those prevailing in Japan and other countries.
+In Japan it is claimed that the Empire was founded by the first
+Emperor, Jummu Tenno, 660 B.C. and that the dynasty founded by him has
+continued ever since. It is well known that the Chinese Imperial
+family is of Manchu origin. The Ching dynasty was founded in 1644 by
+conquest, not by succession. Upon the recent overthrow of the Manchu
+dynasty it was found very difficult to find a Chinese, however popular
+and able, who possessed the legal right of succeeding to the throne.
+Jealousy and provincial feelings placed this suggestion absolutely
+beyond discussion. Disagreements, frictions, and constant civil war
+would have ensued if any attempt had been made to establish a Chinese
+dynasty. Another fact is that a large majority of the intelligent
+people of China were disgusted with the system of monarchial
+government. Thus it will be seen that for the sake of the peace and
+welfare of the nation there was no other course for the people but to
+take a long jump and to establish the present Republic. The law of
+evolution has been very actively at work in China, and no doubt it will
+be for her ultimate good, and therefore for the benefit of all mankind.
+China is now an infant republic, but she will grow into a healthy and
+strong youth. Her people have the kindest feeling for the people of
+the elder republic across the Pacific. There are excellent reasons why
+the two republics should be in closer friendship. It is well known
+that there are great potentialities for the expansion of trade in
+China, and as the Philippine Islands are close to our shores, and the
+completion of the Panama Canal will open a new avenue for the
+enlargement of trade from America, it will be to the interest of both
+nations to stretch out their hands across the Pacific in the clasp of
+good fellowship and brotherhood. When this is done, not only will
+international commerce greatly increase, but peace, at least in the
+Eastern Hemisphere, will be better secured than by a fleet of
+Dreadnaughts.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 4. America and China
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+America has performed great service for the Orient and especially for
+China. If, however, the people of the latter country were asked to
+express their candid opinion on the matter, the verdict would not be
+altogether pleasant, but would be given with mixed feelings of
+gratitude and regret. Since the formal opening of China to foreign
+trade and commerce, people of all nationalities have come here, some to
+trade, some for pleasure, some to preach Christianity, and others for
+other purposes. Considering that the Chinese have a civilization of
+their own, and that their modes of thoughts, ideas, and habits are, in
+many respects, different from those of the western people, it is not
+surprising that frictions and disputes have occasionally occurred and
+that even foreign wars have been waged between China and the Occident,
+but it is gratifying to observe that no force has ever been resorted to
+against China by the United States of America. Now and then
+troublesome questions have arisen, but they have always been settled
+amicably. Indeed the just and friendly attitude taken by the American
+officials in China had so won the esteem and confidence of the Chinese
+Government that in 1867, on the termination of Mr. Anson Burlingame's
+term as American Minister to Peking, he was appointed by the Manchu
+Government as Chief of a special mission to America and Europe. In
+that capacity he performed valuable services for China, although his
+work was unfortunately cut short by his untimely death. The liberal
+and generous treatment accorded to the Chinese students in America is
+another source of satisfaction. They have been admitted freely to all
+educational institutions, and welcomed into American families. In
+whatever school or college they enter they are taught in the same way
+as the American boys and girls, and enjoy equal opportunities of
+learning all that the American students learn.[1] That America has no
+desire for territorial acquisition in China is well known. During the
+Boxer movement the American Government took the lead in initiating the
+policy of maintaining the open door, and preserving the integrity of
+China, a policy to which the other great powers readily consented. It
+was well known at the time, and it is no breach of confidence to
+mention the fact here, that Mr. John Hay, American Secretary of State,
+with the permission of President McKinley, was quite willing that
+America's indemnity demanded from China as her share of the
+compensation for losses sustained during the Boxer upheaval, should be
+reduced by one-half, provided the other powers would consent to similar
+reductions. Unfortunately, Mr. Hay's proposal could not be carried out
+for want of unanimity. However, to show the good faith, and the humane
+and just policy of America, she has since voluntarily refunded to China
+a considerable portion of her indemnity, being the surplus due to her
+after payment of the actual expenses incurred. This is the second
+occasion on which she has done this, although in the previous case the
+refund was smaller. These are some of the instances for which the
+people of China have good reasons to be grateful to America and her
+people.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There is, however, another side to the picture; the Chinese students in
+America, who may be roughly calculated by the thousands, and whose
+number is annually increasing, have been taught democratic principles
+of government. These could not but be detrimental to the welfare of
+the late Manchu Government. They have read the history of how the
+American people gained their independence, and naturally they have been
+imbued with the idea of inaugurating a similar policy in China.
+Chinese merchants, traders, and others who have been residing in
+America, seeing the free and independent manner in which the American
+people carry on their government, learned, of course, a similar lesson.
+These people have been an important factor in the recent overthrow of
+the Manchu dynasty. Added to this, the fact that America has afforded
+a safe refuge for political offenders was another cause of
+dissatisfaction to the Manchus. Thus it will be seen that the Manchu
+Government, from their point of view, have had many reasons for
+entertaining unfavorable sentiments toward America.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This view I need hardly say is not shared by the large majority of
+Chinese. Persons who have committed political offenses in their own
+country find protection not only in America but in all countries in
+Europe, Japan, and other civilized lands. It is an irony of fate that
+since the establishment of the Chinese Republic, Manchu and other
+officials under the old regime, now find secure asylums in Hongkong,
+Japan, and Tsingtao, while hundreds of ex-Manchu officials have fled to
+the foreign settlements of Shanghai, Tientsin, and other treaty ports,
+so reluctantly granted by the late Manchu Government. Thus the edge of
+their complaint against America's policy in harboring political
+refugees has been turned against themselves, and the liberality against
+which they protested has become their protection.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The more substantial cause for dissatisfaction with the United States
+is, I grieve to say, her Chinese exclusion policy. As long as her
+discriminating laws against the Chinese remain in force a blot must
+remain on her otherwise good name, and her relations with China, though
+cordial, cannot be perfect. It is beyond the scope of this chapter to
+deal with this subject exhaustively, but in order to enable my readers
+to understand the exact situation it is necessary to supply a short
+historical summary. In 1868, on account of the pressing need of good
+laborers for the construction of railways and other public works in
+America, the Governments of China and the United States, concluded a
+treaty which provided that "Chinese subjects visiting or residing in
+the United States shall enjoy the same privileges, immunities, and
+exemptions in respect to travel or residence as may be enjoyed by the
+citizens or subjects of the most favored nation." It was a treaty
+negotiated by that great American statesman, Secretary Seward, and
+announced by the President of the United States to Congress as a
+"liberal and auspicious treaty". It was welcomed by the United States
+as a great advance in their international relations. It had also the
+double significance of having been negotiated by a Chinese special
+embassy, of which a distinguished American diplomat, Mr. Anson
+Burlingame, who was familiar with the wishes and interests of the
+American people, was the head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But within a few years the labor unions on the Pacific coast began to
+object to the competition of Chinese laborers. Soon afterward the
+Chinese Government, to its intense surprise, was informed that the
+President of the United States had delegated a commission to come to
+Peking to solicit an abrogation of the treaty clause to which reference
+has been made. The Chinese Government was naturally unwilling to
+abrogate a treaty which had been urged on her by the United States with
+so much zeal, and which had so lately been entered upon on both sides
+with such high hopes. Long and tedious negotiations ensued, and
+finally a short treaty was concluded, the first and second Articles of
+which are as follows:
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3>
+ Article I
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+"Whenever in the opinion of the Government of the United States, the
+coming of Chinese laborers to the United States, or their residence
+therein, affects or threatens to affect the interests of that country,
+or to endanger the good order of the said country or of any locality
+within the territory thereof, the Government of China agrees that the
+Government of the United States may regulate, limit, or suspend such
+coming or residence, but may not absolutely prohibit it. The
+limitation or suspension shall be reasonable and shall apply only to
+Chinese who may go to the United States as laborers, other classes not
+being included in the limitations. Legislation taken in regard to
+Chinese laborers will be of such a character only as is necessary to
+enforce the regulation, limitation, or suspension of immigration, and
+immigrants shall not be subject to personal maltreatment or abuse."
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3>
+ Article II
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+"Chinese subjects, whether proceeding to the United States as teachers,
+students, merchants, or from curiosity, together with their body and
+household servants, and Chinese laborers who are now in the United
+States shall be allowed to go and come of their own free will and
+accord, and shall be accorded all the rights, privileges, immunities,
+and exceptions which are accorded to the citizens and subjects of the
+most favored nations."
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+It would seem reasonable to expect that in yielding so fully to the
+wishes of the United States in this second negotiation the Chinese
+Government would not be called upon to make any further concessions in
+the interests or at the demand of the labor unions on the Pacific
+coast, but in this China was disappointed. Within a period of less
+than ten years an urgent application was made by the American Secretary
+of State for a new treaty amended so as to enable the Congress of the
+United States to still further restrict the privileges of Chinese
+laborers who had come to the United States. And when the Chinese
+Government hesitated to consent to the withdrawal of rights which the
+United States granted to the subjects of other Governments, Congress
+passed the Scott Act of 1888 prohibiting any Chinese person from
+entering the United States except Chinese officials, teachers,
+students, merchants or travellers for pleasure or curiosity and
+forbidding also Chinese laborers in the United States, after having
+left, from returning thereto. This, in the words of Hon. J. W. Foster,
+ex-Secretary of State and a distinguished international lawyer, "was a
+deliberate violation of the Treaty of 1880 and was so declared by the
+Supreme Court of the United States." In order to save the Executive of
+the United States from embarrassment, the Chinese Government, contrary
+to its own sense of justice, and of international comity, for a third
+time yielded to the wishes of the United States, and concluded the
+amended treaty of 1894 which gave Congress additional power of
+legislation respecting Chinese laborers. By Article I of this treaty
+it was agreed that for a term of ten years the coming of Chinese
+laborers to the United States should be absolutely prohibited. Article
+III distinctly provided that "the provisions of this convention shall
+not affect the right at present enjoyed of Chinese subjects, being
+officials, teachers, students, merchants, or travellers for curiosity
+or pleasure, but not laborers, of coming to the United States and
+residing therein." Thus it is clear that the prohibition affects only
+laborers, and not the other classes of Chinese. For a few years after
+the signing of this convention this was the view adopted and acted upon
+by the immigration officials, but afterward they changed their
+attitude, and the foregoing Article has since been interpreted to mean
+that only the above-mentioned five classes can be admitted into the
+United States, and that all the other classes of Chinese, however
+respectable and honorable, must be refused admission. Will my readers
+believe that a Chinese banker, physician, lawyer, broker, commercial
+agent, scholar or professor could all be barred out of the United
+States of America under the provisions of this convention? In the face
+of the plain language of the text it seems too absurd and unreasonable
+to be contemplated, and yet it is a fact.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This convention was proclaimed in December, 1894. According to its
+provisions, it was to remain in force only for a period of ten years,
+but that if six months before the end of that period neither Power
+should give notice of denunciation it should be extended for a similar
+period. Such notice was, however, given by China to the United States
+and accordingly the convention expired in December, 1904, and is now no
+longer in force. No serious attempt has since been made by the United
+States Government to negotiate a new treaty regarding Chinese laborers,
+so the customs and immigration officials continue to prohibit Chinese
+laborers from coming to America by virtue of the law passed by
+Congress. It will be seen that by the treaty of 1868, known as the
+"Burlingame Treaty", the United States Government formally agreed that
+Chinese subjects, visiting or residing in the United States, should
+enjoy the same privileges and immunities as were enjoyed by the
+citizens or subjects of the most favored nation; that being so, and as
+the convention of 1894 has expired, according to the legal opinion of
+Mr. John W. Foster, and other eminent lawyers, the continuation of the
+exclusion of Chinese laborers and the restrictions placed upon Chinese
+merchants and others seeking admission to the United States are not
+only without international authority but in violation of treaty
+stipulations.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The enforcement of the exclusion laws against Chinese in the Hawaiian
+and Philippine Islands is still more inexcusable. The complaint in
+America against the immigration of Chinese laborers was that such
+immigration was detrimental to white labor, but in those Islands there
+has been no such complaint; on the contrary the enforcement of the law
+against the Chinese in Hawaii has been, and is, contrary to the
+unanimous wish of the local Government and the people. Free
+intercourse and immigration between those Islands and China have been
+maintained for centuries. What is most objectionable and unfair is
+that the Chinese should be singled out for discrimination, while all
+other Asiatics such as Japanese, Siamese, and Malays are allowed to
+enter America and her colonies without restraint. It is my belief that
+the gross injustice that has been inflicted upon the Chinese people by
+the harsh working of the exclusion law is not known to the large
+majority of the American people, for I am sure they would not allow the
+continuation of such hardships to be suffered by those who are their
+sincere friends. China does not wish special treatment, she only asks
+that her people shall be treated in the same way as the citizens or
+subjects of other countries. Will the great American nation still
+refuse to consent to this?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To solve the problem of immigration in a manner that would be
+satisfactory to all parties is not an easy task, as so many conflicting
+interests are involved. But it is not impossible. If persons
+interested in this question be really desirous of seeing it settled and
+are willing to listen to reasonable proposals, I believe that a way may
+be found for its solution. There is good reason for my optimistic
+opinion. Even the Labor Unions, unless I am mistaken, would welcome an
+amicable settlement of this complicated question. In 1902, while at
+Washington, I was agreeably surprised to receive a deputation of the
+leaders of the Central Labor Union of Binghamton, New York, inviting me
+to pay a visit there and to deliver an address. As I did not wish to
+disappoint them I accepted their invitation. During my short stay
+there, I was very cordially and warmly received, and most kindly
+treated not only by the local authorities and inhabitants, but by the
+members of the Labor Union and the working men also. I found that the
+Union leaders and the working men were most reasonable, their platform
+being, as far as I could learn, to have no cheap labor competition but
+not necessarily discrimination against any race. If the United States
+Government would appoint a commission composed of members representing
+the Labor Unions, manufacturers and merchants, to treat with a similar
+commission nominated by the Chinese Government, the whole question in
+all its bearings could be discussed, and I feel certain that after free
+and candid exchange of views, the joint Commissioners would be able to
+arrive at a scheme which would put at rest once for all the conflicting
+claims, and settle the matter satisfactorily to both China and the
+United States.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When this disagreeable difference has been removed, the friendly
+relations between the two Republics, cordial even while one was yet an
+Empire, will leave nothing to be desired and cannot but help to largely
+affect the trade between the two countries and to contribute to the
+peace of the Far East.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] I need hardly say that our students are also well treated in
+England, France, Germany, Japan, and other countries in Europe, but I
+am dealing in this chapter with America.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap05"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 5. American Education
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Out of a total population of 91,972,266 in the United States there
+were, in 1910, 17,506,175 pupils enrolled. Few nations can show such a
+high percentage of school students. The total number of teachers was
+506,040. Educational efficiency on such a scale can be maintained only
+by a large expenditure of money, and from the statistics of education I
+find that the sum received from tuition fees was $14,687,192 gold, from
+productive funds $11,592,113 gold, and from the United States
+Government $4,607,298 gold, making a total of $70,667,865 gold.[1] I
+question whether any other nation can produce such an excellent example
+in the cause of education.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In every state there are very many schools, both public and private.
+There are public schools in every town, and even the smallest village
+has its school, while in some agricultural states, such as Wyoming,
+where the population is very scattered, teachers are provided by the
+government to teach in the farmers' homes wherever three or four
+children can be gathered together. The public schools are free and
+open to all, but in some towns in the Southern States special schools
+are provided for the colored people. Having such facilities for
+gaining knowledge, it naturally follows that the Americans, as a whole,
+are an educated people. By this I mean the native American, not the
+recent immigrants and negroes, but even as regards the latter a
+reservation should be made, for some of the negroes, such as Booker T.
+Washington and others, have become eminent through their learning and
+educational work.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The distinguishing feature of the school system is that it is cheap and
+comprehensive. In the primary and high schools the boys and girls,
+whether they come from the wealthy or aristocratic families, or from
+more straitened homes, are all studying together in the same
+class-room, and it is known that a President sent his son to study in a
+public school. There is, therefore, no excuse for even the poorest man
+in America being an illiterate. If he wishes he can obtain a degree in
+a university without difficulty. Many of the state universities admit
+the children of citizens of the state free, while their tuition fees
+for outsiders are exceptionally low, so that it is within the power of
+the man of the most moderate means to give his son a university
+education. Many of the college or university students, in order to
+enable them to go through their courses of study, do outside jobs after
+their lecture hours, and perform manual, or even menial work, during
+the vacations. I frequently met such students in summer resorts acting
+as hotel waiters and found them clean, attentive, and reliable. During
+a visit to Harvard University, President Eliot took me to see the
+dining-hall. Many students were taking their lunch at the time. I
+noticed that the waiters were an unusually clean set of young men, and
+upon inquiry was informed that they were students of the University,
+and that when a waiter was wanted many students applied, as the poorer
+students were glad to avail themselves of the opportunity to earn some
+money.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Honest labor, though menial, is not considered degrading, and no
+American of education and refinement is above doing it. In some of the
+states in the East, owing to the scarcity of servants, families do
+their own cooking and other household work. Some few years ago I was
+on a visit to Ashburnham, Massachusetts, and was surprised to find that
+my hostess not only did the cooking but also cleaned my room. I was
+invited to a formal luncheon by a professor, and to my astonishment his
+two daughters waited at the table. This is not unlike what occurs in
+some parts of China in the interior. The members of families, although
+in good circumstances, do their own household work. In some towns, not
+far from Canton, wealthy farmers and country gentlemen hire out their
+sons as menials, so that these youngsters, when they have grown up,
+shall know the value of money and not squander the family wealth. I
+cite a typical case of a millionaire who had only one son. In order to
+make him appreciate the worth of money he took his boy to Canton, and
+allowed him to be hired out as an ordinary servant. The boy was
+ordered by his master to look after a certain part of the house, and
+also to take care of a little garden. One day he carelessly broke a
+valuable gold-fish jar much prized by the family. His master naturally
+became enraged and reproached him for his negligence. The young man
+coolly told him that if he would come to his father's house he could
+replace the broken vessel by making his own selection from his father's
+collection of gold-fish jars. This irritated the master, who thought
+that the lad was adding insult to injury. However, ultimately, his
+master was persuaded to go with him to his father's house, and to his
+great astonishment he found there many gold-fish jars which were more
+precious than that which the lad had broken. Household work, however
+mean it may be, is not considered degrading in China, but the
+difference between China and America is that in America the people are
+compelled to do it from necessity, while in China it is resorted to as
+a matter of policy to make the young men realize the value of money,
+and not spend it wastefully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The curriculum prescribed in the schools covers a wide range of
+subjects, and the graduates are well equipped to face the battle of
+life. Not only are drawing, sketching and other fine arts taught, but
+also carpentry and other trades. I was once shown a fairly made box
+which was the product of a very small boy. I did not at first perceive
+the use of teaching a boy to do such work in school, but I learned that
+its object was to instruct the pupil how to think and arrange his
+materials systematically.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With the exception of those schools established by Christian societies,
+or endowed by religious sects, all educational institutions, especially
+those established by the state authorities, are secular. Religion is
+not taught. Neither the Bible nor any other religious work is used in
+the schoolroom. The presidents, professors, and tutors may be strict
+churchmen, or very religious people, but, as a rule, they are not
+permitted to inculcate their religious views on the students. The
+minds of the young are most susceptible, and if no moral principles are
+impressed upon them at school or college they are apt to go astray. It
+should be remembered that men of education without moral principles are
+like a ship without an anchor. Ignorant and illiterate people infringe
+the law because they do not know any better, and their acts of
+depredation are clumsy and can be easily found out, but when men of
+education commit crimes these are so skilfully planned and executed
+that it is difficult for the police to unravel and detect them. It has
+been known that frauds and forgeries perpetrated by such unscrupulous
+persons were so cleverly designed that they bore the evidence of
+superior education, and almost of genius. The more a man is educated
+the more is it necessary, for the welfare of the state, to instruct him
+how to make a proper use of his talents: Education is like a
+double-edged sword. It may be turned to dangerous usages if it is not
+properly handled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As there is no established church in the United States, and in view of
+the numberless different sects, it is not advisable to permit any
+particular phase of religion to be taught. But why not consent to
+allow the cardinal principles of morality to be taught in every school?
+The following may serve as examples:
+</P>
+
+<PRE>
+ (1) Honesty is the best policy.
+ (2) Honor thy father and thy mother.
+ (3) Universal brotherhood.
+ (4) Love of mankind.
+ (5) Charity to all.
+ (6) Purity in thought and action.
+ (7) Pure food makes a pure body.
+ (8) Happiness consists of health and a pure conscience.
+ (9) Live and let live.
+ (10) Respect a man for his virtues, not for his money or position.
+ (11) 'Fiat justitia, ruat coelum' (Let justice be done, though the Heavens should fall).
+ (12) Bear no malice against anyone.
+ (13) Be equitable and just to all men.
+ (14) Liberty and freedom but not license.
+ (15) Do not unto others what ye would not that others should do unto you.
+</PRE>
+
+<P>
+I have jotted down the above just as they occurred to me while writing.
+They can easily be amplified, and be made the basis of an ethical
+instruction in all the schools. In any case, every nation should aim
+at the highest standard of morals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Co-education in the United States is not so unpopular as in some other
+countries, and it is increasing in favor. In all the primary schools,
+and in most of the high schools, boys and girls study in the same
+class-room, and girls are admitted as students even in some colleges
+and universities. This principle of admitting the fair sex to equal
+educational privileges is slowly but surely being recognized
+everywhere. In some universities the authorities have gone half-way;
+lectures are given to the girl students in separate rooms, or separate
+buildings, or halls, are provided for the girl students. With regard
+to the teaching staff, in the primary schools nearly all the teachers
+are women, and in the high schools their number is at least half, if
+not more. In some of the universities there are lady professors or
+tutors. It goes without saying that girls have the natural talent for
+learning everything that boys can learn. The objections raised by the
+opponents of co-education seem to rest chiefly upon the danger of the
+intellectual or physical overstrain of girls during adolescence, and
+upon the unequal rate of development of boys and girls during the
+secondary school period. It is further alleged that in mixed schools
+the curriculum is so prescribed that the girls' course of study is more
+or less adapted to that of the boys, with the result that it cannot
+have the artistic and domestic character which is suitable for the
+majority of girls; but why should not the curriculum be arranged in
+such a way as to suit both sexes? Is it not good for both to learn the
+same subjects? That which is good for a boy to learn is it not equally
+advisable for a girl to know, and vice versa? Will not such a policy
+create mutual sympathy between the sexes? The opponents of the
+co-education policy assert that it makes the girls masculine, and that
+it has a tendency to make the boys a little feminine. It cannot,
+however, be doubted that the system reduces the cost of education, such
+as the duplication of the teaching staff, laboratories, libraries, and
+other equipment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is objected that the system has done more than anything else to rob
+marriage of its attractions, by divesting man of most of his old-time
+glamour and romance. It is claimed that this early contact with the
+other sex, on a footing of equality, and the manner in which the
+majority of the girl students more than maintain their intellectual
+standing with the boys, has tended to produce that contempt of the
+much-vaunted superiority of man, that, as a rule, is reserved for those
+post-nuptial discoveries which make marriage such an interesting
+venture. But they forget that marriages are frequently contracted in
+places where girls and boys are taught together, and where they have
+had ample opportunities for knowing each other intimately, and that
+experience proves that such marriages are happy and lasting unions. It
+is interesting to observe, however, that as the number of educational
+institutions has increased, the number of unmarried women has been
+correspondingly augmented. It is easy to explain this by the fact that
+a large number of women earn their own livelihood by going into
+business and the professions. As they become more educated, and are
+allowed to participate in many of the same privileges as men, it is
+only natural that they should show their independence by remaining
+single. The same thing would occur in any country, and we may expect a
+like state of things in China as greater facilities for instruction are
+afforded to women. I do not feel alarmed at the prospect; indeed, I
+would welcome it if I could see my country-women acting as
+independently and as orderly as their American sisters.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The games and sports sanctioned and encouraged in schools and
+universities are useful, in that they afford diversion of the pupils'
+minds from their school work. They should not, however, be indulged in
+in such a way as to interfere with their studies. Take, as an example,
+boat racing; several months of preparation are necessary before the
+event takes place, and during a great portion of this time the students
+do not think much of their studies; they are all mad with excitement.
+The contest between the two rival parties is very keen; they have but
+one thought, and that is to win the race. In this way, at least so it
+seems to me, the main object of recreation is entirely lost sight of;
+it becomes no longer an amusement, but labor and work. I am told that
+the coxswain and the other members of the boat race generally have to
+take a long rest when the race is over, which clearly shows that they
+have been overworking. I favor all innocent games and sports which
+mean recreation and diversion, but if it be thought that without a
+contest games would lose their relish and their fun, then I would
+suggest that the aim should be the exhibition of a perfect body and
+absolute health. Let the students, when they come to the recreation
+ground, indulge in any sport they please, but make them feel that it is
+"bad form" to overstrain, or do anything which, even temporarily, mars
+the perfect working of their physical organisms. Let each student so
+train himself as to become healthy and strong both physically and
+mentally, and the one who, through reasonable and wholesome exercises,
+is able to present himself in the most perfect health should be awarded
+the highest prize.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] There appears to be $39,781,262 missing from these figures.
+Possibly Wu Tingfang's figures are incorrect, but it seems more likely
+that he neglected to include expenditures by state and local
+governments.&mdash;A. R. L., 1996.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap06"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 6. American Business Methods
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+If I should be asked what is most essential for the successful carrying
+on of business in America I would say advertising. A business man in
+America who intends to succeed must advertise in the daily, weekly, and
+monthly papers, and also have big posters in the streets. I do not
+believe any up-to-date merchant in America fails to do this. Every
+book and magazine contains many advertisements; sometimes fully half of
+a big magazine is covered with notices or pictures of articles for
+sale. Wherever you go the inevitable poster confronts you; and even
+when you look out of the window of the train you see large sign-boards
+announcing some article of trade. The newer the brand the bigger the
+picture. If when you get into a street-car you look around you will
+see nothing but advertisements of all kinds and sorts, and if you
+answer an advertisement you will keep on receiving notices of the
+matter about which you inquired. Even now I receive letters urging me
+to buy something or other about which I sent a letter of inquiry when I
+was in America. At night, if you stroll round the town you will be
+amazed by the ingenious and clever signs which the alert minds of the
+trades people have invented, such as revolving electric lights forming
+the name of the advertiser with different colors, or a figure or shape
+of some sort illustrating his wares. But even this is not thought
+sufficient. Circulars are often sent to everyone, making special
+offers, setting forth forceful reasons why the commodity advertised is
+indispensable. Certain stores make it a point to announce cheap sales
+once or twice a year, with from 10 to 25 per cent. reduction. It
+should be noted that no tradesman voluntarily sells his goods at a
+loss, so that if during a sale he can give as much as 25 per cent.
+discount we can easily calculate the percentage of profit he generally
+makes. There are cases where men who started as petty dealers have,
+after a few years, become millionaires.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To show the importance of advertising I cite the well-known sanitary
+drink which is a substitute for tea and coffee, and which by extensive
+advertising in almost every paper published in every country has now
+become a favorite beverage. The proprietor is now a multi-millionaire
+and I am told that he spends more than a million dollars a year in
+advertising.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another thing inseparable from American business is the telephone. A
+telephone is a part of every well-appointed house, every partner's desk
+is provided with a telephone, through which he talks to his clients and
+transacts business with them. In all official departments in
+Washington scores of telephones are provided; even the secretary of the
+department and the chief of the bureau give orders by telephone. It
+goes without saying that this means of communication is also found in
+the home of almost every well-to-do family. The invention of a
+telephone is a great blessing to mankind; it enables friends to talk to
+each other at a distance without the trouble of calling.[1]
+Sweethearts can exchange their sweet nothings, and even proposals of
+marriage have been made and accepted through the telephone. However,
+one is subjected to frequent annoyances from wrong connections at the
+Central Office, and sometimes grave errors are made. Once, through a
+serious blunder, or a mischievous joke, I lost a dinner in my Legation
+in Washington. My valet received a telephone message from a lady
+friend inviting me to dine at her house. I gladly accepted the
+invitation, and at the appointed time drove to her home, only to find
+that there was no dinner-party on, and that I should have to go hungry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With some trades, in order to create a new market, commercial
+travellers or "drummers" give their goods away for nothing. Experience
+has proved that what they lose at the start they recover in the course
+of time, receiving in addition triple or tenfold more business than the
+cost of the original outlay. These commercial agents travel through
+all sections of the country to solicit business; they call upon those
+who can give them orders; they look up those who are engaged in similar
+businesses to their own, and, if they are retailers, they invite their
+orders, or ask them to become sub-agents. These gentlemen practically
+live on the trains: they eat, sleep, and do their business while
+travelling. One of them told me that in one month he had covered
+38,000 miles, and that he had not been back to his firm for three
+months.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There is no doubt that the American people are active, strenuous
+workers. They will willingly go any distance, and undertake any
+journey, however arduous, if it promises business; they seem to be
+always on the go, and they are prepared to start anywhere at a moment's
+notice. An American who called on me a short time ago in Shanghai told
+me that when he left his house one morning at New York, he had not the
+slightest notion he was going to undertake a long journey that day; but
+that when he got to his office his boss asked him if he would go to
+China on a certain commission. He accepted the responsibility at once
+and telephoned to his wife to pack up his things. Two hours later he
+was on a train bound for San Francisco where he boarded a steamer for
+China. The same gentleman told me that this trip was his second visit
+to China within a few months.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+American salesmen are clever and capable, and well know how to
+recommend whatever they have to sell. You walk into a store just to
+look around; there may be nothing that you want, but the adroit manner
+in which the salesman talks, and the way in which he explains the good
+points of every article at which you look, makes it extremely difficult
+for you to leave the store without making some purchases. Salesmen and
+commercial travellers in the United States have certainly learned the
+art of speaking. I once, however, met a remarkable exception to this
+rule in the person of an American gentleman who was singularly lacking
+in tact; he was in China with the intention of obtaining a concession,
+and he had nearly accomplished his object when he spoilt everything by
+his blunt speech. He said he had not come to China for any
+philanthropic purposes, but that he was in the country to make money.
+We all know that the average business man is neither a Peabody nor a
+Carnegie, but it was quite unnecessary for this gentleman to announce
+that his sole object was to make money out of the Chinese.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Up to a few years ago business men in America, especially capitalists,
+had scarcely any idea of transacting business in China. I well
+remember the difficulty I had in raising a railway loan in America. It
+was in 1897. I had received positive instructions from my government
+to obtain a big loan for the purpose of constructing the proposed
+railway from Hankow to Canton. I endeavored to interest well-known
+bankers and capitalists in New York City but none of them would
+consider the proposals. They invariably said that their money could be
+just as easily, and just as profitably, invested in their own country,
+and with better security, than was obtainable in China. It was only
+after nearly twelve months of hard work, of careful explanation and
+much persuasion, that I succeeded in finding a capitalist who was
+prepared to discuss the matter and make the loan. Conditions have now
+changed. American bankers and others have found that investments in
+China are quite safe. They have sent agents to China to represent them
+in the matter of a big international loan, and they are now just as
+ready to lend money in China as in Europe, and on the same terms. In
+conjunction with the representatives of some large European capitalists
+they even formed a powerful syndicate in China, for the purpose of
+arranging loans to responsible Chinese investors. In the spring of
+1913, however, they withdrew from the syndicate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The opportunities to make money in America are great and a young man
+with only fair ability, but an honest purpose, will always get
+something to do; and if he is industrious and ready for hard work, if
+he possess courage and perseverance, he will most surely go forward and
+probably in time become independent. There are hundreds of
+millionaires and multi-millionaires in America who, in their younger
+days, were as poor as sparrows in a snowstorm, but through
+perseverance, combined with industrious and economical habits they have
+prospered far beyond their own expectations. The clever methods they
+adopt in the carrying on of their business cannot but arouse our
+admiration, and Chinese merchants would do well to send some of their
+sons to America to study the various systems practised there. But no
+nation or any class of people is perfect, and there is one money-making
+device which seems to me not quite sound in principle. To increase the
+capital of a corporation new shares are sometimes issued, without a
+corresponding increase in the actual capital. These new shares may
+represent half, or as much of the actual capital as has been already
+subscribed. Such a course is usually defended by the claim that as the
+property and franchises have increased in value since the formation of
+the corporation the increase of the stock is necessary in order to
+fairly represent the existing capital. It is said that some railway
+stock has been "watered" in this way to an alarming extent, so that a
+great deal of it is fictitious, yet though it exists only on paper it
+ranks as the equal of the genuine stock when the dividends are paid.
+Whether or not such an action really is justifiable, or even moral, I
+leave to the Christian clergy and their followers to decide. The
+promoters and directors of such concerns have at least hit upon a very
+clever method for becoming rich, and if the securities of the original
+shareholders are not injured, and the holders of the genuine and the
+watered stock can share equally without endangering the interests of
+all, perhaps such an action may be less blamable, but it is a new kind
+of proceeding to Orientals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I must not omit to mention, however, the confidence which is placed in
+the honesty of the people in general; for example, you enter an
+omnibus, you will find the driver, but no conductor to collect the
+fare. "It is up to you" to put the fare into a box, and if you do not
+pay no one will ask for it. Yet every fare is paid. I have never seen
+a dishonest man who omitted to pay. This is a remarkable fact which I
+have noticed nowhere but in America. I suppose it is because the
+people are not poor, and as they are always able to pay the fare they
+do so. They are too honest to cheat. It is certainly a good way to
+encourage people to be honest, to put them on their honor and then rely
+on their own sense of uprightness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The most curious sight I have ever seen was the Stock Exchange in New
+York. It is used as a market for the purchase and sale of various
+articles, but there were no goods exposed for sale. I saw a good many
+people running about talking, yelling and howling, and had I not been
+informed beforehand what to expect I should have thought that the men
+were getting ready, in their excitement, for a general all round fight.
+However, I did not see any exchange of blows, and I did not hear that
+any blood was shed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another remarkable feature of the scene was that I did not see a single
+woman there; she was conspicuous by her absence. Whether or not the
+rules of the Exchange allow her to become a member I do not know; that
+is a question for the woman suffragists to investigate, but I learned
+that it is a wealthy association consisting of 1,100 members, and that
+to become a member one must be a citizen of the United States of 21
+years of age or more. The number of members is limited. Persons
+obtain membership by election, or by the transfer of the membership of
+a member who has resigned or died. A new member who is admitted by
+transfer pays an initiation fee of 2,000 gold dollars, in addition to a
+large fee to the transferrer, for his "seat in the House". A member
+may transfer his seat to his son, if the Committee of the Exchange
+approve, without charging for it; but in all cases the transferree pays
+the above-mentioned initiation fee of 2,000 gold dollars.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The prices for these seats vary, the fluctuations being due to the
+upward or downward trend of the stock market. Within recent years the
+price has risen considerably, and as much as 95,000 gold dollars has
+been paid to the transferrer. This is much higher than the price
+usually paid by new members in Stock Exchanges in Europe, yet when a
+seat becomes vacant there is no lack of purchasers. It is clear that a
+seat in the "House" is very valuable to the holder. In the building
+each member has a stall allotted to him where he has a telephone for
+his exclusive use; this enables him to communicate every transaction
+done in the Exchange to his business house, and to keep up connections
+with his constituents in other cities. When one of his constituents,
+say in Washington, D.C., desires to buy a certain security the order is
+conveyed to him direct, and executed without delay. I have seen a
+transaction of this kind executed in ten minutes, though there was a
+distance of several hundred miles between client and broker. The
+amount of business transacted in the "House" every day is enormous,
+aggregating many millions of dollars. New York also has other
+Exchanges, where different articles of merchandise are purchased and
+sold, such as corn, coffee, cotton, etc., and the volume of business
+transacted daily in that "Empire City" must be immense, and almost
+beyond calculation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of course there are Exchanges in Chicago, Boston, Cincinnati, St.
+Louis, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington and other cities, all
+conducted on similar lines, but the prices are always governed by the
+quotations from New York. This skilful and systematic way of doing
+business is remarkable, and I am inclined to believe that New York is
+ahead of many cities in South America and in Europe. No wonder that
+the services of Americans are required by other countries in industrial
+and technical concerns. Some years ago, when I was in Madrid, I
+noticed that the street tram-car was running according to the American
+system, and upon inquiry I was told it was controlled by an American
+syndicate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The pursuit of wealth in America is intense; it is apparent everywhere
+and seems to be the chief aim of the American people. Because of their
+eagerness to become rich as soon as possible they are all in a constant
+hurry. You may see people in the streets almost running to their
+offices, at luncheon they do not masticate their food, they bolt it,
+and in less than ten minutes are on their way back to their office
+again. Everyone is urged on by this spirit of haste, and you
+frequently hear of sudden deaths which doctors attribute to heart
+failure, or some other malady, but which I suspect are caused by the
+continual restless hurry and worry. People who are so unnaturally
+eager to get rich naturally suffer for it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is the general belief that Americans do not live as long as
+Europeans. They make money easily and their expectations are high. I
+have known many Americans who, in my opinion, were wealthy people, but
+they themselves did not think so; in fact, they said they were poor.
+Once I asked a gentleman, who was known to be worth half a million of
+gold dollars, whether it was not time for him to retire. He
+pooh-poohed the idea and said that he could not afford to give up his
+work. In reply to my inquiries he informed me that he would not call a
+man wealthy unless he should be possessed of one or two millions of
+dollars. With such extravagant ideas, it is no wonder that Americans
+work so hard. I grant that a man's mission in this world is to attain
+happiness. According to Webster, happiness is "that state of being
+which is attended with enjoyment," but it is curious to observe what
+different notions people have as to what happiness is. I know an
+Englishman in China who by his skilful business management, combined
+with good luck, has amassed immense wealth; in fact, he is considered
+the richest man in the port where he resides. He is a bachelor, over
+seventy years old, and leads a very simple life. But he still goes to
+his office every day, and toils as if he had to work for a living.
+Being told that he should discontinue his drudgery, as at his death he
+would have to leave his large fortune to relatives who would probably
+squander it, he gave an answer which is characteristic of the man. "I
+love," he said, "accumulating dollars and bank notes, and my enjoyment
+is in counting them; if my relatives who will inherit my fortune, take
+as much pleasure in spending it as I have had in making it, they will
+be quite welcome to their joy." Not many people, I fancy, will agree
+with the old bachelor's view of life. I once suggested to a
+multi-millionaire of New York that it was time for him to retire from
+active work, leaving his sons to carry on his business. He told me
+that he would be unhappy without work and that he enjoyed the demands
+his business made on him each day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Many a man's life has been shortened by his retiring from business. It
+is the mind rather than the body that lives, and apart from their
+business these men have no thoughts and therefore no life. A man's
+idea of happiness is greatly governed by his personal tastes, and is
+influenced by his environment, his education and the climate. The form
+which it is to assume may vary with persons of different tastes and
+positions, but it should not be carried out for his own benefit solely
+and it should not be injurious to his health or to his intellectual and
+spiritual improvement, nor should it be detrimental to the interests of
+other people.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] "To call" in the sense of "to visit".&mdash;A. R. L., 1996.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap07"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 7. American Freedom and Equality
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+When an Oriental, who, throughout his life, has lived in his own
+country where the will of his Sovereign is supreme, and the personal
+liberty of the subject unknown, first sets foot on the soil of the
+United States, he breathes an atmosphere unlike anything he has ever
+known, and experiences curious sensations which are absolutely new.
+For the first time in his life he feels that he can do whatever he
+pleases without restraint, and that he can talk freely to people
+without fear. When he takes up a newspaper and reads statements about
+different persons in high positions which are not at all creditable to
+them, and learns that no serious consequences happen to the writers, he
+is lost in wonderment. After a little time he begins to understand
+that this is the "land of the free and the home of the brave", and that
+in America everybody is on an equality. The President, the highest
+official in the United States, is neither more nor less than a citizen;
+and should he, which is very unlikely, commit an offense, or do
+anything in contravention of the law, he would be tried in a Court of
+Justice in the same manner as the lowest and the poorest citizen.
+Naturally the new visitor thinks this the happiest people on earth, and
+wishes that his own country could be governed as happily. Until that
+lucky day arrives he feels that he would rather stay in free America
+than return to his native land.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One of the first lessons which is learned by the American child in
+school, and which is deeply impressed on its mind by its teacher, is
+that according to the Constitution all persons are born equal, and that
+no distinction is made between sections, classes, or sects.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No slaves, or persons under bonds, have been allowed in the United
+States since the abolition of slavery by President Lincoln. The moment
+a slave, or anyone in bonds, steps on the shores of the United States
+he is free, and no one, not even his former master, can deprive him of
+his liberty. America also affords an asylum for oppressed people and
+for political offenders; people who have been persecuted in their own
+land, on account of their religion, or for political offenses, find a
+safe refuge in this country. Every year large numbers of Jews, and
+other foreigners, emigrate to America for the sake of enjoying
+religious freedom. Perfect religious liberty is guaranteed to everyone
+in the United States. There is equal religious liberty in England, but
+the King is compelled to belong to a particular section of the
+Christian Church, whereas in the United States no restriction is placed
+on the religious belief of the President; thus one President was a
+Baptist, another a Unitarian, and a third a Congregationalist; and, if
+elected, a Jew, a Mohammedan, or a Confucianist could become the
+President. Several Jews have held high Federal offices; they have even
+been Cabinet Ministers. Article VI of the Constitution of the United
+States says: "No religious test shall ever be required as a
+qualification to any office or public trust under the United States."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So ingrained in the minds of the American people is this principle of
+liberty and freedom of action that I do not believe they would resign
+it for any consideration whatsoever. Once an English Duke was asked
+whether he would accept the throne of China on the sole condition that
+he must reside in the Palace of Peking, and act as the Chinese Emperors
+have always been accustomed to act. He replied that such an exalted
+position of power and responsibility would be very great and tempting,
+but that he would on no account accept such an honor on such terms, as
+it would practically make him a prisoner. Though a subject under a
+monarchial form of government, he would not forfeit his right of
+freedom of action; and much less would a democratic American give up
+his birthright for any price. I knew an eminent and learned Judge of
+the Supreme Court in Washington, who used to say that he would never
+bend his knees to any human being, and that to the Almighty God alone
+would he ever do homage. He no doubt acted up to his principles, but I
+much doubt if all Americans observe so lofty an ideal. A young lover
+in proposing to his sweetheart would not mind kneeling down to support
+his prayer. I have seen penitent husbands bending their knees to ask
+the forgiveness of their offended wives. This, however, can be
+explained by the fact that the act of kneeling is not, in such cases, a
+sign of inferiority, but the act of one equal asking a favor from
+another; still it is the bending of the knee which was so solemnly
+abjured by the learned Judge.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The dislike of distinction of classes which arises from the principle
+of equality is apparent wherever you go in the States. The railroad
+cars are not marked first, second, or third, as they are in Europe. It
+is true that there are Pullman cars, and palace cars, with superior and
+superb accommodation, and for which the occupant has to pay an extra
+fare; but the outside of the car simply bears the name "Pullman"
+without indicating its class, and anyone who is willing to pay the fare
+may share its luxuries. I should mention that in some of the Southern
+states negroes are compelled to ride on separate cars. On one
+occasion, arriving at the railroad station in one of those states, I
+noticed there were two waiting-rooms, one labelled "For the White", and
+the other "For the Colored". The railway porter took my portmanteau to
+the room for the white, but my conscience soon whispered I had come to
+the wrong place, as neither of the two rooms was intended for people of
+my complexion. The street-cars are more democratic; there is no
+division of classes; all people, high or low, sit in the same car
+without distinction of race, color or sex. It is a common thing to see
+a workman, dressed in shabby clothes full of dirt, sitting next to a
+millionaire or a fashionable lady gorgeously clothed. Cabinet officers
+and their wives do not think it beneath their dignity to sit beside a
+laborer, or a coolie, as he is called in China.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Foreign Ministers and Ambassadors coming to Washington soon learn to
+follow these local customs. In a European country they ride in
+coronated carriages, with two liverymen; but in Washington they usually
+go about on foot, or travel by the street-cars. I frequently saw the
+late Lord Pauncefote, the celebrated British Ambassador to Washington,
+ride to the State Department in the street-car. My adoption of this
+democratic way of travelling during the time I was in America was the
+cause of a complaint being made against me at Peking. The complainants
+were certain Chinese high officials who had had occasion to visit the
+States; one of them had had a foreign education, and ought to have
+known better than to have joined in the accusation that my
+unpretentious manner of living was not becoming the dignity of a
+representative of China. They forgot that when in Rome you must do as
+the Romans do, and that to ride in a sumptuous carriage, with uniformed
+footmen, is in America not only an unnecessary expense, but a habit
+which, among such a democratic people as the Americans, would detract
+from, rather than add to, one's dignity. An envoy residing in a
+foreign country should be in touch with the people among whom he is
+sojourning. If he put on unnecessary airs, there will be a coldness
+and lack of cordiality between him and the community; his sphere of
+usefulness will be curtailed, and his knowledge of the people and their
+country limited. Of course, in a European Capital, where every
+diplomat drives in a carriage, I should follow the example of my
+colleagues. But even in England, I frequently met high statesmen,
+such, for example, as Lord Salisbury, walking in the streets. This
+unrestrained liberty and equality is remarkably conspicuous in the
+United States; for instance, at the White House official receptions or
+balls in Washington, I have seen ladies in ordinary dress, while on one
+occasion a woman appeared in the dress of a man. This was Doctor Mary
+Walker.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a democratic country, such as the United States, one would naturally
+suppose that the people enjoyed a greater degree of freedom than is
+possible in monarchial countries. But, so far from this being so, in
+some respects, they appear to be in a worse position. On my return
+journey from South America, some years ago, our steamer had to stay for
+four hours outside of New York harbor. We had first to wait for the
+doctor to come on board to make his inspection of all the passengers,
+then the Customs officials appeared and examined the luggage and boxes
+of all the passengers, and then, last but not the least, we had to wait
+for the immigration officers. All this necessarily took time, and it
+was not until all these inspections were completed that the steamer was
+allowed to enter the harbor, and to tie up alongside the dock. And
+this occurred in the land of freedom and liberty! I spoke to some of
+my American fellow passengers about the inconvenience and delay, and
+though they all murmured they quietly submitted. Customs and sanitary
+inspection should be so conducted as to cause as little delay as
+possible. I have visited many countries in Europe, in South America,
+and in Asia, but I have never known of a ship having to stay outside
+the harbor of the port of her destination for so long a time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Take another case; some months since, I wished, in compliance with the
+request of a lady in America, to send her a chow-dog. A mutual friend
+was willing to take it to her, but, upon making inquiries at the
+American Consulate as to the Customs regulations, he was informed that
+it would be impossible for him to undertake the commission, as the
+Customs officers at San Francisco, besides imposing a heavy duty on the
+dog, would keep the ship in quarantine because the dog was on board. I
+could scarcely believe this, but inquiries confirmed the truth of my
+friend's statement. Customs and immigration laws and sanitary
+regulations must, of course, be observed, but they should be enforced
+in such a way as not to work hardship on the people. Officers
+entrusted with the performance of such duties, while faithfully and
+conscientiously performing their work, should yet exercise their power
+with discretion and tact. They are the servants of the people, and
+ought to look after their interests and convenience as well as after
+the interests of the State. I would be the last one to encourage
+smuggling, but would the national interests really suffer if the Custom
+House officers were to be a little more ready to accept a traveller's
+word, and if they were less ready to suspect everyone of making false
+declarations when entering the country? Smuggling must be repressed,
+but at the same time is it not true that the more imports enter the
+country the better it is for the State and for the people?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There are no peers in the United States, as the Government has no power
+to create them; and although America is nominally a free country, yet
+if a foreign government should confer a decoration on an American
+citizen for services rendered, he cannot accept it without the consent
+of Congress, just as under a monarchy a subject must obtain his
+sovereign's permission to wear a foreign decoration. It is true that
+there are some such titled persons in America, but they are not treated
+with any greater respect or distinction than other citizens; yet you
+frequently find people in America who not only would not disdain, but
+are actually anxious, to receive decorations from foreign governments.
+Once, at least, an American high official, just before leaving the
+country to which he had been accredited, accepted, without permission,
+a decoration, knowing, that if he had asked for the consent of
+Congress, he would not have been allowed to receive it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is human nature to love change and variety, and for every person to
+be designated "Mister" is too tame and flat for the go-ahead Americans.
+Hence many of the people whom you meet daily have some prefix to their
+names, such as General, Colonel, Major, President, Judge, etc. You
+will not be far wrong to call a man "Judge" when he is a lawyer; or
+"General" or "Colonel" if he has served in the army; or "Admiral" or
+"Captain" if he has been in the navy. Though neither the Federal nor
+the State Government has power to confer titles, the magnates do so.
+They see that dukes and other peers are created in Europe, and that the
+partners in the big, wealthy firms over there, are called "merchant
+princes", and so to outdo them, they arrogate to themselves a still
+higher title. Hence there are railroad kings, copper kings, tobacco
+kings, etc. It is, however, manifestly improper and incongruous that
+the people should possess a higher title than their President, who is
+the head of the nation. To make it even, I would suggest that the
+title "President" be changed to "Emperor", for the following reasons:
+First, it would not only do away with the impropriety of the chief
+magistrate of the nation assuming a name below that of some of his
+people, but it would place him on a level with the highest ruler of any
+nation on the face of the earth. I have often heard the remark that
+the President of the United States is no more than a common citizen,
+elected for four years, and that on the expiration of his term he
+reverts to his former humble status of a private citizen; that he has
+nothing in common with the dignified majesty of an Emperor; but were
+the highest official of the United States to be in future officially
+known as Emperor, all these depreciatory remarks would fall to the
+ground. There is no reason whatever why he should not be so styled,
+as, by virtue of his high office, he possesses almost as much power as
+the most aristocratic ruler of any nation. Secondly, it would clearly
+demonstrate the sovereign power of the people; a people who could make
+and unmake an Emperor, would certainly be highly respected. Thirdly,
+the United States sends ambassadors to Germany, Austria, Russia, etc.
+According to international law, ambassadors have what is called the
+representative character, that is, they represent their sovereign by
+whom they are delegated, and are entitled to the same honors to which
+their constituent would be entitled were he personally present. In a
+Republic where the head of the State is only a citizen and the
+sovereign is the people, it is only by a stretch of imagination that
+its ambassador can be said to represent the person of his sovereign.
+Now it would be much more in consonance with the dignified character of
+an American ambassador to be the representative of an Emperor than of a
+simple President. The name of Emperor may be distasteful to some, but
+may not a new meaning be given to it? A word usually has several
+definitions. Now, if Congress were to pass a law authorizing the chief
+magistrate of the United States of America to be styled Emperor, such
+designation to mean nothing more than the word "President", the title
+would soon be understood in that sense. There is no reason in history
+or philology why the word "Emperor" should never mean anything other
+than a hereditary ruler. I make this suggestion seriously, and hope it
+will be adopted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marriage laws in the United States, as I understand them, are more
+elastic than those in Europe. In England, until a few years ago, a man
+could not contract a legal marriage with his deceased wife's sister,
+although he could marry the betrothed wife of his deceased brother. It
+is curious to compare the Chinese view of these two cases. Marriage
+with a deceased wife's sister is, in China, not only lawful, but quite
+common, while to marry a dead brother's betrothed is strictly
+prohibited. Doubtless in the United States both are recognized as
+legal. I was not, however, prepared to hear, and when I did hear it, I
+could not at first believe that a man is permitted to marry his
+deceased son's wife. Let me quote from the "China Press" which has
+special facilities for obtaining news from America. "Boston, March 24.
+The engagement of Mrs. Katherine M. B., widow of Charles A. B., and
+daughter of George C. F., chairman of the ........, Board of ........,
+to her father-in-law, Frank A. B., of ........, became known to-day.
+Charles A. B. was killed at the ........ Road crossing in ........ on
+March 29, 1910, by a locomotive which struck a carriage in which he was
+driving to the First Congregational Church, to serve as best man at the
+wedding of Miss H. R. F., another daughter of S. F., to L. G. B. of
+........ His wife, who was in the carriage with him and was to have
+been matron at the wedding, was severely injured. Her mother-in-law,
+Mrs. Frank A. B., died some months later."[1] I suppose the marriage
+has since been consummated. If a father is permitted to marry his
+deceased son's wife, in fairness a son should be allowed to marry his
+deceased father's wife. I presume that there is a law in the United
+States or in some of the states against marriages within the prohibited
+degrees of consanguinity and affinity, but I confess that the more I
+study the subject the more I am confused as to what is or what is not
+within the prohibited degrees.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In China the law on this subject is extremely rigid, and consequently
+its infraction is exceedingly rare; I have, as a matter of fact, never
+heard of the marriage laws in China being broken. In "Liao Chai", a
+famous collection of Chinese tales, it is recorded that a young widow
+married her son and moved to another part of the country, so that their
+identity and relationship should be concealed. They seemed to have
+lived very happily together. After many years, when they had had
+children and grandchildren, their true relationship was accidentally
+discovered. A complaint was laid before the local authorities. After
+a long deliberation and careful review of the case, and to eradicate
+such "unnatural offspring", as they were termed, it was decided that
+the two offenders, and all their children and grandchildren should be
+burned to death, which sentence was duly carried out. I doubt if the
+story is authentic. It was probably fabricated by the author that it
+might serve as a warning. The sentence, if true, was too severe; the
+offspring who were innocent contributories to the crime deserved pity
+rather than punishment; the judgment passed on the real offenders was
+also unduly harsh. My object in citing this unsavory tale is to show
+the different views held in regard to incestuous marriage in China with
+its serious consequences.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is commonly supposed that all men are born equal, and that the
+United States is the land of perfect equality. Now let us see if this
+is really so. There are men born into high stations of life, or into
+wealthy families, with "silver spoons" in their mouths; while there are
+others ushered into this world by parents who are paupers and who
+cannot support them. Then there are people born with wit and wisdom,
+while others are perfect fools. Again there are some who are brought
+to this life with strong and healthy constitutions, while others are
+weak and sickly. Thus it is plain that men are not born equal, either
+physically, intellectually, or socially. I do not know how my American
+friends account for this undoubted fact, but the Chinese doctrine of
+previous lives, of which the present are but the continuation, seems to
+afford a satisfactory explanation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+However, this doctrine of equality and independence has done immense
+good. It has, as a rule, caused men to think independently, and not to
+servilely follow the thoughts and ideas of others, who may be quite
+wrong. It has encouraged invention, and new discoveries in science and
+art. It has enabled men to develop industries and to expand trade.
+New York and Chicago, for example, could not have become such huge and
+prosperous cities within comparatively short periods, but for their
+free and wise institutions. In countries where personal liberty is
+unknown, and the rights of person and property are curtailed, people do
+not exert themselves to improve their environments, but are content to
+remain quiet and inactive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By the constitution of the State of California it is declared that "all
+men are free and independent". It must be conceded that the American
+people enjoy a greater amount of freedom and independence than other
+people. But are they perfectly free, and are they really independent?
+Are they not swayed in politics by their "bosses", and do not many of
+them act and vote as their bosses dictate? In society are they not
+bound by conventionalities and, dare they infringe the strict rules
+laid down by the society leaders? In the matter of dress also are they
+not slaves, abjectly following new-fangled fashions imported from
+Paris? In domestic circles are not many husbands hen-pecked by their
+wives, because they, and not the men, rule the roost? Are not many
+women practically governed by their husbands, whose word is their law?
+The eager hunger for "the almighty dollar" leads most Americans to
+sacrifice their time, health, and liberty in the acquisition of wealth,
+and, alas, when they have acquired it, they find that their health is
+broken, and that they themselves are almost ready for the grave. Ought
+a free and independent people to live after this fashion?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In every well organized community it is essential that people should
+obey all laws and regulations which are enacted for the greatest good
+of the greatest number. In domestic circles they should willingly
+subordinate their own wishes to the wishes of others, for the sake of
+peace, concord and happiness. Happy that people whose laws and
+conditions are such that they can enjoy the greatest amount of freedom
+in regard to person and property, compatible with the general peace and
+good order of the community, and if I should be asked my opinion,
+notwithstanding all that I have above said concerning the United
+States, I should have to acknowledge that I believe that America is one
+of the few nations which have fairly well approximated the high ideal
+of a well-governed country.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] The names of the parties and places were given in full in the
+"China Press".
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap08"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 8. American Manners
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Much has been written and more said about American manners, or rather
+the American lack of manners. Americans have frequently been
+criticized for their bad breeding, and many sarcastic references to
+American deportment have been made in my presence. I have even been
+told, I do not know how true it is, that European diplomats dislike
+being stationed in America, because of their aversion to the American
+way of doing things.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Much too has been written and said about Chinese manners, not only by
+foreigners but also by Chinese. One of the classics, which our youth
+have to know by heart, is practically devoted entirely to manners.
+There has also been much adverse criticism of our manners or our excess
+of manners, though I have never heard that any diplomats have, on this
+account, objected to being sent to China. We Chinese are therefore in
+the same boat as the Americans. In regard to manners neither of us
+find much favor with foreigners, though for diametrically opposite
+reasons: the Americans are accused of observing too few formalities,
+and we of being too formal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Americans are direct and straight-forward. They will tell you to
+your face that they like you, and occasionally they also have very
+little hesitation in telling you that they do not like you. They say
+frankly just what they think. It is immaterial to them that their
+remarks are personal, complimentary or otherwise. I have had members
+of my own family complimented on their good looks as if they were
+children. In this respect Americans differ greatly from the English.
+The English adhere with meticulous care to the rule of avoiding
+everything personal. They are very much afraid of rudeness on the one
+hand, and of insincerity or flattery on the other. Even in the matter
+of such a harmless affair as a compliment to a foreigner on his
+knowledge of English, they will precede it with a request for pardon,
+and speak in a half-apologetic manner, as if complimenting were
+something personal. The English and the Americans are closely related,
+they have much in common, but they also differ widely, and in nothing
+is the difference more conspicuous than in their conduct. I have
+noticed curiously enough that English Colonials, especially in such
+particulars as speech and manners, follow their quondam sister colony,
+rather than the mother country. And this, not only in Canada, where
+the phenomenon might be explained by climatic, geographic, and historic
+reasons, but also in such antipodean places as Australia and South
+Africa, which are so far away as to apparently have very little in
+common either with America or with each other. Nevertheless, whatever
+the reason, the transplanted Englishman, whether in the arctics or the
+tropics, whether in the Northern or the Southern Hemisphere, seems to
+develop a type quite different from the original stock, yet always
+resembling his fellow emigrants.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The directness of Americans is seen not only in what they say but in
+the way they say it. They come directly to the point, without much
+preface or introduction, much less is there any circumlocution or
+"beating about the bush". When they come to see you they say their say
+and then take their departure, moreover they say it in the most terse,
+concise and unambiguous manner. In this respect what a contrast they
+are to us! We always approach each other with preliminary greetings.
+Then we talk of the weather, of politics or friends, of anything, in
+fact, which is as far as possible from the object of the visit. Only
+after this introduction do we broach the subject uppermost in our
+minds, and throughout the conversation polite courtesies are exchanged
+whenever the opportunity arises. These elaborate preludes and
+interludes may, to the strenuous ever-in-a-hurry American, seem useless
+and superfluous, but they serve a good purpose. Like the common
+courtesies and civilities of life they pave the way for the speakers,
+especially if they are strangers; they improve their tempers, and place
+them generally on terms of mutual understanding. It is said that some
+years ago a Foreign Consul in China, having a serious complaint to make
+on behalf of his national, called on the Taotai, the highest local
+authority in the port. He found the Chinese official so genial and
+polite that after half an hour's conversation, he advised the
+complainant to settle the matter amicably without troubling the Chinese
+officials about the matter. A good deal may be said in behalf of both
+systems. The American practice has at least the merit of saving time,
+an all important object with the American people. When we recall that
+this remarkable nation will spend millions of dollars to build a tunnel
+under a river, or to shorten a curve in a railroad, merely that they
+may save two or three minutes, we are not surprised at the abruptness
+of their speech. I, as a matter of fact, when thinking of their
+time-saving and abrupt manner of address, have been somewhat puzzled to
+account for that peculiar drawl of theirs. Very slowly and
+deliberately they enunciate each word and syllable with long-drawn
+emphasis, punctuating their sentences with pauses, some short and some
+long. It is almost an effort to follow a story of any length&mdash;the
+beginning often becomes cold before the end is reached. It seems to me
+that if Americans would speed up their speech after the fashion of
+their English cousins, who speak two or three times as quickly, they
+would save many minutes every day, and would find the habit not only
+more efficacious, but much more economical than many of their
+time-saving machines and tunnels. I offer this suggestion to the great
+American nation for what it is worth, and I know they will receive it
+in the spirit in which it is made, for they have the saving sense of
+humor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some people are ridiculously sensitive. Some years ago, at a certain
+place, a big dinner was given in honor of a notable who was passing
+through the district. A Chinese, prominent in local affairs, who had
+received an invitation, discovered that though he would sit among the
+honored guests he would be placed below one or two whom he thought he
+ought to be above, and who, he therefore considered, would be usurping
+his rightful position. In disgust he refused to attend the dinner,
+which, excepting for what he imagined was a breach of manners, he would
+have been very pleased to have attended. Americans are much more
+sensible. They are not a bit sensitive, especially in small matters.
+Either they are broad-minded enough to rise above unworthy trifles, or
+else their good Americanism prevents their squabbling over questions of
+precedence, at the dinner table or elsewhere.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Americans act up to their Declaration of Independence, especially the
+principle it enunciates concerning the equality of man. They lay so
+much importance on this that they do not confine its application to
+legal rights, but extend it even to social intercourse. In fact, I
+think this doctrine is the basis of the so-called American manners.
+All men are deemed socially equal, whether as friend and friend, as
+President and citizen, as employer and employee, as master and servant,
+or as parent and child. Their relationship may be such that one is
+entitled to demand, and the other to render, certain acts of obedience,
+and a certain amount of respect, but outside that they are on the same
+level. This is doubtless a rebellion against all the social ideas and
+prejudices of the old world, but it is perhaps only what might be
+looked for in a new country, full of robust and ambitious manhood,
+disdainful of all traditions which in the least savor of monarchy or
+hierarchy, and eager to blaze as new a path for itself in the social as
+it has succeeded in accomplishing in the political world. Combined
+with this is the American characteristic of saving time. Time is
+precious to all of us, but to Americans it is particularly so. We all
+wish to save time, but the Americans care much more about it than the
+rest of us. Then there are different notions about this question of
+saving time, different notions of what wastes time and what does not,
+and much which the old world regards as politeness and good manners
+Americans consider as sheer waste of time. Time is, they think, far
+too precious to be occupied with ceremonies which appear empty and
+meaningless. It can, they say, be much more profitably filled with
+other and more useful occupations. In any discussion of American
+manners it would be unfair to leave out of consideration their
+indifference to ceremony and their highly developed sense of the value
+of time, but in saying this I do not forget that many Americans are
+devout ritualists, and that these find both comfort and pleasure in
+ceremony, which suggests that after all there is something to be said
+for the Chinese who have raised correct deportment almost to the rank
+of a religion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The youth of America have not unnaturally caught the spirit of their
+elders, so that even children consider themselves as almost on a par
+with their parents, as almost on the same plane of equality; but the
+parents, on the other hand, also treat them as if they were equals, and
+allow them the utmost freedom. While a Chinese child renders
+unquestioning obedience to his parents' orders, such obedience as a
+soldier yields to his superior officer, the American child must have
+the whys and the wherefores duly explained to him, and the reason for
+his obedience made clear. It is not his parent that he obeys, but
+expediency and the dictates of reason. Here we see the clear-headed,
+sound, common-sense business man in the making. The early training of
+the boy has laid the foundation for the future man. The child too has
+no compunction in correcting a parent even before strangers, and what
+is stranger still the parent accepts the correction in good part, and
+sometimes even with thanks. A parent is often interrupted in the
+course of a narrative, or discussion, by a small piping voice, setting
+right, or what it believes to be right, some date, place, or fact, and
+the parent, after a word of encouragement or thanks, proceeds. How
+different is our rule that a child is not to speak until spoken to! In
+Chinese official life under the old regime it was not etiquette for one
+official to contradict another, especially when they were unequal in
+rank. When a high official expressed views which his subordinates did
+not endorse, they could not candidly give their opinion, but had to
+remain silent. I remember that some years ago some of my colleagues
+and I had an audience with a very high official, and when I expressed
+my dissent from some of the views of that high functionary, he rebuked
+me severely. Afterward he called me to him privately, and spoke to me
+somewhat as follows: "What you said just now was quite correct. I was
+wrong, and I will adopt your views, but you must not contradict me in
+the presence of other people. Do not do it again." There is of course
+much to be said for and against each system, and perhaps a blend of the
+two would give good results. Anyhow, we can trace in American customs
+that spirit of equality which pervades the whole of American society,
+and observe the germs of self-reliance and independence so
+characteristic of Americans, whether men, women, or children.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even the domestic servant does not lose this precious American heritage
+of equality. I have nothing to say against that worthy individual, the
+American servant (if one can be found); on the contrary, none is more
+faithful or more efficient. But in some respects he is unique among
+the servants of the world. He does not see that there is any
+inequality between him and his master. His master, or should I say,
+his employer, pays him certain wages to do certain work, and he does
+it, but outside the bounds of this contract, they are still man and
+man, citizen and citizen. It is all beautifully, delightfully legal.
+The washerwoman is the "wash-lady", and is just as much a lady as her
+mistress. The word "servant" is not applied to domestics, "help" is
+used instead, very much in the same way that Canada and Australia are
+no longer English "colonies", but "self-governing dominions".
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We of the old world are accustomed to regard domestic service as a
+profession in which the members work for advancement, without much
+thought of ever changing their position. A few clever persons may
+ultimately adopt another profession, and, according to our antiquated
+conservative ways of thinking, rise higher in the social scale, but,
+for the large majority, the dignity of a butler, or a housekeeper is
+the height of ambition, the crowning point in their career. Not so the
+American servant. Strictly speaking there are no servants in America.
+The man, or the woman as the case may be, who happens for the moment to
+be your servant, is only servant for the time being. He has no
+intention of making domestic service his profession, of being a servant
+for the whole of his life. To have to be subject to the will of
+others, even to the small extent to which American servants are
+subordinate, is offensive to an American's pride of citizenship, it is
+contrary to his conception of American equality. He is a servant only
+for the time, and until he finds something better to do. He accepts a
+menial position only as a stepping stone to some more independent
+employment. Is it to be wondered at that American servants have
+different manners from their brethren in other countries? When
+foreigners find that American servants are not like servants in their
+own country, they should not resent their behavior: it does not denote
+disrespect, it is only the outcrop of their natural independence and
+aspirations.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All titles of nobility are by the Constitution expressly forbidden.
+Even titles of honor or courtesy are but rarely used. "Honorable" is
+used to designate members of Congress; and for a few Americans, such as
+the President and the Ambassadors, the title "Excellency" is permitted.
+Yet, whether it is because the persons entitled to be so addressed do
+not think that even these mild titles are consistent with American
+democracy, or because the American public feels awkward in employing
+such stilted terms of address, they are not often used. I remember
+that on one occasion a much respected Chief Executive, on my proposing,
+in accordance with diplomatic usage and precedent, to address him as
+"Your Excellency", begged me to substitute instead "Mr. President".
+The plain democratic "Mr." suits the democratic American taste much
+better than any other title, and is applied equally to the President of
+the Republic and to his coachman. Indeed the plain name John Smith,
+without even "Mr.", not only gives no offense, where some higher title
+might be employed, but fits just as well, and is in fact often used.
+Even prominent and distinguished men do not resent nicknames; for
+example, the celebrated person whose name is so intimately connected
+with that delight of American children and grown-ups&mdash;the "Teddy Bear".
+This characteristic, like so many other American characteristics, is
+due not only to the love of equality and independence, but also to the
+dislike of any waste of time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In countries where there are elaborate rules of etiquette concerning
+titles and forms of address, none but a Master of Ceremonies can hope
+to be thoroughly familiar with them, or to be able to address the
+distinguished people without withholding from them their due share of
+high-sounding titles and epithets; and, be it whispered, these same
+distinguished people, however broad-minded and magnanimous they may be
+in other respects, are sometimes extremely sensitive in this respect.
+And even after one has mastered all the rules and forms, and can
+appreciate and distinguish the various nice shades which exist between
+"His Serene Highness", "His Highness", "His Royal Highness", and "His
+Imperial Highness", or between "Rt. Rev." and "Most Rev.", one has yet
+to learn what titles a particular person has, and with what particular
+form of address he should be approached, an impossible task even for a
+Master of Ceremonies, unless he always has in his pocket a Burke's
+Peerage to tell him who's who. What a waste of time, what an
+inconvenience, and what an unnecessary amount of irritation and
+annoyance all this causes. How much better to be able to address any
+person you meet simply as Mr. So-and-So, without unwittingly treading
+on somebody's sensitive corns! Americans have shown their common sense
+in doing away with titles altogether, an example which the sister
+Republic of China is following. An illustrious name loses nothing for
+having to stand by itself without prefixes and suffixes, handles and
+tails. Mr. Gladstone was no less himself for not prefixing his name
+with Earl, and the other titles to which it would have entitled him, as
+he could have done had he not declined the so-called honor. Indeed,
+like the "Great Commoner", he, if that were possible, endeared himself
+the more to his countrymen because of his refusal. A name, which is
+great without resorting to the borrowed light of titles and honors, is
+greater than any possible suffix or affix which could be appended to it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In conclusion, American manners are but an instance or result of the
+two predominant American characteristics to which I have already
+referred, and which reappear in so many other things American. A love
+of independence and of equality, early inculcated, and a keen
+abhorrence of waste of time, engendered by the conditions and
+circumstances of a new country, serve to explain practically all the
+manners and mannerisms of Americans. Even the familiar spectacle of
+men walking with their hands deep in their trousers' pockets, or
+sitting with their legs crossed needs no other explanation, and to
+suggest that, because Americans have some habits which are peculiarly
+their own, they are either inferior or unmanly, would be to do them a
+grave injustice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Few people are more warm-hearted, genial, and sociable than the
+Americans. I do not dwell on this, because it is quite unnecessary.
+The fact is perfectly familiar to all who have the slightest knowledge
+of them. Their kindness and warmth to strangers are particularly
+pleasant, and are much appreciated by their visitors. In some other
+countries, the people, though not unsociable, surround themselves with
+so much reserve that strangers are at first chilled and repulsed,
+although there are no pleasanter or more hospitable persons anywhere to
+be found when once you have broken the ice, and learned to know them;
+but it is the stranger who must make the first advances, for they
+themselves will make no effort to become acquainted, and their manner
+is such as to discourage any efforts on the part of the visitor. You
+may travel with them for hours in the same car, sit opposite to them,
+and all the while they will shelter themselves behind a newspaper, the
+broad sheets of which effectively prohibit any attempts at closer
+acquaintance. The following instance, culled from a personal
+experience, is an illustration. I was a law student at Lincoln's Inn,
+London, where there is a splendid law library for the use of the
+students and members of the Inn. I used to go there almost every day
+to pursue my legal studies, and generally sat in the same quiet corner.
+The seat on the opposite side of the table was usually occupied by
+another law student. For months we sat opposite each other without
+exchanging a word. I thought I was too formal and reserved, so I
+endeavored to improve matters by occasionally looking up at him as if
+about to address him, but every time I did so he looked down as though
+he did not wish to see me. Finally I gave up the attempt. This is the
+general habit with English gentlemen. They will not speak to a
+stranger without a proper introduction; but in the case I have
+mentioned surely the rule would have been more honored by a breach than
+by the observance. Seeing that we were fellow students, it might have
+been presumed that we were gentlemen and on an equal footing. How
+different are the manners of the American! You can hardly take a walk,
+or go for any distance in a train, without being addressed by a
+stranger, and not infrequently making a friend. In some countries the
+fact that you are a foreigner only thickens the ice, in America it
+thaws it. This delightful trait in the American character is also
+traceable to the same cause as that which has helped us to explain the
+other peculiarities which have been mentioned. To good Americans, not
+only are the citizens of America born equal, but the citizens of the
+world are also born equal.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap09"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 9. American Women
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+It is rather bold on my part to take up this subject. It is a path
+where "fools rush in where angels fear to tread". No matter what I say
+it is sure to provoke criticism, but having frequently been asked by my
+lady friends to give my opinion of American women, and having given my
+solemn promise that if I ever should write my impressions of America I
+would do so, it would be a serious "breach of promise" if I should now
+break my word.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In general there are three classes of women: first, those who wish to
+be praised; secondly, those who wish to be adversely criticized and
+condemned; and thirdly, those who are simply curious to hear what
+others think of them. American women do not as a rule belong to either
+the first or the second class, but a large majority of them may be
+ranged under class three. They wish to know what other people honestly
+think of them and to hear their candid views. They are progressive
+people who desire to improve their defects whenever they are pointed
+out to them. That being the case I must not swerve from my duty of
+sitting in a high court of justice to pass judgment on them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To begin with, the American women are in some respects dissimilar to
+the women of other nations. I find them sprightly, talkative and well
+informed. They can converse on any subject with ease and resource,
+showing that they have a good all-round education. Often have I
+derived considerable information from them. The persistence with which
+they stick to their opinions is remarkable. Once, when I had a lady
+visitor at my Legation in Washington, after several matters had been
+discussed we commenced talking about women's rights. I was in favor of
+giving women more rights than they are enjoying, but on some points I
+did not go so far as my lady friend; after arguing with me for several
+hours, she, seeing that I did not coincide with all her views,
+threatened that she would not leave my house until I had fully digested
+all her points, and had become converted to her views.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I have observed that many American women marry foreigners, but that an
+American rarely has a foreign wife. It may be said that foreigners
+marry American girls for their money, while American women marry
+distinguished foreigners for their titles. This may have been true in
+some cases, but other causes than such sordid motives must be looked
+for. It is the attractiveness and the beauty of the American girls
+which enable them to capture so many foreign husbands. Their pleasant
+manners and winsome nature predispose a person in their favor, and with
+their well-grounded education and ready fund of knowledge, they easily
+win any gentleman with marital propensities. Had I been single when I
+first visited America I too might have been a victim&mdash;no wonder then
+that American men prefer American wives. Once I was an involuntary
+match-maker. Some years ago, during my first mission in Washington, I
+was invited to attend the wedding of the daughter of the Chief Justice
+of the Supreme Court. When I entered the breakfast room, I saw the
+bridesmaids and a number of young men. Going up to one of the
+bridesmaids whom I had previously met, and who was the daughter of a
+Senator, I asked her when it would be her turn to become a bride. She
+modestly said that she did not know, as she had not yet had an offer.
+Turning to the group of young men who were in the room, I jocularly
+remarked to one of them, "This is a beautiful lady, would you not like
+to marry her?" He replied, "I shall be most delighted to." Then I said
+to the young lady, "Will you accept his offer?" She seemed slightly
+embarrassed and said something to the effect that as she did not know
+the gentleman she could not give a definite answer. After a few days I
+met the young lady at an "At Home" party when she scolded me for being
+so blunt with her before the young men. I told her I was actuated by
+the best of motives, and a few months later I received an invitation
+from the young lady's parents inviting me to be present at their
+daughter's marriage. I thought I would go and find out whether the
+bridegroom was the young man whom I had introduced to the young lady,
+and as soon as I entered the house, the mother of the bride, to my
+agreeable surprise, informed me that it was I who had first brought the
+young couple together, and both the bride and bridegroom heartily
+thanked me for my good offices.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One very conspicuous feature in the character of American women is
+their self-control and independence. As soon as a girl grows up she is
+allowed to do what she pleases, without the control of her parents. It
+is a common occurrence to see a young lady travelling alone without
+either a companion or a chaperon. Travelling on one occasion from San
+Francisco to Washington I met a young lady on the train who was still
+in her teens. She told me that she was going to New York to embark on
+a steamer for Germany, with the intention of entering a German college.
+She was undertaking this long journey alone. Such an incident would be
+impossible in China; even in England, or indeed in any European
+country, I hardly believe that a respectable young girl would be
+allowed to take such a journey without some trusty friend to look after
+her. But in America this is a common occurrence, and it is a credit to
+the administration, and speaks volumes for the good government of the
+country, that for sensible wide-awake American girls such undertakings
+are perfectly safe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This notion of independence and freedom has modified the relation of
+children to their parents. Instead of children being required to show
+respect and filial obedience, the obligation of mutual love and esteem
+is cultivated. Parents would not think of ordering a girl or a boy to
+do anything, however reasonable; in all matters they treat them as
+their equals and friends; nor would a girl submit to an arbitrary order
+from her mother, for she does not regard her as a superior, but as her
+friend and companion. I find it is a common practice among American
+girls to engage themselves in marriage without consulting their
+parents. Once I had a serious talk on this subject with a young couple
+who were betrothed. I asked them if they had the consent of their
+parents. They both answered emphatically that it was not necessary,
+and that it was their business and not their parents'. I told them
+that although it was their business, they might have shown some respect
+to their parents by consulting them before committing themselves to
+this important transaction. They answered that they did not agree with
+me, and as it concerned their own happiness alone, they had a perfect
+right to decide the matter for themselves. This shows the extreme
+limit to which the Americans carry their theory of independence.
+Unless I am greatly mistaken, I fear this is a typical and not an
+isolated case. I believe that in many cases, after they had made up
+their minds to marry, the young people would inform their respective
+parents of their engagement, but I question if they would subordinate
+their own wishes to the will of their parents, or ask their consent to
+their engagement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Now let us see how all this is managed in China. Here the parties most
+interested have no voice in the matter. The parents, through their
+friends, or sometimes through the professional match-makers, arrange
+the marriage, but only after the most strict and diligent inquiries as
+to the character, position, and suitability of temper and disposition
+of the persons for whom the marriage contract is being prepared. This
+is sometimes done with the knowledge of the interested parties, but
+very often they are not consulted. After an engagement is thus made it
+cannot be broken off, not even by the young people themselves, even
+though he or she may plead that the arrangement was made without his or
+her knowledge or consent. The engagement is considered by all parties
+as a solemn compact. On the wedding day, in nine cases out of ten, the
+bride and bridegroom meet each other for the first time, and yet they
+live contentedly, and quite often even happily together. Divorces in
+China are exceedingly rare. This is accounted for by the fact that
+through the wise control of their parents the children are properly
+mated. In saying this I do not wish to be supposed to be advocating
+the introduction of the Chinese system into America. I would, however,
+point out that the independent and thoughtless way in which the
+American young people take on themselves the marriage vow does not as a
+rule result in suitable companionships. When a girl falls in love with
+a young man she is unable to perceive his shortcomings and vices, and
+when, after living together for a few months, she begins to find them
+out, it is alas too late. If, previous to her engagement, she had
+taken her mother into her confidence, and asked her to use her good
+offices to find out the character of the young man whom she favored, a
+fatal and unhappy mistake might have been avoided. Without
+interfering, in the least, with the liberty or free choice, I should
+think it would be a good policy if all young Americans, before
+definitely committing themselves to a promise of marriage, would at
+least consult their mothers, and ask them to make private and
+confidential inquiries as to the disposition, as well as to the moral
+and physical fitness of the young man or lady whom they contemplate
+marrying. Mothers are naturally concerned about the welfare and
+happiness of their offspring, and could be trusted in most cases to
+make careful, impartial and conscientious inquiries as to whether the
+girl or man was really a worthy and suitable life partner for their
+children. If this step were generally taken many an unfortunate union
+would be avoided. It was after this fashion that I reasoned with the
+young people mentioned above, but they did not agree with me, and I had
+to conclude that love is blind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before leaving this subject I would add that the system of marriage
+which has been in vogue in China for so many centuries has been
+somewhat changed within the last few years. This is due to the new
+spirit which has been gradually growing. Young people begin to exert
+their rights, and will not allow parents to choose their life partners
+without their consent. Instances of girls choosing their own husbands
+have come to my knowledge, and they did not occur during leap-year.
+But I sincerely hope that our Chinese youth will not go to the same
+lengths as the young people of America.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The manner in which a son treats his parents in the United States is
+diametrically opposed to our Chinese doctrine, handed down to us from
+time immemorial. "Honor thy father and thy mother" is an injunction of
+Moses which all Christians profess to observe, but which, or so it
+appears to a Confucianist, all equally forget. The Confucian creed
+lays it down as the essential duty of children that they shall not only
+honor and obey their fathers and their mothers, but that they are in
+duty bound to support them. The reason is that as their parents
+brought them into the world, reared and educated them, the children
+should make them some return for their trouble and care. The view of
+this question which is taken in America seems to be very strange to me.
+Once I heard a young American argue in this way. He said, gravely and
+seriously, that as he was brought into this world by his parents
+without his consent, it was their duty to rear him in a proper way, but
+that it was no part of his duty to support them. I was very much
+astounded at this statement. In China such a son would be despised,
+and if he neglected to maintain his parents he would be punished. I do
+not believe that the extreme views of this young man are universally
+accepted in America, but I am inclined to think that the duties of
+children toward their parents are somewhat ill-defined. American
+parents do not apparently expect their children to support them,
+because, as a rule they are, if not rich, at least in comfortable
+circumstances; and even if they are not, they would rather work for
+their livelihood than burden their children and hinder their success by
+relying on them for pecuniary aid. It may have escaped my observation,
+but, so far as I know, it is not the custom for young people to provide
+for their parents. There was, however, one exceptional case which came
+to my knowledge. Some years ago a young Senator in Washington, who was
+famous for his eloquence, had his father living with him. His father
+was eighty years of age, and though in robust health was a cripple, and
+so had to depend on him for support. I was informed that he and his
+wife were very kind to him. Many young men treat their parents kindly
+and affectionately, but they do it more as a favor than as a duty; in
+fact, as between equals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In connection with this subject I may mention that as soon as a son
+marries, however young and inexperienced he may be, he leaves his
+parents' roof. He and his bride will set up a separate establishment
+so that they can do as they please without the supervision of their
+parents. The latter do not object, as it gives the young folk an
+opportunity to gain experience in keeping house. Young wives have a
+horror of having their mothers-in-law reside with them; if it be
+necessary to have an elderly lady as a companion they always endeavor
+to get their own mothers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+American women are ambitious and versatile, and can readily apply
+themselves to any task with ease. They are not only employed in stores
+and mercantile houses but are engaged in different professions. There
+is scarcely any store in America where there are not some women
+employed as typists, clerks, or accountants. I am told that they are
+more steady than men. Even in the learned professions they
+successfully compete with the men. Some years ago the
+Attorney-Generalship of one of the states became vacant. Two
+candidates appeared; one was a gentleman and the other a young lady
+lawyer. They both sought election; the gentleman secured a small
+majority, but in the end the lady lawyer conquered, for she soon became
+the wife of the Attorney-General, her former opponent during the
+election campaign, and after her marriage she practically carried on
+the work of her husband. Some years later her husband retired from
+practice in order to farm, and she continued to carry on the law
+practice. Does not this indicate that the intellect of the American
+woman is equal, if not superior, to that of the men? American women
+are good conversationalists, and many of them are eloquent and endowed
+with "the gift of the gab". One of the cleverest and wittiest speeches
+I have ever heard was from a woman who spoke at a public meeting on a
+public question. They are also good writers. Such women as Mrs. Ella
+Wheeler Wilcox, Mrs. Mary N. Foote Henderson, Mrs. Elizabeth Towne and
+many others, are a great credit to their sex. The writings of such
+women show their profound insight and wide culture. Naturally such
+women cannot be expected to play second fiddle. They exercise great
+influence, and when married "they rule the roost". It should be
+mentioned that their husbands submit willingly to their tactful rule,
+and gladly obey their commands without feeling that they are servants.
+I would advise any married woman who complains of her husband being
+unruly and unpleasant to take a lesson from the ladies of America.
+They are vivacious, bright, loquacious and less reserved than European
+ladies. In social functions they can be easily recognized. If,
+however, an American lady marries a foreigner and lives abroad, she
+soon loses her national characteristics. Once on board a steamer I had
+an American lady as a fellow passenger; from her reserved manner I
+mistook her for an English lady, and it was only after some days that I
+discovered she was born in America, but that she had been living in
+England for many years with her English husband.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There is one fault I find with American women, if it can be so called,
+and that is their inquisitiveness; I know that this is a common fault
+with all women, but it is most conspicuous in the Americans. They have
+the knack of finding out things without your being aware of it, and if
+they should want to know your history they will learn all about it
+after a few minutes' conversation. They are good detectives, and I
+think they should be employed in that line more than they are.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A nation's reputation depends upon the general character of its women,
+for they form at least half, if not more, of the population. In this
+respect America stands high, for the American woman is lively,
+open-hearted and ingenuous; she is also fearless, independent, and is
+almost without restraint. She is easily accessible to high and low,
+and friendly to all, but woe to the man who should misunderstand the
+pure and high character of an American girl, and attempt to take
+liberties with her. To a stranger, and especially to an Oriental, she
+is a puzzle. Some years ago I had to disabuse a false notion of a
+countryman of mine respecting a lady's behavior toward him. The keen
+observer will find that the American girl, having been educated in
+schools and colleges with boys, naturally acts more freely than her
+sisters in other countries, where great restraint is imposed upon them.
+Her actions may be considered as perilously near to the border of
+masculinity, yet she is as far from either coarseness or low thoughts
+as is the North from the South Pole. The Chinese lady is as pure as
+her American sister, but she is brought up in a different way; her
+exclusion keeps her indoors, and she has practically no opportunity of
+associating with male friends. A bird which has been confined in a
+cage for a long time, will, when the door is opened, fly far away and
+perhaps never return, but if it has been tamed and allowed to go in and
+out of its cage as it pleases it will not go far, but will always come
+back in the evening. When my countrywomen are allowed more freedom
+they will not abuse it, but it will take some little time to educate
+them up to the American standards.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap10"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 10. American Costumes
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Fashion is the work of the devil. When he made up his mind to enslave
+mankind he found in fashion his most effective weapon. Fashion
+enthralls man, it deprives him of his freedom; it is the most
+autocratic dictator, its mandate being obeyed by all classes, high and
+low, without exception. Every season it issues new decrees, and no
+matter how ludicrous they are, everyone submits forthwith. The
+fashions of this season are changed in the next. Look, for example, at
+women's hats; some years ago the "merry widow" which was about two or
+three feet in diameter, was all the rage, and the larger it became the
+more fashionable it was. Sometimes the wearer could hardly go through
+a doorway. Then came the hat crowned with birds' feathers, some ladies
+even placing the complete bird on their hats&mdash;a most ridiculous
+exhibition of bad taste. The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
+Animals should take up the question of the destruction of birds for
+their plumage, and agitate until the law makes it illegal to wear a
+bird on a hat. Some may say that if people kill animals and birds for
+food they might just as well wear a dead bird on their hats, if they
+wish to be so silly, although the large majority of America's
+population, I am sorry to find, sincerely believe meat to be a
+necessary article of diet; yet who will claim that a dead bird on a hat
+is an indispensable article of wearing apparel? Why do we dress at
+all? First, I suppose, for protection against cold and heat; secondly,
+for comfort; thirdly, for decency; and, fourthly, for ornament. Now
+does the dress of Americans meet these requirements?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+First, as regards the weather, does woman's dress protect her from the
+cold? The fact that a large number of persons daily suffer from colds
+arouses the suspicion that their dress is at fault. The body is
+neither equally nor evenly covered, the upper portion being as a rule
+nearly bare, or very thinly clad, so that the slightest exposure to a
+draught, or a sudden change of temperature, subjects the wearer to the
+unpleasant experience of catching cold, unless she is so physically
+robust and healthy that she can resist all the dangers to which her
+clothing, or rather her lack of clothing, subjects her. Indeed ladies'
+dress, instead of affording protection sometimes endangers their lives.
+The following extract from the "London Times"&mdash;and the facts cannot be
+doubted&mdash;is a warning to the fair sex. "The strong gale which swept
+over Bradford resulted in an extraordinary accident by which a girl
+lost her life. Mary Bailey, aged 16, the daughter of an electrician,
+who is a pupil at the Hanson Secondary School, was in the school yard
+when she was suddenly lifted up into the air by a violent gust of wind
+which got under her clothes converting them into a sort of parachute.
+After being carried to a height estimated by spectators at 20 feet, she
+turned over in the air and fell to the ground striking the concreted
+floor of the yard with great force. She was terribly injured and died
+half an hour later." Had the poor girl been wearing Chinese clothing
+this terrible occurrence could not have happened; her life would not
+have been sacrificed to fashion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As to the second point, comfort, I do not believe that the wearer of a
+fashionable costume is either comfortable or contented. I will say
+nothing of the unnecessary garments which the average woman affects,
+but let us see what can be said for the tight corset binding the waist.
+So far from being comfortable it must be most inconvenient, a sort of
+perpetual penance and it is certainly injurious to the health. I feel
+confident that physicians will support me in my belief that the
+death-rate among American women would be less if corset and other tight
+lacing were abolished. I have known of instances where tight lacing
+for the ballroom has caused the death of enceinte women.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As to the third object, decency, I am not convinced that the American
+dress fulfils this object. When I say American dress, I include also
+the clothing worn by Europeans for both are practically the same. It
+may be a matter of education, but from the Oriental point of view we
+would prefer that ladies' dresses should be worn more loosely, so that
+the figure should be less prominent. I am aware that this is a view
+which my American friends do not share. It is very curious that what
+is considered as indecent in one country is thought to be quite proper
+in another. During the hot summers in the Province of Kiangsu the
+working women avoid the inconveniences and chills of perspiration by
+going about their work with nothing on the upper part of their bodies,
+except a chest protector to cover the breasts; in Western countries
+women would never think of doing this, even during a season of extreme
+heat; yet they do not object, even in the depth of winter, to
+uncovering their shoulders as low as possible when attending a
+dinner-party, a ball, or the theater. I remember the case of a Chinese
+rice-pounder in Hongkong who was arrested and taken to the Police Court
+on a charge of indecency. To enable him to do his work better he had
+dispensed with all his clothing excepting a loin cloth; for this he was
+sentenced to pay a fine of $2, or, in default of payment to be
+imprisoned for a week. The English Magistrate, in imposing the fine,
+lectured him severely, remarking that in a civilized community such
+primitive manners could not be tolerated, as they were both barbarous
+and indecent. When he said this did he think of the way the women of
+his country dress when they go to a ball?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It must be remembered that modesty is wholly a matter of
+conventionality and custom. Competent observers have testified that
+savages who have been accustomed to nudity all their lives are covered
+with shame when made to put on clothing for the first time. They
+exhibit as much confusion as a civilized person would if compelled to
+strip naked in public. In the words of a competent authority on this
+subject: "The facts appear to prove that the feeling of shame, far
+from being the cause of man's covering his body is, on the contrary, a
+result of this custom; and that the covering, if not used as a
+protection from the climate, owes its origin, at least in many cases,
+to the desire of men and women to make themselves attractive." Strange
+as it may seem, it is nevertheless true, that a figure partially clad
+appears more indecent than one that is perfectly nude.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fourth object of clothes is ornament, but ornaments should be
+harmless, not only to the wearer, but also to other people; yet from
+the following paragraph, copied from one of the daily newspapers, it
+does not appear that they are.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="blockquote">
+ "London, May 7. The death of a girl from blood-poisoning caused by a
+ hatpin penetrating her nose was inquired into at Stockport, Cheshire,
+ yesterday. The deceased was Mary Elizabeth Thornton, aged twenty-four,
+ daughter of a Stockport tradesman. The father said that on Saturday
+ evening, April 20, his daughter was speaking to a friend, Mrs.
+ Pickford, outside the shop. On the following Monday she complained of
+ her nose being sore. Next day she again complained and said, "It must
+ be the hatpin." While talking to Mrs. Pickford, she explained, Mrs.
+ Pickford's baby stumbled on the footpath. They both stooped to pick
+ it up, and a hatpin in Mrs. Pickford's hat caught her in the nostril.
+ His daughter gradually got worse and died on Saturday last. Mrs.
+ Pickford, wife of a paper merchant, said that some minutes after the
+ deceased had picked up the child she said, "Do you know, I scratched
+ my nose on your hatpin?" Mrs. Pickford was wearing the hatpin in
+ court. It projected two inches from the hat and was about twelve inches
+ in length. Dr. Howie Smith said that septic inflammation was set up
+ as a result of the wound, and travelling to the brain caused
+ meningitis. The coroner said that not many cases came before coroners
+ in which death was directly traceable to the hatpin but there must be
+ a very large number of cases in which the hatpin caused injury,
+ in some cases loss of sight. It was no uncommon sight to see
+ these deadly weapons protruding three or four inches from the hat.
+ In Hamburg women were compelled by statute to put shields or
+ protectors on the points of hatpins. In England nothing had been
+ done, but this case showed that it was high time something was done.
+ If women insisted on wearing hatpins they should take precaution
+ of wearing also a shield or protector which would prevent them
+ inflicting injury on other people. The jury returned a verdict
+ of accidental death, and expressed their opinion that long hatpins
+ ought to be done away with or their points protected."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To wear jewels, necklaces of brilliants, precious stones and pearls, or
+ribbons with brilliants round the hair is a pleasing custom and a
+pretty sight. But to see a lady wearing a long gown trailing on the
+ground does not impress me as being elegant, though I understand the
+ladies in Europe and America think otherwise. It would almost seem as
+if their conceptions of beauty depended on the length of their skirts.
+In a ballroom one sometimes finds it very difficult not to tread on the
+ladies' skirts, and on ceremonial occasions each lady has two page boys
+to hold up the train of her dress. It is impossible to teach an
+Oriental to appreciate this sort of thing. Certainly skirts which are
+not made either for utility or comfort, and which fashion changes, add
+nothing to the wearer's beauty; especially does this remark apply to
+the "hobble skirt", with its impediment to free movement of the legs.
+The ungainly "hobble skirt" compels the wearer to walk carefully and
+with short steps, and when she dances she has to lift up her dress.
+Now the latest fashion seems to be the "slashed skirt" which, however,
+has the advantage of keeping the lower hem of the skirt clean.
+Doubtless this, in turn, will give place to other novelties. A Chinese
+lady, Doctor Ya Mei-kin, who has been educated in America, adopted
+while there the American attire, but as soon as she returned to China
+she resumed her own native dress. Let us hear what she has to say on
+this subject. Speaking of Western civilization she said: "If we keep
+our own mode of life it is not for the sake of blind conservatism. We
+are more logical in our ways than the average European imagines. I
+wear for instance this 'ao' dress as you see, cut in one piece and
+allowing the limbs free play&mdash;because it is manifestly a more rational
+and comfortable attire than your fashionable skirt from Paris. On the
+other hand we are ready to assimilate such notions from the West as
+will really prove beneficial to us." Beauty is a matter of education:
+when you have become accustomed to anything, however quaint or queer,
+you will not think it so after a while. When I first went abroad and
+saw young girls going about in the streets with their hair falling
+loose over their shoulders, I was a little shocked. I thought how
+careless their parents must be to allow their girls to go out in that
+untidy state. Later, finding that it was the fashion, I changed my
+mind, until by degrees I came to think that it looked quite nice; thus
+do conventionality and custom change one's opinions. But it should be
+remembered that no custom or conventionality which sanctions the
+distorting of nature, or which interferes with the free exercise of any
+member of the body, can ever be called beautiful. It has always been a
+great wonder to me that American and European ladies who are by no
+means slow to help forward any movement for reform, have taken no
+active steps to improve the uncouth and injurious style of their own
+clothes. How can they expect to be granted the privileges of men until
+they show their superiority by freeing themselves from the enthrallment
+of the conventionalities of fashion?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Men's dress is by no means superior to the women's. It is so tight
+that it causes the wearer to suffer from the heat much more than is
+necessary, and I am certain that many cases of sunstroke have been
+chiefly due to tight clothing. I must admire the courage of Dr. Mary
+Walker, an American lady, who has adopted man's costume, but I wonder
+that, with her singular independence and ingenuity she has not
+introduced a better form of dress, instead of slavishly adopting the
+garb of the men. I speak from experience. When I was a law student in
+England, in deference to the opinion of my English friends, I discarded
+Chinese clothes in favor of the European dress, but I soon found it
+very uncomfortable. In the winter it was not warm enough, but in
+summer it was too warm because it was so tight. Then I had trouble
+with the shoes. They gave me the most distressing corns. When, on
+returning to China, I resumed my own national costume my corns
+disappeared, and I had no more colds. I do not contend that the
+Chinese dress is perfect, but I have no hesitation in affirming that it
+is more comfortable and, according to my views, very much prettier than
+the American fashions. It is superior to any other kind of dress that
+I have known. To appreciate the benefits to be derived from
+comfortable clothing, you have to wear it for a while. Dress should
+not restrain the free movement of every part of the body, neither
+should it be so tight as to hinder in any way the free circulation of
+the blood, or to interfere with the process of evaporation through the
+skin. I cannot understand why Americans, who are correct and cautious
+about most things, are so very careless of their own personal comfort
+in the matter of clothing. Is anything more important than that which
+concerns their health and comfort? Why should they continue wearing
+clothes which retard their movements, and which are so inconvenient
+that they expose the wearers to constant risk and danger? How can they
+consistently call themselves independent while they servilely follow
+the mandates of the dressmakers who periodically make money by
+inventing new fashions necessitating new clothes? Brave Americans,
+wake up! Assert your freedom!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It would be very bold, and indeed impertinent, on my part to suggest to
+my American friends that they should adopt the Chinese costume. It has
+much to recommend it, but I must candidly confess that it might be
+improved. Why not convene an international congress to decide as to
+the best form of dress for men and women? Male and female delegates
+from all over the world might be invited, and samples of all kinds of
+costumes exhibited. Out of them all let those which are considered the
+best for men and most suitable for women be recommended, with such
+improvements as the congress may deem necessary. The advantages of a
+universal uniformity of costumes would be far-reaching. There would be
+no further occasion for any one to look askance at another, as has
+frequently happened when some stranger has been seen wearing what was
+considered an uncomely or unsuitable garb; universal uniformity of
+costume would also tend to draw people closer together, and to make
+them more friendly. Uniforms and badges promote brotherhood. I have
+enough faith in the American people to believe that my humble
+suggestion will receive their favorable consideration and that in due
+time it will be carried into effect.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap11"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 11. American versus Chinese Civilization
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+This is a big subject. Its exhaustive treatment would require a large
+volume. In a little chapter such as this I have no intention of doing
+more than to cast a glance at its cuff buttons and some of the frills
+on its shirt. Those who want a thesis must look elsewhere.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Now what is Civilization? According to Webster it is "the act of
+civilizing or the state of being civilized; national culture;
+refinement." "Civilization began with the domestication of animals,"
+says Alfred Russell Wallace, but whether for the animal that was
+domesticated or for the man domesticating it is not clear. In a way
+the remark probably applies to both, for the commencement of culture,
+or the beginning of civilization, was our reclamation from a savage
+state. Burke says: "Our manners, our civilization, and all the good
+things connected with manners and civilization have in this European
+world of ours depended for ages upon two principles&mdash;the spirit of a
+gentleman, and the spirit of religion." We often hear people,
+especially Westerners, calling themselves "highly civilized", and to
+some extent they have good grounds for their claim, but do they really
+manifest the qualifications mentioned by Burke? Are they indeed so
+"highly civilized" as to be in all respects worthy paragons to the
+so-called semi-civilized nations? Have not some of their policies been
+such as can be characterized only as crooked and selfish actions which
+less civilized peoples would not have thought of? I believe that every
+disinterested reader will be able to supply confirmatory illustrations
+for himself, but I will enforce the point by giving a few Chinese
+ideals of a truly civilized man:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He guards his body as if holding jade"; i.e., he will not contaminate
+himself with mental or moral filth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He does not gratify his appetite, nor in his dwelling place does he
+seek ease"; i.e., he uses the physical without being submerged by it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Without weapons he will not attack a tiger, nor will he dare to cross
+a river without a boat"; in other words he will never ruin himself and
+his family by purely speculative practices.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He will "send charcoal in a snowstorm, but he will not add flowers to
+embroidery", meaning that he renders timely assistance when necessary,
+but does not curry favor by presents to those who do not need them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our most honored heroes are said to have made their virtue "brilliant"
+and one of them engraved on his bath-tub the axiom&mdash;"If you can
+renovate yourself one day, do so from day to day. Let there be daily
+renovation." Our ideal for the ruler is that the regulation of the
+state must commence with his regulation of himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is too often forgotten that civilization, like religion, originally
+came from the East. Long before Europe and America were civilized, yea
+while they were still in a state of barbarism, there were nations in
+the East, including China, superior to them in manners, in education,
+and in government; possessed of a literature equal to any, and of arts
+and sciences totally unknown in the West. Self-preservation and
+self-interest make all men restless, and so Eastern peoples gradually
+moved to the West taking their knowledge with them; Western people who
+came into close contact with them learned their civilization. This
+fusion of East and West was the beginning of Western civilization.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A Chinese proverb compares a pupil who excels his teacher to the color
+green, which originates with blue but is superior to it. This may
+aptly be applied to Westerners, for they originally learned literature,
+science, and other arts from the East; but they have proven apt pupils
+and have excelled their old masters. I wish I could find an apothegm
+concerning a former master who went back to school and surpassed his
+clever pupil. The non-existence of such a maxim probably indicates
+that no such case has as yet occurred, but that by no means proves that
+it never will.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Coming now to particulars I would say that one of the distinguishing
+features in the American people which I much admire is their
+earnestness and perseverance. When they decide to take up anything,
+whether it be an invention or the investigation of a difficult problem,
+they display indomitable perseverance and patience. Mr. Edison, for
+example, sleeps, it is said, in his factory and is inaccessible for
+days when he has a problem to solve, frequently even forgetting food
+and sleep. I can only compare him to our sage Confucius, who, hearing
+a charming piece of music which he wanted to study, became so engrossed
+in it that for many days he forgot to eat, while for three months he
+did not know the taste of meat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The dauntless courage of the aviators, not only in America, but in
+Europe also, is a wonderful thing. "The toll of the air", in the shape
+of fatal accidents from aviation, mounts into the hundreds, and yet men
+are undeterred in the pursuit of their investigations. With such
+intrepidity, perseverance, and genius, it is merely a question of time,
+and I hope it will not be long, when the art of flying, either by
+aeroplanes or airships, will be perfectly safe. When that time arrives
+I mean to make an air trip to America, and I anticipate pleasures from
+the novel experience such as I do not get from travelling by land or
+sea.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The remarkable genius for organization observable anywhere in America
+arouses the visitor's enthusiastic admiration. One visits a mercantile
+office where a number of men are working at different desks in a large
+room, and marvels at the quiet and systematic manner in which they
+perform their tasks; or one goes to a big bank and is amazed at the
+large number of customers ever going in and coming out. It is
+difficult to calculate the enormous amount of business transacted every
+hour, yet all is done with perfect organization and a proper division
+of labor, so that any information required is furnished by the manager
+or by a clerk, at a moment's notice. I have often been in these
+places, and the calm, quiet, earnest way in which the employees
+performed their tasks was beyond praise. It showed that the heads who
+organized and were directing the institutions had a firm grasp of
+multiplex details.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We Chinese have a reputation for being good business men. When in
+business on our own account, or in partnership with a few friends, we
+succeed marvelously well; but we have yet much to learn regarding large
+concerns such as corporations or joint stock companies. This is not to
+be wondered at, for joint stock companies and corporations as conducted
+in the West were unknown in China before the advent of foreign
+merchants in our midst. Since then a few joint stock companies have
+been started in Hongkong, Shanghai, and other ports; these have been
+carried on by Chinese exclusively, but the managers have not as yet
+mastered the systematic Western methods of conducting such concerns.
+Even unpractised and inexpert eyes can see great room for improvement
+in the management of these businesses. Here, I must admit, the
+Japanese are ahead of us. Take, for instance, the Yokohama Specie
+Bank: it has a paid-up capital of Yen 30,000,000 and has branches and
+agencies not only in all the important towns in Japan, but also in
+different ports in China, London, New York, San Francisco, Honolulu,
+Bombay, Calcutta and other places. It is conducted in the latest and
+most approved scientific fashion; its reports and accounts, published
+half-yearly, reveal the exact state of the concern's financial position
+and incidentally show that it makes enormous profits. True, several
+Chinese banks of a private or official nature have been established,
+and some of them have been doing a fair business, but candor compels me
+to say that they are not conducted as scientifically as is the Yokohama
+Specie Bank, or most American banks. Corporations and joint stock
+companies are still in their infancy in China; but Chinese merchants
+and bankers, profiting by the mistakes of the past, will doubtless
+gradually improve their systems, so that in the future there will be
+less and less cause to find fault with them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One system which has been in vogue within the last ten or twenty years
+in America, and which has lately figured much in the limelight, is that
+of "Trusts". Here, again, it is only the ingenuity of Americans which
+could have brought the system to such gigantic proportions as to make
+it possible for it to wield an immense influence over trade, not only
+in America but in other countries also. The main object of the Trust
+seems to be to combine several companies under one direction, so as to
+economize expenses, regulate production and the price of commodities by
+destroying competition. Its advocates declare their policy to be
+productive of good to the world, inasmuch as it secures regular
+supplies of commodities of the best kind at fair and reasonable prices.
+On the other hand, its opponents contend that Trusts are injurious to
+the real interests of the public, as small companies cannot compete
+with them, and without healthy competition the consumer always suffers.
+Where experts differ it were perhaps wiser for me not to express an
+opinion lest I should show no more wisdom than the boy who argued that
+lobsters were black and not red because he had often seen them swimming
+about on the seashore, but was confuted by his friend who said he knew
+they were red and not black for he had seen them on his father's dinner
+table.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fact, however, which remains indisputable, is the immense power of
+wealth. No one boycotts money. It is something no one seems to get
+enough of. I have never heard that multi-millionaires like Carnegie or
+Rockefeller ever expressed regrets at not being poor, even though they
+seem more eager to give money away than to make it. Most people in
+America are desirous for money, and rush every day to their business
+with no other thought than to accumulate it quickly. Their love of
+money leaves them scarcely time to eat, to drink, or to sleep; waking
+or sleeping they think of nothing else. Wealth is their goal and when
+they reach it they will probably be still unsatisfied. The Chinese
+are, of course, not averse to wealth. They can enjoy the jingling coin
+as much as anyone, but money is not their only thought. They carry on
+their business calmly and quietly, and they are very patient. I trust
+they will always retain these habits and never feel any temptation to
+imitate the Americans in their mad chase after money.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There is, however, one American characteristic my countrymen might
+learn with profit, and that is the recognition of the fact that
+punctuality is the soul of business. Americans know this; it is one
+cause of their success. Make an appointment with an American and you
+will find him in his office at the appointed time. Everything to be
+done by him during the course of the day has its fixed hour, and hence
+he is able to accomplish a greater amount of work in a given time than
+many others. Chinese, unfortunately, have no adequate conceptions of
+the value of time. This is due, perhaps, to our mode of reckoning. In
+the West a day is divided into twenty-four hours, and each hour into
+sixty minutes, but in China it has been for centuries the custom to
+divide day and night into twelve (shih) "periods" of two hours each, so
+that an appointment is not made for a particular minute, as in America,
+but for one or other of these two-hour periods. This has created
+ingrained habits of unpunctuality which clocks and watches and contact
+with foreigners are slow to remove. The time-keeping railway is,
+however, working a revolution, especially in places where there is only
+one train a day, and a man who misses that has to wait for the morrow
+before he can resume his journey.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some years ago a luncheon&mdash;"tiffin" we call it in China&mdash;was given in
+my honor at a Peking restaurant by a couple of friends; the hour was
+fixed at noon sharp. I arrived on the stroke of twelve, but found that
+not only were none of the guests there, but that even the hosts
+themselves were absent. As I had several engagements I did not wait,
+but I ordered a few dishes and ate what I required. None of the hosts
+had made their appearance by the time I had finished, so I left with a
+request to the waiter that he would convey my thanks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Knowing the unpunctuality of our people, the conveners of a public
+meeting will often tell the Chinese that it will begin an hour or two
+before the set time, whereas foreigners are notified of the exact hour.
+Not being aware of this device I once attended a conference at the
+appointed time, only to find that I had to wait for over an hour. I
+protested that in future I should be treated as a foreigner in this
+regard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As civilized people have always found it necessary to wear clothes I
+ought not to omit a reference to them here, but in view of what has
+already been said in the previous chapter I shall at this juncture
+content myself with quoting Mrs. M. S. G. Nichols, an English lady who
+has written on this subject. She characterizes the clothing of men as
+unbeautiful, but she principally devotes her attention to the dress of
+women. I quote the following from her book:[1] "The relation of a
+woman's dress to her health is seldom considered, still less is it
+contemplated as to its effect upon the health of her children; yet
+everyone must see that all that concerns the mothers of our race is
+important. The clothing of woman should be regarded in every aspect if
+we wish to see its effect upon her health, and consequently upon the
+health of her offspring. The usual way is to consider the beauty or
+fashion of dress first, its comfort and healthfulness afterward, if at
+all. We must reverse this method. First, use, then beauty, flowing
+from, or in harmony with, use. That is the true law of life" (p. 14).
+On page 23 she continues: "A great deal more clothing is worn by women
+in some of fashion's phases than is needed for warmth, and mostly in
+the form of heavy skirts dragging down upon the hips. The heavy
+trailing skirts also are burdens upon the spine. Such evils of women's
+clothes, especially in view of maternity, can hardly be over-estimated.
+The pains and perils that attend birth are heightened, if not caused,
+by improper clothing. The nerves of the spine and the maternal system
+of nerves become diseased together." And on page 32 she writes: "When
+I first went to an evening party in a fashionable town, I was shocked
+at seeing ladies with low dresses, and I cannot even now like to see a
+man, justly called a rake, looking at the half-exposed bosom of a lady.
+There is no doubt that too much clothing is an evil, as well as too
+little; but clothing that swelters or leaves us with a cold are both
+lesser evils than the exposure of esoteric charms to stir the already
+heated blood of the 'roue'. What we have to do, as far as fashion and
+the public opinion it forms will allow, is to suit our clothing to our
+climate, and to be truly modest and healthful in our attire." Mrs.
+Nichols, speaking from her own experience, has naturally devoted her
+book largely to a condemnation of woman's dress, but man's dress as
+worn in the West is just as bad. The dreadful high collar and tight
+clothes which are donned all the year round, irrespective of the
+weather, must be very uncomfortable. Men wear nearly the same kind of
+clothing at all seasons of the year. That might be tolerated in the
+frigid or temperate zones, but should not the style be changed in the
+tropical heat of summer common to the Eastern countries? I did not
+notice that men made much difference in their dress in summer; I have
+seen them, when the thermometer was ranging between 80 and 90, wearing
+a singlet shirt, waistcoat and coat. The coat may not have been as
+thick as that worn in winter, still it was made of serge, wool or some
+similarly unsuitable stuff. However hot the weather might be it was
+seldom that anyone was to be seen on the street without a coat. No
+wonder we frequently hear of deaths from sunstroke or heat, a fatality
+almost unknown among the Chinese.[2]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Chinese dress changes with the seasons, varying from the thickest fur
+to the lightest gauze. In winter we wear fur or garments lined with
+cotton wadding; in spring we don a lighter fur or some other thinner
+garment; in summer we use silk, gauze or grass cloth, according to the
+weather. Our fashions are set by the weather; not by the arbitrary
+decrees of dressmakers and tailors from Peking or elsewhere. The
+number of deaths in America and in Europe every year, resulting from
+following the fashion must, I fear, be considerable, although of course
+no doctor would dare in his death certificate to assign unsuitable
+clothing as the cause of the decease of a patient.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even in the matter of dressing, and in this twentieth century, "might
+is right". In the opinion of an impartial observer the dress of man is
+queer, and that of woman, uncouth; but as all nations in Europe and
+America are wearing the same kind of dress, mighty Conventionality is
+extending its influence, so that even some natives of the East have
+discarded their national dress in favor of the uglier Western attire.
+If the newly adopted dress were, if no better than, at least equal to,
+the old one in beauty and comfort, it might be sanctioned for the sake
+of uniformity, as suggested in the previous chapter; but when it is
+otherwise why should we imitate? Why should the world assume a
+depressing monotony of costume? Why should we allow nature's
+diversities to disappear? Formerly a Chinese student when returning
+from Europe or America at once resumed his national dress, for if he
+dared to continue to favor the Western garb he was looked upon as a
+"half-foreign devil". Since the establishment of the Chinese Republic
+in 1911, this sentiment has entirely changed, and the inelegant foreign
+dress is no longer considered fantastic; on the contrary it has become
+a fashion, not only in cities where foreigners are numerous, but even
+in interior towns and villages where they are seldom seen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Chinese ladies, like their Japanese sisters, have not yet, to their
+credit be it said, become obsessed by this new fashion, which shows
+that they have more common sense than some men. I have, however, seen
+a few young and foolish girls imitating the foreign dress of Western
+women. Indeed this craze for Western fashion has even caught hold of
+our legislators in Peking, who, having fallen under the spell of
+clothes, in solemn conclave decided that the frock coat, with the
+tall-top hat, should in future be the official uniform; and the
+swallow-tail coat with a white shirt front the evening dress in China.
+I need hardly say that this action of the Peking Parliament aroused
+universal surprise and indignation. How could the scholars and gentry
+of the interior, where foreign tailors are unknown, be expected to
+dress in frock coats at formal ceremonies, or to attend public
+entertainments in swallow-tails? Public meetings were held to discuss
+the subject, and the new style of dress was condemned as unsuitable.
+At the same time it was thought by many that the present dresses of men
+and women leave much room for improvement. It should be mentioned that
+as soon as it was known that the dress uniform was under discussion in
+Parliament, the silk, hat and other trades guilds, imitating the habits
+of the wide-world which always everywhere considers self first, fearing
+that the contemplated change in dress might injuriously affect their
+respective interests, sent delegates to Peking to "lobby" the members
+to "go slow" and not to introduce too radical changes. The result was
+that in addition to the two forms of dress above mentioned, two more
+patterns were authorized, one for man's ordinary wear and the other for
+women, both following Chinese styles, but all to be made of
+home-manufactured material. This was to soothe the ruffled feelings of
+the manufacturers and traders, for in purchasing a foreign suit some of
+the materials at least, if not all, must be of foreign origin or
+foreign make.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+During a recent visit to Peking I protested against this novel fashion,
+and submitted a memorandum to President Yuan with a request that it
+should be transmitted to Parliament. My suggestion is that the
+frock-coat and evening-dress regulation should be optional, and that
+the Chinese dress uniform as sketched by me in my memorandum should be
+adopted as an alternative. I am in hopes that my suggestion will be
+favorably considered. The point I have taken is that Chinese diplomats
+and others who go abroad should, in order to avoid curiosity, and for
+the sake of uniformity, adopt Western dress, and that those who are at
+home, if they prefer the ugly change, should be at liberty to adopt it,
+but that it should not be compulsory on others who object to suffering
+from cold in winter, or to being liable to sunstroke in summer. I have
+taken this middle course in order to satisfy both sides; for it would
+be difficult to induce Parliament to abolish or alter what has been so
+recently fixed by them. The Chinese dress, as is well known all over
+the world, is superior to that worn by civilized people in the West,
+and the recent change favored by the Chinese is deplored by most
+foreigners in China. The following paragraph, written by a foreign
+merchant and published in one of the Shanghai papers, expresses the
+opinion of almost all intelligent foreigners on this subject:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Some time back the world was jubilant over the news that among the
+great reforms adopted in China was the discarding of the Chinese tunic,
+that great typical national costume. 'They are indeed getting
+civilized,' said the gossip; and one and all admired the energy
+displayed by the resolute Young China in coming into line with the
+CIVILIZED world, adopting even our uncomfortable, anti-hygienic and
+anti-esthetic costume.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Foreign 'fashioned' tailor shops, hat stores, shoemakers, etc., sprang
+up all over the country. When I passed through Canton in September
+last, I could not help noticing also that those typical streets lined
+with boat-shaped, high-soled shoes, had been replaced by foreign-style
+boot and shoemakers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Undoubtedly the reform was gaining ground and the Chinese would have
+to be in the future depicted dressed up as a Caucasian.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"In my simplicity I sincerely confess I could not but deplore the
+passing away of the century-old tunic, so esthetic, so comfortable, so
+rich, so typical of the race. In my heart I was sorry for the change,
+as to my conception it was not in the dress where the Chinese had to
+seek reform...."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I agree with this writer that it is not in the domain of dress that we
+Chinese should learn from the Western peoples. There are many things
+in China which could be very well improved but certainly not dress.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] "The Clothes Question Considered in its Relation to Beauty, Comfort
+and Health", by Mrs. M. S. G. Nichols. Published in London, 32
+Fopstone Road, Earl's Court, S.W.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[2] There have been a few cases of Chinese workmen who through
+carelessness have exposed themselves by working in the sun; but such
+cases are rare.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap12"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 12. American versus Chinese Civilization (Continued)
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The question has often been asked "Which are the civilized nations?"
+And the answer has been, "All Europe and America." To the query, "What
+about the nations in the East?" the answer has been made that with the
+exception of Japan, who has now become a great civilized power, the
+other nations are more or less civilized. When the matter is further
+pressed and it is asked, "What about China?" the general reply is, "She
+is semi-civilized," or in other words, not so civilized as the nations
+in the West.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before pronouncing such an opinion justifiable, let us consider the
+plain facts. I take it that civilization inculcates culture,
+refinement, humane conduct, fair dealing and just treatment. Amiel
+says, "Civilization is first and foremost a moral thing." There is no
+doubt that the human race, especially in the West, has improved
+wonderfully within the last century. Many inventions and discoveries
+have been made, and men are now able to enjoy comforts which could not
+have been obtained before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From a material point of view we have certainly progressed, but do the
+"civilized" people in the West live longer than the so-called
+semi-civilized races? Have they succeeded in prolonging their lives?
+Are they happier than others? I should like to hear their answers. Is
+it not a fact that Americans are more liable to catch cold than
+Asiatics; with the least change of air, and with the slightest
+appearance of an epidemic are they not more easily infected than
+Asiatics? If so, why? With their genius for invention why have they
+not discovered means to safeguard themselves so that they can live
+longer on this earth? Again, can Americans say that they are happier
+than the Chinese? From personal observation I have formed the opinion
+that the Chinese are more contented than Americans, and on the whole
+happier; and certainly one meets more old people in China than in
+America. Since the United States of America is rich, well governed,
+and provided with more material comforts than China, Americans, one
+would think, should be happier than we are, but are they? Are there
+not many in their midst who are friendless and penurious? In China no
+man is without friends, or if he is, it is his own fault. "Virtue is
+never friendless," said Confucius, and, as society is constituted in
+China, this is literally true. If this is not so in America I fear
+there is something wrong with that boasted civilization, and that their
+material triumphs over the physical forces of nature have been paid
+dearly for by a loss of insight into her profound spiritualities.
+Perhaps some will understand when I quote Lao Tsze's address to
+Confucius on "Simplicity". "The chaff from winnowing will blind a man.
+Mosquitoes will bite a man and keep him awake all night, and so it is
+with all the talk of yours about charity and duty to one's neighbor, it
+drives one crazy. Sir, strive to keep the world in its original
+simplicity&mdash;why so much fuss? The wind blows as it listeth, so let
+virtue establish itself. The swan is white without a daily bath, and
+the raven is black without dyeing itself. When the pond is dry and the
+fishes are gasping for breath it is of no use to moisten them with a
+little water or a little sprinkling. Compared to their original and
+simple condition in the pond and the rivers it is nothing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Henry Ward Beecher says, "Wealth may not produce civilization, but
+civilization produces money," and in my opinion while wealth may be
+used to promote happiness and health it as often injures both.
+Happiness is the product of liberality, intelligence and service to
+others, and the reflex of happiness is health. My contention is that
+the people who possess these good qualities in the greatest degree are
+the most civilized. Now civilization, as mentioned in the previous
+chapter, was born in the East and travelled westward. The law of
+nature is spiral, and inasmuch as Eastern civilization taught the
+people of the West, so Western civilization, which is based upon
+principles native to the East, will return to its original source. No
+nation can now remain shut up within itself without intercourse with
+other nations; the East and the West can no longer exist separate and
+apart. The new facilities for transportation and travel by land and
+water bring all nations, European, American, Asiatic and African, next
+door to each other, and when the art of aviation is more advanced and
+people travel in the air as safely as they now cross oceans, the
+relationships of nations will become still closer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What effect will this have on mankind? The first effect will be, I
+should say, greater stability. As interests become common, destructive
+combats will vanish. All alike will be interested in peace. It is a
+gratifying sign that within recent years the people of America have
+taken a prominent part in peace movements, and have inaugurated peace
+congresses, the members of which represent different sections of the
+country. Annual gatherings of this order must do much to prevent war
+and to perpetuate peace, by turning people's thoughts in the right
+direction. Take, for instance, the Lake Mohonk Conference on
+International Arbitration, which was started by a private gentleman,
+Mr. A. K. Smiley, who was wont every year to invite prominent officials
+and others to his beautiful summer place at Lake Mohonk for a
+conference. He has passed away, to the regret of his many friends, but
+the good movement still continues, and the nineteenth annual conference
+was held under the auspices of his brother, Mr. Daniel Smiley. Among
+those present, there were not only eminent Americans, such as Dr. C. W.
+Eliot, President Emeritus of Harvard University, Ex-American Ambassador
+C. Tower, Dr. J. Taylor, President of Vassar College, and Dr. Lyman
+Abbott, but distinguished foreigners such as J. A. Baker, M.P., of
+England, Herr Heinrich York Steiner, of Vienna, and many others. Among
+the large number of people who support this kind of movement, and the
+number is increasing every day, the name of Mr. Andrew Carnegie stands
+out very prominently. This benevolent gentleman is a most vigorous
+advocate of International Peace, and has spent most of his time and
+money for that purpose. He has given ten million dollars (gold) for
+the purpose of establishing the Carnegie Peace Fund; the first
+paragraph in his long letter to the trustees is worthy of reproduction,
+as it expresses his strong convictions:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have transferred to you," he says, "as Trustees of the Carnegie
+Peace Fund, ten million dollars of five per cent. mortgage bonds, the
+revenue of which is to be administered by you to hasten the abolition
+of international war, the foulest blot upon our civilization. Although
+we no longer eat our fellowmen nor torture our prisoners, nor sack
+cities, killing their inhabitants, we still kill each other in war like
+barbarians. Only wild beasts are excusable for doing that in this the
+Twentieth Century of the Christian era, for the crime of war is
+inherent, since it decides not in favor of the right, but always of the
+strong. The nation is criminal which refuses arbitration and drives
+its adversary to a tribunal which knows nothing of righteous judgment."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am glad to say that I am familiar with many American magazines and
+journals which are regularly published to advocate peace, and I have no
+doubt that in every country similar movements are stirring, for the
+nations are beginning to realize the disastrous effects of war. If I
+am not mistaken, however, Americans are the most active in this matter.
+The Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague, whose members belong
+to nearly every nation, is a significant index of the spirit of the
+times. Yet what an irony of fate that while people are so active in
+perpetuating peace they cannot preserve it. Look at the recent wars in
+Europe, first between Italy and Turkey, and afterward in the Balkans,
+to say nothing of disturbances in China and other parts of the world.
+It is just like warning a child not to take poison and then allowing
+him to swallow it and die. Sensible men should consider this question
+calmly and seriously. We all agree as to the wickedness of war and yet
+we war with one another; we do not like war yet we cannot help war.
+There is surely some hidden defect in the way we have been brought up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Is not the slogan of nationality, to a great extent, the root of the
+evil? Every schoolboy and schoolgirl is taught the duty of devotion,
+or strong attachment, to his or her own country, and every statesman or
+public man preaches the doctrine of loyalty to one's native land; while
+the man who dares to render service to another country, the interests
+of which are opposed to the interests of his own land, is denounced a
+traitor. In such cases the individual is never allowed an opinion as
+to the right or wrong of the dispute. He is expected to support his
+own country and to cry at all times, "Our country, right or wrong." A
+politician's best chance to secure votes is to gloss over the faults of
+his own party or nation, to dilate on the wickedness of his neighbors
+and to exhort his compatriots to be loyal to their national flag. Can
+it be wondered at that men who are imbued with such doctrines become
+selfish and narrow-minded and are easily involved in quarrels with
+other nations?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Patriotism is, of course, the national life. Twenty-four centuries
+ago, speaking in the Greek Colony of Naxos, Pythagoras described this
+emotion in the following eloquent passage: "Listen, my children, to
+what the State should be to the good citizen. It is more than father
+or mother, it is more than husband or wife, it is more than child or
+friend. The State is the father and mother of all, is the wife of the
+husband and the husband of the wife. The family is good, and good is
+the joy of the man in wife and in son. But greater is the State, which
+is the protector of all, without which the home would be ravaged and
+destroyed. Dear to the good man is the honor of the woman who bore
+him, dear the honor of the wife whose children cling to his knees; but
+dearer should be the honor of the State that keeps safe the wife and
+the child. It is the State from which comes all that makes your life
+prosperous, and gives you beauty and safety. Within the State are
+built up the arts, which make the difference between the barbarian and
+the man. If the brave man dies gladly for the hearthstone, far more
+gladly should he die for the State."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But only when the State seeks the good of the governed, for said
+Pythagoras on another occasion: "Organized society exists for the
+happiness and welfare of its members; and where it fails to secure
+these it stands ipso facto condemned."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But to-day should the State be at war with another, and any citizen or
+section of citizens believe their own country wrong and the opposing
+nation wronged, they dare not say so, or if they do they run great risk
+of being punished for treason. Men and women though no longer bought
+and sold in the market place are subjected to subtler forms of serfdom.
+In most European countries they are obliged to fight whether they will
+or not, and irrespective of their private convictions about the
+dispute; even though, as is the case in some European countries, they
+may be citizens from compulsion rather than choice, they are not free
+to abstain from active participation in the quarrel. Chinese
+rebellions are said to "live on loot", i.e., on the forcible
+confiscation of private property, but is that worse than winning
+battles on the forcible deprivation of personal liberty? This is
+nationalism gone mad! It fosters the desire for territory grabbing and
+illustrates a fundamental difference between the Orient and the
+Occident. With us government is based on the consent of the governed
+in a way that the Westerner can hardly understand, for his passion to
+expand is chronic. Small nations which are over-populated want
+territory for their surplus population; great nations desire territory
+to extend their trade, and when there are several great powers to
+divide the spoil they distribute it among themselves and call it
+"spheres of influence", and all in honor of the god Commerce. In China
+the fundamentals of our social system are brotherhood and the dignity
+of labor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What, I ask, is the advantage of adding to national territory? Let us
+examine the question calmly. If a town or a province is seized the
+conqueror has to keep a large army to maintain peace and order, and
+unless the people are well disposed to the new authority there will be
+constant trouble and friction. All this, I may say, in passing, is
+opposed to our Confucian code which bases everything on reason and
+abhors violence. We would rather argue with a mob and find out, if
+possible, its point of view, than fire on it. We have yet to be
+convinced that good results flow from the use of the sword and the
+cannon. Western nations know no other compulsion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If, however, the acquisition of new territory arises from a desire to
+develop the country and to introduce the most modern and improved
+systems of government, without ulterior intentions, then it is beyond
+praise, but I fear that such disinterested actions are rare. The
+nearest approach to such high principle is the purchase of the
+Philippine Islands by the United States. I call it "purchase" because
+the United States Government paid a good price for the Islands after
+having seized the territory. The intentions of the Government were
+well known at the time. Since her acquisition of those Islands,
+America has been doing her best to develop their resources and expand
+their trade. Administrative and judicial reforms have been introduced,
+liberal education has been given to the natives, who are being trained
+for self-government. It has been repeatedly and authoritatively
+declared by the United States that as soon as they are competent to
+govern themselves without danger of disturbances, and are able to
+establish a stable government, America will grant independence to those
+islands. I believe that when the proper time comes she will fulfill
+her word, and thus set a noble example to the world.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The British in Hongkong afford an illustration of a different order,
+proving the truth of my contention that, excepting as a sphere for the
+exercise of altruism, the acquisition of new territories is an illusive
+gain. When Hongkong was ceded to Great Britain at the conclusion of a
+war in which China was defeated, it was a bare island containing only a
+few fishermen's huts. In order to make it a trading port and encourage
+people to live there, the British Government spent large sums of money
+year after year for its improvement and development, and through the
+wise administration of the local Government every facility was afforded
+for free trade. It is now a prosperous British colony with a
+population of nearly half a million. But what have been the advantages
+to Great Britain? Financially she has been a great loser, for the
+Island which she received at the close of her war with China was for
+many years a great drain on her national treasury. Now Hongkong is a
+self-supporting colony, but what benefits do the British enjoy there
+that do not belong to everyone else? The colony is open to all
+foreigners, and every right which a British merchant has is equally
+shared with everyone else. According to the census of 1911, out of a
+population of 456,739 only 12,075 were non-Chinese, of whom a small
+portion were British; the rest were Chinese. Thus the prosperity of
+that colony depends upon the Chinese who, it is needless to say, are in
+possession of all the privileges that are enjoyed by British residents.
+It should be noticed that the number of foreign firms and stores (i.e.,
+non-British) have been and are increasing, while big British hongs are
+less numerous than before. Financially, the British people have
+certainly not been gainers by the acquisition of that colony. Of
+course I shall be told that it adds to the prestige of Great Britain,
+but this is an empty, bumptious boast dearly paid for by the British
+tax-payer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From an economic and moral point of view, however, I must admit that a
+great deal of good has been done by the British Government in Hongkong.
+It has provided the Chinese with an actual working model of a Western
+system of government which, notwithstanding many difficulties, has
+succeeded in transforming a barren island into a prosperous town, which
+is now the largest shipping port in China. The impartial
+administration of law and the humane treatment of criminals cannot but
+excite admiration and gain the confidence of the natives. If the
+British Government, in acquiring the desert island, had for its purpose
+the instruction of the natives in a modern system of government, she is
+to be sincerely congratulated, but it is feared that her motives were
+less altruistic.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These remarks apply equally, if not with greater force, to the other
+colonies or possessions in China under the control of European Powers,
+as well as to the other colonies of the British Empire, such as
+Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and others which are called
+"self-governing dominions". The Imperial Government feels very tender
+toward these colonists, and practically they are allowed to manage
+their affairs as they like. Since they are so generously treated and
+enjoy the protection of so great a power, there is no fear that these
+self-governing dominions will ever become independent of their mother
+country; but if they ever should do so, it is most improbable that she
+would declare war against them, as the British people have grown wiser
+since their experience with the American colonists. British statesmen
+have been awakened to the necessity of winning the good-will of their
+colonists, and within recent years have adopted the policy of inviting
+the Colonial premiers to London to discuss questions affecting Imperial
+and Colonial interests. Imperial federation seems to be growing
+popular with the British and it is probable that in the future England,
+Scotland, Wales, and Ireland will each have its own parliament, with an
+Imperial Parliament, sitting at Westminster, containing representatives
+from all parts of the British Empire, but America is the only nation
+which has added to her responsibilities with the avowed purpose of
+making semi-civilized tribes independent, self-governing colonies, and
+America is almost the only great power that has never occupied or held
+territory in China.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Let me ask again what is the object of nations seeking new possessions?
+Is it for the purpose of trade? If so, the object can be obtained
+without acquiring territory. In these days of enlightenment anyone can
+go to any country and trade without restriction, and in the British
+colonies the alien is in the same position as the native. He is not
+hampered by "permits" or other "red-tape" methods. Is it for the
+purpose of emigration? In Europe, America and all the British
+colonies, so far as I know, white people, unless they are paupers or
+undesirables, can emigrate to any country and after a short period
+become naturalized.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some statesmen would say that it is necessary for a great power to have
+naval bases or coaling stations in several parts of the world. This
+presupposes preparations for war; but if international peace were
+maintained, such possessions would be useless and the money spent on
+them wasted. In any case it is unproductive expenditure. It is the
+fashion for politicians (and I am sorry to find them supported by
+eminent statesmen) to preach the doctrine of armaments; they allege
+that in order to preserve peace it is necessary to be prepared for war,
+that a nation with a large army or navy commands respect, and that her
+word carries weight. This argument cuts both ways, for a nation
+occupying such a commanding position may be unreasonable and a terror
+to weaker nations. If this high-toned doctrine continues where will it
+end? We shall soon see every nation arming to the teeth for the sake
+of her national honor and safety, and draining her treasury for the
+purpose of building dreadnaughts and providing armaments. When such a
+state of things exists can international peace be perpetuated? Will
+not occasion be found to test those war implements and to utilize the
+naval and military men? When you purchase a knife don't you expect to
+use it? Mr. Lloyd George, the English Chancellor of the Exchequer, in
+a speech in which he lamented the ever-increasing but unnecessary
+expenditure on armaments, said in Parliament: "I feel confident that
+it will end in a great disaster&mdash;I won't say to this country, though it
+is just possible that it may end in a disaster here." A man with a
+revolver sometimes invites attack, lest what was at first intended only
+for a defense should become a menace.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When discussing the craze of the Western nations for adding to their
+territories I said that white people can emigrate to any foreign
+country that they please, but it is not so with the yellow race. It
+has been asserted with authority that some countries are reserved
+exclusively for the white races, and with this object in view laws have
+been enacted prohibiting the natives of Asia from becoming naturalized
+citizens, besides imposing very strict and almost prohibitory
+regulations regarding their admission. Those who support such a policy
+hold that they, the white people, are superior to the yellow people in
+intellect, in education, in taste, and in habits, and that the yellow
+people are unworthy to associate with them. Yet in China we have
+manners, we have arts, we have morals, and we have managed a fairly
+large society for thousands of years without the bitter class hatreds,
+class divisions, and class struggles that have marred the fair progress
+of the West. We have not enslaved our lives to wealth. We like luxury
+but we like other things better. We love life more than chasing
+imitations of life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our differences of color, like our differences of speech, are
+accidental, they are due to climatic and other influences. We came
+originally from one stock. We all started evenly, Heaven has no
+favorites. Man alone has made differences between man and man, and the
+yellow man is no whit inferior to the white people in intelligence.
+During the Russo-Japan War was it not the yellow race that displayed
+the superior intelligence? I am sometimes almost tempted to say that
+Asia will have to civilize the West over again. I am not bitter or
+sarcastic, but I do contend that there are yet many things that the
+white races have to learn from their colored brethren. In India, in
+China, and in Japan there are institutions which have a stability
+unknown outside Asia. Religion has apparently little influence on
+Western civilization; it is the corner-stone of society in all Asiatic
+civilizations. The result is that the colored races place morality in
+the place assigned by their more practical white confreres to economic
+propositions. We think, as we contemplate the West, that white people
+do not understand comfort because they have no leisure to enjoy
+contentment; THEY measure life by accumulation, WE by morality. Family
+ties are stronger with the so-called colored races than they are among
+the more irresponsible white races; consequently the social sense is
+keener among the former and much individual suffering is avoided. We
+have our vices, but these are not peculiar to US; and, at least, we
+have the merit of being easily governed. Wherever there are Chinese
+colonies the general verdict is: "The Chinese make good citizens."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This is what the late Sir Robert Hart, to whom China owes her Customs
+organization, said about us:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They (the Chinese) are well-behaved, law-abiding, intelligent,
+economical, and industrious; they can learn anything and do anything;
+they are punctiliously polite, they worship talent, and they believe in
+right so firmly that they scorn to think it requires to be supported or
+enforced by might; they delight in literature, and everywhere they have
+their literary clubs and coteries for learning and discussing each
+other's essays and verses; they possess and practise an admirable
+system of ethics, and they are generous, charitable, and fond of good
+work; they never forget a favor, they make rich return for any
+kindness, and though they know money will buy service, a man must be
+more than wealthy to win esteem and respect; they are practical,
+teachable, and wonderfully gifted with common sense; they are excellent
+artisans, reliable workmen, and of a good faith that everyone
+acknowledges and admires in their commercial dealings; in no country
+that is or was, has the commandment 'Honor thy father and thy mother',
+been so religiously obeyed, or so fully and without exception given
+effect to, and it is in fact the keynote of their family, social,
+official and national life, and because it is so their days are long in
+the land God has given them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cry of "America for the Americans" or "Australia for the
+Australians" is most illogical, for those people were not the original
+owners of the soil; with far greater reason we in the far East might
+shout, "China for the Chinese", "Japan for the Japanese". I will quote
+Mr. T. S. Sutton, English Secretary of the Chinese-American League of
+Justice, on this point. "The most asinine whine in the world," he
+says, "is that of 'America for the Americans' or 'China for the
+Chinese', etc. It is the hissing slogan of greed, fear, envy,
+selfishness, ignorance and prejudice. No man, no human being who calls
+himself a man, no Christian, no sane or reasonable person, should or
+could ever be guilty of uttering that despicable wail. God made the
+world for all men, and if God has any preference, if God is any
+respecter of persons, He must surely favor the Chinese, for He has made
+more of them than of any other people on the globe. 'America for the
+aboriginal Indians' was once the cry. Then when the English came over
+it changed to 'America for the English', later 'America for the
+Puritans', and around New Orleans they cried 'America for the French'.
+In Pennsylvania the slogan was 'America for the Dutch', etc., but the
+truth remains that God has set aside America as 'the melting pot' of
+the world, the land to which all people may come, and from which there
+has arisen, and will continue to rise, a great mixed race, a
+cosmopolitan nation that may, if it is not misled by prejudice and
+ignorance, yet lead the world." Although Mr. Sutton's phraseology is
+somewhat strong, his arguments are sound and unanswerable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I now pass to some less controversial aspects of my theme, and note a
+praiseworthy custom that is practically unknown in the Far East. I
+refer to the habit of international marriages which are not only common
+in cosmopolitan America but are of daily occurrence in Europe also,
+among ordinary people as well as the royal families of Europe, so that
+nearly all the European courts are related one to the other. This is a
+good omen for a permanent world-peace. There have been some marriages
+of Asiatics with Europeans and Americans, and they should be
+encouraged. Everything that brings the East and West together and
+helps each to understand the other better, is good. The offspring from
+such mixed unions inherit the good points of both sides. The head
+master of the Queen's College in Hongkong, where there are hundreds of
+boys of different nationalities studying together, once told me that
+formerly at the yearly examination the prizes were nearly all won by
+the Chinese students, but that in later years when Eurasian boys were
+admitted, they beat the Chinese and all the others, and generally came
+out the best. Not only in school but in business also they have turned
+out well. It is well known that the richest man in Hongkong is a
+Eurasian. It is said that the father of Aguinaldo, the well-known
+Philippine leader, was a Chinese. There is no doubt that mixed
+marriages of the white with the yellow races will be productive of good
+to both sides. But do Chinese really make good husbands? my lady
+friends ask. I will cite the case of an American lady. Some years ago
+a Chinese called on me at my Legation in Washington accompanied by an
+American lady and a girl. The lady was introduced to me as his wife
+and the girl as his daughter; I naturally supposed that the lady was
+the girl's mother, but she told me that the girl was the daughter of
+her late intimate friend, and that after her death, knowing that the
+child's father had been a good and affectionate husband to her friend,
+she had gladly become his second wife, and adopted his daughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Those who believe in reincarnation (and I hope most of my readers do,
+as it is a clue to many mysteries) understand that when people are
+reincarnated they are not always born in the same country or continent
+as that in which they lived in their previous life. I have an
+impression that in one of my former existences I was born and brought
+up in the United States. In saying this I do not express the slightest
+regrets at having now been born in Asia. I only wish to give a hint to
+those white people who advocate an exclusive policy that in their next
+life they may be born in Asia or Africa, and that the injury they are
+now inflicting on the yellow people they may themselves have to suffer
+in another life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While admitting that we Chinese have our faults and that in some
+matters we have much to learn, especially from the Americans, we at
+least possess one moral quality, magnanimity, while the primal virtues
+of industry, economy, obedience, and love of peace, combined with a
+"moderation in all things", are also common among us. Our people have
+frequently been slighted or ill-treated but we entertain no revengeful
+spirit, and are willing to forget. We believe that in the end right
+will conquer might. Innumerable as have been the disputes between
+Chinese and foreigners it can at least be said, without going into
+details, that we have not, in the first instance, been the aggressors.
+Let me supply a local illustration showing how our faults are always
+exaggerated. Western people are fond of horse-racing. In Shanghai
+they have secured from the Chinese a large piece of ground where they
+hold race meetings twice a year, but no Chinese are allowed on the
+grand-stand during the race days. They are provided with a separate
+entrance, and a separate enclosure, as though they were the victims of
+some infectious disease. I have been told that a few years ago a
+Chinese gentleman took some Chinese ladies into the grand-stand and
+that they misbehaved; hence this discriminatory treatment of Chinese.
+It is proper that steps should be taken to preserve order and decency
+in public places, but is it fair to interdict the people of a nation on
+account of the misconduct of two or three? Suppose it had been Germans
+who had misbehaved themselves (which is not likely), would the race
+club have dared to exclude Germans from sharing with other nations the
+pleasures of the races?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In contrast with this, let us see what the Chinese have done. Having
+learned the game of horse-racing from the foreigners in China, and not
+being allowed to participate, they have formed their own race club,
+and, with intention, have called it the "International Recreation
+Club". This Club has purchased a large tract of land at Kiangwan,
+about five miles from Shanghai, and has turned it into a race-course,
+considerably larger than that in Shanghai. When a race meeting is held
+there, IT IS OPEN TO FOREIGNERS AS WELL AS CHINESE, in fact
+complimentary tickets have even been sent to the members of the foreign
+race club inviting their attendance. Half of the members of the race
+committee are foreigners; while foreigners and Chinese act jointly as
+stewards and judges; the ponies that run are owned by foreigners as
+well as by Chinese, and Chinese jockeys compete with foreign jockeys in
+all the events. A most pleasing feature of these races is the very
+manifest cordial good feeling which prevails throughout the races
+there. The Chinese have been dubbed "semi-civilized and heathenish",
+but the "International Recreation Club" and the Kiangwan race-course
+display an absence of any desire to retaliate and sentiments of
+international friendship such as it would, perhaps, be difficult to
+parallel. Should such people be denied admission into Australia,
+Canada, or the United States? Would not the exclusionists in those
+countries profit by association with them?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The immigration laws in force in Australia are, I am informed, even
+more strict and more severe than those in the United States. They
+amount to almost total prohibition; for they are directed not only
+against Chinese laborers but are so operated that the Chinese merchant
+and student are also practically refused admission. In the course of a
+lecture delivered in England by Mrs. Annie Besant in 1912 on "The
+citizenship of colored races in the British Empire", while condemning
+the race prejudices of her own people, she brought out a fact which
+will be interesting to my readers, especially to the Australians. She
+says, "In Australia a very curious change is taking place. Color has
+very much deepened in that clime, and the Australian has become very
+yellow; so that it becomes a problem whether, after a time, the people
+would be allowed to live in their own country. The white people are
+far more colored than are some Indians." In the face of this plain fact
+is it not time, for their own sake, that the Australians should drop
+their cry against yellow people and induce their Parliament to abolish,
+or at least to modify, their immigration laws with regard to the yellow
+race? Australians are anxious to extend their trade, and they have
+sent commercial commissioners to Japan and other Eastern countries with
+the view to developing and expanding commerce. Mr. J. B. Suttor,
+Special Commissioner of New South Wales, has published the following
+advertisement:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"NEW SOUTH WALES. The Land of Reward for Capital Commerce and
+Industry. Specially subsidized steamers now giving direct service
+between Sydney, THE PREMIER COMMERCIAL CENTER OF AUSTRALIA, AND
+SHANGHAI. Thus offering special facilities for Commerce and Tourists.
+NEW SOUTH WALES PRODUCTS ARE STANDARDS OF EXCELLENCE."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Commerce and friendship go together, but how Australians can expect to
+develop trade in a country whose people are not allowed to come to
+visit her shores even for the purposes of trade, passes my
+comprehension. Perhaps, having heard so much of the forgiving and
+magnanimous spirit of the Chinese, Australians expect the Chinese to
+greet them with smiles and to trade with them, while being kicked in
+return.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I believe in the doctrine of the universal brotherhood of men. It is
+contrary to the law (God) of creation that some people should shut out
+other people from portions of the earth solely from motives of
+selfishness and jealousy; the injury caused by such selfish acts will
+sooner or later react on the doers. "Every man is his own ancestor.
+We are preparing for the days that come, and we are what we are to-day
+on account of what has gone before." The dog-in-the-manger policy
+develops doggish instincts in those who practise it; and, after all,
+civilization without kindness and justice is not worth having. In
+conclusion, I will let the English poet, William Wordsworth, state
+"Nature's case".
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Listen to these noble lines from the ninth canto of his "Excursion".
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="poem">
+ "Alas! what differs more than man from man,<BR>
+ And whence that difference? Whence but from himself?<BR>
+ For see the universal Race endowed<BR>
+ With the same upright form. The sun is fixed<BR>
+ And the infinite magnificence of heaven<BR>
+ Fixed, within reach of every human eye;<BR>
+ The sleepless ocean murmurs for all years;<BR>
+ The vernal field infuses fresh delight<BR>
+ Into all hearts. Throughout the world of sense,<BR>
+ Even as an object is sublime or fair,<BR>
+ That object is laid open to the view<BR>
+ Without reserve or veil; and as a power<BR>
+ Is salutary, or an influence sweet,<BR>
+ Are each and all enabled to perceive<BR>
+ That power, that influence, by impartial law,<BR>
+ Gifts nobler are vouchsafed alike to all;<BR>
+ Reason, and, with that reason, smiles and tears;<BR>
+ Imagination, freedom in the will;<BR>
+ Conscience to guide and check; and death to be<BR>
+ Foretasted, immortality conceived<BR>
+ By all&mdash;a blissful immortality,<BR>
+ To them whose holiness on earth shall make<BR>
+ The Spirit capable of heaven, assured.<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="poem">
+ ..............................The smoke ascends<BR>
+ To Heaven as lightly from the cottage hearth<BR>
+ As from the haughtiest palace. He whose soul<BR>
+ Ponders this true equality, may walk<BR>
+ The fields of earth with gratitude and hope;<BR>
+ Yet, in that meditation, will he find<BR>
+ Motive to sadder grief, as we have found;<BR>
+ Lamenting ancient virtues overthrown,<BR>
+ And for the injustice grieving, that hath made<BR>
+ So wide a difference between man and man."<BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap13"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 13. Dinners, Banquets, Etc.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Dinner, as we all know, indicates a certain hour and a certain habit
+whose aim is the nourishment of the body, and a deliverance from
+hunger; but in our modern civilized life it possesses other purposes
+also. Man is a gregarious animal, and when he takes his food he likes
+company; from this peculiarity there has sprung up the custom of dinner
+parties. In attending dinner parties, however, the guests as a rule do
+not seek sustenance, they only go to them when they have nothing else
+to do, and many scarcely touch the food that is laid before them.
+Their object is to do honor to the host and hostess, not to eat, but to
+be entertained by pleasant and congenial conversation. Nevertheless,
+the host, at whose invitation the company has assembled, is expected to
+provide a great abundance and a large variety of savory dishes, as well
+as a good supply of choice wines. Flesh and wine are indispensable,
+even though the entertainers eschew both in their private life, and
+most of the guests daily consume too much of each. Few have the
+courage to part with conventional practices when arranging a social
+function.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+American chefs are excellent caterers, and well know how to please the
+tastes of the American people. They concentrate on the art of
+providing dainty dishes, and human ingenuity is heavily taxed by them
+in their efforts to invent new gustatory delicacies. The dishes which
+they place before each guest are so numerous that even a gourmand must
+leave some untouched. At a fashionable dinner no one can possibly
+taste, much less eat, everything that is placed before him, yet the
+food is all so nicely cooked and served in so appetizing a manner, that
+it is difficult to resist the temptation at least to sample it; when
+you have done this, however, you will continue eating until all has
+been finished, but your stomach will probably be a sad sufferer,
+groaning grievously on the following day on account of the frolic of
+your palate. This ill-mated pair, although both are chiefly interested
+in food, seldom seem to agree. I must not omit to mention however that
+the number of courses served at an American millionaire's dinner is
+after all less numerous than those furnished at a Chinese feast. When
+a Chinese gentleman asks his friends to dine with him the menu may
+include anywhere from thirty to fifty or a hundred courses; but many of
+the dishes are only intended for show. The guests are not expected to
+eat everything on the table, or even to taste every delicacy, unless,
+indeed, they specially desire to do so. Again, we don't eat so
+heartily as do the Americans, but content ourselves with one or two
+mouthfuls from each set of dishes, and allow appreciable intervals to
+elapse between courses, during which we make merry, smoke, and
+otherwise enjoy the company. This is a distinct advantage in favor of
+China.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In Europe and America, dessert forms the last course at dinner; in
+China this is served first. I do not know which is the better way.
+Chinese are ever ready to accept the best from every quarter, and so
+many of us have recently adopted the Western practice regarding
+dessert, while still retaining the ancient Chinese custom, so that now
+we eat sweetmeats and fruit at the beginning, during dinner, and at the
+end. This happy combination of Eastern and Western practices is, I
+submit, worthy of expansion and extension. If it were to become
+universal it would help to discourage the present unwholesome habit,
+for it is nothing more than a habit, of devouring flesh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One of the dishes indispensable at a fashionable American dinner is the
+terrapin. Those who eat these things say that their flesh has a most
+agreeable and delicate flavor, and that their gelatinous skinny necks
+and fins are delicious, but apparently the most palatable tidbits pall
+the taste in time, for it is said that about forty years ago terrapins
+were so abundant and cheap that workmen in their agreement with their
+employers stipulated that terrapin should not be supplied at their
+dinner table more than three times a week. Since then terrapins have
+become so rare that no stylish dinner ever takes place without this
+dish. Oysters are another Western sine qua non, and are always served
+raw. I wonder how many ladies and gentlemen who swallow these mollusca
+with such evident relish know that they are veritable scavengers, which
+pick up and swallow every dirty thing in the water. A friend of mine
+after taking a few of them on one occasion, had to leave the table and
+go home; he was ill afterward for several days. One cannot be too
+careful as to what one eats. The United States has a Pure Food
+Department, but I think it might learn a great deal that it does not
+know if it were to send a commission to China to study life in the
+Buddhist monasteries, where only sanitary, healthful food is consumed.
+It is always a surprise to me that people are so indifferent to the
+kind of food they take. Public health officers are useful officials,
+but when we have become more civilized each individual will be his own
+health officer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some of the well-known Chinese dishes are very relishable and should
+not be overlooked by chefs and dinner hostesses. I refer to the
+sharks' fins, and birds' nest&mdash;the Eastern counterpart of the Western
+piece de resistance&mdash;the terrapin. From a hygienic point of view
+sharks' fins may not be considered as very desirable, seeing they are
+part of the shark, but they are certainly not worse, and are perhaps
+better, than what is called the "high and tender" pheasant, and other
+flesh foods which are constantly found on Western dining tables, and
+which are so readily eaten by connoisseurs. Birds' nest soup is far
+superior to turtle soup, and I have the opinion of an American chemist
+who analyzed it, that it is innocuous and minus the injurious uric acid
+generated by animal flesh, the cause of rheumatic and similar painful
+complaints.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The "chop suey" supplied in the Chinese restaurants in New York,
+Chicago, and other places, seems to be a favorite dish with the
+American public. It shows the similarity of our tastes, and encourages
+me to expect that some of my recommendations will be accepted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Will some one inform me why so many varieties of wines are always
+served on American tables, and why the sparkling champagne is never
+avoidable? Wealthy families will spare neither pains nor expense to
+spread most sumptuous dinners, and it has been reported that the cost
+of an entertainment given by one rich lady amounted to twenty thousand
+pounds sterling, although, as I have said, eating is the last thing for
+which the guests assemble.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I do not suppose that many will agree with me, but in my opinion it
+would be much more agreeable, and improve the general conversation, if
+all drinks of an intoxicating nature were abolished from the dining
+table. It is gratifying to know that there are some families (may the
+number increase every day!) where intoxicating liquors are never seen
+on their tables. The first instance of this sort that came under my
+notice was in the home of that excellent woman, Mrs. M. F. Henderson,
+who is an ardent advocate of diet reform and teetotalism. Mr. William
+Jennings Bryan, the Secretary of State, has set a noble example, as
+from newspaper reports it appears that he gave a farewell dinner to
+Ambassador Bryce, without champagne or other alcoholic drinks. He has
+a loyal supporter in Shanghai, in the person of the American
+Consul-General, Dr. A. P. Wilder, who, to the great regret of everybody
+who knows him in this port, is retiring from the service on account of
+ill-health. Dr. Wilder is very popular and figures largely in the
+social life of the community, but Dr. Wilder is a staunch opponent of
+alcohol, and through his influence wines at public dinners are always
+treated as extras. So long as the liquor traffic is so extensively and
+profitably carried on in Europe and America, and so long as the
+consumption of alcohol is so enormous, so long will there be a
+difference of opinion as to its ill effects, but in this matter, by
+means of its State Prohibition Laws, America is setting an example to
+the world. In no other country are there such extensive tracts without
+alcohol as the "Dry States" of America. China, who is waging war on
+opium, recognizes in this fact a kindred, active moral force which is
+absent elsewhere, and, shaking hands with her sister republic across
+the seas, hopes that she will some day be as free of alcoholic poisons
+as China herself hopes to be of opium. Every vice, however, has its
+defense. Some years ago I met a famous Dutch artist in Peking, who,
+though still in the prime of life, was obliged to lay aside his work
+for a few days each month, due to an occasional attack of rheumatism.
+I found he was fond of his cup, though I did not understand that he was
+an immoderate drinker. I discoursed to him somewhat lengthily about
+the evil effects of drink, and showed him that unless he was willing to
+give up all intoxicating liquor, his rheumatism would never give him
+up. He listened attentively, pondered for a few minutes, and then gave
+this characteristic answer: "I admit the soundness of your argument
+but I enjoy my glass exceedingly; if I were to follow your advice I
+should be deprived of a lot of pleasure. Indeed, I would rather have
+the rheumatic pains, which disappear after two or three days, and
+continue to enjoy my alcoholic drinks, than endure the misery of doing
+without them." I warned him that in course of time his rheumatism
+would be longer in duration and attack him more frequently, if he
+continued to ignore its warnings and to play with what, for him, was
+certainly poison. When anyone has a habit, be it injurious or
+otherwise, it is not easy to persuade him to abandon it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Aristocracy of Health" written by the talented Mrs. Henderson is
+an admirable work. I owe much to it. The facts and arguments adduced
+against tobacco smoking, strong drink and poisonous foods, are set
+forth in such a clear and convincing manner, that soon after reading it
+I became a teetotaler and "sanitarian"[1] and began at once to reap the
+benefits. I felt that I ought not to keep such a good thing to myself,
+but that I should preach the doctrine far and wide. I soon found,
+however, that it was an impossible task to try to save men from
+themselves, and I acquired the unenviable sobriquet of "crank"; but I
+was not dismayed. From my native friends I turned to the foreign
+community in Peking, thinking that the latter would possess better
+judgment, appreciate and be converted to the sanitarian doctrine.
+Among the foreigners I appealed to, one was a distinguished diplomat,
+and the other a gentleman in the Chinese service, with a world-wide
+reputation. Both were elderly and in delicate health, and it was my
+earnest hope that by reading Mrs. Henderson's book, which was sent to
+them, they would be convinced of their errors and turn over a new
+leaf&mdash;I was disappointed. Both, in returning the book, made
+substantially the same answer. "Mrs. Henderson's work is very
+interesting, but at my time of life it is not advisable to change
+life-long habits. I eat flesh moderately, and never drink much wine."
+They both seemed to overlook the crucial problem as to whether or not
+animal food contains hurtful poison. If it does, it should not be
+eaten at all. We never hear of sensible people taking arsenic,
+strychnine, or other poisons, in moderation, but many foolish women, I
+believe, take arsenic to pale their complexions, while others, both men
+and women, take strychnine in combination with other drugs, as a tonic,
+but will anyone argue that these substances are foods? The rule of
+moderation is applicable to things which are nutritious, or at least
+harmless, but not to noxious foods, however small the quantity of
+poison they may contain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Pleasant conversation at the dinner table is always enjoyable, and a
+good talker is always welcome, but I often wonder why Americans, who
+generally are so quick to improve opportunity, and are noted for their
+freedom from traditional conventionalisms, do not make a more
+systematic use of the general love of good conversation. Anyone who is
+a witty conversationalist, with a large fund of anecdote, is sure to be
+asked by every dinner host to help to entertain the guests, but if the
+company be large the favorite can be enjoyed by only a few, and those
+who are too far away to hear, or who are just near enough to hear a
+part but not all, are likely to feel aggrieved. They cannot hear what
+is amusing the rest, while the talk elsewhere prevents their talking as
+they would if there were no interruptions. A raconteur generally
+monopolizes half the company, and leaves the other half out in the
+cold. This might be avoided if talkers were engaged to entertain the
+whole company during dinner, as pianists are now sometimes engaged to
+play to them after dinner. Or, the entertainment might be varied by
+engaging a good professional reciter to reproduce literary gems, comic
+or otherwise. I am sure the result would bring more general
+satisfaction to the guests than the present method of leaving them to
+entertain themselves. Chinese employ singing girls; Japanese, geishas
+to talk, sing or dance. The ideal would here again seem to be an
+amalgamation of East and West.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is difficult for a mixed crowd to be always agreeable, even in the
+congenial atmosphere of a good feast, unless the guests have been
+selected with a view to their opinions rather than to their social
+standing. Place a number of people whose ideas are common, with a
+difference, around a well-spread table and there will be no lack of
+good, earnest, instructive conversation. Most men and women can talk
+well if they have the right sort of listeners. If the hearer is
+unsympathetic the best talker becomes dumb. Hosts who remember this
+will always be appreciated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As a rule, a dinner conversation is seldom worth remembering, which is
+a pity. Man, the most sensible of all animals, can talk nonsense
+better than all the rest of his tribe. Perhaps the flow of words may
+be as steady as the eastward flow of the Yang-tse-Kiang in my own
+country, but the memory only retains a recollection of a vague,
+undefined&mdash;what? The conversation like the flavors provided by the
+cooks has been evanescent. Why should not hostesses make as much
+effort to stimulate the minds of their guests as they do to gratify
+their palates? What a boon it would be to many a bashful man, sitting
+next to a lady with whom he has nothing in common, if some public
+entertainer during the dinner relieved him from the necessity of always
+thinking of what he should say next? How much more he could enjoy the
+tasty dishes his hostess had provided; and as for the lady&mdash;what a
+number of suppressed yawns she might have avoided. To take great pains
+and spend large sums to provide nice food for people who cannot enjoy
+it because they have to talk to one another, seems a pity. Let one man
+talk to the rest and leave them leisure to eat, is my suggestion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The opportunities afforded at the dining table may be turned to many
+useful purposes. Of course not all are ill-paired, and many young men
+and ladies meet, sit side by side, engage in a friendly, pleasant
+conversation, renew their acquaintance at other times, and finally
+merge their separate paths in the highway of marriage. Perhaps China
+might borrow a leaf from this custom and substitute dinner parties for
+go-betweens. The dinner-party method, however, has its dangers as well
+as its advantages&mdash;it depends on the point of view. Personal
+peculiarities and defects, if any, can be easily detected by the way in
+which the conversation is carried on, and the manner in which the food
+is handled. It has sometimes happened that the affianced have
+cancelled their engagement after a dinner party. On the other hand,
+matters of great import can often be arranged at the dinner table
+better than anywhere else. Commercial transactions involving millions
+of dollars have frequently been settled while the parties were sipping
+champagne; even international problems, ending in elaborate
+negotiations and treaties, have been first discussed with the
+afterdinner cigar. The atmosphere of good friendship and equality,
+engendered by a well-furnished room, good cheer, pleasant company, and
+a genial hostess, disarms prejudice, removes barriers, melts reserve,
+and disposes one to see that there is another side to every question.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In China when people have quarreled their friends generally invite them
+to dinner, where the matters in dispute are amicably arranged. These
+are called "peace dinners". I would recommend that a similar expedient
+should be adopted in America; many a knotty point could be disposed of
+by a friendly discussion at the dinner table. If international
+disputes were always arranged in this way the representatives of
+nations having complaints against each other might more often than now
+discover unexpected ways of adjusting their differences. Why should
+such matters invariably be remanded to formal conferences and set
+speeches? The preliminaries, at least, would probably be better
+arranged at dinner parties and social functions. Eating has always
+been associated with friendship. "To eat salt" with an Arab forms a
+most binding contract. Even "the serpent" in the book of Genesis
+commenced his acquaintance with Eve by suggesting a meal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It almost seems as if there were certain unwritten laws in American
+society, assigning certain functions to certain days in the week. I do
+not believe Americans are superstitious, but I found that Thursday was
+greatly in favor. I remember on one occasion that Mrs. Grant, widow of
+the late President, sent an invitation to my wife and myself to dine at
+her house some Thursday evening; this was three weeks in advance, and
+we readily accepted her invitation. After our acceptance, about a
+dozen invitations came for that same Thursday, all of which we had, of
+course, to decline. Curiously enough we received no invitations for
+any other day during that week, and just before that eventful Thursday
+we received a letter from Mrs. Grant cancelling the invitation on
+account of the death of one of her relations, so that we had to dine at
+home after all. Now we Chinese make no such distinctions between days.
+Every day of the week is equally good; in order however to avoid
+clashing with other peoples' engagements, we generally fix Fridays for
+our receptions or dinners, but there is not among the Chinese an
+entertainment season as there is in Washington, and other great cities,
+when everybody in good society is busy attending or giving "At Homes",
+tea parties or dinners. I frequently attended "At Homes" or tea
+parties in half-a-dozen places or more in one afternoon, but no one can
+dine during the same evening in more than one place. In this respect
+America might learn a lesson from China. We can accept half-a-dozen
+invitations to dinner for one evening; all we have to do is to go to
+each place in turn, partake of one or two dishes, excuse ourselves to
+the host and then go somewhere else. By this means we avoid the
+seeming rudeness of a declination, and escape the ill feelings which
+are frequently created in the West by invitations being refused. The
+Chinese method makes possible the cultivation of democratic friendships
+without violating aristocratic instincts, and for candidates at
+election times it would prove an agreeable method by which to make new
+friends. We are less rigid than Americans about dropping in and taking
+a mouthful or two at dinner, even without a special invitation.[2]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Washington officials and diplomats usually give large entertainments.
+The arranging of the seats at the dinner table is a delicate matter, as
+the rule of precedence has to be observed, and inattention to the rule,
+by placing a wrong seat for a gentleman or lady who is entitled to a
+higher place, may be considered as a slight. It is at such functions
+as these that the professional story-teller, the good reciter, the
+clever reader, the perfect entertainer would make the natural selfish
+reserve of mankind less apparent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Fashionable people, who entertain a good deal, are, I understand, often
+puzzled to know how to provide novelties. In addition to the
+suggestions I have made, may I be pardoned another? There are many
+good cooks in the U.S.A. Why not commission these to sometimes prepare
+a recherche Chinese dinner, with the food served in bowls instead of
+plates, and with chop-sticks ("nimble lads" we call them) for show, but
+forks and spoons for use. I see no reason why Chinese meals should not
+become fashionable in America, as Western preparations are frequently
+favored by the Elite in China. One marked difference between the two
+styles is the manner in which the Chinese purveyor throws his most
+delicate flavors into strong relief by prefacing it with a diet which
+is insipid, harsh or pungent. Contrasts add zest to everything human,
+be it dining, working, playing, or wooing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This suggests an occasional, toothsome vegetarian repast as a set-off
+to the same round of fish, flesh, fowl and wine fumes. No people in
+the world can prepare such delicious vegetarian banquets as a Chinese
+culinary artist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A banquet is a more formal affair than the dinner parties I have been
+discussing. It is generally gotten up to celebrate some special event,
+such as the conclusion of some important business, or the birthday of
+some national hero like Washington, Lincoln, or Grant; or the Chambers
+of Commerce and Associations of different trades in the important
+cities of America will hold their annual meetings to hear a report and
+discuss the businesses transacted during the year, winding up by
+holding a large banquet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The food supplied on these occasions is by no means superior to that
+given at private dinners, yet everybody is glad to be invited. It is
+the inevitable rule that speeches follow the eating, and people attend,
+not for the sake of the food, but for the privilege of hearing others
+talk. Indeed, except for the opportunity of talking, or hearing others
+talk, people would probably prefer a quiet meal at home. Speakers with
+a reputation, orators, statesmen, or foreign diplomats are frequently
+invited, and sometimes eminent men from other countries are the guests
+of honor. These functions occur every year, and the Foreign Ministers
+with whose countries the Associations have commercial relations are
+generally present.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The topics discussed are nearly always the same, and it is not easy to
+speak at one of these gatherings without going over the same ground as
+that covered on previous occasions. I remember that a colleague of
+mine who was a clever diplomat, and for whom I had great respect, once
+when asked to make an after-dinner speech, reluctantly rose and, as far
+as I can remember, spoke to the following effect: "Mr. Chairman and
+gentlemen, I thank your Association for inviting me to this splendid
+banquet, but as I had the honor of speaking at your banquet last year I
+have nothing more to add, and I refer you to that speech;" he then sat
+down. The novelty of his remarks, of course, won him applause, but I
+should like to know what the company really thought of him. For my
+part, I praised his wisdom, for he diplomatically rebuked all whose
+only interest is that which has its birth with the day and disappears
+with the night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Banquets and dinners in America, as in China, are, however, often far
+removed from frivolities. Statesmen sometimes select these
+opportunities for a pronouncement of their policy, even the President
+of the nation may occasionally think it advisable to do this. Speeches
+delivered on such occasions are generally reported in all the
+newspapers, and, of course, discussed by all sorts of people, the wise
+and the otherwise, so that the speaker has to be very careful as to
+what he says. Our President confines himself to the more formal
+procedure of issuing an official mandate, the same in kind, though
+differing in expression, as an American President's Inaugural Address,
+or one of his Messages to Congress.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Commercial men do not understand and are impatient with the
+restrictions which hedge round a Foreign Minister, and in their anxiety
+to get speakers they will look anywhere. On one occasion I received an
+invitation to go to Canada to attend a banquet at a Commercial Club in
+one of the principal Canadian cities. It would have given me great
+pleasure to be able to comply with this request, as I had not then
+visited that country, but, contrary to inclination, I had to decline.
+I was accredited as Minister to Washington, and did not feel at liberty
+to visit another country without the special permission of my Home
+Government.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Public speaking, like any other art, has to be cultivated. However
+scholarly a man may be, and however clever he may be in private
+conversation, when called upon to speak in public he may sometimes make
+a very poor impression. I have known highly placed foreign officials,
+with deserved reputations for wisdom and ability, who were shockingly
+poor speakers at banquets. They would hesitate and almost stammer, and
+would prove quite incapable of expressing their thoughts in any
+sensible or intelligent manner. In this respect, personal observations
+have convinced me that Americans, as a rule, are better speakers
+than.... (I will not mention the nationality in my mind, it might give
+offense.) An American, who, without previous notice, is called upon to
+speak, generally acquits himself creditably. He is nearly always
+witty, appreciative, and frank. This is due, I believe, to the
+thorough-going nature of his education: he is taught to be
+self-confident, to believe in his own ability to create, to express his
+opinions without fear. A diffident and retiring man, whose chief
+characteristic is extreme modesty, is not likely to be a good speaker;
+but Americans are free from this weakness. Far be it from me to
+suggest that there are no good speakers in other countries. America
+can by no means claim a monopoly of orators; there are many elsewhere
+whose sage sayings and forcible logic are appreciated by all who hear
+or read them; but, on the whole, Americans excel others in the
+readiness of their wit, and their power to make a good extempore speech
+on any subject, without opportunity for preparation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Neither is the fair sex in America behind the men in this matter. I
+have heard some most excellent speeches by women, speeches which would
+do credit to an orator; but they labor under a disadvantage. The
+female voice is soft and low, it is not easily heard in a large room,
+and consequently the audience sometimes does not appreciate lady
+speakers to the extent that they deserve. However, I know a lady who
+possesses a powerful, masculine voice, and who is a very popular
+speaker, but she is an exception. Anyhow I believe the worst speaker,
+male or female, could improve by practising private declamation, and
+awakening to the importance of articulation, modulation, and&mdash;the pause.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another class of social functions are "At Homes", tea parties, and
+receptions. The number of guests invited to these is almost unlimited,
+it may be one or two dozen, or one or two dozen hundreds. The purpose
+of these is usually to meet some distinguished stranger, some guest in
+the house, or the newly married daughter of the hostess. It is
+impossible for the host or hostess to remember all those who attend, or
+even all who have been invited to attend; generally visitors leave
+their cards, although many do not even observe this rule, but walk
+right in as if they owned the house. When a newcomer is introduced his
+name is scarcely audible, and before the hostess, or the distinguished
+guest, has exchanged more than one or two words with him, another
+stranger comes along, so that it is quite excusable if the next time
+the hosts meet these people they do not recognize them. In China a new
+fashion is now in vogue; new acquaintances exchange cards. If this
+custom should be adopted in America there would be less complaints
+about new friends receiving the cold shoulder from those who they
+thought should have known them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In large receptions, such as those mentioned above, however spacious
+the reception hall, in a great many instances there is not even
+standing room for all who attend. It requires but little imagination
+to understand the condition of the atmosphere when there is no proper
+ventilation. Now, what always astonished me was, that although the
+parlor might be crowded with ladies and gentlemen, all the windows
+were, as a rule, kept closed, with the result that the place was full
+of vitiated air. Frequently after a short time I have had to slip away
+when I would willingly have remained longer to enjoy the charming
+company. If I had done so, however, I should have taken into my lungs
+a large amount of the obnoxious atmosphere exhaled from hundreds of
+other persons in the room, to the injury of my health, and no one can
+give his fellows his best unless his health is hearty. No wonder we
+often hear of a host or hostess being unwell after a big function.
+Their feelings on the morning after are often the reverse of "good-will
+to men", and the cause is not a lowered moral heartiness but a weakened
+physical body through breathing too much air exhaled from other
+people's lungs. When man understands, he will make "good health" a
+religious duty.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In connection with this I quote Dr. J. H. Kellogg, the eminent
+physician and Superintendent of the Battle Creek Sanitarium. In his
+book, "The Living Temple"[3], the doctor speaks as follows on the
+importance of breathing pure air: "The purpose of breathing is to
+obtain from the air a supply of oxygen, which the blood takes up and
+carries to the tissues. Oxygen is one of the most essential of all the
+materials required for the support of life.... The amount of oxygen
+necessarily required for this purpose is about one and one-fourth cubic
+inches for each breath.... In place of the one and one-fourth cubic
+inches of oxygen taken into the blood, a cubic inch of carbonic acid
+gas is given off, and along with it are thrown off various other still
+more poisonous substances which find a natural exit through the lungs.
+The amount of these combined poisons thrown off with a single breath is
+sufficient to contaminate, and render unfit to breathe, three cubic
+feet, or three-fourths of a barrel, of air. Counting an average of
+twenty breaths a minute for children and adults, the amount of air
+contaminated per minute would be three times twenty or sixty cubic
+feet, or one cubic foot a second.... Every one should become
+intelligent in relation to the matter of ventilation, and should
+appreciate its importance. Vast and irreparable injury frequently
+results from the confinement of several scores or hundreds of people in
+a schoolroom, church, or lecture room, without adequate means of
+removing the impurities thrown off from their lungs and bodies. The
+same air being breathed over and over becomes densely charged with
+poisons, which render the blood impure, lessen the bodily resistance,
+and induce susceptibility to taking cold, and to infection with the
+germs of pneumonia, consumption, and other infectious diseases, which
+are always present in a very crowded audience room. Suppose, for
+example, a thousand persons are seated in a room forty feet in width,
+sixty in length, and fifteen in height: how long a time would elapse
+before the air of such a room would become unfit for further
+respiration? Remembering that each person spoils one foot of air every
+second, it is clear that one thousand cubic feet of air will be
+contaminated for every second that the room is occupied. To ascertain
+the number of seconds which would elapse before the entire air
+contained in the room will be contaminated, so that it is unfit for
+further breathing, we have only to divide the cubic contents of the
+room by one thousand. Multiplying, we have 60*40*15 equals 36,000, the
+number of cubic feet. This, divided by one thousand, gives thirty-six
+as the number of seconds. Thus it appears that with closed doors and
+windows, breath poisoning of the audience would begin at the end of
+thirty-six seconds, or less than one minute. The condition of the air
+in such a room at the end of an hour cannot be adequately pictured in
+words, and yet hundreds of audiences are daily subjected to just such
+inhumane treatment through ignorance."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The above remarks apply not only to churches, lecture rooms, and other
+public places, but also with equal force to offices and family houses.
+I should like to know how many persons pay even a little attention to
+this important subject of pure air breathing? You go to an office,
+whether large or small, and you find all the windows closed, although
+there are half-a-dozen or more persons working in the room. No wonder
+that managers, clerks, and other office workers often break down and
+require a holiday to recuperate their impaired health at the seaside,
+or elsewhere.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When you call at a private residence you will find the same thing, all
+the windows closed. It is true that there are not so many persons in
+the room as in an office, but if your sense of smell is keen you will
+notice that the air has close, stuffy exhalations, which surely cannot
+be sanitary. If you venture to suggest that one of the windows be
+opened the lady of the house will at once tell you that you will be in
+a draught and catch cold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is a matter of daily occurrence to find a number of persons dining
+in a room where there is no opening for the contaminated air to leak
+out, or for the fresh air to come in. After dinner the gentlemen
+adjourn to the library to enjoy the sweet perfumes of smoking for an
+hour or so with closed windows. What a picture would be presented if
+the bacteria in the air could be sketched, enlarged, and thrown on a
+screen, or better still shown in a cinematograph, but apparently
+gentlemen do not mind anything so long as they can inhale the
+pernicious tobacco fumes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is a common practice, I fear, to keep the windows of the bedroom
+closed, except in hot weather. I have often suggested to friends that,
+for the sake of their health, they should at least keep one of the
+windows, if not more, open during the night, but they have pooh-poohed
+the idea on account of that bugaboo&mdash;a draught. It is one of the
+mysteries of the age that people should be willing to breathe
+second-hand air when there is so much pure, fresh air out of doors to
+be had for nothing; after inhaling and exhaling the same air over and
+over again all through the night it is not strange that they rise in
+the morning languid and dull instead of being refreshed and in high
+spirits. No one who is deprived of a sufficiency of fresh air can long
+remain efficient. Health is the cornerstone of success. I hear many
+nowadays talking of Eugenics. Eugenics was founded ten years ago by
+Sir Francis Galton, who defined it thus: "The study of agencies under
+control that may improve or impair the racial qualities of future
+generations, either physically or mentally." The University of London
+has adopted this definition, where a chair of Eugenics has been
+founded. This science is undoubtedly of the first importance, but what
+advantage is good birth if afterward life is poisoned with foul air? A
+dust-laden atmosphere is a germ-laden atmosphere, therefore physicians
+prescribe for tubercular convalescents conditions in which the air is
+90% free from dust. However, the air of the city has been
+scientifically proven to be as pure as the air of the country. All
+that is necessary to secure proper lung food is plenty of it,&mdash;houses
+so constructed that the air inside shall be free to go out and the air
+outside to come in. Air in a closed cage must be mischievous, and what
+are ill-ventilated rooms but vicious air cages, in which mischiefs of
+all sorts breed?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+America professes to believe in publicity, and what is "publicity" but
+the open window and the open door? Practise this philosophy and it
+will be easy to keep on the sunny side of the street and to discourage
+the glooms. The joys fly in at open windows.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] I have never been a smoker and have always eschewed tobacco,
+cigarettes, etc.; though for a short while to oblige friends I
+occasionally accepted a cigarette, now I firmly refuse everything of
+the sort.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[2] Since writing the above, I have heard from an American lady that
+"progressive dinners" have recently been introduced by the idle and
+rich set of young people in New York. The modus operandi is that
+several dinners will, by arrangement, be given on a certain day, and
+the guests will go to each house alternately, eating one or two dishes
+only and remaining at the last house for fruit. I can hardly believe
+this, but my friend assures me it is a fact. It seems that eating is
+turned into play, and to appreciate the fun, I would like to be one of
+the actors.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[3] "The Living Temple", by J. H. Kellogg, pp. 282 et al. Published by
+Good Health Publishing Co., Battle Creek, Mich., U.S.A.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap14"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 14. Theaters
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The ideal of China is sincerity but an actor is a pretender. He
+appears to be what he is not. Now our ancient wise men felt that
+pretense of any sort must have a dangerous reactionary influence on the
+character. If a man learns how to be a clever actor on the stage he
+may be a skilled deceiver in other walks of life. Moreover, no one to
+whom sincerity is as the gums are to the teeth, would wish to acquire
+the art of acting as though he were some one else. Hence actors in
+China have from ancient times been looked down upon. Actresses, until
+the last decade or so, were unknown in China, and a boy who became an
+actor could never afterward occupy any position of honor. He, his
+children and his grandchildren might be farmers, merchants or soldiers,
+but they could never be teachers, literary men or officials. The
+Chinese feeling for sincerity, amounting almost to worship, has caused
+the profession of an actor in China to be considered a very low one,
+and so until the new regime the actor was always debarred from
+attending any literary examination, and was also deprived of the
+privilege of obtaining official appointment; in fact he was considered
+an outcast of society. No respectable Chinese family would think of
+allowing their son to go on the stage. As a natural consequent the
+members of the Chinese stage have, as a rule, been men who were as much
+below the level of moral respectability as conventionalism had already
+adjudged them to be below the level of social respectability. Regard
+anyone as a mirror with a cracked face and he will soon justify your
+opinion of him. If the morals of Chinese actors will not bear
+investigation it is probably due to the social ostracism to which they
+have always been subjected. The same phenomenon may be seen in
+connection with Buddhism. As soon as Buddhism in China ceased to be a
+power the priests became a despised class and being despised they have
+often given occasion to others to despise them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am aware that quite a different view is held of the stage in America
+and Europe, and that actors and actresses are placed on an equal
+footing with other members of society. This does not, of course, mean
+that either America or Europe lays less stress on sincerity than China,
+but simply that we have developed in different ways. I have heard of
+the old "morality plays", I know that English drama, like the Egyptian,
+Greek, and Indian, had its origin in religion, but this alone will not
+explain the different attitude assumed toward actors in the West from
+that taken up in China.[1] I am inclined to think that the reason why
+actors are not despised in the West as they are in China is because the
+West considers first the utility of pleasure, and the East the
+supremacy of sincerity. Here, as is so frequently the case, apparent
+differences are largely differences of emphasis. The West would seem
+to emphasize the beauty of the desire to please where Chinese consider
+the effect on character or business. The expensive dinners which no
+one eats and which I discussed in a previous chapter are an
+illustration. No one in China would spend money in this fashion
+excepting for some definite purpose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We Chinese like to flatter, and to openly praise to their faces those
+whom we admire. Most Westerners, would, I think, please rather than
+admire; most men and women in America and Europe enjoy applause more
+than instruction. This recognition of the delicate pleasure of being
+able to please some one else naturally attracts quite a different type
+to the Western stage from the material usually found in Chinese
+dramatic companies, and in a society where everyone acknowledges the
+beauty of pleasing another, the position of the actor naturally becomes
+both envied and desirable. When therefore a man or woman succeeds on
+the European or American stage he or she is looked up to and welcomed
+in fashionable society, e.g., Henry Irving had the entree to the
+highest society, and his portrait was always found among the notables.
+Newspapers published long notices of his stage performances, and when
+he died he received as great honors as England could give. During his
+lifetime he enjoyed the royal favor of Queen Victoria, who conferred a
+knighthood upon him. After his death his biography was published and
+read by thousands. All this is quite contrary to the spirit of the
+Chinese who, no matter how clever a man may be as an actor, can never
+forget that he is a pretender and that the cleverer he is the greater
+care exists for guarding one's self against his tricks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Actresses are no less respected and honored in the West, whereas in
+China there are positively no respectable women on the stage. Yet in
+the West it is a common occurrence to hear of marriages of actresses to
+bankers, merchants, and millionaires. Even ballet-girls have become
+duchesses by marriage. The stage is considered a noble profession.
+Often, when a girl has a good voice, nothing will satisfy her but a
+stage career. A situation such as this is very difficult for a Chinese
+to analyze. The average Chinese woman lacks the imagination, the
+self-abandon, the courage which must be necessary before a girl can
+think of herself as standing alone in a bright light before a large
+audience waiting to see her dance or hear her sing. Chinese actresses
+were quite unknown until very recently, and the few that may be now
+found on the Chinese stage were nearly all of questionable character
+before they entered the theater. In the northern part of China some
+good Chinese women may be found in circuses, but these belong to the
+working class and take up the circus life with their husbands and
+brothers for a livelihood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The actresses of the West are different. They are drawn to the stage
+for the sake of art; and it must be their splendid daring as much as
+their beauty which induces wealthy men, and even some of the nobility,
+to marry these women. Man loves courage and respects all who are brave
+enough to fight for their own. In a world where self-love (not
+selfishness) is highly esteemed, manhood, or the power of
+self-assertion, whether in man or woman, naturally becomes a
+fascinating virtue. No one likes to be colleague to a coward. The
+millionaires and others who have married actresses&mdash;and as actresses
+make plenty of money they are not likely to be willing to marry poor
+men&mdash;meet many women in society as beautiful as the women they see on
+the stage, but society women lack the supreme courage and daring of the
+stage girl. Thus, very often the pretty, though less educated,
+ballet-girl, wins the man whom her more refined and less self-assertive
+sister&mdash;the ordinary society girl&mdash;is sorry to lose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The suffragettes are too intent just now on getting "Votes for Women"
+to listen to proposals of marriage, but when they succeed in obtaining
+universal suffrage I should think they would have little difficulty in
+obtaining brave husbands, for the suffragettes have courage. These
+women, however, are serious, and I do not think that men in the West,
+judging from what I have seen, like very serious wives. So perhaps
+after all the ballet-girl and actresses will have more chances in the
+marriage (I had almost written money) market than the suffragettes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I may be mistaken in my theories. I have never had the opportunity of
+discussing the matter with a millionaire or an actress, nor have I
+talked about the stage with any of the ladies who make it their home,
+but unless it is their superb independence and their ability to throw
+off care and to act their part which attract men who are looking for
+wives, I cannot account for so many actresses marrying so well.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What, however, we may ask, is the object of the theater? Is it not
+amusement? But when a serious play ending tragically is put on the
+boards is that amusement? The feelings of the audience after
+witnessing such a play must be far from pleasant, and sometimes even
+moody; yet tragedies are popular, and many will pay a high price to see
+a well-known actor commit most objectionable imitation-crimes on the
+stage. A few weeks before this chapter was written a number of men of
+different nationalities were punished for being present at a cockfight
+in Shanghai. Mexican and Spanish bullfights would not be permitted in
+the United States, and yet it is a question whether the birds or the
+animals who take part in these fights really suffer very much. They
+are in a state of ferocious exaltation, and are more concerned about
+killing their opponents than about their own hurts. Soldiers have been
+seriously wounded without knowing anything about it until the
+excitement of the battle had died away. Why then forbid cockfighting
+or bull-baiting? They would be popular amusements if allowed. It is
+certain that animals that are driven long distances along dirty roads,
+cattle, sheep, and fowl that are cooped up for many weary hours in
+railway trucks, simply that they may reach a distant market and be
+slaughtered to gratify perverted human appetites, really suffer more
+than the cock or bull who may be killed or wounded in a fight with
+others of his own kind. What about the sufferings of pugilists who
+take part in the prize-fights, in which so many thousands in the United
+States delight? It cannot be pity, therefore, for the birds or beasts,
+which makes the authorities forbid cockfighting and bull-baiting. It
+must be that although these are exhibitions of courage and skill, the
+exhibition is degrading to the spectators and to those who urge the
+creatures to fight. But what is the difference, so far as the
+spectator is concerned, between watching a combat between animals or
+birds and following a vivid dramatization of cruelty on the stage? In
+the latter case the mental sufferings which are portrayed are
+frequently more harrowing than the details of any bull- or cockfight.
+Such representation, therefore, unless a very clear moral lesson or
+warning is emblazoned throughout the play, must have the effect of
+making actors, actresses and spectators less sympathetic with
+suffering. Familiarity breeds insensibility. What I have said of
+melodrama applies also, though in a lesser degree, to books, and should
+be a warning to parents to exercise proper supervision of their
+children's reading.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Far be it from me to disparage the work of the playwright; the plot is
+often well laid and the actors, especially the prima-donna, execute
+their parts admirably. I am considering the matter, at the moment,
+from the view-point of a play-goer. What benefit does he receive from
+witnessing a tragedy? In his home and his office has he not enough to
+engage his serious attention, and to frequently worry his mind? Is it
+worth his while to dress and spend an evening watching a performance
+which, however skilfully played, will make him no happier than before?
+It is a characteristic of those who are fond of sensational plays that
+they do not mind watching the tragical ending of a hero or a heroine,
+and all for the sake of amusement. Young people and children are not
+likely to get good impressions from this sort of thing. It has even
+been said that murders have been committed by youngsters who had been
+taken by their parents to see a realistic melodrama. It is dangerous
+to allow young people of tender age to see such plays. The juvenile
+mind is not ripe enough to form correct judgments. Some time ago I
+read in one of the American papers that a boy had killed his father
+with a knife, on seeing him ill-treat his mother when in a state of
+intoxication. It appeared that the lad had witnessed a dramatic
+tragedy in a theater, and in killing his father considered he was doing
+a heroic act. He could, by the same rule, have been inspired to a
+noble act of self-sacrifice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After all, the main question is, does a sensational play exercise a
+beneficial or a pernicious influence over the audience? If the reader
+will consider the matter impartially he should not have any difficulty
+in coming to a right conclusion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Theatrical performances should afford amusement and excite mirth, as
+well as give instruction. People who visit theaters desire to be
+entertained and to pass the time pleasantly. Anything which excites
+mirth and laughter is always welcomed by an audience. But a serious
+piece from which humor has been excluded, is calculated, even when
+played with sympathetic feeling and skill, to create a sense of gravity
+among the spectators, which, to say the least, can hardly be restful to
+jaded nerves. Yet when composing his plays the playwright should never
+lose sight of the moral. Of course he has to pay attention to the
+arrangement of the different parts of the plot and the characters
+represented, but while it is important that each act and every scene
+should be harmoniously and properly set, and that the characters should
+be adapted to the piece as a whole, it is none the less important that
+a moral should be enforced by it. The practical lesson to be learned
+from the play should never be lost sight of. In Chinese plays the
+moral is always prominent. The villain is punished, virtue is
+rewarded, while the majority of the plays are historical. All
+healthy-minded people will desire to see a play end with virtue
+rewarded, and vice vanquished. Those who want it otherwise are
+unnatural and possess short views of life. Either in this life or in
+some other, each receives according to his deserts, and this lesson
+should always be taught by the play. Yet from all the clever dramas
+which have been written and acted on the Western stage from time to
+time what a very small percentage of moral lessons can be drawn, while
+too many of them have unfortunately been of an objectionable nature.
+Nearly everyone reads novels, especially the younger folk; to many of
+these a visit to a theater is like reading a novel, excepting that the
+performance makes everything more realistic. A piece with a good moral
+cannot therefore fail to make an excellent impression on the audience
+while at the same time affording them amusement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am somewhat surprised that the churches, ethical societies and reform
+associations in America do not more clearly appreciate the valuable aid
+they might receive from the stage. I have been told that some churches
+pay their singers more than their preachers, which shows that they have
+some idea of the value of good art. Why not go a step further and
+preach through a play? This does not mean that there should be no fun
+but that the moral should be well thrust home. I have heard of
+preachers who make jokes while preaching, so that it should not be so
+very difficult to act interesting sermons which would elevate, even if
+they did not amuse. People who went to church to see a theater would
+not expect the same entertainment as those who go to the theater simply
+for a laugh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In China we do not expend as much energy as Americans and Europeans in
+trying to make other people good. We try to be good ourselves and
+believe that our good example, like a pure fragrance, will influence
+others to be likewise. We think practice is as good as precept, and,
+if I may say so without being supposed to be critical of a race
+different from my own, the thought has sometimes suggested itself to me
+that Americans are so intent on doing good to others, and on making
+others good, that they accomplish less than they would if their actions
+and intentions were less direct and obvious. I cannot here explain all
+I mean, but if my readers will study what Li Yu and Chuang Tsz have to
+say about "Spontaneity" and "Not Interfering", I think they will
+understand my thought. The theater, as I have already said, was in
+several countries religious in its origin; why not use it to elevate
+people indirectly? The ultimate effect, because more natural, might be
+better and truer than more direct persuasion. Pulpit appeals, I am
+given to understand, are sometimes very personal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Since writing the above I have seen a newspaper notice of a dramatic
+performance in the Ethical Church, Queen's Road, Bayswater, London.
+The Ethical Church believes "in everything that makes life sweet and
+human" and the management state that they believe&mdash;"the best trend of
+dramatic opinion to-day points not only to the transformation of
+theaters into centers of social enlightenment and moral elevation, but
+also to the transformation of the churches into centers for the
+imaginative presentation, by means of all the arts combined, of the
+deeper truths and meanings of life." Personally, I do not know
+anything about this society, but surely there is nothing out of harmony
+with Christianity in these professions, and I am glad to find here an
+alliance between the two greatest factors in the development of Western
+thought and culture&mdash;the church and the theater. The newspaper article
+to which I have referred was describing the "old morality play,
+Everyman" which had been performed in the church. The visitor who was
+somewhat critical, and apparently unused to seeing the theater in a
+church, wrote of the performance thus: "Both the music and the dressing
+of the play were perfect, and from the moment that Death entered clad
+in blue stuff with immense blue wings upon his shoulders, and the trump
+in his hand, and stopped Everyman, a gorgeous figure in crimson robes
+and jewelled turban, with the question, 'Who goes so gaily by?' the
+play was performed with an impressiveness that never faltered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The heaviest burden, of course, falls on Everyman, and the artist who
+played this part seemed to me, though I am no dramatic critic, to have
+caught the atmosphere and the spirit of the play. His performance,
+indeed, was very wonderful from the moment when he offers Death a
+thousand boons if only the dread summons may be delayed, to that final
+tense scene, when, stripped of his outer robe, he says his closing
+prayers, hesitates for a moment to turn back, though the dread angel is
+there by his side, and then follows the beckoning hand of Good Deeds, a
+figure splendidly robed in flowing draperies of crimson and with a
+wonderfully expressive mobile face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"At the conclusion of the play Dr. Stanton Colt addressed a few words
+to the enthusiastic audience, 'Forsake thy pride, for it will profit
+thee nothing,' he quoted, 'If we could but remember this more carefully
+and also the fact that nothing save our good deeds shall ever go with
+us into that other World, surely it would help us to a holier and
+better life. Earthly things have their place and should have a due
+regard paid to them, but we must not forget the jewel of our souls.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I have, of course, heard of the "Passion Play" at Oberammergau in
+Germany where the life of Jesus Christ is periodically represented on
+the stage, but I say nothing about this, for, so far as I know, it is
+not performed in America, and I have not seen it; but I may note in
+passing that in China theaters are generally associated with the gods
+in the temples, and that the moral the play is meant to teach is always
+well driven home into the minds of the audience. We have not, however,
+ventured to introduce any of our sages to theater audiences.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The theater in China is a much simpler affair than in America. The
+residents in a locality unite and erect a large stage of bamboo and
+matting, the bamboo poles are tied with strips of rattan, and all the
+material of the stage, excepting the rattan, can be used over again
+when it is taken down. Most of the audience stand in front of the
+stage and in the open air, the theater generally being in front of the
+temple; and the play, which often occupies three or four days, is often
+performed in honor of the god's birthday. There is no curtain, and
+there are no stage accessories. The audience is thus enabled to
+concentrate its whole attention on the acting. Female parts are played
+by men, and everything is beautifully simple. There is no attempt to
+produce such elaborate effects as I have seen in the West, and of
+course nothing at all resembling the pantomime, which frequently
+requires mechanical arts. A newspaper paragraph caught my eye while
+thinking of this subject. I reproduce it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Century Theater in New York City has special apparatus for
+producing wind effects, thunder and lightning simultaneously. The wind
+machine consists of a drum with slats which are rotated over an apron
+of corded silk, which produces the whistling sound of wind; the
+lightning is produced by powdered magnesium electrically ignited;
+thunder is simulated by rolling a thousand pounds of stone, junk and
+chain down a chute ending in an iron plate, followed by half-a-dozen
+cannon balls and supplemented by the deafening notes of a thunder drum."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Although, however, Chinese play-goers do not demand the expensive
+outfits and stage sceneries of the West, I must note here that not even
+on the American stage have I seen such gorgeous costumes, or robes of
+so rich a hue and displaying such glittering gold ornaments and
+graceful feathers, as I have seen on the simple Chinese stage I have
+just described. Western fashions are having a tendency in our ports
+and larger cities to modify some things that I have stated about
+Chinese theatrical performances, but the point I wish especially to
+impress on my readers is that theatrical performances in China, while
+amusing and interesting, are seldom melodramatic, and as I look back on
+my experiences in the United States, I cannot but think that the good
+people there are making a mistake in not utilizing the human natural
+love for excitement and the drama as a subsidiary moral investment.
+And, of course, all I have said of theaters applies with equal force to
+moving-picture shows.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap15"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 15. Opera and Musical Entertainments
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Opera is a form of entertainment which, though very popular in America
+and England, does not appeal to me. I know that those who are fond of
+music love to attend it, and that the boxes in an opera house are
+generally engaged by the fashionable set for the whole season
+beforehand. I have seen members of the "four hundred" in their boxes
+in a New York opera house; they have been distinguished by their
+magnificent toilettes and brilliant jewelry; but I have been thinking
+of the Chinese drama, which, like the old Greek play, is also based on
+music, and Chinese music with its soft and plaintive airs is a very
+different thing from the music of grand opera. Chinese music could not
+be represented on Western instruments, the intervals between the notes
+being different. Chinese singing is generally "recitative" accompanied
+by long notes, broken, or sudden chords from the orchestra. It differs
+widely from Western music, but its effects are wonderful. One of our
+writers has thus described music he once heard: "Softly, as the murmur
+of whispered words; now loud and soft together, like the patter of
+pearls and pearlets dropping upon a marble dish. Or liquid, like the
+warbling of the mango-bird in the bush; trickling like the streamlet on
+its downward course. And then like the torrent, stilled by the grip of
+frost, so for a moment was the music lulled, in a passion too deep for
+words." That this famous description of the effects of music which I
+have borrowed from Mr. Dyer Ball's "Things Chinese" is not exaggerated,
+anyone who knows China may confirm by personal observation of the keen
+enjoyment an unlearned, common day laborer will find in playing a
+single lute all by himself for hours beneath the moon on a warm summer
+evening, with no one listening but the trees and the flitting insects;
+but it requires a practised ear to appreciate singing and a good voice.
+On one occasion I went to an opera house in London to hear the
+world-renowned Madame Patti. The place was so crowded, and the
+atmosphere so close, that I felt very uncomfortable and I am ashamed to
+acknowledge that I had to leave before she had finished. If I had been
+educated to appreciate that sort of music no doubt I would have
+comprehended her singing better, and, however uncomfortable, I should
+no doubt have remained to the end of the entertainment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While writing this chapter it happened that the following news from New
+York was published in the local papers in Shanghai. It should be
+interesting to my readers, especially to those who are lovers of music.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Yellow music' will be the next novelty to startle and lure this blase
+town; amusement forecasters already see in the offing a Fall invasion
+of the mysterious Chinese airs which are now having such a vogue in
+London under the general term of 'yellow music'.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The time was when Americans and occidentals in general laughed at
+Chinese music, but this was due to their own ignorance of its full
+import and to the fact that they heard only the dirges of a Chinese
+funeral procession or the brassy noises that feature a celestial
+festival. They did not have opportunity to be enthralled by the
+throaty, vibrant melodies&mdash;at once so lovingly seductive and harshly
+compelling&mdash;by which Chinese poets and lovers have revealed their
+thoughts and won their quest for centuries. The stirring tom-tom, if
+not the ragtime which sets the occidental capering to-day, was common
+to the Chinese three or four hundred years ago. They heard it from the
+wild Tartars and Mongols&mdash;heard it and rejected it, because it was
+primitive, untamed, and not to be compared with their own carefully
+controlled melodies. Mr. Emerson Whithorne, the famous British
+composer, who is an authority on oriental music, made this statement to
+the London music lovers last week:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'The popularity of Chinese music is still in its childhood. From now
+on it will grow rapidly. Chinese music has no literature, as we
+understand that term, but none can say that it has not most captivating
+melodies. To the artistic temperament, in particular, it appeals
+enormously, and well-known artists&mdash;musicians, painters, and so on&mdash;say
+that it affects them in quite an extraordinary way.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Chinese music from an occidental standpoint has been unjustly described
+as "clashing cymbals, twanging guitars, harsh flageolets, and shrill
+flutes, ear-splitting and headache-producing to the foreigner." Such
+general condemnation shows deplorable ignorance.[2] The writer had
+apparently never attended an official service in honor of Confucius,
+held biennially during the whole of the Ching dynasty at 3 A.M. The
+"stone chimes", consisting of sonorous stones varying in tone and
+hanging in frames, which were played on those solemn occasions, have a
+haunting melody such as can be heard nowhere else. China, I believe,
+is the only country that has produced music from stones. It is
+naturally gratifying to me to hear that Chinese airs are now having a
+vogue in London, and that they will soon be heard in New York. It will
+take some little time for Westerners to learn to listen intelligently
+to our melodies which, being always in unison, in one key and in one
+movement, are apt at first to sound as wearisome and monotonous as
+Madame Patti's complicated notes did to me, but when they understand
+them they will have found a new delight in life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Although we Chinese do not divide our plays into comedies and tragedies
+there is frequently a good deal of humor on the Chinese stage; yet we
+have nothing in China corresponding to the popular musical comedy of
+the West. A musical comedy is really a series of vaudeville
+performances strung together by the feeblest of plots. The essence
+seems to be catchy songs, pretty dances, and comic dialogue. The plot
+is apparently immaterial, its only excuse for existence being to give a
+certain order of sequence to the aforesaid songs, dances, and
+dialogues. That, indeed, is the only object for the playwright's
+introducing any plot at all, hence he does not much care whether it is
+logical or even within the bounds of probability. The play-goers, I
+think, care even less. They go to hear the songs, see the dances,
+laugh at the dialogues, and indulge in frivolous frivolities; what do
+they want with a plot, much less a moral? Chinese vaudeville takes the
+form of clever tumbling tricks which I think are much preferable to the
+sensuous, curious, and self-revealing dances one sees in the West.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Although musical comedy, or, more properly speaking, musical farce, is
+becoming more and more popular in both Europe and America it is also
+becoming proportionately more farcical; although in many theaters it is
+staged as often as the more serious drama, in some having exclusive
+dominion; and although theater managers find that these plays draw
+bigger crowds and fill their houses better than any other, in the large
+cities running for over a year, I cannot help regarding this feature of
+theatrical life as so much theatrical chaos. It lacks culture, and is
+sometimes both bizarre and neurotic. I do not object to patter, smart
+give and take, in which the comical angles of life are exposed, if it
+is brilliant; neither have I anything to say against light comedy in
+which the ridiculous side of things is portrayed. This sort of
+entertainment may help men who have spent a busy day, crowded with
+anxious moments, and weighted with serious responsibilities, but
+exhibitions which make men on their way home talk not of art, or of
+music, or of wit, but of "the little girl who wore a little black net"
+are distinctly to be condemned. Even the class who think it waste of
+time to think, and who go to the theater only to "laugh awfully", are
+not helped by this sort of entertainment. Such songs as the following,
+which I have culled from the 'Play Pictorial', a monthly published in
+London, must in time pall the taste of even the shallow-minded.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="poem">
+ "Can't you spare a glance?<BR>
+ Have we got a chance?<BR>
+ You've got a knowing pair of eyes;<BR>
+ When it's 2 to 1<BR>
+ It isn't much fun,"<BR>
+ This is what she soon replies:<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="poem">
+ "Oh, won't you buy a race-card,<BR>
+ And take a tip from me?<BR>
+ If you want to find a winner,<BR>
+ It's easy as can be<BR>
+ When the Cupid stakes are starting,<BR>
+ Your heads are all awhirl,<BR>
+ And my tip to-day<BR>
+ Is a bit each way<BR>
+ On the race-card girl."<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yet this, apparently, is the sort of thing which appeals to the modern
+American who wants amusement of the lightest kind, amusement which
+appeals to the eye and ear with the lightest possible tax on his
+already over-burdened brain. He certainly cannot complain that his
+wishes have not been faithfully fulfilled. It may be due to my
+ignorance of English, but the song I have just quoted seems to me
+silly, and I do not think any "ragtime music" could make it worth
+singing. Of course many songs and plays in the music halls are such as
+afford innocent mirth, but it has to be confessed that there are other
+things of a different type which it is not wise for respectable
+families to take the young to see. I would not like to say all I think
+of this feature of Western civilization, but I may quote an Englishman
+without giving offense. Writing in the 'Metropolitan Magazine', Louis
+Sherwin says: "There is not a doubt that the so-called 'high-brow
+dancer' has had a lot to do with the bare-legged epidemic that rages
+upon the comic-opera stage to-day. Nothing could be further removed
+from musical comedy than the art of such women as Isadora Duncan and
+Maude Allen. To inform Miss Duncan that she has been the means of
+making nudity popular in musical farce would beyond question incur the
+lady's very reasonable wrath. But it is none the less true. When the
+bare-legged classic dancer made her appearance in opera houses, and on
+concert platforms with symphony orchestras, it was the cue for every
+chorus girl with an ambition to undress in public. First of all we had
+a plague of Salomes. Then the musical comedy producers, following
+their usual custom of religiously avoiding anything original, began to
+send the pony ballets and soubrettes on the stages without their
+hosiery and with their knees clad in nothing but a coat of whitewash
+(sometimes they even forgot to put on the whitewash, and then the sight
+was horrible). The human form divine, with few exceptions, is a
+devilish spectacle unless it is properly made up. Some twenty years
+from now managers will discover what audiences found out months ago,
+that a chorus girl's bare leg is infinitely less beautiful than the
+same leg when duly disguised by petticoats and things."
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] In his discussion of actors, Wu Tingfang does not seem to be aware
+that the idealization of actors in the West is comparatively recent,
+and that historically, and even now in some parts of society, actors
+and the acting profession have been looked down upon in the West for
+many of the same reasons he gives for the same phenomenon in China.&mdash;A.
+R. L., 1996.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[2] Wu Tingfang is quite correct to deplore this statement as a
+description of Chinese music. However, in all fairness, it is an
+accurate description of how a Western ear first hears CERTAIN types of
+Chinese music. After successive hearings this impression will fly
+away, but until then CERTAIN types are reminiscent of two alley-cats
+fighting in a garbage can. This is not meant as a degrading comment,
+any more so than Wu Tingfang's comments on opera. Some music is an
+acquired taste, and after acquirement, its beauty becomes not only
+recognizable but inescapable. Certain other types of Chinese music can
+easily be appreciated on the first hearing.&mdash;A. R. L., 1996.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap16"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 16. Conjuring and Circuses
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+After what I have said as to the position of the actor in China my
+readers will not be surprised at my saying that the performance of a
+conjuror should not be encouraged. What pleasure can there be in being
+tricked? It may be a great display of dexterity to turn water into
+wine, to seem to cut off a person's head, to appear to swallow swords,
+to escape from locked handcuffs, and to perform the various cabinet
+tricks, but cleverness does not alter the fact that after all it is
+only deception cunningly contrived and performed in such a way as to
+evade discovery. It appears right to many because it is called
+"legerdemain" and "conjuring" but in reality it is exactly the same
+thing as that by which the successful card-sharper strips his victims,
+viz., such quickness of hand that the eye is deceived. Should we
+encourage such artful devices? History tells many stories as to the
+way in which people have been kept in superstitious bondage by
+illusions and magic, and if it be now held to be right to deceive for
+fun how can it be held to have been wrong to deceive for religion?
+Those who made the people believe through practising deception
+doubtless believed the trick to be less harmful than unbelief. I
+contend, therefore, that people who go to see conjuring performances
+derive no good from them, but that, on the contrary, they are apt to be
+impressed with the idea that to practise deception is to show
+praiseworthy skill. It is strange how many people pay money to others
+to deceive them. More than ever before, people to-day actually enjoy
+being cheated. If the tricks were clumsily devised and easily detected
+there would be no attraction, but the cleverer and more puzzling the
+trick the more eagerly people flock to see it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Christian preachers and moralists could do well to take up this matter
+and discourage people from frequenting the exhibitions of tricksters.
+There are doubtless many laws in nature yet undiscovered, and a few
+persons undoubtedly possess abnormal powers. This makes the
+cultivation of the love of trickery the more dangerous. It prevents
+the truth from being perceived. It enables charlatans to find dupes,
+and causes the real magician to be applauded as a legerdemainist. This
+is what the New Testament tells us happened in the case of Jesus
+Christ. His miracles failed to convince because the people had for a
+long time loved those who could deceive them cleverly.[1] The people
+said to him, "Thou hast a devil," and others warned them after his
+death saying, "That deceiver said while he was yet alive 'After three
+days I will rise again.'" When people are taught not only to marvel at
+the marvelous but to be indifferent to its falsehoods they lose the
+power of discrimination, and are apt to take the true for the false,
+the real for the unreal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For an evening's healthy enjoyment I believe a circus is as good a
+place as can be found anywhere. The air there is not close and
+vitiated as in a theater; you can spend two or three hours comfortably
+without inhaling noxious atmospheres. It is interesting to note that
+the circus is perhaps the only form of ancient entertainment which has
+retained something of its pristine simplicity. To-day, as in the old
+Roman circuses, tiers of seats run round the course, which in the
+larger circuses is still in the form of an ellipse, with its vertical
+axis, where the horses and performers enter, cut away. But the modern
+world has nothing in this connection to compare with the Circus Maximus
+of Rome, which, according to Pliny, held a quarter of a million
+spectators. It is singular, however, that while the old Roman circuses
+were held in permanent buildings, modern circuses are mostly travelling
+exhibitions in temporary erections. In some respects the entertainment
+offered has degenerated with the change, for we have to-day nothing in
+the circus to correspond to the thrilling chariot races in which the
+old Romans delighted. I wonder that in these days of restless search
+for novelties some one does not re-introduce the Roman chariot race
+under the old conditions, and with a reproduction of the old
+surroundings. It would be as interesting and as exciting as, and
+certainly less dangerous than, polo played in automobiles, which I
+understand is one of the latest fads in the West. A modern horse-race,
+with its skill, daring and picturesqueness, is the only modern
+entertainment comparable to the gorgeous races of the Romans.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The exhibition of skillful feats of horsemanship and acrobatic displays
+by juvenile actors, rope-dancing, high vaulting and other daring
+gymnastic feats seen in any of our present-day circuses are
+interesting, but not new. The Romans had many clever tight-rope
+walkers, and I do not think they used the long pole loaded at the ends
+to enable them to maintain their equilibrium, as do some later
+performers. Japanese tumblers are very popular and some of their
+tricks clever, but I think the Western public would find Chinese
+acrobats a pleasant diversion. With practice, it would seem as if when
+taken in hand during its supple years there is nothing that cannot be
+done with the human body. Sometimes it almost appears as if it were
+boneless, so well are people able by practice to make use of their
+limbs to accomplish feats which astonish ordinary persons whose limbs
+are less pliable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The trapeze gives opportunity for the display of very clever
+exhibition, of strength and agility; at first sight the gymnast would
+appear to be flying from one cross-bar to the other, and when watching
+such flights I have asked myself: "If a person can do that, why cannot
+he fly?" Perhaps human beings will some day be seen flying about in the
+air like birds. It only requires an extension of the trapeze "stunt".
+Travelling in the air by means of airships or aeroplanes is tame sport
+in comparison with bird-like flights, whether with or without
+artificial wings.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There are many advantages in being able to travel in the air. One is a
+clear and pure atmosphere such as cannot be obtained in a railway car,
+or in a cabin on board a ship; another is the opportunity afforded of
+looking down on this earth, seeing it as in a panorama, with the people
+looking like ants. Such an experience must broaden the mental outlook
+of the privileged spectator, and enable him to guess how fragmentary
+and perverted must be our restricted view of things in general. There
+is, however, danger of using such opportunities for selfish and
+mischievous purposes. A wicked man might throw a bomb or do some other
+wicked nonsense just as some one else, who really sees things as they
+are and not as they seem to be, might employ his superior knowledge to
+benefit himself and injure his fellows; but the mention of the trapeze
+and its bird-like performers has diverted me from my theme.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I suppose that a reference to the circus would be incomplete which
+overlooked the clowns, those poor survivals of a professional class of
+jesters who played what appears to have been a necessary part in
+society in ruder days, when amusements were less refined and less
+numerous. The Chinese have never felt the need of professional
+foolers, and I cannot say that I admire the circus clown, but the
+intelligence which careful training develops in the horse, the dog,
+etc., interests me a good deal. An instance of this came under my own
+observation during a recent visit to Shanghai of "Fillis' Circus". Mr.
+Fillis had a mare which for many years had acted the part of the horse
+of a highway robber. The robber, flying from his enemies, urges the
+animal beyond its strength, and the scene culminated with the dying
+horse being carried from the arena to the great grief of its master.
+When this entertainment was given in Shanghai this horse&mdash;"Black
+Bess"&mdash;fell sick. A tonic was administered in the shape of the lively
+tune which the band always played as she was about to enter the arena
+and play her part as the highwayman's mare. The animal made pitiable
+attempts to rise, and her inability to do so apparently suggested to
+the intelligent creature the dying scene she had so often played. She
+lay down and relaxed, prepared to die in reality. The attendants,
+ignorant of the manner in which the horse had let herself go, tried to
+lift her, but in her relaxed condition her bowels split&mdash;Black Bess had
+acted her part for the last time.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] This is a rather unorthodox view, but nonetheless interesting,
+especially as it pertains to his following statements.&mdash;A. R. L., 1996.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap17"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Chapter 17. Sports
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Perhaps in nothing do the Chinese differ from their Western friends in
+the matter of amusements more than in regard to sports. The Chinese
+would never think of assembling in thousands just to see a game played.
+We are not modernized enough to care to spend half a day watching
+others play. When we are tired of work we like to do our own playing.
+Our national game is the shuttlecock, which we toss from one to another
+over our shoulders, hitting the shuttlecock with the flat soles of the
+shoes we are wearing. Sometimes we hit with one part of the foot,
+sometimes with another, according to the rules of the game. This, like
+kite-flying, is a great amusement among men and boys.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We have nothing corresponding to tennis and other Western ball games,
+nor, indeed, any game in which the opposite sexes join. Archery was a
+health-giving exercise of which modern ideas of war robbed us. The
+same baneful influence has caused the old-fashioned healthful gymnastic
+exercises with heavy weights to be discarded. I have seen young men on
+board ocean-going steamers throwing heavy bags of sand to one another
+as a pastime. This, though excellent practice, hardly equals our
+ancient athletic feats with the bow or the heavy weight. Western
+sports have been introduced into some mission and other schools in
+China, but I much doubt if they will ever be really popular among my
+people. They are too violent, and, from the oriental standpoint,
+lacking in dignity. Yet, when Chinese residing abroad do take up
+Western athletic sports they prove themselves the equals of all
+competitors, as witness their success in the Manila Olympiad, and the
+name the baseball players from the Hawaiian Islands Chinese University
+made for themselves when they visited America. Nevertheless, were the
+average Chinese told that many people buy the daily paper in the West
+simply to see the result of some game, and that a sporting journalism
+flourishes there, i.e., papers devoted entirely to sport, they would
+regard the statement as itself a pleasant sport. Personally, I think
+we might learn much from the West in regard to sports. They certainly
+increase the physical and mental faculties, and for this reason, if for
+no other, deserve to be warmly supported. China suffers because her
+youths have never been trained to team-work. We should be a more
+united people if as boys and young men we learned to take part in games
+which took the form of a contest, in which, while each contestant does
+his best for his own side, the winning or losing of the game is not
+considered so important as the pleasure of the exercise. I think a
+great deal of the manliness which I have admired in the West must be
+attributed to the natural love of healthy sport for sport's sake.
+Games honestly and fairly played inculcate the virtues of honor,
+candidness, and chivalry, of which America has produced many worthy
+specimens. When one side is defeated the winner does not exult over
+his defeated opponents but attributes his victory to an accident; I
+have seen the defeated crew in a boat race applauding their winning
+opponents. It is a noble example for the defeated contestants to give
+credit to and to applaud the winner, an example which I hope will be
+followed by my countrymen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As an ardent believer in the natural, healthy and compassionate life I
+was interested to find in the Encyclopaedia Britannica how frequently
+vegetarians have been winners in athletic sports.[1] They won the
+Berlin to Dresden walking match, a distance of 125 miles, the
+Carwardine Cup (100 miles) and Dibble Shield (6 hours) cycling races
+(1901-02), the amateur championship of England in tennis (four
+successive years up to 1902) and racquets (1902), the cycling
+championship of India (three years), half-mile running championship of
+Scotland (1896), world's amateur cycle records for all times from four
+hours to thirteen hours (1902), 100 miles championship Yorkshire Road
+Club (1899, 1901), tennis gold medal (five times). I have not access
+to later statistics on this subject but I know that it is the reverse
+of truth to say, as Professor Gautier, of the Sarbonne, a Catholic
+foundation in Paris, recently said, that vegetarians "suffer from lack
+of energy and weakened will power." The above facts disprove it, and
+as against Prof. Gautier, I quote Dr. J. H. Kellogg, the eminent
+physician and Superintendent of Battle Creek Sanitarium in Michigan,
+U.S.A., who has been a strict vegetarian for many years and who, though
+over sixty years of age, is as strong and vigorous as a man of forty;
+he told me that he worked sixteen hours daily without the least
+fatigue. Mrs. Annie Besant, President of the Theosophical Society, is
+another example. I am credibly informed that she has been a vegetarian
+for at least thirty-five years and that it is doubtful if any
+flesh-eater who is sixty-five can equal her in energy. Whatever else
+vegetarians may lack they are not lacking in powers of endurance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is needless for me to say that hunting, or, as it is called,
+"sport", is entirely opposed to my idea of the fitness of things. I do
+not see why it should not be as interesting to shoot at "clay pigeons"
+as to kill living birds; and why moving targets are not as suitable a
+recreation as running animals. "The pleasures of the chase" are no
+doubt fascinating, but when one remembers that these so-called
+pleasures are memories we have brought with us from the time when we
+were savages and hunted for the sake of food, no one can be proud of
+still possessing such tastes. To say that hunters to-day only kill to
+eat would be denied indignantly by every true sportsman. That the
+quarry is sometimes eaten afterward is but an incident in the game; the
+splendid outdoor exercise which the hunt provides can easily be found
+in other ways without inflicting the fear, distress, and pain which the
+hunted animals endure. It is a sad commentary on the stage at which
+humanity still is that even royalty, to whom we look for virtuous
+examples, seldom misses an opportunity to hunt. When a man has a
+strong hobby he is unable to see its evil side even though in other
+respects he may be humane and kind-hearted. Thus the sorry spectacle
+is presented of highly civilized and humane people displaying their
+courage by hunting and attacking wild animals, not only in their own
+native country but in foreign lands as well. Such personages are, I
+regret to have to add, not unknown in the United States.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fact that hunting has been followed from time immemorial, that the
+ancient Egyptians, Assyrians, and Babylonians indulged in this pastime,
+does not make it any more suitable an occupation for us to-day. The
+good qualities of temper and patience which hunting demands are equally
+well developed by athletic sports. I understand that a good hunting
+establishment will cost as much as $10,000 (2000 Pounds) a year.
+Surely those who can afford so much on luxuries could find a more
+refined amusement in yachting and similar recreations. To sail a yacht
+successfully in half a gale of wind, is, I should imagine, more
+venturesome, more exciting, and a pastime requiring a manifestation of
+more of the qualities of daring, than shooting a frightened animal from
+the safe retreat of the saddle of a trusty horse; and not even the hunt
+of the wild beast can equal in true sportsmanship a contest with the
+wind and the waves, for it is only occasionally that a beast shows
+fight because he is wounded, and even then man is well protected by his
+gun; but whether yachting or swimming the sportsman's attitude of
+watchfulness is uninterrupted. I fancy it is convention and custom,
+rather than conviction of the superiority of the sport, that has given
+hunting its pre-eminence. It is on record that four thousand years ago
+the ancient emperors of China started periodically on hunting
+expeditions. They thus sought relief from the monotony of life in
+those days; in the days of the Stuarts, in England, royalty found
+pleasure in shows which were childish and even immoral. Of course in
+barbarous countries all savages used to hunt for food. For them
+hunting was an economic necessity, and it is no slander to say that the
+modern hunt is a relic of barbarism. It is, indeed, a matter of
+surprise to me that this cruel practice has not ceased, but still
+exists in this twentieth century. It goes without saying that hunting
+means killing the defenseless, inflicting misery and death on the
+helpless; even if it be admitted that there is some justification for
+killing a ferocious and dangerous animal, why should we take pleasure
+in hunting and killing the fox, the deer, the hare, the otter, and
+similar creatures? People who hunt boast of their bravery and
+fearlessness, and to show their intrepidity and excellent shooting they
+go to the wilderness and other countries to carry on their "sport". I
+admire their fearless courage but I am compelled to express my opinion
+that such actions are not consistent with those of a good-hearted
+humane gentleman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Still less excuse is there for the practice of shooting. What right
+have we to wantonly kill these harmless and defenseless birds flying in
+the air? I once watched pigeon shooting at a famous watering place,
+the poor birds were allowed to fly from the trap-holes simply that they
+might be ruthlessly killed or maimed. That was wanton cruelty; to
+reprobate too strongly such revolting barbarity is almost impossible.
+I am glad to say that such cruel practices did not come under my
+observation during my residence in the States, and I hope that they are
+not American vices but are prohibited by law. No country, with the
+least claim to civilization, should allow such things, and our
+descendants will be astonished that people calling themselves civilized
+should have indulged in such wholesale and gratuitous atrocities. When
+people allow animals to be murdered&mdash;for it is nothing but murder&mdash;for
+the sake of sport, they ought not to be surprised that men are murdered
+by criminals for reasons which seem to them good and sufficient. An
+animal has as much right to its life as man has to his. Both may be
+called upon to sacrifice life for the sake of some greater good to a
+greater number, but by what manner of reasoning can killing for
+killing's sake be justified? Does the superior cunning and intellect
+of man warrant his taking life for fun? Then, should a race superior
+to humanity ever appear on the earth, man would have no just cause of
+complaint if he were killed off for its amusement. There formerly
+existed in India a "well-organized confederacy of professional
+assassins" called Thugs, who worshipped the goddess Kali with human
+lives. They murdered according to "rigidly prescribed forms" and for
+religious reasons. The English, when they came into power in India,
+naturally took vigorous measures to stamp out Thuggeeism; but from a
+higher point of view than our own little selves, is there after all so
+much difference between the ordinary sportsman and the fanatic Thuggee?
+If there be, the balance is rather in favor of the latter, for the Thug
+at least had the sanction of religion, while the hunter has nothing to
+excuse his cruelty beyond the lust of killing. I do not understand why
+the humane societies, such as "The Society for the Prevention of
+Cruelty to Animals", are so supine in regard to these practices. The
+Chinese are frequently accused of being cruel to animals, but I think
+that those who are living in glass houses should not throw stones.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this connection I would remark that birds are shot not only for
+pleasure and for their flesh, but in some cases for their plumage, and
+women who wear hats adorned with birds' feathers, do, though
+indirectly, encourage the slaughter of the innocent. Once a Chinese
+was arrested by the police in Hongkong for cruelty to a rat. It
+appeared that the rat had committed great havoc in his household,
+stealing and damaging various articles of food; when at last it was
+caught the man nailed its feet to a board, as a warning to other rats.
+For this he was brought before the English Magistrate, who imposed a
+penalty of ten dollars. He was astonished, and pleaded that the rat
+deserved death, on account of the serious havoc committed in his house.
+The Magistrate told him that he ought to have instantly killed the rat,
+and not to have tortured it. The amazed offender paid his fine, but
+murmured that he did not see the justice of the British Court in not
+allowing him to punish the rat as he chose, while foreigners in China
+were allowed the privilege of shooting innocent birds without
+molestation. I must confess, people are not always consistent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Peace Societies should take up this matter, for hunting is an
+imitation of war and an apprenticeship to it. It certainly can find no
+justification in any of the great world religions, and not even the
+British, or the Germans, who idolize soldiers, would immortalize a man
+simply because he was a hunter. From whatever point the subject be
+viewed it seems undeniable that hunting is only a survival of savagery.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="footnote">
+[1] E. B., 9th ed., vol. 33, p. 649.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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